With 20 plates.
While there have been many histories of geographical exploration, the history of geographical thought has still to be written. This volume is offered as a modest contribution to that study. It essays to follow the development of medieval earth-knowledge as it was affected, on the one hand, by the prevailing ideologies and, on the other, by the results of human enterprise. Much of the ground covered will be familiar to students, both of history and geography, for my aim has been to select representative men and writings to illustrate the theme rather than to catalogue all the available material, literary and cartographical. Further, few of the conclusions will strike the well-informed reader as novel, but I comfort myself with the knowledge, firstly, that they have not previously been made accessible within the compass of a single volume, and secondly, that the contribution of the Middle Ages to the advancement of geographical studies has still to be adequately appreciated.
Author(s): George H. T. Kimble
Edition: Reissue
Publisher: Russell & Russell
Year: 1968
Language: English
Pages: XXX+272
City: New York
I. THE PASSING OF CLASSICAL GEOGRAPHY 1
II. THE DARK AGES OF GEOGRAPHY 19
III. THE RISE AND FALL OF MOSLEM GEOGRAPHY 44
IV. THE RENAISSANCE OF GEOGRAPHICAL STUDIES IN CHRISTENDOM 69
V. EXPANDING HORIZONS — AFRICA 100
VI. EXPANDING HORIZONS — ASIA 120
VII. PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY IN THE MIDDLE AGES 148
VIII. MAPS IN THE MIDDLE AGES 181
IX. THE GEOGRAPHICAL BACKGROUND OF THE GREAT AGE OF DISCOVERY 205
X. THE BEGINNINGS OF GEOGRAPHICAL SCIENCE 221
APPENDIX: DANTE'S GEOGRAPHICAL KNOWLEDGE 241
SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY 245
INDEX 259