The Mediterranean in the Ancient World
By (Author) Fernand Braudel
Translated by Sin Reynolds
Penguin Books Ltd
Penguin Books Ltd
25th April 2002
25th April 2002
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Ancient history
936
Paperback
432
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 19mm
298g
Braudel's rich, sweeping history draws on his storytelling skills and lifelong love of the Mediterranean to bring its "long and dazzling past" vividly to life - from prehistory to the fall of the Roman Empire. His "fabulous journey" takes us back to the very first settlers as they developed basic skills, to farmers in ancient Mesopotamia and slaves in Egypt, Phoenician mariners and merchants, the religious sacrifices of Carthage and the mysteries of the Etruscans, as well as the power of Greece and Rome. This is the story of the ancient Mediterranean told not as a series of "great events", but as a continuous whole, where past and present are woven into a single fabric. Braudel shows how its history has been shaped not just by war and conquest, but by the physical realities of live, and the ebb and flow of the Mediterranean itself, over countless generations.
Fernand Braudel was France's foremost post-war historian. He is best known for The Mediterranean in the Age of Philip II, Civilization and Capitalism and The Identity of France. This will be Braudel's final major posthumous publication. Sian Reynolds has translated all the great Braudel books published in English. She is recognised as one of the leading translators of French on either side of the Atlantic.