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1
Online Resource
Online Resource
Cambridge [u.a.] : Cambridge Univ. Press ; 1.1958 -
UID:
gbv_265785464
Format: Online-Ressource
ISSN: 1469-5103
Note: Gesehen am 15.04.24 , Erscheint fünfmal jährlich, bis 2019 vierteljährlich
Additional Edition: ISSN 0018-246X
Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe The historical journal Cambridge [u.a.] : Cambridge Univ. Press, 1958 ISSN 0018-246X
Former: Vorg Cambridge historical journal
Language: English
Keywords: Historische Geografie ; Zeitschrift ; Online-Ressource ; Weltgeschichte ; Zeitschrift ; Online-Ressource ; Zeitschrift
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Associated Volumes
  • 2
    UID:
    gbv_1872145957
    ISSN: 1469-5103
    Content: This article explores the impulse behind the outpouring of extraordinarily ornate maps representing the inhabitants of Brazil that emanated from Normandy in the mid-sixteenth century. It aims to understand the reasons behind the iconography of Brazil, a region of particular commercial interest for the French. Whereas maps produced elsewhere in this period emphasize the presence of fierce cannibals in Brazil, Norman examples highlight peaceful relations, particularly the dyewood trade. By analysing the maps in comparison with extant maps from other centres of production (particularly Portugal and the German lands), travel accounts, and wider visual culture, this article explores their relationship to possible sources and considers the extent to which their iconography had a basis in experience. By investigating the use of these maps as gifts to French kings, it suggests that the mapmakers’ selective use of trading imagery also played a persuasive role in the Norman maritime world's disputes with the Portuguese crown over the extent of Portugal's Atlantic empire.
    Note: Gesehen am 06.12.2023 , Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 May 2012
    In: The historical journal, Cambridge [u.a.] : Cambridge Univ. Press, 1958, 55(2012), 2, Seite 317-348, 1469-5103
    In: volume:55
    In: year:2012
    In: number:2
    In: pages:317-348
    Language: English
    URL: Volltext  (lizenzpflichtig)
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  • 3
    UID:
    gbv_1872146422
    ISSN: 1469-5103
    Content: This history of Russian place naming in the Pacific Islands from 1804 to 1830 systematically juxtaposes, correlates, and compares toponyms inscribed in varied genres of Russian texts: map, atlas, journal, narrative, and hydrographic treatise. Its empirical core comprises place names bestowed or recorded by naval officers and naturalists in eastern and northern Pacific archipelagoes during expeditions led by the Baltic German circumnavigators Krusenstern (1803–6), Kotzebue (1815–18), Bellingshausen (1819–21), and Lütke (1826–9). We address the interplay of personality, precedent, circumstance, and embodied encounters in motivating voyagers’ toponymic choices and their material expressions. We consider diverse textual movements from located experience, to specific inscription, to synthesis. Russian toponyms constituted part of the vast stock of historical raw material from which Krusenstern later created the authoritative pioneer Atlas de l'Océan pacifique (1824–7). This toponymic focus is scaffolding for a dual ethnohistorical inquiry: into the implications for Russian toponymy of Indigenous agency during situated encounters with people and places; and into the relative significance of loca'l knowledge conveyed to Russian voyagers by Indigenous interlocutors, and its presence or absence in particular sets of toponyms or different genres of text.
    Note: Gesehen am 06.12.2023 , Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 March 2019
    In: The historical journal, Cambridge [u.a.] : Cambridge Univ. Press, 1958, 62(2019), 3, Seite 709-740, 1469-5103
    In: volume:62
    In: year:2019
    In: number:3
    In: pages:709-740
    Language: English
    URL: Volltext  (lizenzpflichtig)
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  • 4
    UID:
    gbv_187214764X
    ISSN: 1469-5103
    Content: This article uses the British colonial history of border making in northern India to examine the assumptions and contradictions at work in the theorizing, configuring, and mapping of frontiers and borders. It focuses, in particular, on the development of the ‘water-parting principle’ – wherein the edge of a watershed is considered to be the border – and how this principle was used to determine boundaries in the northwestern Himalaya, a region that had long-established notions of border points, but no borderlines. By the twentieth century, the water-parting principle would become the dominant boundary logic for demarcating borders in mountainous regions, and would be employed by statesmen, treaty editors, and boundary commissioners around the world. But for the northwestern Himalaya, a region that British colonial officials considered to be the ‘finest natural combination of boundary and barrier that exists in the world’, making a border proved much more difficult than anticipated.
    Note: Gesehen am 06.12.2023 , Published online by Cambridge University Press: 08 August 2018
    In: The historical journal, Cambridge [u.a.] : Cambridge Univ. Press, 1958, 62(2019), 1, Seite 149-170, 1469-5103
    In: volume:62
    In: year:2019
    In: number:1
    In: pages:149-170
    Language: English
    URL: Volltext  (lizenzpflichtig)
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  • 5
    UID:
    gbv_1872147356
    ISSN: 1469-5103
    Content: This article analyses the relationship between imperial expansion and popular visual culture in late seventeenth-century Venice. It addresses the impact of the military on the marketplace of print and examines the cultural importance of commercial printmaking to the visualization of colonial motifs during the 1684–99 war with the Ottoman Empire. Through a broad array of single-sheet engravings and illustrated books encompassing different visual typologies (e.g. maps, siege views, battle scenes, portraits of Venetian patricians, and representations of the Ottomans), the article re-examines key questions about the imperial dimensions of Venetian print culture and book history. In particular, it shows how warfare and colonial politics militarized the communication media, and highlights the manner in which prints engaged metropolitan viewers in the Republic's expansionist ventures. In so doing, the analysis demonstrates how the printing industry brought the visual spectacle of empire onto the centre stage of Venetian cultural life.
    Note: Gesehen am 06.12.2023 , Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 April 2016
    In: The historical journal, Cambridge [u.a.] : Cambridge Univ. Press, 1958, 59(2016), 3, Seite 635-668, 1469-5103
    In: volume:59
    In: year:2016
    In: number:3
    In: pages:635-668
    Language: English
    URL: Volltext  (lizenzpflichtig)
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  • 6
    UID:
    gbv_1872146899
    ISSN: 1469-5103
    Content: Iconic early European maps of the Caribbean depict neatly parcelled plantations, sugar mills, towns, and fortifications juxtaposed against untamed interiors sketched with runaway slaves and Indigenous toponyms. These extra-geographical symbols of racial and spatial meaning projected desire and design to powerful audiences. Abstractions about material life influenced colonial perceptions and actions upon a space, often to deleterious effects for the Indigenous and African people who were abused in tandem with the region's flora and fauna. The scientific revolution curbed these proscriptive and descriptive ‘thick-mapped’ features that offer historians an underexplored record of early colonial Caribbean life beyond the geographically descriptive. Before this shift from mystery to mastery, the early correlation of colonization and cartography in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries provides a fascinating glimpse into the process of creating the Americas. This article offers ideas for deconstructing old maps as new sources for historians of the early Atlantic World. As digital readers may explore through the roughly fifty maps linked via the footnotes, their informative spectacle naturalized colonialism upon lived and imagined race and space, created an exoticized, commodified Caribbean, and facilitated wealth extraction projects of competing empires made profitable by African labour on Indigenous land.
    Note: Gesehen am 06.12.2023 , Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 December 2019
    In: The historical journal, Cambridge [u.a.] : Cambridge Univ. Press, 1958, 63(2020), 4, Seite 789-810, 1469-5103
    In: volume:63
    In: year:2020
    In: number:4
    In: pages:789-810
    Language: English
    URL: Volltext  (lizenzpflichtig)
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  • 7
    UID:
    gbv_1893906485
    ISSN: 1469-5103
    Content: Over the past two decades, historians have become increasingly fascinated by the question of what enabled the emergence of a stable model of democracy in post-war Western Europe, characterized by the persistence of pre-war elites and top-down forms of decision-making. This article reveals the importance of the British occupations during and after the Second World War in fostering this model of democracy. It does so by comparing and weaving together British occupation strategies in Germany and Italy between 1943 and 1949. Based on a novel examination of archival sources, it demonstrates that British ruling strategies influenced the form of democracy that emerged in these two states. As such, the article reveals the centrality of ‘indirect rule’ practices and their multifaceted impact. Building on imperial precedents, the occupations were primarily run through pre-existing local elites who commanded authority and influence amongst the population. The article argues that this choice explains why the British produced, first, functioning occupation regimes and, subsequently, contributed to the emergence of remarkably stable democracies. At the same time, however, this ruling strategy aided the creation of political regimes that were elite-led and that strongly limited popular participation, leaving many democratic aspirations unfulfilled.
    Note: Literaturangaben
    In: The historical journal, Cambridge [u.a.] : Cambridge Univ. Press, 1958, 67(2024), 3, Seite 538-560, 1469-5103
    In: volume:67
    In: year:2024
    In: number:3
    In: pages:538-560
    Language: English
    URL: Volltext  (kostenfrei)
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