Europe and the Sea
By (Author) Dorlis Blume
Edited by Christiana Brennecke
Edited by Ursula Breymayer
Edited by Thomas Eisentraut
Hirmer Verlag
Hirmer Verlag
31st October 2018
Germany
General
Non Fiction
History
387.509409
Hardback
448
Width 210mm, Height 280mm
1850g
The history and culture of Europe has been decisively shaped by the exploration and use of the seas surrounding Europe. This catalogue book reflects the significance of the sea as a space of rule and trade for Europeans, as bridge and border, as resource and a site of desire. The book also reviews the changing perception of the sea in the arts.
Europe is a maritime continent: measured by the length of its coasts and its total size, none of the five continental masses on the planet has more points of cont act with the seas than Europe. The importance of the sea for the development of European civilisation is illustrated by the themes of myths, shipbuilding and seafaring, rule of the seas, European coastal trade, expansion, the slave trade, migration, the ma ritime global economy, resources, oceanography, tourism, and the artistic perception of the sea. Thirteen themes, each linked to a port city, range from Antiquity to the present day and demonstrate that the domination of the seas was a central component of European power politics for centuries.
Dorlis Blume is a curator at the Deutsches Historisches Museum. Christiana Brennecke is a public relations associate at the Badisches Landesmuseum Karlsruhe. Ursula Breymayer is a German curator. Thomas Eisentraut works as a translator, historian, and exhibition curator.