Richard W. Unger
Author of Beer in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance
About the Author
Richard W. Unger is Professor of History at the University of British Columbia.
Image credit: Richard W. Unger [credit: Richard Unger; grabbed from Wikipedia]
Series
Works by Richard W. Unger
Cartography in Antiquity and the Middle Ages: Fresh Perspectives, New Methods (Technology and Change in History) (2008) — Editor — 13 copies
Ships on Maps: Pictures of Power in Renaissance Europe (Early Modern History: Society and Culture) (2010) 9 copies, 1 review
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- Unger, Richard W.
- Legal name
- Unger, Richard Watson
- Other names
- UNGER, Richard Watson
UNGER, Richard W.
UNGER, R. W. - Birthdate
- 1942-12-23
- Gender
- male
- Education
- Yale University
University of Chicago
Haverford College - Occupations
- historian
- Organizations
- University of British Columbia
Medieval Academy of America
Canadian Association for the Advancement of Netherlandic Studies
Canadian Nautical Research Society
Medieval Association of the Pacific
Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (show all 7)
Society for the History of Technology - Awards and honors
- Guggenheim Fellowship (1985-1986)
Killam Research Prize (1993) - Nationality
- Canada
USA - Birthplace
- Huntington, West Virginia, USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- West Virginia, USA
Members
Reviews
Description.
Ships on maps in the sixteenth century were signs of European conquest of the seas. Cartographers commemorated the new found dominion over the oceans by putting the most technically advanced ships of the day all over oceans, estuaries, rivers, and lakes on all kinds of maps. Ships virtually never appeared on maps before 1375. The dramatic change from medieval practice had roots in practical problems but also in exploration and new geographical knowledge. Map makers produced show more beautiful works of art and decorated them with the accomplishments which set Europeans apart from their classical past and from all the other peoples of the world. Ships on Maps investigates how, long admired but little understood, the many ships big and small that came to decorate maps in the age when sailors began to sail around the world were an integral part of the information summarizing a new age.
Contens.
List of illustrations
Preface
Acknowledgements
Abbreviations
Glossary of Shipbuilding Terms
Introduction Maps and Mapping
Making Maps without Ships, with Ships
Mapping before the Renaissance
Portolans and the Late Medieval Transition
The Classical Revival, Printing and Maps
New Routes and Portuguese Map Makers
Iberian Influence in Southern Europe
Northern Europe and Southern Practices
Ships, Geography, and Humanism
Epilogue
Bibliography
Notes
Index
List of illustrations
Preface
Acknowledgements
Abbreviations
Glossary of Shipbuilding Terms
Introduction Maps and Mapping
Making Maps without Ships, with Ships
Mapping before the Renaissance
Portolans and the Late Medieval Transition
The Classical Revival, Printing and Maps
New Routes and Portuguese Map Makers
Iberian Influence in Southern Europe
Northern Europe and Southern Practices
Ships, Geography, and Humanism
Epilogue
Bibliography
Notes
Index
RICHARD W. UNGER trained as an economic historian and has published widely on ships and shipping before 1800, brewing from the Middle Ages to the twentieth century and on energy use and its impact in pre-modern Europe. He has taught history at the University of British Columbia for more than four decades. show less
Ships on maps in the sixteenth century were signs of European conquest of the seas. Cartographers commemorated the new found dominion over the oceans by putting the most technically advanced ships of the day all over oceans, estuaries, rivers, and lakes on all kinds of maps. Ships virtually never appeared on maps before 1375. The dramatic change from medieval practice had roots in practical problems but also in exploration and new geographical knowledge. Map makers produced show more beautiful works of art and decorated them with the accomplishments which set Europeans apart from their classical past and from all the other peoples of the world. Ships on Maps investigates how, long admired but little understood, the many ships big and small that came to decorate maps in the age when sailors began to sail around the world were an integral part of the information summarizing a new age.
Contens.
List of illustrations
Preface
Acknowledgements
Abbreviations
Glossary of Shipbuilding Terms
Introduction Maps and Mapping
Making Maps without Ships, with Ships
Mapping before the Renaissance
Portolans and the Late Medieval Transition
The Classical Revival, Printing and Maps
New Routes and Portuguese Map Makers
Iberian Influence in Southern Europe
Northern Europe and Southern Practices
Ships, Geography, and Humanism
Epilogue
Bibliography
Notes
Index
List of illustrations
Preface
Acknowledgements
Abbreviations
Glossary of Shipbuilding Terms
Introduction Maps and Mapping
Making Maps without Ships, with Ships
Mapping before the Renaissance
Portolans and the Late Medieval Transition
The Classical Revival, Printing and Maps
New Routes and Portuguese Map Makers
Iberian Influence in Southern Europe
Northern Europe and Southern Practices
Ships, Geography, and Humanism
Epilogue
Bibliography
Notes
Index
RICHARD W. UNGER trained as an economic historian and has published widely on ships and shipping before 1800, brewing from the Middle Ages to the twentieth century and on energy use and its impact in pre-modern Europe. He has taught history at the University of British Columbia for more than four decades. show less
Jul 5, 2012 (Edited)Dutch
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