Geography anatomized ... The sixteenth edition, etc. [With maps.]
Author: Patrick GORDON (F.R.S.)
Publisher:
Published: 1747
Total Pages: 464
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKRead and Download eBook Full
Author: Patrick GORDON (F.R.S.)
Publisher:
Published: 1747
Total Pages: 464
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Patrick GORDON (F.R.S.)
Publisher:
Published: 1693
Total Pages: 268
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: O.F.G. Sitwell
Publisher: UBC Press
Published: 2011-11-01
Total Pages: 682
ISBN-13: 0774844574
DOWNLOAD EBOOKGeography as an academic discipline dates back to the last few decades of the nineteenth century. However, during the preceding centuries a large body of English-language literature relevant to the field of special geography was published. Four Centuries of Special Geography lists all the works published before 1888 and includes descriptions of each entry and notes on later editions.
Author: Martin Brückner
Publisher: UNC Press Books
Published: 2012-12-01
Total Pages: 293
ISBN-13: 0807838977
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThe rapid rise in popularity of maps and geography handbooks in the eighteenth century ushered in a new geographic literacy among nonelite Americans. In a pathbreaking and richly illustrated examination of this transformation, Martin Bruckner argues that geographic literacy as it was played out in popular literary genres--written, for example, by William Byrd, George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Royall Tyler, Charles Brockden Brown, Meriwether Lewis, and William Clark--significantly influenced the formation of identity in America from the 1680s to the 1820s. Drawing on historical geography, cartography, literary history, and material culture, Bruckner recovers a vibrant culture of geography consisting of property plats and surveying manuals, decorative wall maps and school geographies, the nation's first atlases, and sentimental objects such as needlework samplers. By showing how this geographic revolution affected the production of literature, Bruckner demonstrates that the internalization of geography as a kind of language helped shape the literary construction of the modern American subject. Empirically rich and provocative in its readings, The Geographic Revolution in Early America proposes a new, geographical basis for Anglo-Americans' understanding of their character and its expression in pedagogical and literary terms.
Author: Robert Morden
Publisher:
Published: 1693
Total Pages: 748
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Robert Morden
Publisher:
Published: 1693
Total Pages: 718
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Bernard Quaritch (Firm)
Publisher:
Published: 1895
Total Pages: 216
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Mark Valeri
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Published: 2023
Total Pages: 313
ISBN-13: 0197663672
DOWNLOAD EBOOK"This book describes how English and colonial American Protestants described religions throughout the world during a crucial period of English colonization of North America, from 1650 to 1765. It uses a variety of sources, including thick accounts of Catholicism, Islam, and Native American traditions, to argue-against much of current scholarship-that Protestants changed their perspectives on non-Protestant religions and conversion during the early eighteenth century. This account of a transformation in Protestant discourse locates the English Revolution of 1688 and subsequent growth of the British empire as a turning point, when observers keyed the wellbeing of Britain to civic moral virtues, including religious toleration, rather than to any particular religious creed. A wide range of Protestants, including liberal Anglicans, Calvinist dissenters, deists, and evangelicals endorsed this new understanding of religion and the state. They accordingly began to parse religions around the world not as good or bad as a whole but as complex traditions with some groups who sustained religious liberty and other groups that, under the sway of power-hungry clergy, suppressed religious liberty. They also changed their evangelistic practices, jettisoning civilizing agendas for reasoned persuasion as the means of mission. This story concerns ambiguities in Protestant ideas yet suggests the importance of those ideas for contemporary understandings of religious liberty, matters of race, and moral reasonableness in public life"--