
A professionalised, urbanised and commercialised world is the grand legacy of the Mediterranean - the astonishing Phoenician-Greek-Roman-Byzantine-Arab-Venetian-Turkish continuity you can know and feel today in any harbour town from Cadiz to Latakia. That is a good summary of what he has described - in essence, the medieval urbanisation of northern Europe - but not a single one of those aspects of life was not a reflection of what had already been long apparent in the south. We are not on the margins of history any more we are dealing in the essential, the changes of mind that made our world possible. Law, professions, the written word towns, and what they do to the natural world books and fashion business and its relationship to power.

‘The modern world is taking its shape,’ he concludes after his centuries have run their course: He doesn’t know enough to make a coherent case for the contribution the north, let alone the North Sea, may have made to European civilisation. Pye admits early on that he feels out of his depth and that, unfortunately, in the end, is the trouble. He has posed it as a whopping set of questions, stretching over 1,000 years from 700 to 1700, and 100 kingdoms, one which would daunt any historian, however practised and however informed. That is Michael Pye’s question: do the North Sea and the connections across it constitute the missing half of the European story? How have its dynamics shaped our history? But more than that, is the north merely the ragged edge of the south, far less continuous in its culture, broken by a hostile climate and impoverished soils, the rough end of Europe? Or does it have a substance beyond that? Can you really say that ‘the North Sea made us who we are’? Surely the North Sea deserves its human history too?


The Mediterranean glows in our conception of the Continent, the warm source of everything that is best in us, the seat of civilisation, from which one delicious wave after another has washed up on our shores.īut what about the Mediterranean’s twin, the other great lobe of the Atlantic which defines the northern edge of the European peninsula, a sea of enormous fertility, its edges laced with islands, fed into by the richest of rivers, with, in the Baltic, its own inner chamber, giving access to the giant hinterlands of Russia.
