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| Book Review | The American Historical Review, 106.3 | The History Cooperative
106.3  
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June, 2001
 
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Book Review



Comparative/World



Paul Butel. The Atlantic. (Seas in History.) Translated by Iain Hamilton Grant. New York: Routledge. 1999. Pp. xiii, 330. $65.00.

This book opens a welcome new series of volumes on "Seas in History." Previous syntheses of Atlantic history have been more limited in thematic or temporal focus. Paul Butel conscientiously sweeps through two and a half millennia of human interaction around and across the ocean. He begins with the imaginary lands projected by antiquity into the terrifying expanse of the Sea of Perpetual Gloom and ends with the era of air travel, containerization, and cruise hotels. The book follows familiar lines of exploration, appropriation and conflict, moving outward from the Mediterranean basin and Northern Europe. From start to finish, the author's perspective is the Atlantic "as seen from Europe" (p. 1). The first chapter quickly moves the reader through two thousand years of seaborne ventures from the Phoenicians to the Viking feats of conquest and exploration along the northern arc of islands between the British Isles and Newfoundland. . . .


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