List of Maps vii
Acknowledgements ix
Note on References x
Abbreviations xi
Introduction 1
Part One: ‘Frogs round a Pond’: Ideas of the Mediterranean 7
I A Geographical Expression 9
1. What is the Mediterranean?;2. The Challenge of the Continents;3. The Mediterranean Disintegrated; 4. Intimations of Unity
II a Historian’s Mediterranean 26
1. The Imaginary Sea; 2. Four Men in a Boat; 3. The End of the Mediterranean; 4. Mediterranean History; 5. Historical Ecology
Part Two: ‘Short Distances and Definite Places’: Mediterranean Microecologies 51
III Four Definite Places 53
1. The Biqa; 2. South Etruria; 3. The Green Mountain, Cyrenaica; 4. Melos; 5. ‘La trame du monde’; 6. Mountains and Pastures; 7. Theodoric and Dante
IV Ecology and the Larger Settlement 89
1. An Urban Tradition; 2. Definitions; 3. The Urban Variable; 4. Types and Theories; 5. Consumption; 6. Settlement Ecology; 7. Autarky; 8. Dispersed Hinterlands
V Connectivity 123
1. Lines of Sound and Lines of Sight; 2. Extended Archipelagos; 3. Shipping Lanes; 4. Economies Compared; 5. The Early Medieval Depression; 6. Connectivity Maintained?; 7. Conclusion Copyrighted Material
Part Three: Revolution and Catastrophe 173
VI Imperatives of Survival: Diversify, Store, Redistribute 175
1. The History of Mediterranean Food Systems; 2. The New Ecological Economic History; 3. Understanding the Marginal; 4. The Integrated Mediterranean Forest; 5. The Underestimated Mediterranean Wetland; 6. ‘These Places Feed Many Pickling-Fish .’; 7. Mediterranean Animal Husbandry; 8. Cereals and the Dry Margin; 9. The Case of the Tree-Crop; 10. The Mediterranean Garden; 11. The Smaller Mediterranean Island
VII Technology and Agrarian Change 231
1. Working the Soil; 2. The Irrigated Landscape; 3. On the Diversity of Cultivated Plants; 4. Abatement and Intensification; 5. Anatomy of the Mediterranean Countryman; 6. Colonizations and Allotments; 7. The Reception of Innovation
VIII Mediterranean Catastrophes 298
1. On the History of Catastrophe; 2. An Unstable World; 3. Alluvial Catastrophe and its Causes; 4. Sediments and History; 5. The History of Vegetation; 6. Environmental History without Catastrophe
IX Mobility of Goods and People 342
1. Inescapable Redistribution; 2. Animal, Vegetable and ; 3. The Problem of Mediterranean Textiles; 4. Problems with High Commerce; 5. The Ultimate Resource; 6. Organized Mobility; 7. Places of Redistribution
Part Four: The Geography of Religion 401
X ‘territories of Grace’ 403
1. Religion and the Physical Environment; 2. A Perilous Environment; 3. The Sacralized Economy; 4. The Religion of Mobility; 5. The Religion of Boundary and Belonging
Part Five: ‘Museums of Man’? The Uses of Social Anthropology 461
XI ‘mists of Time’: Anthropology and Continuity 463
1. Survivals Revisited; 2. Balanced Arcadias; 3. The Presence of the Past; 4. Upstreaming
XII ‘i also Have a Moustache’: Anthropology and
Mediterranean Unity 485
1. Grands faits méditerranéens?; 2. Mediterranean Values?; 3. Honour and Shame I; 4. Honour and Shame II; 5. Honour in the City; 6. Pattern and Depth; 7. Distinctiveness; 8. Origins; 9. History; 10. The Case for Mediterraneanism
Bibliographical Essays 530
Consolidated Bibliography 642
Index 737
Peregrine Horden is Wellcome Trust Research Lecturer in the History of Medicine, Royal Holloway, University of London. Nicholas Purcell is Fellow and Tutor in Ancient History, St John's College, Oxford. They began studying Mediterranean history when both were Fellows of All Souls College, Oxford.
"The Corrupting Sea is a book that all classicists should read."
Classical Review
"In their book The Corrupting Sea, Horden and Purcell have engaged
in one of the most relentless intellectual reassessments to have
been undertaken in recent times of the history of the
pre-industrial Mediterranean. One seldom emerges from a book as
rich as this, having had so many firmly-held notions shaken out of
one's mind and having glimpsed so many enthralling new vistas on a
once-familiar past." Professor Peter Brown, Princeton
University
"To bring together the economic and social history of so many
periods and places within the great story of the Mediterranean is a
remarkable achievement and Peregrine Horden and Nicholas Purcell
should be congratulated upon it." Professor Colin Renfrew, McDonald
Institute for Archaeological Research, University of Cambridge
"In recreating the Mediterranean for the new millennium, the
authors offer a substantial achievement that challenges many
long-held assumptions not only about the Mediterranean, but also
about human relations with the environment and even the very nature
of historical writing. It certainly deserves to provoke discussion
among scholars from fields as broad as its own grand scope." Times
Higher Education Supplement
"The Corrupting Sea is a book of magisterial synthesis and
scholarship - a huge multi-disciplinary literature turned into a
narrative that is at once comprehensive, enjoyable, quirky and
thought-provoking." Antiquity
"This book will be indispensable for the serious student of the
Mediterranean past and present." CHOICE
"This is an important book that presents a powerful and original
model of Mediterranean history that will be used, debated, and
criticized by historians of all periods for years to come." English
Historical Review
"Horden and Purcell's new Mediterranean panorama, which will take a
generation of historians to digest and implement, forms one of
those manifest watersheds in the study of antiquity." Journal of
Roman Archaeology
"This book amounts to an often fascinating, and unerringly useful,
compendium." International History Review
"Here a generation of ecological historians ... has led the way.
Horden and Purcell have synthesized that literature, extended its
reach into the Middle Ages, and made it accessible to the general
medievalist." Speculum
"This impressive work synthesizes a vast amount of historical,
geographical, archaelogical, and ethnographic knowledge about the
Mediterranean region." Historical Geography
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