The Age of Reconnaissance: Discovery, Exploration and Settlement, 1450-1650

by J. H. Parry

Paperback, 1964

Status

Available

Call number

910.94

Collection

Publication

Mentor / New American Library (1964), Paperback, 384 pages

Description

The Age of Reconnaissance, as J. H. Parry has so aptly named it, was the period during which Europe discovered the rest of the world. It began with Henry the Navigator and the Portuguese voyages in the mid-fifteenth century and ended 250 years later when the "Reconnaissance" was all but complete. Dr. Parry examines the inducements--political, economic, religious--to overseas enterprises at the time, and analyzes the nature and problems of the various European settlements in the new lands.

User reviews

LibraryThing member thcson
This is a wonderfully broad survey of European exploration and colonization between the fifteenth and seventeenth centuries. One of the general conclusions of this book is that European adventurers were motivated far more by hopes of economic gain than by geographic or scientific curiosity. Its
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overarching theme is therefore conquest in the name of trade, but the narrative also branches out to a multitude of other topics, such as proselytization, forced and voluntary migrations, government and even the theoretical justifications for conquest and conversion (in Spanish colonies in particular).

I particularly liked the opening chapter which clearly explains the political and technological reasons for the limitations of European geographic knowledge prior to the 15th century. Travel by land eastward was difficult and dangerous, while ships could only cover the Mediterranean ocean. The author seems to have had a particular fondness for naval history, as he goes into great detail in describing the evolution of ships and navigation methods which enabled Europeans to start exploring the big oceans. He closes the book by emphasizing that the world known to Europeans by the middle of the seventeenth century was still mostly a world of coastlines.

One strength of this book is that it reveals the mixed motives of explorers, conquistadores, traders, colonists, royal courts and their colonial representatives in this age. They rarely viewed discovery as an aim in itself as many modern historians are accustomed to do. Conquest was mostly profitable, but fortunes changed swiftly and there were many exploratory and colonial dead ends. European monarchies frequently lost interest and influence in their colonies when wars and revolutions required urgent attention at home. The seeds of colonial independence were planted in this period, but how independence eventually came about is a story for another book.

Another positive is that this book treats eastward and westward reconnaissance evenly. The westward story gets more attention, but this is clearly justified because strong political organizations in Asia prevented eastward travellers from controlling anything more than seaborne trade. European undertakings on the American continent were far more pervasive and consequential. Overall this book is a very useful complement to internal European history in these centuries. European reconnaissance had a substantial impact not only on the places where Europeans came ashore, but on Europe itself.
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Language

Original publication date

1963

Physical description

384 p.

ISBN

0451001702 / 9780451001702
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