The Corrupting Sea

2000 book by Peregrine Horden and Nicholas Purcell From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Corrupting Sea: A Study of Mediterranean History is a book written by Peregrine Horden and Nicholas Purcell and published in 2000.[1] The book is regarded as revolutionizing Mediterranean studies, introducing important concepts such as micro-ecologies and 'history of,' rather than 'history in'.[2]

Publication date
7 April 2000
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The Corrupting Sea
First edition
AuthorPeregrine Horden and Nicholas Purcell
SubjectMediterranean history
PublisherWiley-Blackwell
Publication date
7 April 2000
Media typePrint
Pages776 pages (paperback)
ISBN978-0631218906
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Environmental historian J. Donald Hughes (1932–2019), a prominent researcher on deforestation during the Roman period, cited The Corrupting Sea amongst the milder challengers of the scholarly consensus that human activity in the ancient Greco-Roman Mediterranean world led to severe deforestation and soil erosion: "[W]hile admitting that forests were destroyed by factors such as overgrazing and mining, [Horden and Purcell] opine that such damage was rare and localized, and that deforestation was seen as a "Good Thing" because it improved the landscape for agriculture."[3]

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