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Landscape and Change in Early Medieval Italy

Landscape and Change in Early Medieval Italy

Landscape and Change in Early Medieval Italy

Chestnuts, Economy, and Culture
Paolo Squatriti , University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
February 2017
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Paperback
9781316633205

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    This innovative environmental history of the long-lived European chestnut tree and its woods offers valuable perspectives on the human transition from the Roman to the medieval world in Italy. Integrating evidence from botanical and literary sources, individual charters and case studies of specific communities, the book traces fluctuations in the size and location of Italian chestnut woods to expose how early medieval societies changed their land use between the fourth and eleventh centuries, and in the process changed themselves. As the chestnut tree gained popularity in late antiquity and became a valuable commodity by the end of the first millennium, this study brings to life the economic and cultural transition from a Roman Italy of cities, agricultural surpluses and markets to a medieval Italy of villages and subsistence farming.

    • Shows how people and plants interacted to create historical outcomes, highlighting the constraints on human agency
    • Offers an environmental perspective on the fall of Rome, allowing a reconceptualisation of how empires change over time
    • Blends scientific and cultural information about historical processes

    Reviews & endorsements

    '… densely laden as it is with relevant facts and observations, [this] book is a solid achievement, and its modestly presented thesis deserves to be appreciated beyond the niche of medieval arboreal history.' Jacob Wamberg, Speculum

    'This book is an absolute treat, delicious in its detail, surprising in just how much a tree's view of medieval history can reveal about people. Paolo Squatriti's research on the rise of the chestnut, a tree little cultivated in the Roman period yet a major crop for medieval Italy, identifies the convergences between the worlds of men and woodlands. It is written with humour and intelligence, and nearly each page contains a discovery about botany, biology, cuisine or legal practice.' Caroline Goodson, Early Medieval Europe

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    Product details

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    Adobe eBook Reader
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    4 maps
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    Table of Contents

    • Introduction: trees, woods, and chestnuts in early medieval Italy
    • 1. A natural history of the chestnut
    • 2. The triumph of a tree
    • 3. The poetics of the chestnut in the early Middle Ages
    • 4. Chestnuts in medieval Campania
    • 5. Chestnuts in the Po valley
    • Conclusion: Giovanni Pascoli and the old chestnut
    • Bibliography.
      Author
    • Paolo Squatriti , University of Michigan, Ann Arbor

      Paolo Squatriti is Associate Professor of History and Romance Languages and Literatures at the University of Michigan. He specialises in the study of the pre-industrial environment and has published on ecological and landscape change in the Dark Ages.