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Early modern Europe, 1450-1789 / Merry E. Wiesner-Hanks.

Yazar: Katkıda bulunan(lar):Seri kaydı: Cambridge history of Europe ; volume 2.Yayıncı: Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2013Baskı: Second editionTanım: xv, 546 pages : illustrations, maps ; 26 cmİçerik türü:
  • text
Ortam türü:
  • unmediated
Taşıyıcı türü:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9781107031067
  • 1107031060
  • 9781107643574
  • 1107643570
Konu(lar): DDC sınıflandırma:
  • 23
LOC sınıflandırması:
  • D203 .W54 2013
İçindekiler:
-- Table Of Contents: List of illustrations List of maps List of source boxes List of methods and analysis boxes Acknowledgments Introduction PART I 1 Europe in the world of 1450 2 Individuals in society, 1450-1600 3 Politics and power, 1450-1600 4 Cultural and intellectual life, 1450-1600 5 Religious reform and consolidation, 1450-1600 6 Economics and technology, 1450-1600 7 Europe in the world, 1450-1600 PART II 8 Individuals in society, 1600-1789 9 Politics and power, 1600-1789 10 Cultural and intellectual life, 1600-1789 11 Religious consolidation and renewal, 1600-1789 12 Economics and technology, 1600-1789 13 Europe in the world, 1600-1789 Index
Özet: "The title of this book, and perhaps also of the course for which you are reading it, is Early Modern Europe. The dates in the title inform you about the chronological span covered (1450-1789), but they do not explain the designation "early modern." That term was developed by historians seeking to refine an intellectual model first devised during this very period, when scholars divided European history into three parts: ancient (to the end of the Roman Empire in the west in the fifth century), medieval (from the fifth century to the fifteenth), and modern (from the fifteenth century to their own time). In this model, the break between the Middle Ages and the modern era was marked by the first voyage of Columbus (1492) and the beginning of the Protestant Reformation (1517), though some scholars, especially those who focused on Italy, set the break somewhat earlier with the Italian Renaissance. This three-part periodization became extremely influential, and as the modern era grew longer and longer, historians began to divide it into "early modern"--The Renaissance or Columbus to the French Revolution in 1789 - and what we might call "truly modern" - from the French Revolution to whenever they happened to be writing"--
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Kitap Kitap Mehmet Akif Ersoy Merkez Kütüphanesi Genel Koleksiyon Non-fiction D203 .W54 2013 (Rafa gözat(Aşağıda açılır)) Kullanılabilir 037122
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Includes index.

Originally published in 2006.

-- Table Of Contents: List of illustrations List of maps List of source boxes List of methods and analysis boxes Acknowledgments Introduction PART I 1 Europe in the world of 1450 2 Individuals in society, 1450-1600 3 Politics and power, 1450-1600 4 Cultural and intellectual life, 1450-1600 5 Religious reform and consolidation, 1450-1600 6 Economics and technology, 1450-1600 7 Europe in the world, 1450-1600 PART II 8 Individuals in society, 1600-1789 9 Politics and power, 1600-1789 10 Cultural and intellectual life, 1600-1789 11 Religious consolidation and renewal, 1600-1789 12 Economics and technology, 1600-1789 13 Europe in the world, 1600-1789 Index

"The title of this book, and perhaps also of the course for which you are reading it, is Early Modern Europe. The dates in the title inform you about the chronological span covered (1450-1789), but they do not explain the designation "early modern." That term was developed by historians seeking to refine an intellectual model first devised during this very period, when scholars divided European history into three parts: ancient (to the end of the Roman Empire in the west in the fifth century), medieval (from the fifth century to the fifteenth), and modern (from the fifteenth century to their own time). In this model, the break between the Middle Ages and the modern era was marked by the first voyage of Columbus (1492) and the beginning of the Protestant Reformation (1517), though some scholars, especially those who focused on Italy, set the break somewhat earlier with the Italian Renaissance. This three-part periodization became extremely influential, and as the modern era grew longer and longer, historians began to divide it into "early modern"--The Renaissance or Columbus to the French Revolution in 1789 - and what we might call "truly modern" - from the French Revolution to whenever they happened to be writing"--

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