Description
Like the great sea of which he writes Braudel's vision transcends the limits so instinctive to the pigeon-holing mind and moves with a force, a colour and a depth that carries the study of man beyond its familiar horizons.Perhaps no historical work published since 1945 has received greater acclaim than this book. Professor Braudel who acknowledges his own debt to Lucien Febvre and Marc Bloch has like them gone far to enrich and enhance our conception of history and to break down the barriers erected by intellectual smallholders in defense of particular specializations.
The focus of the book is the Mediterranean world in the second half of the sixteenth century. But the perspective of time stretches back from the age of Philip II to the world of Odysseus and the foreground reaches to the life of our own time. The same unconcerned, unconfined mastery reveals itself in the treatment of space. The Mediterranean is not to be defined in hydrographic terms as a sea, or even as a series of seas; nor in ecological terms as the area of sea and land that lies between the northernmost date palm and the northernmost olive. It reaches across to the Americas for the silver that submerged its price structures; down the Red Sea and across Asia for the spices that dominated its trade; up to England, Germany, Holland, Russia for grain and wool and ships and men; down the West African coast or across the Sahara for slaves and gold and ivory.
And in considering its history it is not treaties and wars and dynastic marriages that claim our attention but the time it took for a cargo ship to work her way from Alicante to Alexandria; how much it cost to send a special courier from Madrid to Paris; how people lived and what they lived on; what happened in the great cities like Venice, Naples or Constantinople when plague or famine or war intensified an already furious struggle for existence. Climate, landscape, diet, rhythms of trade, the operations of financiers and the hard life of the peasant and the seaman, all the rich variety and colour of this most magnetic area of human history have their place in a brilliant mosaic. The harmonizing of individual detail with the broad sweep of description and analysis is achieved with mastery. The whole work is informed by a sense of the physical presence of the Mediterranean, its sun and sea and the characteristic landscape of vine and olive. No true lover of the Mediterranean should be without a copy; no one seriously interested in Europe and its history could afford to be.
'One of those books which are recognized as classics from their first publication. An excellent English translation by Sian Reynolds, beautifully produced . . . His style is marvelously fresh, clear, and above all, alive: as living as his subject and the historical philosophy which he brings to it.'
-- Hugh Trevor-Roper, Sunday Times
The painting reproduced on the jacket is Pieter Bruegel's BATTLE IN THE GULF OF NAPLES from the Galleria Doria, Rome. (Scala)
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The focus of Fernand Braudel's great work is the Mediterranean world in the second half of the sixteenth century, but Braudel ranges back in history to the world of Odysseus and forward to our time, moving out from the Mediterranean area to the New World and other destinations of Mediterranean traders. Braudel's scope embraces the natural world and material life, economics, demography, politics, and diplomacy.
ISBN:9780520203303