When Janet Abu-Lughod sketched the contours of a medieval "world system" in 1989, she located most communication networks in the southern hemisphere. In recent decades, however, new trends in research and new forms of evidence have complicated, enriched, and expanded this picture, geographically and chronologically. We now know that vast portions of the world were interconnected throughout the Middle Ages and, moreover, that the entire circumpolar North was a contact zone in its own right. In this volume, scholars from a range of disciplines explore the boreal globe from the late Iron Age to the seventeenth century, offering fresh perspectives that cross the frontiers of national historiographies and presenting new research on migration, trade, mapping, cultural exchange, and the interactions of humans with their environment.
Author(s): Carol Symes
Series: The Medieval Globe Books, 7
Publisher: Arc Humanities Press
Year: 2022
Language: English
Pages: 183
City: Amsterdam
COVER
CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION: EXPLORING THE GLOBAL NORTH, FROM THE IRON AGE TO THE AGE OF SAIL
CONTESTING MARGINALITY: THE BOREAL FOREST OF MIDDLE SCANDINAVIA AND THE WORLDS OUTSIDE
ARCHAEOLOGICAL EVIDENCE FOR STARAYA LAGODA AS AN EARLY SCANDINAVIAN EMPORIUM OF THE GLOBAL NORTH
GUNHILD’S CROSS AND THENORTH ATLANTIC TRADE SPHERE
THE FAR NORTH IN THE EYES OF ADAM OF BREMEN AND THE ANONYMOUS AUTHOR OF THE HISTORIA NORWEGIE
THE MULTI-LAYERED SPATIALITY OF THE GLOBAL NORTH: SPATIAL REFERENCES AND SPATIAL CONSTRUCTIONS IN MEDIEVAL EAST NORSE LITERATURE
MILITARY MIGRATION IN THEBALTIC SEA REGION, CA. 1400–1620
OLD AND NEW LAND IN THE NORTH AND WEST: THE NORTH ATLANTIC ON THE MEDIEVAL GLOBE AROUND 1500