How the West Won: The Neglected Story of the Triumph of Modernity (81 page)

Read How the West Won: The Neglected Story of the Triumph of Modernity Online

Authors: Rodney Stark

Tags: #History, #World, #Civilization & Culture

Williams, C. F. 1903.
The Story of the Organ
. New York: Charles Scribner and Sons.

Williams-McClanahan, Robin. 2006.
Out of the Ashes: The Rise of Towns and Trade in the Early Medieval West
. New York: iUniverse, Inc.

Williams, Neville. 1975.
The Sea Dogs
. New York: Macmillan.

Wilson, Andrew. 2002. “Machines, Power and the Ancient Economy.”
Journal of Roman Studies
92: 1–32.

Wimberly, Dale, and Rosaria Bello. 1992. “Effects of Foreign Investment, Exports, and Economic Growth on Third World Food Consumption.”
Social Forces
70: 895–921.

Windel, Aaron. 2009. “British Colonial Education in Africa: Policy and Practice in the Era of Trusteeship.”
History Compass
7: 1–21.

Windschuttle, Keith. 1996.
The Killing of History
. San Francisco: Encounter Books.

Wittfogel, Karl A. [1957] 1981.
Oriental Despotism
. New York: Vintage Books.

Wolfram, Herwig. 1988.
History of the Goths
. Berkeley: University of California Press.

———. 1997.
The Roman Empire and Its Germanic Peoples
. Berkeley: University of California Press.

Wolfson, Harry Austryn. 1947. “The Knowability and Describability of God in Plato and Aristotle.”
Harvard Studies in Classical Philology
56: 233–49.

Wood, Frances. 1995.
Did Marco Polo Go to China?
London: Secker and Warburg.

Woodberry, Robert D. 2007a. “The Medical Impact of Missions.” Paper presented at the American Society for Church History, Atlanta, January 5.

———. “The Missionary Roots of Liberal Democracy.”
American Political Science Review
106: 1–30.

———. 2006. “Reclaiming the M-Word: The Legacy of Missions in Nonwestern Societies.”
Reveiw of Faith and International Affairs
4, no. 1: 3–12.

———. 2011. “Religion and the Spread of Human Capital and Poltiical Institutions.” In Rachel M. McCleary, ed.
The Oxford Handbook of the Economics of Religion
, 111–31. New York: Oxford University Press.

———. 2007b. “The Social Impact of Missionary Higher Education.” In Philip Yuen Sang Leung and Peter Tze Ming Ng, eds.,
Christian Responses to Asian Challenges
, 99–120. Hong Kong: Centre for the Study of Religion and Chinese Society, the Chinese University of Hong Cong.

Wrigley, E. A. 2010.
Energy and the English Industrial Revolution
. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Wroth, Lawrence C. 1970.
The Voyages of Giovanni de Verrazzano, 1524–1528
. New Haven: Yale University Press.

Wuthnow, Robert. 1989.
Communities of Discourse
. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.

Yamaki, Kazuhiko. 2001.
Nicholas of Cusa: A Medieval Thinker for a Modern Age
. New York: Routledge.

Ziegler, Philip. 1971.
The Black Death
. New York: Harper Torchbooks.

Zinsser, Hans. 1963.
Rats, Lice, and History
. New York: Black Dog and Leventhal.

Zoll, Amy. 2002.
Gladiatrix: The True Story of History’s Unknown Woman Warrior
. New York: Berkley.

Zupko, Jack. 2003.
John Buridan: Portrait of a Fourteenth-Century Arts Master
. Notre Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame Press.

Index

 

 

‘Abd-al-Rahmân,
88
,
89

Abelard, Peter,
166

“academic freedom,”
167–68

Académie Royale,
306

Accius, Lucius,
52

Acemoglu, Daron,
345

Acre,
109
,
284

Adam of Breman,
146

Adrianople, Battle of,
57
,
64

Aeschylus,
16–17

Afonso IV (king of Portugal),
206

Africa: Battle of Shangani,
362
; depicted in the
Medici Atlas
,
207
; diseases affecting Westerners,
359–60
; Portuguese voyages along the coast of,
207–8

African slavery: American Indians and,
236–37
; Catholic slave codes,
230–32
; causes of,
227–28
; colonialism and,
219
,
220
; slave trade,
228–29
.
See also
slavery

Age of Belief, The
(Fremantle),
70

Age of Discovery: European knowledge of geography,
200–203
; European political disunity and,
212–13
; navigational technology,
203–4
; overview,
199
; Portuguese voyages of exploration,
199
,
205–9
; significance of,
214–15
; voyages of Amerigo Vespucci,
214
; voyages of Cabot,
213–14
; voyages of Columbus,
210–13

Age of Imperialism,
364–66

Agincourt, Battle of,
85
,
86

Agobard of Lyons,
124

agriculture: during the Dark Ages,
76–78
; the
Mesta
system in Spain,
257
; prosperity during the Medieval Warm Period,
146–47
; urbanization and,
333–34

Alaric,
60
,
64
,
65–66

Alba, Duke of.
See
Toledo, Don Fernando Álvarez de

Albert of Saxony,
177

Albertus Magnus, Saint,
136
,
171–72
,
196

Alexander II (pope),
98

Alexander the Great,
27
,
28
,
32

Alexius I Comnenus,
99
,
102
,
103–5

Ali Pasha,
293
,
294

Allen, Robert C.,
342

Almagest
(Ptolemy),
173–74
,
210

Algorismus
(John of Sacrobosco),
171

America: gold and silver taken by Spain,
242–43
; naming of,
214
; Spanish immigration,
259–60
; voyages of Amerigo Vespucci to,
214
; voyages of Cabot to,
213–14
; voyages of Columbus to,
210–13
.
See also
North America

American Indians: lack of technological progress,
237–40
; myths of the “noble savage,”
232–37
; slavery and,
236–37

amphitheaters: Roman,
55

Anastasius (pope),
112

anatomical studies,
164–65

Anaxagoras,
25–26

Anaximander,
24

ancient empires: exploitation, stagnation, and repression in,
9
,
10–13

Andronicus, Livius,
52

Anglo-Saxons: arrival in England,
75
; flight after the Norman conquest of England,
99

Anselm, Saint,
124

Antioch: capture by the crusaders,
105–6
; massacre of 1266,
111
; Princedom of,
107–8

Antioch-at-Jerusalem,
34

anti-Semitism: during the Black Death,
151–52
; Islam and,
301–2
; Luther and,
275
; in the Rhine region,
152

Antwerp,
249
,
250–51

Aphrodite of Knidos,
22

Aquinas.
See
Thomas Aquinas, Saint

Arabic numerals,
296

Arab societies: modernity and,
370

Aratus,
35

Archimedes,
23
,
200
,
343

architecture: during the Dark Ages,
83
; influence of dhimmis on Muslim architecture,
295–96

Arens, William,
233

Aristotelian logic,
28

Aristotle: on the Athenian Empire,
30
; conception of the universe as cyclic,
37–38
; early Christianity and,
37–38
; on the Greek economy,
20
; Islam and,
298–99
; ownership of slaves,
29
; philosophical concepts,
27–28
; Scholasticism and,
164
,
165
; on the universe as uncreated,
316
; views of commerce,
343
; Western science and,
304–5

Armenia,
301

arms and armor: crossbows,
85
,
99
,
109
; crusader victories and,
109
; during the Dark Ages,
84–85
; of the Vikings,
95–96

Armstrong, Karen,
109

Arnarson, Ingólfr,
145

arquebuses,
197
,
220–21

Arsuf,
108

Artaxerxes II,
17

artillery.
See
cannons

arts: ancient Greece,
21–22
; Dark Ages,
73–74
,
82–83
; Greco-Roman,
51–52

Ascalon, Battle of,
107

Asimov, Isaac,
307

Assayer
(Galileo),
318

astrolabe,
23
,
204

astrology,
161

astronomy: illusions about Islamic contributions,
296–97
; Scholastics and the Copernican “revolution,”
169–79

Atahualpa,
223–24

Atharī, Masha’allah ibn,
296

Athenian Empire,
30

Other books

Come Near Me by Kasey Michaels
The Miles by Robert Lennon
Simple Genius by David Baldacci
Blind Wolf by Rose, Aubrey
Borders of the Heart by Chris Fabry
Run for Home by Dan Latus
My Prize by Sahara Kelly
Exposed by Francine Pascal