David Abulafia’s The Great Sea is an ambitious
undertaking. There is so much
information to marshal: So many cultures, so many years, and so many
perspectives from which to witness the unfolding of the history. But Abulafia
does a masterful job of telling a coherent story, while packing his book with
an immense volume of information. Each time I sat down with this book, I had
the enjoyable experience of absorbing new knowledge. Since most histories are
from a period, event or national perspective, and since this region transcends
those categories, the view of history from the Mediterranean is from an angle
rarely encountered.
Undeniably, there will be flaws when attempting such a
far-reaching project. There are early times within the Mediterranean which we
know little about. The author makes the mistake of filling the information gap
with myth and legend. We know little about the origin or character of the
Etruscan Civilization, so Albulafia falls back on tall tales recorded by
Herodotus to explain their origins, and a myth of Dionysos to exemplify their
reputation as pirates (Abulafia, pp. 101-104). It would be easier if the author
stated outright that there was no evidentiary foundation to these stories. Instead,
he weaves together legend and fact. While discussing Hannibal’s father,
Abulafia writes: “That Hamilcar was
determined to emancipate Carthage from Roman shackles is made plain in a famous
but possibly legendary tale (Abulafia, p. 184).” If a tale is “possibly
legendary,” it makes nothing “plain”. In places where historical fact is
lacking, “I don’t know” is a fine statement. Fortunately, this confusion of
myth and legend with reality is confined to the first couple of sections in the
book where information is misty.
The inclusion of maps at the beginning of each chapter, to illustrate periods and peoples
discussed, was an excellent idea.
Unfortunately, the maps are little more than a repeated outline of the
Mediterranean with a small number of dots representing cities. When the Greek,
Roman or Ottoman empires are discussed, there is never an outline of their
territory. Individual nations also lack depiction. The representation of cities on
these maps is so scant that many of those covered in the associated chapter
are not on the map. Abulafia talks about how Durazzo was “strategically
valuable” to the Venetians (Abulafia, p. 448), but he doesn’t show it on a map
so that the reader can see why. He discusses the importance to trade of “the
great road that ran from Dyrrhachion through Thessalonika to Constantinople”
(Abulafia, p. 269), but leaves it to the reader to connect the dots and imagine
the borders between the different nations which employed the route. For those
wishing to compensate for the poverty of these maps, I recommend the Oxford Atlas
of World History reviewed on this blog.
Much of the sea’s history is a discourse on trade. This is a peaceful refuge from the usual
catalog of “great men” massacring populations. Trade provides evidence of
cross-cultural communication and the author shows this through the variety of
populations co-existing in trade towns. Readers with an economist’s view will
enjoy the evolution of commercial ventures. Those interested in the chess game
of competing trade empires will also find the work captivating. This is the
area where Abulafia focuses most of his attention. The book occasionally gets
bogged down here. The chronicler can become a bit obsessive while lengthily
depicting who traded with whom and what goods they traded. At these times, The
Great Sea contains all the charm and excitement of a ship’s manifest. But
trade is the story of the Mediterranean, so occasionally the reader’s
fascination may be a casualty. I only wish there were more information on the
exchange of ideas, and less about figs and iron. It’s not that discussion of
technology, science and shared learning are absent from the book, it’s just
that they are more episodic than thematic.
Throughout The Great Sea, Abulafia does an excellent
job of staying on point. Given the immense swath of history covered, it would
be easy to have the conversation diverted onto large historical events
unconnected to the Mediterranean. But the author remains focused. World War One
was a huge international event. But discussion of this war is limited to how it
impacted the region around the sea. Also, it would have been tempting for the
author, a Jew who has an extensive knowledge of his people’s history, to spend
a great deal of time on the Holocaust. But as a faithful chronicler, Abulafia
covered this tragedy only to the extent that it affected his subject area. This
ability to remain focused keeps the book from meandering and maintains the
unifying purpose.
Though the story of this region is unavoidably fraught with
conflict and greed, there is a great deal of positive exploration exhibited
through the relationship between humans and their unique nautical environment.
Cultures sprouted and grew like sea-dependent plants around the Mediterranean,
growing and evolving with organic regularity, cross-pollinating with different
peoples. The Great Sea is a well-researched record of human history
around the Mediterranean, providing an exceptional knowledge base for those
wishing to expand their understanding of our place on its shores.
Abulafia, David. The Great Sea. New York: Oxford
University Press, Inc., 2011.
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