Details
The publication combines studies from humanities and natural sciences. Thus, historians, archaeologists, and pharmacists have investigated the way of transfer by means of material and immaterial goods, such as ship lists, medicine, metal ware, exotic animals and Asian objects as well as ship constructions. They set out, the continuity and discontinuity of cultural exchange based on moving objects depending on different conditions such as region, time, demand and availability.
The innovative contributions of the publication aim to improve the understanding of cultural exchange by sea, as well as its reflection on land in the Early Modern Time and are the results of a workshop, which took place in the German Maritime Museum Bremerhaven, a Research Institute of the Leibniz Association, in 2015. The results show good promise for forthcoming investigations at the interface between History and Maritime Archaeology.
The book targets graduate and post-graduate interdisciplinary researchers of archaeological, human, and natural sciences as well as everybody interested in both post-medieval and maritime history.
Table of Contents
Reviews & Quotes
"All these papers are interesting and instructive in themselves. But they go beyond that. As a collection they demonstrate that ships are always parts of wider systems and, since these systems are highly mobile, the networks they establish, and the influences, connections, and cultural interactions they generate, can be enormously complex and far-flung."
Colin Martin
International Journal of Nautical Archaeology
(09/09/2019)