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The Discovery of the Baltic

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Nils Blomkvist discusses how the Baltic Rim was initially Europeanized between 1075 and 1225 AD. He compares the indigenous civilisations to the prevailing western European one. After the expansive...
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  • 29 November 2004
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Nils Blomkvist discusses how the Baltic Rim was initially Europeanized between 1075 and 1225 AD. He compares the indigenous civilisations to the prevailing western European one. After the expansive Viking period, European penetration became a process of discovery.
The importance of the Catholic Reform movement and its unintentional ties to the formation of an endurable commodity market are outlined. Clashes and compromises are investigated in case studies of the Kalmarsund region, Gotland and the Daugava valley. Dissimilar cases of state formation are compared: those of Sweden and Livonia.
Many classical scholarly problems are revisited. A new approach to the period's narrative sources brings to life Scandinavian, German, Russian, Finno-Ugrian and Baltic attitudes and day-to-day concern in the midst of a change of epic dimensions.
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Price: $182.00
Pages: 774
Publisher: Brill
Imprint: Brill
Publication Date: 29 November 2004
ISBN: 9789004141223
Format: Hardcover
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'Combining the Annales school and the postcolonial thought with some Marxist concepts, clash of civilizations, and globalization inspirations, Blomkvist (Gotland Univ. College) produces a truly original approach to understanding the confrontation of an expansive and confident Western society with the older, Eastern-oriented, technologically backward, and diverse societies of the Baltic. .. Highly recommended. Advanced students and researchers.'
W.L.Urban, Choice, 2005.
Nils Blomkvist, Ph.D. (1979) in History, Uppsala University, is Professor of Medieval History at Gotland University and leader of the multinational and interdisciplinary research project "Culture Clash or Compromise?" which involved some twenty scholars studying medieval Europeanization on the Baltic Rim.