Making the Earth Global: Early Modern Nautical Rutters and the Construction of a Global Concept of the Earth (RUTTER)
Team
Henrique Leitão, Principal Investigator
Antonio Sánchez, Senior Researcher
David Salomoni, Post-doc
Luana Giurgevich, Post-doc
Juan Acevedo, Post-doc
Nuno Vila-Santa, Post-doc
Joana Lima, PhD Candidate
José Maria Moreno Madrid, PhD Candidate
Carlos Neves, PhD Candidate
Inês Bénard da Costa, MsC
Silvana Munzi, Project manager
Period
2019-2024
Funding
European Research Council (Advanced Grant)
About
Early modern nautical rutters (sailing directions) are the earliest Western documents that testify to the stable and regular lived experience of traversing the earth’s oceans on a global, planetary scale.
Nautical rutters (and ship’s logbooks) are technical documents that collect and analyse critical information for the successful accomplishment of oceanic navigation. This includes elements of strict nautical nature (courses, distances, and latitudes), as well as information on oceanography (currents and tides), meteorology (winds and storms), geography, geophysics (magnetic declination) and the natural world.
Their unique value lies not only in the fact that they are exceptional historical repositories of information about the world on a planetary scale but, more importantly, that they document the emergence of global concepts about the earth. In fact, no earlier documents contain information about the earth on a comparable worldwide scale. Thus, their historical value is peerless.
Using these exceptional, yet poorly known sources, the main objective of this project is to write a narrative of the scaling up of a scientific description of the earth in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, from the lived experience of travelling and observing the earth in long-distance sea voyages. As a preliminary task, a systematic search, identification and classification of the information contained in early modern Iberian rutters and ship’s logbooks will be performed. This will be followed by an extensive multidisciplinary study aiming at radically improving our present knowledge of the historical process that led to the formation of global concepts about the earth.