The Penguin Historical Atlas of the Medieval World

by Andrew Jotischky

Other authorsJohn Haywood (Editor), Simon Hall (Editor), Caroline Hull
Paperback, 2005

Status

Available

Call number

911.0902

Collection

Publication

Penguin Books (2005), Paperback, 144 pages

Description

The Penguin Historical Atlas of the Medieval World traces the development of peoples, cultures, and faiths between the coming of the barbarian invasions in the fourth century and the first voyages to the New World in the sixteenth. This colorful atlas illustrates the sweeping changes from the fall of the Roman Empire to the birth of Islam, the rise of Christianity, and the role of Judaism across Europe. Packed with vivid maps and photographs, this atlas is a perfect guide to Europe and its neighbors in the Middle Ages.

User reviews

LibraryThing member davidpwithun
It is what it the title says, of course, and it was everything I expected it to be. The maps and short paragraphs of historical information surrounding the maps are very interesting and detailed. If you have a great deal of interest in the Middle Ages, this book is very helpful for attaining a
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visual picture of the world you read about.
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LibraryThing member macha
this successor to Colin McEvedy's iconoclastic New Penguin Atlas of Medieval History is a disappointment. abandoning the chronological and wideangle-lensed viewpoint of the McEvedy in favour of a return to the conventional thematic organization has yielded a less brilliant and less comprehensive
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view of the period. it fails to capture not only the nature and extent of external and internal invasions of Europe during this period, but also changes in population, the Church, and especially trade. it concentrates greatly on the 1000-1300 period in history, giving only cursory attention to the remainder of this long era. it seems to sanitize the effect of both the religious schisms and the political objectives of the Catholic Church during the medieval period. it concentrates lopsidedly on English and French history. and it inexplicably ends with a section on the "first voyages to the New World" without ever mentioning the earlier Viking voyages. even on culture (which McEvedy basically ignores) this volume is oddly spotty, perhaps as a result of opting for the thematic closeup format rather than taking a chronological and comprehensive narrative line.
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Language

Physical description

144 p.; 7.12 inches

ISBN

0141014490 / 9780141014494

Local notes

study 7/5
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