1st Edition

Far From the Truth Distance, Information, and Credibility in the Early Modern World

Edited By Michiel van Groesen, Johannes Müller Copyright 2024
276 Pages 29 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

276 Pages 29 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

Information and knowledge were essential tools of early modern Europe’s global ambitions. This volume addresses a key concern that emerged as the competition for geopolitical influence increased: how could information from afar be trusted when there was no obvious strategy for verification? How did notions of doubt develop in relation to intercultural encounters? Who were those in the position to... Read more

Introduction - Michiel van Groesen and Johannes Müller

Distance, Credibility, and the Geographies of Information in Early Modern Europe

Chapter 1 - Josiah Blackmore

Reports from the Edges of Iberian Empire

Chapter 2 - Joan-Pau Rubiés

Distance and Credibility in Sixteenth-Century Travel Writing: Discovery, Text, and Truth in Varthema, Vespucci, and Pigafetta

Chapter 3 - Stephanie Leitch

Copies with Wings: Bridging Distances by Printing the Familiar in the Travel Accounts of Theodore de Bry and Levinus Hulsius

Chapter 4 - Ricardo Padrón 

Multitudo Insularum: The Rhetoric of Numbers and the Mapping of the Indies

Chapter 5 - Johannes Müller

Knowledge and Its Opposite: Antiquity, Parody, and Geographical Distance in Gabriel Rollenhagen’s Four Indian Voyages

Chapter 6 - Michiel van Groesen

"I Am Giving You as Much As I Have": News, Distance, and Credibility in Théophraste Renaudot’s Gazette

Chapter 7 - Christina Brauner

The Many Lives of African-European Treaties

Chapter 8 - Nicholas Popper

Joseph Williamson and the Information Order of the Early English Empire

Chapter 9 - Renate Dürr

Emotions as Guide to Untrustworthiness: John Lockman’s Struggle with What He Could Not Check

Epilogue - Miles Ogborn

Getting Closer to the Truth?

 

Biography

Michiel van Groesen is Professor of Maritime History at Leiden University. His work is interdisciplinary in nature, focusing on the culture of early modern Europe’s imperial expansion and the politics of global interactions. He is the author of two books, Representations of the Overseas World in the De Bry Collection of Voyages, 1590–1634(Brill, 2008) and Amsterdam’s Atlantic: Print Culture and the Making of Dutch Brazil (Penn, 2017). He is currently completing a monograph on the circulation of news and information in the Atlantic world, which is provisionally entitled An Ocean of Rumours, and will appear with Cambridge University Press.

Johannes Müller is an assistant professor at the Leiden University Centre for the Arts in Society. His research focuses on environmental history, memory studies, and the history of knowledge. Among his publications are the volumes Exile Memories and the Dutch Revolt: The Narrated Diaspora, 1550–1750 (Brill, 2016), Memory before Modernity. Practices of Memory in Early Modern Europe (Brill, 2013, co-edited with Judith Pollmann, Erika Kuijpers, and Jasper van der Steen), and he is currently preparing a book manuscript on the impact of climate on fish and fisheries with marine biologist Daniel Pauly.