Today, mountains are spaces of adventure: hill-walking, skiing, rock-climbing and mountaineering. Mountain regions are treasured as places for human beings to connect with nature, encounter the sublime, and challenge themselves. It has often been said that the love of mountains is relatively new: that before modern mountaineers planted flags upon the peaks, the average European was more likely to revile and avoid a mountainous landscape than admire it. Mountains Before Mountaineering tells a different story, of the way mountains were experienced and enjoyed in Europe before 1750. It gives voice to the early modern travellers who climbed peaks and passes with fear and delight, to the ‘real mountaineers’ who lived and died upon the mountain slopes, and to the scientists who used mountains to try to understand the origins of the world.
Engrossing, astonishing, thought-provoking; shatters the long-standing illusion that mountains were held in abhorrence during the early modern era. Fascinating to read about mountains as seen through the eyes of early modern travellers, writers, poets, philosophers, naturalists, artists, map-makers, and the people who actually lived there. Jo Woolf, author of Britain’s Landmarks and Legends Like a passionate guide, Dawn Hollis leads you along the little-travelled paths of pre-modern mountains … With a sharp and reflexive eye for the practice of historical research, she challenges the prevailing notion of ‘Mountain Gloom’ associated with that era. Spanning centuries and continents, she unveils the diverse perceptions and uses of mountains beyond the single practice of mountaineering. Dr Gilles Rudaz, University of Geneva Dawn Hollis's rich and compelling account will transform the way we think about the history of human engagement with mountains. It shows decisively that places of high altitude could be sources of pleasure and even joy in many different contexts within European culture long before the mid-eighteenth century … Based on painstaking research across a vast range of sources, it brings to life the responses of individuals and communities whose stories have been sidelined from traditional histories of mountains and mountaineering. Professor Jason König, University of St Andrews From studying mountain stories for 25 years, I’ve learned that authors and mountaineers believe that they are the lucky ones. Ice axes and sticky rubber enabled them to climb. They also believed that those before them were blind to mountains’ beauty or incapable of fathoming their sublime. Even I accepted it as dogma. But Dawn L. Hollis’ thorough research strips the myth down to uncover our longer human respect, curiosity, and affection for the mountains that predates mountaineering. Mountains Before Mountaineering challenges us to reconsider our human relationship with mountains and who we are as adventurers and people. Andrew Szalay, The Suburban Mountaineer We have heard all too often the tired old cliché that appreciation of mountain scenery is a modern invention, prompted by Wordsworth, Colderidge and those other eighteenth century inventors of ’The Sublime’. Dawn Hollis digs a bit deeper to unearth the adventures of much earlier romantic travellers, equally enthralled by the mountains. ... Hollis wears her erudition lightly and writes engagingly, with a lovely conversational tone brightened by sparks of humour, inviting us generously to share and enjoy her discoveries. Stephen Venables Written by a woman mountaineer, this book asks what mountains meant before mountaineering came be about conquering particular peaks. Hollis destroys the myth that mountaineering is a quintessentially modern pursuit, or that pre modern people feared mountains. ... Hollis introduces us to a raft of extraordinary characters, like the fictional Theuerdank, who pole-vaulted across mountains as he sought to win his bride – she was not impressed. Or Johann Jakob Scheuchzer, who noted local reports of long-tongued, serpent-like dragons in the Alps and whose book depicted them too. ... Packed with vivid anecdote, this book is a historical anthropology of the peak. Lyndal Roper, Regius Professor of History at the University of Oxford ‘Explores landscapes inhabited by travellers drawn upwards to the roof of the world.’ * National Geographic Traveller *
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