Description
A pioneering study of how medieval Europeans used and changed their environment, integrating social, economic and environmental history approaches.
About the Author
Richard Hoffmann is Professor Emeritus and Senior Scholar at the Department of History, York University, Canada. As a pioneer in the environmental history of pre-industrial Europe, he is widely known for his contributions to medieval studies, environmental studies and historic fisheries.
Reviews
'Contains the wisdom, and embodies the experience, gained from a career spent presenting this most interdisciplinary of subjects to classes of humanities students shy of science and nervous of numbers. The result is an accessible, readable and thought-provoking book with which any historian, environmental or otherwise, ought to be able to engage.' Bruce M. S. Campbell, The English Historical Review
'... [Richard Hoffman] has provided a rich overview of medieval daily life and thought with regard to the natural environment. He does not only focus on the interaction between nature and humans, but also contextualizes his findings in a larger framework of economic and social history, and the histories of law and mentalities. The book will serve as a readable introduction for students and scholars of medieval history, as well as enable specialists in environmental history to build on his work ... an essential book and a work to use as a reference for all medievalists and environmental historians.' Christian Rohr, Speculum
Awards
Winner of Margaret Wade Labarge Prize, Canadian Society of Medievalists 2015.
Book Information
ISBN 9780521876964
Author Richard Hoffmann
Format Hardback
Page Count 428
Imprint Cambridge University Press
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Weight(grams) 670g
Dimensions(mm) 223mm * 142mm * 23mm