Historical atlas of central Europe

書誌事項

Historical atlas of central Europe

Paul Robert Magocsi

University of Toronto Press, c2018

3rd revised and expanded ed

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注記

Includes bibliographical references and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

Central Europe remains a region of ongoing change and continuing significance in the contemporary world. This third, fully revised edition of the Historical Atlas of Central Europe takes into consideration recent changes in the region. The 120 full-colour maps, each accompanied by an explanatory text, provide a concise visual survey of political, economic, demographic, cultural, and religious developments from the fall of the Roman Empire in the early fifth century to the present. No less than 19 countries are the subject of this atlas. In terms of today's borders, those countries include Lithuania, Poland, and Belarus in the north; the Czech Republic, Austria, Slovenia, Croatia, Hungary, and Slovakia in the Danubian Basin; and Serbia, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Montenegro, Romania, Moldova, Bulgaria, Macedonia, Albania, and Greece in the Balkans. Much attention is also given to areas immediately adjacent to the central European core: historic Prussia, Venetia, western Anatolia, and Ukraine west of the Dnieper River. Embedded in the text are 48 updated administrative and statistical tables. The value of the Historical Atlas of Central Europe as an authoritative reference tool is further enhanced by an extensive bibliography and a gazetteer of place names - in up to 29 language variants - that appear on the maps and in the text. The Historical Atlas of Central Europe is an invaluable resource for scholars, students, journalists, and general readers who wish to have a fuller understanding of this critical area, with its many peoples, languages, and continued political upheaval.

目次

Introduction to the Original Edition Note to the Second Revised and Expanded Edition Note to the Third Revised Edition 1. Central Europe: geographic zones 2. Central Europe, ca. 400 3. Central Europe, 7th-8th centuries 4. Central Europe, 9th century 5. Early medieval kingdoms, ca. 1050 6. The period of feudal subdivisions, ca. 1250 7. Poland, Lithuania, and Bohemia-Moravia, 13th-15th centuries 8. Hungary-Croatia and Venetia, 14th-15th centuries 9. Bulgaria, Serbia, Bosnia, and the Ottoman Empire, 14th-15th centuries 10. Central Europe, ca. 1480 11. Economic patterns, ca. 1450 12. The city in medieval times 13. Ecclesiastical jurisdictions, ca. 1450 14. Central Europe, ca. 1570 15. Protestant Reformation, 16th century 16. Catholic Counter Reformation, 16th-17th centuries 17. Education and culture through the 18th century 18. Central Europe, 1648 19. Poland-Lithuania, the Habsburgs, Hungary-Croatia, and Transylvania, 16th-17th centuries 20. The Ottoman Empire, the Habsburgs, Hungary-Croatia, and Transylvania, 16th-17th centuries 21. Central Europe, ca. 1721 22. Poland, Austria, and the Ottoman Empire, 18th century 23. The Napoleonic era, 1795-1814 24. Central Europe, 1815 25. The Austrian and Austro-Hungarian Empire, 1815-1914 26. The Balkan Peninsula, 1817-1912 27. The Balkan Peninsula on the eve of World War I 28. Canal and railway development before 1914 29. Population, 1870-1910 30. Ethnolinguistic distribution, ca. 1900 31. Cultural and educational institutions before 1914 32. Germans in Central Europe, ca. 1900 33. Jews and Armenians in Central Europe, ca. 1900 34. The Catholic Church, 1900 35. The Orthodox Church, 1900 36. Central Europe, 1910 37. World War I, 1914-1918 38. Central Europe, 1918-1923 39. Poland, Danzig, and Lithuania in the 20th century 40. Belarus and Ukraine in the 20th century 41. Czechoslovakia, the Czech Republic, and Slovakia in the 20th century 42. Austria and Hungary in the 20th century 43. Romania and Moldova in the 20th century 44. Yugoslavia, Serbia, and Kosovo in the 20th century 45. Slovenia, Trieste, and Istria in the 20th century 46. Croatia and Bosnia-Herzegovina in the 20th century 47. Montenegro, Albania, and Macedonia in the 20th century 48. Bulgaria and Greece in the 20th century 49. Central Europe, ca. 1930 50. World War II, 1939-1942 51. World War II, 1943-1945 52. Central Europe after World War II 53. Population movements, 1944-1948 54. Population in the 20th century 55. Ethnolinguistic distribution, ca. 2010 56. Central Europe, 1980 57. Industrial development, 1945-1989 58. Education and re-education in the 20th century 59. The Catholic Church in the 20th century 60. The Orthodox Church in the 20th century 61. Post-Communist Central Europe Map sources Bibliography Index

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