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This book explores the history of natural resources in Continental
Europe presenting research on how resources were traded, collected
and depleted between the fifteenth and nineteenth century. It is
helpful for students of Environmental Studies and those with an
interest in Environmental History.
Most of us today know little about the conditions under which
people travelled in early modern Europe. Travellers' accounts from
the period generally omit detailed descriptions of the state of
roads, the discomfort of a carriage or a coach, or the harshness of
a landscape, even though these formed the everyday reality of
travel for most people. In this wide-ranging book, Maczak sets out
to fill this gap in our knowledge by vividly reconstructing the
lives and daily experiences of travellers in the sixteenth and
seventeenth centuries. He analyzes the reasons why they travelled,
what they hoped to gain from it, and how they were changed by the
experience. He discusses the practical problems encountered by
travellers: difficulties with transportation, the danger of
accidents, and the problem of finding suitable conveyances and
guides. He describes the dangers presented by inhospitable weather
and terrain, wild animals, marauding soldiers, bandits and
highwaymen. He analyses travellers' lodges and food, the
relationships they formed on their journeys, and their encounters
with foreign bureaucracies, customs and border controls. Maczak
paints colourful portraits of a wide variety of travellers, from
the splendid entourages of bishops and ambassadors, to the lone
pilgrims, artists and scholars travelling for their own pleasure
and enlightenment.
Natural Resources in European History pulls together several papers
from the Bellagio Conference on Natural Resources and Economic
Development which took place in 1977. Originally published in 1978,
this report focuses on papers exploring the history of natural
resources in Continental Europe presenting research on how
resources were traded, collected and depleted between the fifteenth
and nineteenth century. This title will be of interest to students
of Environmental Studies or with an interest in Environmental
History.
This book analyzes the patron-client relationship over both space
and time. It covers such areas of the globe as Europe, Africa and
Latin America, and such periods in time as ancient Rome,
seventeenth- and eighteenth-century Poland, as well as
twentieth-century America. It also analyzes clientelism in U.S.
policy toward the Vietnam War and in Richard J. Daley's mayoral
rule over Chicago. In his comparative approach the author makes
broad use of theories from such fields as history, sociology,
anthropology and linguistics while considering the global scale of
the patron-client relationship and the immense role that
clientelism has played in world history.
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