Until recently, most historians shared a prejudice in favour of the history of land, territory and their human inhabitants. Yet two-thirds of the world’s surface is water and much of human history has been conducted on its shores, around its seas and across its oceans. This article proposes reimagining the history of the world through its oceans and seas and examines the multiple genealogies of oceanic history, Mediterranean, Pacific and Atlantic among them. It argues that these models do not exhaust the potential for an oceanic history of the world. It takes the example of the Atlantic and its history to show how models from other oceanic arenas can help us to open up new histories, of regions within larger oceans, of the transnational con...
The article opens with a brief look at evidence that in classical antiquity and the Middle Ages the ...
The world’s oceans hold their secrets close, including clues about how people lived tens of thousand...
The vast majority of maritime historians focus on bodies of water defined by their continental margi...
ABSTRACTIn her Inaugural Lecture, Alison Bashford, Vere Harmsworth Professor of Imperial and Naval H...
This volume brings together historians, anthropologists and literary critics in a common project foc...
Review of the book "Oceanic Histories", David Armitage, Alison Bashford Sujit Sivasundaram (eds.) A...
Following Fernand Braudel’s Méditerranée, historians interpreted the Mediterranean, Baltic, Atlantic...
In examining the significance of mobility in the long sweep of human history in the Pacific, the wor...
Too often the basic framework upon which historians hang the facts of architecture's past is constru...
Historical research is playing an increasingly important role in marine sciences. Historical data ar...
My analysis rests on the hypothesis that these dispossessed collectives articulated their identities...
This article pivots around the work of early modern legal scholar Hugo Grotius to consider the polit...
The argument focuses on the differences in methods of historiographies as put forth by David Abulafi...
Firmly cemented in history as a connector of people, a facilitator for trade and transport routes an...
Historical research is playing an increasingly important role in marine sciences. Historical data ar...
The article opens with a brief look at evidence that in classical antiquity and the Middle Ages the ...
The world’s oceans hold their secrets close, including clues about how people lived tens of thousand...
The vast majority of maritime historians focus on bodies of water defined by their continental margi...
ABSTRACTIn her Inaugural Lecture, Alison Bashford, Vere Harmsworth Professor of Imperial and Naval H...
This volume brings together historians, anthropologists and literary critics in a common project foc...
Review of the book "Oceanic Histories", David Armitage, Alison Bashford Sujit Sivasundaram (eds.) A...
Following Fernand Braudel’s Méditerranée, historians interpreted the Mediterranean, Baltic, Atlantic...
In examining the significance of mobility in the long sweep of human history in the Pacific, the wor...
Too often the basic framework upon which historians hang the facts of architecture's past is constru...
Historical research is playing an increasingly important role in marine sciences. Historical data ar...
My analysis rests on the hypothesis that these dispossessed collectives articulated their identities...
This article pivots around the work of early modern legal scholar Hugo Grotius to consider the polit...
The argument focuses on the differences in methods of historiographies as put forth by David Abulafi...
Firmly cemented in history as a connector of people, a facilitator for trade and transport routes an...
Historical research is playing an increasingly important role in marine sciences. Historical data ar...
The article opens with a brief look at evidence that in classical antiquity and the Middle Ages the ...
The world’s oceans hold their secrets close, including clues about how people lived tens of thousand...
The vast majority of maritime historians focus on bodies of water defined by their continental margi...