by JWintjes » Thu Nov 08, 2007 6:13 pm
kennylibben wrote:JWintjes wrote:
As for references, you can take any standard history of Tuscany or of the sea republics.
Jorit
I have, i've studied Tuscan history in Tuscany, Researched the sea republics of renaissance Italy (mainly Venetian Shipbuilding and the fountain of wine), and visited Pisa.... never-once have I come across this information.
Ehm, Kenny, then you didn't research hard enough, it's even in the Wikipedia entry...
Seriously, though, I could recommend some introductory works in German - the usual stuff we try to have our students read it - but unfortunately, as that's not really my field, I don't know about equivalent works in English. I would assume that there's
If you're interested in the coastal change issue, try getting Thompson's "Archaeology and Coastal Change" via interlibrary loan; it's on Britain, but eye-opening.
Jorit
[quote="kennylibben"][quote="JWintjes"]
As for references, you can take any standard history of Tuscany or of the sea republics.
Jorit[/quote]
I have, i've studied Tuscan history in Tuscany, Researched the sea republics of renaissance Italy (mainly Venetian Shipbuilding and the fountain of wine), and visited Pisa.... never-once have I come across this information.[/quote]
Ehm, Kenny, then you didn't research hard enough, it's even in the Wikipedia entry... :wink: :big_grin:
Seriously, though, I could recommend some introductory works in German - the usual stuff we try to have our students read it - but unfortunately, as that's not really my field, I don't know about equivalent works in English. I would assume that there's
If you're interested in the coastal change issue, try getting Thompson's "Archaeology and Coastal Change" via interlibrary loan; it's on Britain, but eye-opening.
Jorit