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Early Modern Europe

2018
The most intensive research in historical climatology has concentrated on Europe in the early modern period (c.1500–1800), and established many of the methods and procedures that have become standard in this discipline. This chapter reviews the source material, methodology, and results of climate reconstructions from the archives of societies for each ...
Christian Pfister   +4 more
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Grain Storage in Early Modern Europe

The Journal of Economic History, 1999
Scholars have long held strong views about the nature and extent of grain storage in early modern Europe. Direct evidence on the issue is quite poor and inconclusive.1 Randall Nielsen's ambitious attempt at solving the problem in a recent issue of this JOURNAL therefore deserves serious attention.2 Like others before him, Nielsen uses inferences from ...
M, Ejrnaes, K G, Persson
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Trading Zones in Early Modern Europe

Isis, 2015
This essay adopts the concept of trading zones first developed for the history of science by Peter Galison and redefines it for the early modern period. The term "trading zones" is used to mean arenas in which substantive and reciprocal communication occurred between individuals who were artisanally trained and learned (university-trained) individuals.
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“Moving textuality” in early modern Europe

2022
This chapter relies on some of the methodological tools that have emerged in the debate on “mobility and humanities” to reassess the meaning of mobility in the pre-modern world in the field of textuality. By focusing on the mobility of library catalogs in early modern Europe, this chapter first discusses the tension between the thickness of mobility ...
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Apprenticeship in Early Modern Europe

Social History, 2021
Early modern apprenticeships have not loomed large in accounts of the period’s economic growth. A Darntonesque image of the institutions as brutal and exploitative, coupled with a narrative that th...
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Early Modern Europe

Abstract This chapter explores subversion’s role in the rivalry between Elizabeth I of England and Philip II of Spain. It sets the scene by briefly describing the rise of the House of Habsburg and efforts by other European states, particularly France, to prevent Habsburg hegemony. In this mix, the arrival of the Protestant Elizabeth I on
Jill Kastner, William C. Wohlforth
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