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Paperback Memory and the Mediterranean Book

ISBN: 0375703993

ISBN13: 9780375703997

Memory and the Mediterranean

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Book Overview

A grand sweep of history by the late Fernand Braudel-one of the twentieth century's most influential historians- Memory and the Mediterranean chronicles the Mediterranean's immeasurably rich past during the foundational period from prehistory to classical antiquity, illuminating nothing less than the bedrock of our civilization and the very origins of Western culture. Essential for historians, yet written explicitly for the general reader, this magnificent...

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Good overview of ancient technology, economics, and politics

_Memory and the Mediterranean_ is a previously unpublished book by French historian Fernand Braudel, one written in the 1960s and originally intended to be part of a larger series. Set aside with the death of the author's longtime friend and editor, Albert Skira and the collapse of the project, the book was only published for the first time in 1998, well after the author's death in 1985. In the book's introduction, written by Oswyn Murray, we learn something of the history of the book and the series it was supposed to be a part of, as well as the life of Braudel himself. Braudel was an interesting man; he invented microfilm, copying thousands of historical texts for study prior to accepting a position at a Brazilian university, and his most famous work, _The Mediterranean and the Mediterranean World in the Age of Philip II_, he wrote during four years of captivity in a POW camp in France, aided by a few books, but "using mainly his prodigious memory of his prewar researches," writing the great treatise out by hand in exercise books on a small plank in a room shared with twenty other prisoners. As there have been some advances in archaeology as well as changes in historical thinking, endnotes accompanied the text, with experts Jean Guilaine covering prehistory and Pierre Rouillard on history. I was surprised how few endnotes there were, as substantially much of what Braudel written is still current. Many of the notes referred to different dates for events and in particular artifacts - not surprising, as Braudel himself noted in the text how advances were continually being made in scientific dating methods - and in a few other areas, notably thoughts on prehistoric megalithic culture in the Mediterranean and on the crisis of the twelfth century B.C (both of which he seemed to have largely gotten wrong, not that either formed a very large part of the book's content). Overall I found the book quite broad in scope, dealing mainly with regions, empires, movements, and the "longue duree," which is often translated as "the long perspective." Except for the last chapters on Greece and Rome, named individuals are rarely discussed. Much of the book dealt with the rise and fall of empires, the advancement and consequences of the mastery of new technologies such as pottery and weaving, as well as the continuing evolution of others, such as metalworking (tracing the advent of bronze, then iron), language (the development of an alphabet was to have profound consequences) and seafaring (his sections on the continuing evolution of ship technology were interesting and well-illustrated with contemporary art), and the development of trade and long-distance exchange in the Mediterranean as a whole and separately in the eastern and western portions. While it was good to have such a broad perspective that transcended local dynasties and city-states, sometimes it made for somewhat dry reading. The book was epic in scope, covering the Mediterranean from prehist

Blend of geographic, commercial, and "traditional" histories

As a cofounder of the Annales school of history (which included such scholars as Marc Bloch, Georges Duby, and Emmanuel Le Roy Ladurie), Braudel helped to define and popularize economic and social history, often relegating political events and intellectual developments--"the actions of a few princes and rich men [who] were more acted upon than actors"--to lesser status in the march of history. So this posthumously published survey of Mediterranean history is something of a surprise. While its pages contain expected, brilliant analyses of the geographic factors, commercial considerations, and technological advances that eventually created a politically cohesive if culturally splintered Mediterranean civilization, its final chapters allot noticeable space to the importance of statesmen, philosophers, and artists.Braudel's broad coverage is understandable, given the original design and purpose of the book. Written in the late 1960s, the manuscript was meant as a general survey, the first volume in a cancelled series of illustrated books on the history of the Mediterranean. What's remarkable is how well the book has stood up over time. (A small number of notes correct suppositions since proved inaccurate or incomplete.) What's missing, however, is an appropriate selection of illustrations--and the text was clearly meant to accompany them. Although this edition includes 32 (quite striking) full-color pages of photographs, they are not keyed to the text and many have only tangential connections. "Memory and the Mediterranean" begins with the archaeological discoveries that inform what we know about the Paleolithic era and the Neolithic civilizations (such as Catal Hoyuk) in the Fertile Cresent. Subsequent chapters discuss Mesopotamia, Egypt, and Crete, before turning to the relatively "dark ages" of the twelfth through eighth centuries B.C. By incorporating North African and Asian influences, Braudel deliberately moves the center of Mediterranean culture from Europe to where it belongs: in the center of the Mediterranean. Before tackling the Greek "miracle" and the Roman empire, Braudel examines the Phoenicians, the Etruscans, and Greek colonization in what is unquestionably the best argued, most informative chapter of the book. He ably shows how historical trends--geography, natural disasters, migrations, commerce, maritime advances, science and technology, writing--led to the dominance enjoyed by the Romans in the coastal lands surrounding the Mediterranean Sea. Yet this dominance was neither inevitable or preordained. While "the destiny of Rome is devastatingly simple. . . , people, events and details complicated the story." Braudel balances his own brand of geographic determinism with an acknowledgment of the muscle of Roman imperialism: "the very fact that the Mediterranean, while in thrall to Rome, was still a living entity with a healthy pulse of its own, meant that all its cultural goods continued to circulate, mingling ideas and beliefs, and

Excellent history writing

Other reviewers have addressed the subject matter, I'd add that his approach might have as much to do with how enjoyable this book is as the material he covers. This book (and I'm assuming, his others) isn't just a recounting of the lives of major figures, retellings of major battles, etc - i.e. history as he tells it isn't just a trivial-pursuit collection of dramatic events.Instead, he is careful to put historical change in the context of how it actually happens - usually gradual developments over long periods of time, the slow social transformations that take place, with context always playing a large role. Braudel does a good job conveying this, and it makes the truly dramatic events that much more significant.I also had the feeling that he was being very honest with the reader, pointing out the places where there is contention among historians or archaeologists, and not wasting our time with differing viewpoints when when there's general agreement.

History Gliding Over the Sea

Memory and the Mediterranean is a wonderful read. The author, Fernand Braudel (as translated by Sian Reynolds from a text edited by Roselyne de Ayala and Paule Braudel), uses all the skills that have made him renowned as one of the more important historians of the twentienth century in this venture. This book was the first volume of a planned series about the history of the Mediterranean by different authors with this volume being the first. The series never happened and this book was, therefore, never published during the author's lifetime. It is to our benefit that it is now being published posthumously. The history begins prior to Neolothic and takes the reader through to the Roman Empire. There is wonderful writing, many moments of humour and the strongly held opinions of a historian who has earned his stubbornness. Some of the earlier ideas have been challenged or, even, defeated by later archeology but these are explained in the end notes as not to disrupt the wonderful flow of the narrative. The chapter on the Greeks, particularly the pre- and early classical period, is the most interesting. A book of this type covers too large a time period for any significant analysis but this book is effective as a journey, through both history and history writing.

Updated to reflect recent discoveries

This general history of the Mediterranean traces Mediterranean area history from its earliest geological roots to the civilizations which flourished later. Memory And The Mediterranean originally was written in the late 1960s but has been set aside until now, updated to reflect recent archaeological discoveries in the region.
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