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Books > Humanities > History > World history > 1500 to 1750
In the seventeenth century, riots, rebellions, and revolts flared
around Europe. Concerned about their internal stability, many
states responded by closely observing the violent upheavals that
plagued their neighbours. Rebellion and Diplomacy in Early Modern
Europe investigates how in this struggle for intelligence about
internal discord, diplomats emerged as key information brokers and
interpreters of Europe's tumultuous political landscape. The
contributions in this volume uncover how diplomatic actors
interacted with rulers, opposition leaders, informers, media
entrepreneurs, and different audiences in their efforts to
understand, communicate, and draw lessons from the insurrections in
their time. Rebellion and Diplomacy also examines how diplomats
actively tried to shape the course of internal conflicts by
managing the spread news, supporting political factions at their
court of residence, and even instigating violence. Covering
different European regions from the Iberian Peninsula to
Scandinavia and from the British Isles to the Carpathian Basin, the
book will appeal to all students and researchers interested in
early modern diplomacy, politics, and news cultures.
In this book, George McClure examines the intellectual tradition of
challenges to religious and literary authority in the early modern
era. He explores the hidden history of unbelief through the lens of
Momus, the Greek god of criticism and mockery. Surveying his
revival in Italy, France, Spain, Germany, the Netherlands, and
England, McClure shows how Momus became a code for religious doubt
in an age when such writings remained dangerous for authors. Momus
('Blame') emerged as a persistent and subversive critic of divine
governance and, at times, divinity itself. As an emblem or as an
epithet for agnosticism or atheism, he was invoked by writers such
as Leon Battista Alberti, Anton Francesco Doni, Giordano Bruno,
Luther, and possibly, in veiled form, by Milton in his depiction of
Lucifer. The critic of gods also acted, in sometimes related
fashion, as a critic of texts, leading the army of Moderns in
Swift's Battle of the Books, and offering a heretical archetype for
the literary critic.
This book provides an accessible introduction to a wide range of
concerns that have preoccupied historians over time. Global in
scope, it explores historical perspectives not only from
historiography itself, but from related areas such as literature,
sociology, geography and anthropology which have entered into
productive dialogues with history. Clearly written and accessible,
this third edition is fully revised with an updated structure and
new areas of historical enquiry and themes added, including the
history of emotions, video history and global pandemics. In all of
this, the authors have attempted to think beyond the boundaries of
the West and consider varied approaches to history. They do so by
engaging with theoretical perspectives and methodologies that have
provided the foundation for good historical practice. The authors
analyse how historians can improve their skills by learning about
the discipline of historiography, that is, how historians go about
the task of exploring the past and determining where the line
separating history from other disciplines, such as sociology or
geography, runs. History: An Introduction to Theory and Method 3ed
is an essential resource for students of historical theory and
method working at both an introductory and more advanced level.
The Compendium of World Sovereigns series contains three volumes
Ancient, Medieval and Early Modern. These volumes provide students
with easy-to-access 'who's who' with details the identities and
dates, with ages and wives, where known, of heads of government in
any given state at any time within the framework of reference. The
relevant original and secondary sources are also listed in a
comprehensive bibliography. Providing a clear reference guide for
students, to who was who and when they ruled in the Dynasties and
other ruler-lists for the Ancient, Medieval, and Early Modern
worlds - primarily European and Middle Eastern but including
available information on Africa and Asia and the pre-Columbian
Americas. The trilogy accesses and interprets the original data
plus any modern controversies and disputes over names and dating,
reflecting on the shifts in and widening of focus in student and
academic studies. Each volume contains league tables of rulers'
'records', and an extensive bibliographical guide to the relevant
personnel and dynasties, plus any controversies, so readers can
consult these for extra details and know exactly where to go for
which information. All relevant information is collected and
provided as a one-stop-shop for students wishing to check the known
information about a world Sovereign. The Early Modern volume begins
with Eastern and Western Europe and moves through the Ottoman
Empire, South and East Asia, Africa and ends in Central and South
America. Compendium of World Sovereigns: Volume III Early Modern
provides students and scholars with the perfect reference guide to
support their studies and to fact check dates, people, and places.
Providing the first in-depth examination of Pope Pius II's
development of the concept of Europe and what it meant to be
'European', From Christians to Europeans charts his life and work
from his early years as a secretary in Northern Europe to his
papacy. This volume introduces students and scholars to the concept
of Europe by an important and influential early thinker. It also
provides Renaissance specialists who already know him with the
fullest consideration to date of how and why Pius (1405-1464)
constructed the idea of a unified European culture, society, and
identity. Author Nancy Bisaha shows how Pius's years of travel, his
emotional response to the fall of Constantinople in 1453, and the
impact of classical ethnography and other works shaped this
compelling vision - with close readings of his letters, orations,
histories, autobiography, and other works. Europeans, as Pius
boldly defined them, shared a distinct character that made them
superior to the inhabitants of other continents. The reverberations
of his views can still be felt today in debates about identity,
ethnicity, race, and belonging in Europe and more generally. This
study explores the formation of this problematic notion of
privilege and separation-centuries before the modern era, where
most scholars have erroneously placed its origins. From Christians
to Europeans adds substantially to our understanding of the
Renaissance as a critical time of European self-fashioning and the
creation of a modern "Western" identity. This book is essential
reading for students and scholars interested in the formation of
modern Europe, intellectual history, cultural studies, the history
of Renaissance Europe and late medieval Italy and the Ottoman
Empire.
The Holy Roman Empire has often been anachronistically assumed
to have been defunct long before it was actually dissolved at the
beginning of the nineteenth century. The authors of this volume
reconsider the significance of the Empire in the sixteenth,
seventeenth, and eighteenth centuries. Their research reveals the
continual importance of the Empire as a stage (and audience) for
symbolic performance and communication; as a well utilized
problem-solving and conflict-resolving supra-governmental
institution; and as an imagined political, religious, and cultural
world for contemporaries. This volume by leading scholars offers a
dramatic reappraisal of politics, religion, and culture and also
represents a major revision of the history of the Holy Roman Empire
in the early modern period.
Embracing a multiconfessional and transnational approach that
stretches from central Europe, to Scotland and England, from Iberia
to Africa and Asia, this volume explores the lives, work, and
experiences of women and men during the tumultuous fifteenth to
seventeenth centuries. The authors, all leading experts in their
fields, utilize a broad range of methodologies from cultural
history to women's history, from masculinity studies to digital
mapping, to explore the dynamics and power of constructed gender
roles. Ranging from intellectual representations of virginity to
the plight of refugees, from the sea journeys of Jesuit
missionaries to the impact of Transatlantic economies on women's
work, from nuns discovering new ways to tolerate different
religious expressions to bleeding corpses used in criminal trials,
these essays address the wide diversity and historical complexity
of identity, gender, and the body in the early modern age. With its
diversity of topics, fields, and interests of its authors, this
volume is a valuable source for students and scholars of the
history of women, gender, and sexuality as well as social and
cultural history in the early modern world.
This book addresses the multifaceted history of the domestic sphere
in Europe from the Age of Reformation to the emergence of modern
society. By focusing on daily practice, interaction and social
relations, it shows continuities and social change in European
history from an interior perspective. The Routledge History of the
Domestic Sphere in Europe contains a variety of approaches from
different regions that each pose a challenge to commonplace views
such as the emergence of confessional cultures, of private life,
and of separate spheres of men and women. By analyzing a plethora
of manifold sources including diaries, court records, paintings and
domestic advice literature, this volume provides an overview of the
domestic sphere as a location of work and consumption, conflict and
cooperation, emotions and intimacy, and devotion and education. The
book sheds light on changing relations between spouses, parents and
children, masters and servants or apprentices, and humans and
animals or plants, thereby exceeding the notion of the modern
nuclear family. This volume will be of great use to upper-level
graduates, postgraduates and experienced scholars interested in the
history of family, household, social space, gender, emotions,
material culture, work and private life in early modern and
nineteenth-century Europe.
The pastor in print explores the phenomenon of early modern pastors
who chose to become print authors, addressing ways authorship could
enhance, limit or change clerical ministry and ways pastor-authors
conceived of their work in parish and print. It identifies
strategies through which pastor-authors established authorial
identities, targeted different sorts of audiences and strategically
selected genre and content as intentional parts of their clerical
vocation. The first study to provide a book-length analysis of the
phenomenon of early modern pastors writing for print, it uses a
case study of prolific pastor-author Richard Bernard to offer a new
lens through which to view religious change in this pivotal period.
By bringing together questions of print, genre, religio-politics
and theology, the book will interest scholars and postgraduate
students in history, literature and theological studies, and its
readability will appeal to undergraduates and non-specialists. -- .
Using the city of Puebla de los Angeles, the second-largest urban
center in colonial Mexico (viceroyalty of New Spain), Pablo Miguel
Sierra Silva investigates Spaniards' imposition of slavery on
Africans, Asians, and their families. He analyzes the experiences
of these slaves in four distinct urban settings: the marketplace,
the convent, the textile mill, and the elite residence. In so
doing, Urban Slavery in Colonial Mexico advances a new
understanding of how, when, and why transatlantic and transpacific
merchant networks converged in Central Mexico during the
seventeenth century. As a social and cultural history, it also
addresses how enslaved people formed social networks to contest
their bondage. Sierra Silva challenges readers to understand the
everyday nature of urban slavery and engages the rich Spanish and
indigenous history of the Puebla region while intertwining it with
African diaspora studies.
French North America in the Shadows of Conquest is an
interdisciplinary, postcolonial, and continental history of
Francophone North America across the long twentieth century,
revealing hidden histories that so deeply shaped the course of
North America. Modern French North America was born from the
process of coming to terms with the idea of conquest after the fall
of New France. The memory of conquest still haunts those 20 million
Francophones who call North America home. The book re-examines the
contours of North American history by emphasizing alliances between
Acadians, Cajuns, and Quebecois and French Canadians in their
attempt to present a unified challenge against the threat of
assimilation, linguistic extinction, and Anglophone hegemony. It
explores cultural trauma narratives and the social networks
Francophones constructed and shows how North American history looks
radically different from their perspective. This book presents a
missing chapter in the annals of linguistic and ethnic differences
on a continent defined, in part, by its histories of dispossession.
It will be of interest to scholars and students of American and
Canadian history, particularly those interested in French North
America, as well as ethnic and cultural studies, comparative
history, the American South, and migration.
This edited collection examines the meeting points between travel,
mobility, and conflict to uncover the experience of travel -
whether real or imagined - in the early modern world. Until
relatively recently, both domestic travel and voyages to the wider
world remained dangerous undertakings. Physical travel, whether
initiated by religious conversion and pilgrimage, diplomacy, trade,
war, or the desire to encounter other cultures, inevitably heralded
disruption: contact zones witnessed cultural encounters that were
not always cordial, despite the knowledge acquisition and financial
gain that could be reaped from travel. Vast compendia of travel
such as Hakluyt's Principla Navigations, Voyages and Discoveries,
printed from the late sixteenth century, and Prevost's Histoire
Generale des Voyages (1746-1759) underscored European exploration
as a marker of European progress, and in so doing showed the
tensions that can arise as a consequence of interaction with other
cultures. In focusing upon language acquisition and translation,
travel and religion, travel and politics, and imaginary travel, the
essays in this collection tease out the ways in which travel was
both obstructed and enriched by conflict.
This volume brings together cutting-edge research by some of the
most innovative scholars of early modern Britain. Inspired in part
by recent studies of the early modern 'public sphere', the twelve
chapters collected here reveal an array of political and religious
practices that can serve as a foundation for new narratives of the
period. The practices considered range from deliberation and
inscription to publication and profanity. The narratives under
construction range from secularisation to the rise of majority
rule. Many of the authors also examine ways British developments
were affected by and in turn influenced the world outside of
Britain. These chapter will be essential reading for students of
early modern Britain, early modern Europe and the Atlantic World.
They will also appeal to those interested in the religious and
political history of other regions and periods. -- .
"State, Power and Community in Early Modern Russia" is a vivid
reconstruction of life in one of the garrison towns built on
Muscovy's southern steppe frontier in the early seventeenth century
to defend against Tatar raids. It focuses on how the colonization
process shaped power relations in a particular southern garrison
community, both at the village level, within the land commune, and
at the district level, between the general garrison community and
the appointed officials representing state authority.
The work of women philosophers in the early modern period has
traditionally been overlooked, yet their writing on topics such as
reality, time, mind and matter holds valuable lessons for our
understanding of metaphysics and its history. This volume of new
essays explores the work of nine key female figures: Bathsua Makin,
Anna Maria van Schurman, Elisabeth of Bohemia, Margaret Cavendish,
Anne Conway, Damaris Cudworth Masham, Mary Astell, Catharine
Trotter Cockburn, and Emilie Du Chatelet. Investigating issues from
eternity to free will and from body to natural laws, the essays
uncover long-neglected perspectives and demonstrate their
importance for philosophical debates, both then and now. Combining
careful philosophical analysis with discussion of the intellectual
and historical context of each thinker, they will set the agenda
for future enquiry and will appeal to scholars and students of the
history of metaphysics, science, religion and feminism.
This volume seeks to address a relatively neglected subject in the
field of English reformation studies: the reformation in its urban
context. Drawing on the work of a number of historians, this
collection of essays will seek to explore some of the dimensions of
that urban stage and to trace, using a mixture of detailed case
studies and thematic reflections, some of the ways in which
religious change was both effected and affected by the activities
of townsmen and women.
In the seventeenth century, England saw Holland as an economic
power to learn from and compete with. English Economic Thought in
the Seventeenth Century: Rejecting the Dutch Model analyses English
economic discourse during this period, and explores the ways in
which England's economy was shaped by the example of its Dutch
rival. Drawing on an impressive range of primary and secondary
sources, the chapters explore four key areas of controversy in
order to illuminate the development of English economic thought at
this time. These areas include: the herring industry; the setting
of interest rates; banking and funds; and land registration and
credit. The links between each of these debates are highlighted,
and attention is also given to the broader issues of international
trade, social reform and credit. This book is of strong interest to
advanced students and researchers of the history of economic
thought, economic history and intellectual history.
Mary Tudor is often written off as a hopeless, twisted queen who
tried desperately to pull England back to the Catholic Church that
was so dear to her mother, and sent many to burn at the stake in
the process. In this radical re-evaluation of the first 'real'
English queen regnant, Judith M. Richards challenges her reputation
as 'Bloody Mary' of popular historical infamy, contending that she
was closer to the more innovative, humanist side of the Catholic
Church. Richards argues persuasively that Mary, neither boring nor
basically bloody, was a much more hard-working, 'hands on', and
decisive queen than is commonly recognized. Had she not died in her
early forties and failed to establish a Catholic succession, the
course of history could have been very different, England might
have remained Catholic and Mary herself may even have been treated
more kindly by history. This illustrated and accessible biography
is essential reading for all those with an interest in one of
England's most misrepresented monarchs.
This book takes a new approach by synthesizing the work of scholars
of military and Indigenous history to provide the first
chronologically ordered, region-wide, and long-term narrative
history of conflict in the Early American Northeast. War and
Colonization in the Early American Northeast focuses on war and
society, European colonization, and Indigenous peoples in New
England from the pre-Columbian era to the mid-eighteenth century.
It examines how the New English used warfare against Native
Americans as a way to implement a colonial order. These conflicts
shaped New English attitudes toward Native Americans, which further
aided in the marginalization and the violent targeting of these
communities. At the same time, this volume pays attention to the
experiences of Indigenous peoples. It explores pre-Columbian Native
American conflict, and studies how colonization altered the ways of
warfare of Indigenous people. Native Americans contested New
English efforts at colonization and used violent warfare strategies
and raids to target their enemies - often quite successfully.
However, in the long run, depending on time and geographic
location, conflict and colonization led to dramatic and violent
changes for Native Americans. This volume is an essential resource
for academics, students, academic libraries and general readers
interested in the history of New England, military, Native
American, or U.S. history.
Now in its second edition, Britain since 1688 is an accessible and
comprehensive introduction to British History from 1688 to the
present day that assumes no prior knowledge of the subject.
Chronological in structure yet thematic in approach, the book
guides the reader through major events in British history from the
Glorious Revolution of 1688, offering extensive coverage of the
British Empire and continuing through to recent events such as
Britain's exit from the European Union. Fully revised and updated
using the most recent historical scholarship, this edition includes
discussion of the Brexit referendum and Britain's subsequent exit
from the European Union, along with increased coverage of Britain's
imperial past and its legacy in the present. New sidebars on themes
such as race, immigration, religion, sexuality, the presence of
empire and the experience of warfare are carried across chapters to
offer students current and relevant interpretations of British
history. Written by a team of expert North American university
professors and supported by textboxes, timelines, bibliographies,
glossaries and a fully integrated companion website, this textbook
provides students with a strong grounding in the rich tapestry of
events, characters, and themes that encompass the history of
Britain since 1688.
Examining diversity as a fundamental reality of empire, this book
explores European colonial empires, both terrestrial and maritime,
to show how they addressed the questions of how to manage
diversity. These questions range from the local to the
supra-regional, and from the management of people to that of
political and judicial systems. Taking an intersectional approach
incorporating categories such as race, religion, subjecthood and
social and legal status, the contributions of the volume show how
old and new modes of creating social difference took shape in an
increasingly early modern globalized world, and what contemporary
legacies these 'diversity formations' left behind. This volume show
diversity and imperial projects to be both contentious and mutually
constitutive: one the one hand, the conditions of empire created
divisions between people through official categorizations (such as
racial classifications and designations of subjecthood) and through
discriminately applied extractive policies, from taxation to
slavery. On the other hand, imperial subjects, communities, and
polities within and adjacent to empire asserted themselves through
a diverse range of affiliations and identities that challenged any
notion of a unilateral, universal imperial authority. This book
highlights the multidimensionality and interconnectedness of
diversity in imperial settings and will be useful reading to
students and scholars of the history of colonial Empires, global
history, and race.
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