Silvia MARZAGALLI & Roberto Zaugg (dir.), Atlantic Italies. Economic Entanglements Between the Americas, Africa, and the Mediterranean (15th-19th Centuries), Viella, 2025, 564 pp., ISBN:9791254693803, DOI : 10.52056/9791257011307, 70 €. While no pre-unification Italian state ever possessed colonies beyond the Strait of Gibraltar, the Mediterranean peninsula was linked to the Americas and Africa through a variety of entanglements. Weaving networks that crossed political boundaries, merchants profited from manifold economic opportunities – including the Atlantic slave trade, which, from its beginnings in the 15th century to its demise in the 19th century, attracted considerable investments from the Italies. Mariners, scholars, clerics, and aristocrats served the empires of various European powers, whereas others – such as mendicant friars – carved out room for manoeuvre that transcended imperial agendas. City dwellers and peasants discovered new foodstuffs and acquired an increasingly global consumer culture. By challenging narratives moulded by methodological nationalism, this book explores how such connections shaped the Italian Peninsula and contributes to a new trans-imperial perspective on the Atlantic world.
Avec le tournant numérique, les chercheurs qui s’intéressent à l’histoire des circulations maritimes ont alimenté des bases de données pour gérer des quantités massives d’informations produites à l’époque moderne. Ce dossier fait le point sur trois bases majeures actuellement utilisées, issues des récents programmes « AveTransRisk », « Portic » et « STRO ». Les implications pour l’historiographie maritime sont également mises en évidence.
La Méditerranée intranquille (XVe-XXIe siècles) Colloque international de Nice (25-27 septembre 2025) Campus Carlone – Salle du Conseil (1er étage) Organisateurs : Anne Brogini, Majid Embarech, [...]