Abulafia wins for his epic history of humanity鈥檚 relationship with the world鈥檚 oceans, 探花直播Boundless Sea.

A remarkable book which through immense and impeccable research helps us to understand humanity鈥檚 relationship with the waters on which our future depends.

Wolfson History Prize judges

This year鈥檚 Wolfson History Prize has been awarded to David Abulafia, Emeritus Professor of Mediterranean History and Fellow of Gonville and Caius College, for his book , published last autumn.

探花直播book traces the history of human movement, trade and communication around and across the world's greatest bodies of water, charting our relationship with the oceans from the time of the earliest seafaring societies to the maritime networks of today鈥檚 container ships.

探花直播award was announced on Monday night at the Wolfson Prize鈥檚 first virtual ceremony, which featured guest appearances from previous winners, including Professor Mary Beard from the 探花直播鈥檚 Faculty of Classics. 探花直播virtual winner announcement can be viewed below.

探花直播Chair of the Wolfson Prize judging panel, Professor David Cannadine, described the book as one of 鈥渄eep scholarship鈥 and said it was brilliantly written.

鈥 探花直播Boundless Sea tackles a world encompassing subject: humanity鈥檚 constantly changing relationship with the seas that cover most of our planet and on which our very lives depend,鈥 Cannadine said. 听听

In 探花直播Boundless Sea, Abulafia follows merchants, explorers, pirates, cartographers and travellers in their quests for spices, gold, ivory, slaves, lands for settlement and knowledge of what lay beyond. It builds on Abulafia鈥檚 previous book 探花直播Great Sea, a human history of the Mediterranean.

探花直播Boundless Sea aims to go beyond 鈥淓urocentric鈥 approaches, examining the Atlantic waters before Columbus, and showing how lucrative trade routes were created that carried goods and ideas along the "Silk Route of the Sea"听well before Europeans burst into the Indian Ocean around 1500.

鈥淲inning the Wolfson History Prize I see as a tribute to all of us who have been trying to communicate history to the public, writing in an accessible way without jargon, and making sure that people see the past as an essential part of our human experience,鈥 said Abulafia, a former Chair of Cambridge鈥檚 Faculty of History.

探花直播Wolfson History Prize is run and awarded by the Wolfson Foundation, an independent charity that awards grants in the fields of science, health, heritage, humanities, and the arts. 听

Paul Ramsbottom, chief executive at the Wolfson Foundation, said that the Prize celebrates 鈥渢he importance to society of outstanding and accessible history writing鈥.

鈥淒avid Abulafia鈥檚 book is magnificently ambitious, brilliantly examining the changing, extraordinary connections between the vast oceans and humanity,鈥 said Ramsbottom. 鈥淲hile broad in chronological sweep, this clearly has a strong contemporary resonance 鈥 as our relationship with the natural world (including the oceans) is under scrutiny as never before.鈥

Professor David Abulafia is a maritime historian who has spent his career teaching and researching in the History Faculty at Cambridge 探花直播. He is the Papathomas Professorial Fellow of Gonville and Caius College, and a Fellow of the British Academy.



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