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    De Re Metallica

    De Re MetallicaAuthor: Georgius Agricola
    Publisher: Dover Publications
    Category: Book

    List Price: $38.95
    Buy Used: $13.00
    as of 3/20/2010 15:33 EDT details
    You Save: $25.95 (67%)



    New (20) Used (19) from $13.00

    Seller: green_oobleck
    Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 7 reviews
    Sales Rank: 533495

    Media: Paperback
    Pages: 672
    Number Of Items: 1
    Shipping Weight (lbs): 2.6
    Dimensions (in): 10.7 x 6.7 x 1.3

    ISBN: 0486600068
    Dewey Decimal Number: 550
    EAN: 9780486600062
    ASIN: 0486600068

    Publication Date: June 1, 1950
    Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

    Features:
      • ISBN13: 9780486600062
      • Condition: NEW
      • Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.

    Also Available In:

      • Hardcover - De re metallica
      • Hardcover - De Re Metallica

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    Editorial Reviews:

    Product Description
    One of the most important scientific classics of all time, this 1556 work on mining was the first based on field research and observation and the methods of modern science. 289 authentic Renaissance woodcuts. Translated by Herbert Hoover. Reprint of English (1912) edition.



    Customer Reviews:
    Showing reviews 1-5 of 7



    5 out of 5 stars De Re Metallica   October 13, 2008
    M. Sellers (State College, PA USA)
    1 out of 1 found this review helpful

    An essential book for the medievalist or art historian. Explains techniques and methods that have been lost to modern people over time.


    4 out of 5 stars De Re Metallica   July 13, 2006
    Rebar Belcher (Hawaii USA)
    1 out of 2 found this review helpful

    Not a practical work, however valuable as a record in the developement of human industrial activities. The industrial methods and processes described in De Re Metallica have long been superseded by newer methods. This is the first known text book of mining and metallurgy(1556)and is richly illustrated. Worth the price of admission for the illustrations alone. A classic historical text. RB


    4 out of 5 stars Vast Information, Increadable Woodcuts   January 15, 2006
    Cherylyn Crill (Fresno, CA)
    9 out of 10 found this review helpful

    This book is not a simple read for those looking for the basics, it a detailed review of the process of mining in the 16th Century throughout Germany with the inclusion of some surrounding regions. All aspects of the search for and creation of metals are covered from how to determine where a vein of materials is most likely to be found thru the methods of ore refinement and ingot production. The footnotes are incredibly helpful and sometimes (necessarily) take up more space than the text they refer to. This is not a basic overview, it is a manual designed to educate in specifics.

    As a reference this text is wonderful. The woodcuts alone provide a review of the methods and technology used that is more detailed than any other source I have found - although I am admittedly a novice in this particular field of study in Early Modern German History. As an amateur historian I would say that this manuscript is not a `friendly' read for a general audience, however as a reference for those deeply interested in the subject of mining or Early Modern German metal working it is invaluable. Great companion for Pyrotechnica.



    5 out of 5 stars Ian Myles Slater on: A Humanist's Industrial Handbook   October 12, 2003
    Ian M. Slater (Los Angeles, CA United States)
    17 out of 18 found this review helpful

    Georg Pawer was an extremely well educated German in the Humanist tradition of the late fifteenth and early sixteenth century. It was natural that he turned his Greco-German name into Greco-Latin, labeling himself Georgius Agricola. Both versions mean Farmer (Georgios) Farmer (Pawer = Bauer / Agricola). He was a physician by profession. Neither side of his background would seem to suit him to write one of the great books on mining and the refining of ores, but as an official town physician, responsible for treating miners at no additional charge, he seems to have won their trust. The result was a manual, aimed not at people who would have to dig up ores, but at potential investors, and officials and lawyers, who would have to deal with financing, administration and litigation. He set out the basic customs and practices of mining, described the remarkably elaborate machines needed to keep mines dry and ventilated, and processing and refining, with their devices and chemicals. Naturally, he wrote it in the language of real scholarship, Latin, not sixteenth-century German.

    Since surviving classical Latin is not abundantly supplied with appropriate technical terms, and those which exist are not always clear, the resulting text was soon found to present formidable difficulties, despite important aids from accompanying illustrations. There were early attempts at translating it into German, and even a rendering into Chinese (an early attempt to emulate the mysterious Occidentals and their terror-weapons), but when this translation appeared in 1912, German scholars were humiliated to find that they had been outclassed by a couple of mere "Englanders". They were probably even less happy to find that the translators were Americans.

    Actually, Lou Henry Hoover, a good classicist, made a perfect team with her husband, the mining engineer Herbert Hoover, who was shortly to become much better known for humanitarian relief work, and an unhappy experience as President of the United States. The engineering half of the partnership knew what the problems were, and the sort of thing that Agricola must have been trying to say, and the classicist could tell whether the vocabulary and grammar could carry that meaning. The result was a book which was not only beautiful, with its reproductions of the original illustrations, but a genuine contribution to the history of technology.

    The Dover reprinting of 1950 was one of the first, if not the first, of that publisher's adventures in bringing important works back into print, in attractive editions, at reasonable prices. It remains a gem, whether regarded from points of view of the history of technology, of art, or of Renaissance Humanism. The only thing missing is Agricola's companion treatise on other hazards of mining, like kobolds and other malicious spirits (yes, I am serious; he had lots of testimony from honest miners, after all).

    Of course, nothing human is perfect, and there are some hints of why such a practical man as Herbert Hoover, with a real concern for human suffering, proved so doctrinaire in the face of the Depression. At one point, the Hoovers scold the Romans for concentrating on German metal resources, instead of trying to build up the only true source of wealth, Agriculture. A lovely sentiment, very eighteenth-century Physiocratic, but it did not seem to occur to them that any agricultural surplus would have had to be shipped down the Rhine, into the North Sea, and around Europe, to be of any immediate benefit to Rome. If it stayed in Germany, it would just feed more nasty, Roman-hating Germans -- so much better to concentrate on something more compact and worth carrying across the Alps, or at least useful for arming the Legions. (Of course, there are also the problems of whether Italian agricultural techniques were of any value in the Rhine valley, and why the Germans had not learned appropriate methods from the neighboring Gauls -- but that leads in other directions.)



    5 out of 5 stars Excellent attention to detail of ancient mining practices   May 19, 1999
    4 out of 6 found this review helpful

    This book is a great read. The sections are well defined to cover each topic, including measurements where applicable and even the definition of tracts and management of said lands. He has written other books too. I hope they reprint the translations soon.

    Showing reviews 1-5 of 7


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