Ecologies and Economies in Medieval and Early Modern Europe
Studies in Environmental History for Richard C. Hoffmann
Biographical note
Scott G. Bruce, Ph.D (2000) in History, Princeton University, is Associate Professor of Medieval History at the University of Colorado at Boulder. He has published widely on topics related to the abbey of Cluny, including a book entitled Silence and Sign Language in Medieval Monasticism: The Cluniac Tradition, c. 900-1200 (Cambridge, UK, 2007).
Readership
All those interested in the environmental history of premodern Europe, as well as medieval and early modern historians in general.
Table of contents
Acknowledgements
List of Figures and Tables
List of Contributors
Preface: Richard C. Hoffmann, an Appreciation Scott G. Bruce
Introduction: Hoffmann in the Historiography of Environmental history Richard W. Unger
Part One Premodern People and the Natural World
Trees, Nuts, and Woods at the End of the First Millennium: A Case from the Amalfi Coast Paolo Squatriti
The Great Famine: 1315-1322 Revisited William Chester Jordan
Rabbits Swimming across Borders: Micro-environmental Infrastructrres and Macro-environmental Change in Early Modern Holland Petra J.E.M. van Dam
The Art of Making the Earth Fruitful: Medieval and Early Modern Improvements of Soil Fertility Verena Winiwarter
Part Two Aquatic Ecosystems and Human Economies
The Seasonality of Fishing in Medieval Britain Maryanne Kowaleski
Reeling in the Eels at la Trinquetaille near Arles Constance H. Berman
Reaching for a 'Natural Authority': The Rhone in Eighteenth-Century Lyon Pierre Claude Reynard
Defining 'Natural' Fish Communities for Fishery Management Purposes: Biological, Historical, and Archaeological Approaches Wim Van Neer and Anton Ervynck
Appendix: Richard C. Hoffmann: Works Published 1971-2008 Compiled by Scott G. Bruce with the help of Ellen Hoffmann and Jean Levy
Index
List of Figures and Tables
List of Contributors
Preface: Richard C. Hoffmann, an Appreciation Scott G. Bruce
Introduction: Hoffmann in the Historiography of Environmental history Richard W. Unger
Part One Premodern People and the Natural World
Trees, Nuts, and Woods at the End of the First Millennium: A Case from the Amalfi Coast Paolo Squatriti
The Great Famine: 1315-1322 Revisited William Chester Jordan
Rabbits Swimming across Borders: Micro-environmental Infrastructrres and Macro-environmental Change in Early Modern Holland Petra J.E.M. van Dam
The Art of Making the Earth Fruitful: Medieval and Early Modern Improvements of Soil Fertility Verena Winiwarter
Part Two Aquatic Ecosystems and Human Economies
The Seasonality of Fishing in Medieval Britain Maryanne Kowaleski
Reeling in the Eels at la Trinquetaille near Arles Constance H. Berman
Reaching for a 'Natural Authority': The Rhone in Eighteenth-Century Lyon Pierre Claude Reynard
Defining 'Natural' Fish Communities for Fishery Management Purposes: Biological, Historical, and Archaeological Approaches Wim Van Neer and Anton Ervynck
Appendix: Richard C. Hoffmann: Works Published 1971-2008 Compiled by Scott G. Bruce with the help of Ellen Hoffmann and Jean Levy
Index
€206.00$292.00
Ole J. Benedictow
In this monograph, the alternative theories to the established bubonic-plague theory as to the microbiological identity of historical plague epidemics are intensively discussed in the light of the historical sources and the medical primary research and standard works.
No additional information