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For a long time studies on northern antiquarianism have focused on
individual nations. This volume introduces this phenomenon in a
transnational perspective. In the course of the 17th and 18th
centuries, the Baltic Sea was at the centre of a culture of debate,
whose networks encompassed numerous European centres of learning.
When the countries around the Baltic began to explore their own
antiquities in this period, the prevailing climate of competition
between Sweden, Denmark, Russia and the German countries soon
permeated the construction and presentation of their own pasts.
Exploring the ancient literatures and monuments of Iceland, Sweden
or Denmark, studying runic writings or the Sami tradition, the
northern scholars were establishing an individual architecture of
history, and so extending the horizon of their emerging nations
both geographically and historically. The contributions in this
volume provide case studies illustrating the role that scholarship,
art and literature played in establishing and maintaining national
claims around the Baltic Sea. The variety of methods combined for
this purpose makes this book of interest to intellectual historians
as well as historians of art and early modern science.
Despite its enormous extent and impact, the Swedish scholarship
produced in the context of Olof Rudbeck's monumental 'Atlantica' (4
vols, 1679-1702) has hitherto escaped attention outside
Scandinavia. The present volume explores the numerous disciplines
that comprised this, one of the last, but grandest appropriations
of the classical heritage in early modern times. In the decades
around 1700, dozens of scholars all around the Baltic Sea embarked
on studies of classical and Norse mythology, material remains and
antiquities, of languages, botany and zoology as well as biblical
scholarship, in order to reveal the primordial status of ancient
Sweden. Fusing together numerous disciplines within Rudbeck's
elaborate and all-encompassing epistemological framework, they gave
to a nation that had advanced to the rank of a European superpower
a narrative of a glorious past that matched its contemporary
pretentions. Presenting case studies stretching from the 17th to
the 19th century and across a wide number of fields, this volume
traces the extent and longue duree of one of the most fascinating
and underestimated episodes in European intellectual history.
With his unconventional philosophical tracts, his translations from
the Hebrew, and his work on Christian kabbala, the neophyte Paulus
Ritius (d. 1541), a friend of Erasmus of Rotterdam and Johannes
Reuchlin, became one of the most important mediators of Italian
Renaissance philosophy in Germany. His attempts to combine the
natural philosophy of Aristotle and AverroAs with Christianity
brought him in conflict with the German universities and culminated
in public disputes with the leading Catholic theologians of the
day. His fate as an academic outcast was sealed when he undertook
to reconcile Catholics and Protestants. The study is an
appreciation of Ritius' significance for the history of ideas in
the early modern age.
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