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Before Columbus: Exploration and Colonization from the Mediterranean to the Atlantic, 1229-1492 (Middle Ages) (Paperback)
$24.95 - Free shipping worldwide (to United States and
all these other countries) Usually dispatched within 48 hours | |Short Description for Before Columbus"A welcome addition to the growing literature dedicated to 'Atlantic Studies.'... Recommended for the professional scholar, the university student, and the educated public."-History
Full description- Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press
- Published: 01 September 1992
- Format: Paperback 294 pages
- See: Full bibliographic data
- Categories: Geographical Discovery & Exploration | General & World History
- ISBN 13: 9780812214123 ISBN 10: 0812214129
- Sales rank: 963,534
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Full description for Before Columbus
Demonstrating that Columbus's voyage was a new step in a centuries-old process of European expansion, Fernandez-Armesto provides a stimulating account of the broadening of Europe's physical and mental horizons in the Middle Ages. He shows how the techniques and institutions of medieval colonial expansion that were applied to the New World made long-term conquest and settlement possible. A brief introduction analyzes the problems that face students and historians. Then, concentrating on medieval Spanish colonial development, but carefully linking that development to the wider European process of expansion, the author surveys the great areas of expansion in the Western Mediterranean: the island conquests of the House of Barcelona; the "first Atlantic Empire" in Andalusia, its environs, Valencia, and Murcia; the Genoese Mediterranean; and the North African coast. In the last four chapters, Fernandez-Armesto sketches the course and characteristics of early European expansion of the Atlantic before Columbus and highlights the impact of geography and anthropology on the discovery of "the Atlantic space." The emphasis throughout is on tracing the elements of continuity and discontinuity between Mediterranean and Atlantic worlds and studying how colonial societies originate and behave.

