Marginal Europe

The Contribution of Marginal Lands since the Middle Ages

Sidney Pollard author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Oxford University Press

Published:15th May '97

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Marginal Europe cover

The momentum of the British industrial revolution arose mostly in regions poorly endowed by nature, badly located and considered backward and poor by contemporaries. Sidney Pollard examines the initially surprising contribution made by the population of these and other `marginal areas' (mountains, forests and marshes) to the economic development of Europe since the Middle Ages. He provides case studies of periods in which marginal areas took the lead in economic development, such as the Dutch economy in its Golden Age, and in the British industrial revolution. The traditional perception of the populations inhabiting these regions was that they were poor, backward, and intellectually inferior; but Sidney Pollard shows how they also had certain peculiar qualities which predisposed them to initiate progress. Healthy living, freedom, a martial spirit, and the hardiness to survive in harsh conditions enabled them to contribute a unique pioneering ability to pivotal economic periods; illustrating some of the effects of geography upon the development of societies.

It is possibly the book's major contribution to have brought a large and compelling amount of evidence to bear upon this important and heretofore overlooked point. * S. R. Epstein, Economic Histiory Review *
The book is the outcome of a lifetime's scholarship, and is based on over 1,800 listed books, articles and theses. It is one of those books that forces us to modify the way we look at the history of Europe's economic development. * Michael Palairet, The International History Review, XXI.2 June 1999 *
This is a bold and ambitious set of claims, and Pollard has mobilized a vast scholarship ... supporting his argument ... Interesting, learned and scholarly, the book's approach is firmly grounded in a traditional master narrative of European progress. * Peter Sahlins, Journal of Modern History, Vol 71, no 3 September 1999 *

ISBN: 9780198206385

Dimensions: 243mm x 163mm x 23mm

Weight: 667g

336 pages