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Beskrivning
Central to the European maritime expansion of the 15th century was the mastery of long-distance sea routes and the development of rutters—technical documents recording navigational data and geographic observations. This book highlights the indispensable role of rutters and ships' logbooks in early modern navigation and knowledge production.
Luís Campos Ribeiro is a historian of science and art and a researcher at CIUHCT, University of Lisbon, specializing in the history of astrology and astronomy. He leads the Astra Project: Historical Research on Astrological Techniques and Practices (CIUHCT/The Warburg Institute) and is a postdoctoral researcher at the ERC Rutter Project. David Salomoni is an assistant professor in the History of Education at the University for Foreigners of Siena. From 2019 until 2023, he worked in the framework of the ERC Rutter Project based at the University of Lisbon. His research focuses on geographical literacy in Early Modern Europe. Henrique Leitão is a Senior Researcher at the Department for the History and Philosophy of Science at the Faculty of Science, University of Lisbon, Portugal. He is presently Provost (Pro-reitor) of the University of Lisbon and director of the Lisbon University Press. In 2018, he was awarded an ERC Advanced Grant (Rutter Project).
Innehållsförteckning
List of Figures, Introduction, Chapter 1. Decoding the Oceans: Rutter-Writing and the Emergence of the Oceanic Rutters as a New Textual Genre, Chapter 2. Sixteenth-Century Nautical Treatises: The Definition of a New Genre of Technical Literature, Chapter 3. Monitoring the Paths of the Sea: Rutters, Laws and Long-Distance Control in Sixteenth-Century Iberian Empires, Chapter 4. Traveling with and Updating Secret Knowledge: Van Linschoten and the Iberian Nautical Rutters (1583-1596), Chapter 5. The New Pathways of Knowledge: The Early Modern Iberian Oceanic Rutters and the Emergence of a Global Knowledge Society, Chapter 6. The Problem of Relational Cardinality, the Sixteenth-Century Atlantic, and the Making of the Globe, Chapter 7. Precious Art or Tried and Tested Science: Early Modern Indian Ocean Navigation in Context, Chapter 8. From the Anecdote to the Report: Indian Ocean Pilots in Sixteenth-Century Portuguese Literature, Chapter 9. The Poetics of Distance in the Early Modern European Imaginary, References, Index