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Geography and the Classical World

Unearthing Historical Geography's Forgotten Past

William A. Koelsch (Clark University, USA)

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English
Bloomsbury Academic
24 December 2020
In the eighteenth century a new subject emerged that was to capture the interest and imagination of scholars and the educated public for the next 150 years. Called 'ancient geography' or 'classical geography', its focus was the geographical study of the ancient Mediterranean, in particular the worlds of ancient Greece and Rome.

Geographers, explorers, classicists and historians all contributed to its rise, as it flourished in both Britain and America.

Yet in the 1920s the subject began to decline, so that its story has been lost.

This pioneering volume is the first full-length study to explore the emergence of classical geography and its role in both the geographical and classical traditions. The author begins with the expeditions sponsored or undertaken by the members of the Society of Dilettanti in the second half of the eighteenth and the early nineteenth centuries. Expeditions by such figures as Richard Chandler, James Stuart and Nicholas Revett, Sir William Gell, Robert Wood and William Martin Leake, marked a new and more serious study of Greek and Near Eastern landscapes.

At the same time, in post-Revolutionary America the Founding Fathers felt it important that Americans should know something of the history and geography of the ancient world, and leading figures such as Thomas Jefferson - a lifelong reader of the classics and a founding father of American geography - and Benjamin Franklin, ensured that classical geography became part of both the school and university curriculum. Professor Koelsch gives equal prominence to the story as it unfolded in both Britain and America. He explores the impact and influence of key figures and institutions over a period of almost two centuries. They range from William Ramsay, Edward Herbert Bunbury, John Linton Myres, Henry Fanshawe Tozer, William Gladstone, Edward Augustus Freeman, and Halford Mackinder in England, to Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin Rush, Ellen Semple, and John Kirtland Wright in America.

The author relates the part that classical geography played in the rise of British geography, through the Oxford School of geography, and in the story of the early American institutions such as the College of William and Mary, the University of Virginia, Harvard University, the College of New Jersey (now Princeton) as well as later universities such as the University of California, Cornell, Johns Hopkins and the University of Chicago.

In recovering the trajectory of classical geography from its adventurous beginnings, through its heyday and later decline, the author restores this almost forgotten part of the geographical and classical tradition. The result is a work of outstanding scholarship that will interest historical geographers, classicists, historians and all students of the classical tradition.

By:  
Imprint:   Bloomsbury Academic
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 234mm,  Width: 156mm, 
Weight:   662g
ISBN:   9781350197374
ISBN 10:   1350197378
Series:   Tauris Historical Geographical Series
Pages:   480
Publication Date:  
Audience:   College/higher education ,  A / AS level ,  Further / Higher Education
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
I Introduction: the Search for a Source Chapter 1 – The Society of Dilettanti and Ancient Geography Chapter 2 – Classical Geography in the Colonial and Post-Revolutionary American College Chapter 3 – Classical Geography in Thomas Jefferson’s University Chapter 4 – From the Age of Enlightenment to the Age of Professionalization Chapter 5 – William E. Gladstone and the Reconstruction of Bronze Age Geography Chapter 6 – British Historians, Classicists, and Classical Geography Chapter 7 – Classics, History and Geography in Nineteenth-Century Harvard Chapter 8 – Classical Geography in the Oxford School of Geography Chapter 9 – Classical Geography in the Nineteenth-Century Classroom Chapter 10 – Classical Geography in the New American Universities Epilogue – Anglo-American Classical Geography since the 1930s Index

William A. Koelsch is Professor Emeritus in the Graduate School of Geography at Clark University, USA. His research centres around the history of geography and especially on the relations between geography and the classics in Britain and the United States.

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