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E-grāmata: Collapse of the Eastern Mediterranean: Climate Change and the Decline of the East, 950-1072

4.11/5 (30 ratings by Goodreads)
(Hebrew University of Jerusalem)
  • Formāts: EPUB+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 02-Aug-2012
  • Izdevniecība: Cambridge University Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781139564618
  • Formāts - EPUB+DRM
  • Cena: 44,00 €*
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  • Formāts: EPUB+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 02-Aug-2012
  • Izdevniecība: Cambridge University Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781139564618

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"As a 'Medieval Warm Period' prevailed in Western Europe during the tenth and eleventh centuries, the eastern Mediterranean region, from the Nile to the Oxus, was suffering from a series of climatic disasters which led to the decline of some of the most important civilisations and cultural centres of the time. This provocative study argues that many well-documented but apparently disparate events - such as recurrent drought and famine in Egypt, mass migrations in the steppes of central Asia, and the decline in population in urban centres such as Baghdad and Constantinople - are connected and should be understood within the broad context of climate change. Drawing on a wealth of textual and archaeological evidence, Ronnie Ellenblum explores the impact of climatic and ecological change across the eastern Mediterranean in this period, to offer a new perspective on why this was a turning point in the history of the Islamic world"--

Recenzijas

'We have long been familiar with the famines that struck Egypt in the mid-1000s, but Ellenblum is the first to show how these are part of a broad regional pattern. This comprehensive and clearly argued book advances our understanding of the complex political, social, and economic processes of the late tenth and eleventh century in SW Asia and, more broadly, our capacity to link these processes to those underway in other parts of Eurasia.' Stephen Humphreys, University of California, Santa Barbara 'To climatologists who study the past by looking into geological and chemical evidence imprinted in silent natural archives, Ellenblum's work adds the missing element of contemporaneous human observation, experience, and response. His thorough synthesis of numerous documents that reported the occurrence of extreme climate events, weaved together across space and time with records of related conflict and civic system response, adds an invaluable resource for understanding how climate varied in the past and how it has affected humanity.' Yochanan Kushnir, Lamont Research Professor, Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory 'Ellenblum has mined sources from many languages, ancient and modern, especially those of chroniclers writing in Arabic, to construct a powerful story: from northeastern Africa through Central Asia severe droughts and extreme cold conditions in the tenth and eleventh centuries resulted in famines, migrations, anarchy, wars, the fall of states, and all manner of social, economic, and political dislocations. No study on 'collapse' and its consequences is as persuasive as this one.' Norman Yoffee, Professor Emeritus, University of Michigan 'Fluent, persuasive, iconoclastic and provocative ' History Today 'This book contains a gold mine of written descriptions for the time period that should be useful for scholars.' Journal of Historical Geography 'The study of environmental history in the early Middle Ages is still very much in its infancy; thus Ronnie Ellenblum's contribution, not least because it argues so lucidly for a real climatic impact in various areas of human activity, is to be welcomed wholeheartedly.' Mark Humphries, Early Medieval Europe

Papildus informācija

A provocative study of the devastating impact of climate change across the eastern Mediterranean in the tenth and eleventh centuries.
List of maps and figures
viii
List of tables
x
Acknowledgments xi
PART I THE COLLAPSE OF THE EASTERN MEDITERRANEAN
1(58)
1 Presenting the events
3(9)
A wave of nomalization and dislocation
4(1)
Collapse of bureaucracies
4(1)
The creation of nomadic statehoods
5(1)
The decline of urban culture
5(1)
Desertion of marginal agricultural provinces
6(1)
Decline of cultures
6(1)
Minorities and the Islamization of the Levant
7(5)
2 Deconstructing a `collapse'
12(29)
`Overshoot and collapse' theory versus `resilience' theory
12(7)
Historical analysis of a climatic disaster
19(4)
Spatial analysis of a climatic disaster: droughts in the Nile Valley
23(9)
Earlier cold spells in Iran and Mesopotamia
32(4)
Domino effects
36(5)
3 950--1027: an impending disaster
41(18)
Egypt: seven bad years (963--9)
41(5)
Consecutive failures of the Nile, 1004--9
46(3)
Cold spells in Baghdad, 398/1007, and in southern Italy, 398/1007--402/1012 and 1017
49(2)
Egypt in the mid 1020s
51(8)
PART II REGIONAL DOMINO EFFECTS IN THE EASTERN MEDITERRANEAN: 1027--60 AD
59(102)
4 The collapse of Iran
61(27)
The climatic crisis of 1024--71
61(3)
The collapse of Iran
64(12)
Nomads acquire political power
76(12)
5 The fall of Baghdad
88(35)
Political events and climatic disasters
90(6)
The civil war (1055--60)
96(10)
Nomadic statehood
106(2)
Cultural implications of the crisis
108(3)
Destruction of libraries and academies
111(3)
The 1060s: the recovery of Baghdad
114(6)
The introduction of the madrasa (law college)
120(3)
6 A crumbling empire: the Pechenegs and the decimation of Byzantium
123(24)
The end of Byzantine dominion in southern Italy
134(3)
The great schism of 1054
137(4)
Renewed attacks by nomads
141(6)
7 Egypt and its provinces, 1050s--1070s
147(14)
The `great calamity'
151(4)
The invasion of North Africa by the Banu Hilal and Banu Sulaym
155(3)
Nomadization in Palestine and North Africa
158(3)
PART III CITIES AND MINORITIES
161(100)
8 Jerusalem and the decline of Classical cities
163(33)
The decline of Classical urbanism in the eastern Mediterranean: The Pirenne Thesis
164(4)
`From Polis to Madina' and beyond
168(4)
Jerusalem during the eleventh century
172(1)
Periods of dearth
173(3)
Delineating new walls
176(6)
The Tyropoeon Valley and the gates of the Temple Mount
182(4)
Droughts and hunger during the second half of the eleventh century
186(10)
9 Water supply, declining cities and deserted villages
196(32)
Aqueducts and cities
196(12)
Springs, provincial cities and hinterlands: the case of Jerusalem
208(16)
Cities in the western and eastern Mediterranean: an attempt at a summary
224(4)
10 Food crises and accelerated Islamization
228(21)
Outbound emigrations
235(3)
Inbound immigration
238(2)
Forced conversion and desecration of sacred places
240(9)
11 Reflections
249(12)
Climatic crises and the longue duree
249(2)
The regional and the global
251(5)
The fate of Classical heritage
256(2)
East and West
258(3)
Index 261
Ronnie Ellenblum is an Associate Professor at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and a life member of Clare Hall, University of Cambridge. He is the author of the prize-winning Crusader Castles and Modern Histories (Cambridge, 2007). His first book, Frankish Rural Settlement in the Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem (Cambridge, 1998), has become a standard work for the study of Crusader Geographies.