Editorial Blackwell
Fecha de edición enero 2002
Idioma inglés
EAN 9780631207047
392 páginas
Libro
encuadernado en tapa blanda
This engaging narrative history introduces readers to the central features and main developments of sixteenth-century Europe. The author's account of the major events of the age - political and religious conflicts, statebuilding, and exploration - creates a vivid sense of how it would have been to live in this tumultuous century. Events are seen within the context of the cultural, physical and intellectual environment at the time, and considered from the point of view of both Europe's elites and the broader spectrum of peoples.
In tracing them, the author also provides an up-to-date synthesis of recent scholarly research written from many different approaches, and covering the whole European continent. The book is written specifically for students coming to the study of this topic for the first time and assumes no prior knowledge of the period covered. It is particularly suitable for use on survey courses, since the fifteen chapters are designed to correspond to a fifteen-week semester course.
Andrew Pettegree (Reino Unido, 1957) es catedrático de Historia Moderna en la Universidad de St Andrews. Coautor de Bibliotecas: una historia frágil (Capitán Swing, 2024) y autor de las premiadas obras The Book in the Renaissance y The Invention of News . Pettegree ha contribuido profundamente a la historiografía de la comunicación y el libro; además, fue vicepresidente de la Royal Historical Society y es el fundador del Universal Short Title Catalogue .
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