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This book explores how geographical ideas, traditions and knowledge were shaped, circulated and received in Europe during the Middle Ages.
List of contents
Introduction Keith D. Lilley; Part I. Geographical Traditions: 1. Chorography reconsidered: an alternative approach to the Ptolemaic definition Jesse Simon; 2. Geography and memory in Isidore's Etymologies Andy Merrills; 3. The uses of classical history and geography in medieval St Gall Natalia Lozovsky; 4. The cosmographical imagination of Roger Bacon Amanda Power; 5. Reflections in the Ebstorf map: cartography, theology and dilectio speculationis Marcia Kupfer; 6. 'After poyetes and astronomyers': English geographical thought and early English print Meg Roland; 7. Displacing Ptolemy? The textual geographies of Ramusio's Navigazioni e Viaggi Margaret Small; Part II. Geographical Imaginations: 8. Gaul undivided: cartography, geography, and identity in France at the time of the Hundred Years War Camille Serchuk; 9. Passion and conflict: medieval Islamic views of the West Karen C. Pinto; 10. Hereford maps, Hereford lives: biography and cartography in an English cathedral city Daniel Birkholz; 11. Shifting geographies of anti-semitism: mapping Jew and Christian in Thomas of Monmouth's Life and Miracles of St William of Norwich Kathy Lavezzo; 12. Gardens of Eden and ladders to Heaven: holy mountain geographies in Byzantium Veronica Della Dora; 13. Journeying to the world's end? Imagining the Anglo-Irish frontier in Ramon de Perellós's Pilgrimage to St Patrick's Purgatory Sara V. Torres.
About the author
Keith Lilley is Reader in Historical Geography at Queen's University Belfast. His research focuses on spaces, places and landscapes of the European Middle Ages. He has published essays and articles across different disciplines, and is the author of two other books, Urban Life in the Middle Ages (2002) and City and Cosmos: The Medieval World in Urban Form (2009). He is a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society and has directed numerous funded research projects in the field of digital humanities, including a project on the UNESCO-recognised fourteenth-century map of Great Britain known as the Gough Map. In this and other projects he has developed the use of spatial technologies to further understand the medieval past. For more than twenty years he has taught geography at undergraduate and postgraduate levels at a number of UK universities, including the University of London, the University of Birmingham and the University of Cambridge. At Queen's University Belfast he is director of a postgraduate programme on 'Heritage Science'. Through his work he has addressed conferences and delivered seminars across Europe and in North America, Japan and Australia.