| Darrera modificació: 2022-01-06Bases de dades: Sciència.cat
 Nieto Olarte, Mauricio, Exploration, Religion and Empire in the Sixteenth-century Ibero-Atlantic World. A New Perspective on the History of Modern Science, Amsterdam, Amsterdam University Press (Maritime Humanities, 1400-1800), 2021, 330 pp. 
ResumThe Iberian conquest of the Atlantic at the beginning of the sixteenth century had a notable impact on the formation of the new world order in which Christian Europe claimed control over most a considerable part of the planet. This was possible thanks to the confluence of different and inseparable factors: the development of new technical capacities and favorable geographical conditions in which to navigate the great oceans; the Christian mandate to extend the faith; the need for new trade routes; and an imperial organization aspiring to global dominance.The author explores new methods for approaching old historiographical problems of the Renaissance—such as the discovery and conquest of America, the birth of modern science, and the problem of Eurocentrism—now in reference to actors and regions scarcely visible in the complex history of modern Europe: the ships, the wind, the navigators, their instruments, their gods, saints, and demons.
 
 Conté:
 * Introduction
 * The New World and the problem of Eurocentrism
 * Science and empire
 
 Summary of the chapters in this book
 
 1. The Iberian Peninsula and the Atlantic
 Portugal and Spain
 Winds, currents, and sailing ships in the Atlantic
 Gold, silver, slaves, souls, and a thousand kinds of trees
 
 2. The imperial bureaucracy and the appropriation of the New World
 Seville and the Casa de Contratacion
 The universal monarchy
 
 3. The piloto mayor: cosmography and the art of navigation
 The post of piloto mayor: seamanship and cartography
 The navigation manuals
 Manuals for the Empire
 Publications, dissemination, and secrecy
 Humanism and the classics
 Experience and authority
 Man against the sea: shipwrecks and meteorology
 Routes and chorographic descriptions: The New World within the new global order
 
 4. Machines of the empire
 The ships
 Shipbuilding
 War and artillery
 Navigational instruments
 The astrolabe
 The cross-staff
 The mariner's compass
 Time and clocks
 The sounding/plumb line
 The navigation charts
 Astronomical tables
 Instruments, measurements, precision, and standardization
 The crew
 The captain/admiral
 The pilot
 The shipmaster (maestre) and quartermaster (contramaestre)
 The boatswain (guardian)
 The ordinary seamen (marineros)
 Midshipmen (grumetes) and cabin boys (pajes)
 The carpenter, steward, cooper, and cook
 The scribe, master-at-arms, and overseer
 The cannoneer
 The barber/surgeon
 The priest
 Life on board
 The argot of the sailors
 Overcrowding
 Food and health
 Men of the sea and men of God
 
 5. The Master Map (Padrón Real) and the cartography of the New World
 Nautical charts and how they were made
 The making of a chart
 The charts of tierra firme: the earliest maps of the New World
 Three early maps of the New World
 Juan de la Cosa (1500)
 Waldseemuller (1507)
 Diego Ribero (1520) 6. The creatures of God never seen before: natural history
 Nature in the New World
 The classics and the Bible
 Monsters in paradise
 To describe, classify, and name
 Medicine, botany, and the knowledge of the natives
 The Empire and natural history
 
 7. The New World, global science, and Eurocentrism
 Plus ultra
 Experience and authority
 The Empire and the challenge of standardization
 Eurocentrism
 
 Bibliography
 
 Informació de l'editor
  MatèriesHistòria de la ciènciaGeografia i viatges
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