Samuel Hartlib and Universal Reformation
Studies in Intellectual Communication
Mark Greengrass editor Michael Leslie editor Timothy Raylor editor
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:1st Dec '94
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
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- Paperback£44.99(9780521520119)
A collaborative study of the theoretical and practical interests of Samuel Hartlib and his circle.
Samuel Hartlib, a Prussian by birth who settled in England in the late 1620s, was a key figure in the intellectual revolution of the seventeenth century. This volume reflects the variety of the theoretical and practical interests of Hartlib's circle and presents them in their continental context.Samuel Hartlib was a key figure in the intellectual revolution of the seventeenth century. Originally from Elbing, in Prussig, Hartlib settled permanently in England from the late 1620s until his death in 1662. His aspirations formed a distinctive and influential strand in English intellectual life during those revolutionary decades. This volume reflects the variety of the theoretical and practical interests of Hartlib's circle and presents them in their continental context. The editors of the volume are all attached to the Hartlib Papers Project at the University of Sheffield, a major collaborative research effort to exploit the largely untapped resources of the surviving Hartlib manuscripts. In an introduction to the volume they explore the background to the Hartlib circle and provide the context in which the essays should be read.
"This is a stimulating book....richly rewarding for those who want to move beyond the university-Westminster axis into the lives and concerns of seventeenth-century British intellectuals, reformers, and visionaries." James B. McSwain, Sixteenth Century Journal
"...those who take the subtitle seriously will find a number of fascinating "studies in intellectual communication." Stanford Lehmberg, Rebaissance Quarterly
ISBN: 9780521452526
Dimensions: 235mm x 160mm x 26mm
Weight: 687g
394 pages