Early Modern Fire offers new perspectives on the history of fire in early modern Europe (ca. 1600â1800). Far from the background role that scholarship has traditionally assigned to fire, the essays in this volume demonstrate its centrality to understanding the entangled histories of science, technology, and society in the pre-industrial period.
Analysing case studies ranging from alchemy to cooking and from firefighting to fireworks, the contributors show that the history of fire is not only one of change and progress, but also of continuity, characterised by the persistence of traditional know-how, small-scale innovation, and the coexistence of different paradigms.
5 The Kitchen Fire (Eighteenth and Early Nineteenth Century)
âGianenrico Bernasconi
6 Fire Mechanics: Inventors and Promoters of Heating Systems (Eighteenth and Early Nineteenth Century)
âOlivier Jandot
7 âThe Manner of Conducting Fireâ: Firing Architectural Terracotta in the Modern Era, between Know-How, Wood Shortage, and Innovations
âCyril Lacheze
8 John Smeatonâs Fire Engine Trials
âAndrew M.A. Morris
Postgraduate students and academics interested in the history of science and technology, economic history, environmental history, history of material culture, social history, and early modern cultural history.
Keywords: heat, alchemy, thermometry, Galileo Galilei, apothecaries, cooking fire, Nicolas Gauger, architectural terracotta, John Smeaton, firefighting, fireworks, artisanal knowledge, urban police, purification, remedy making.