ABSTRACT

Uncovering, for the first time, the role played by home users in fostering energy changes, this book explores the effects of energy transitions between the medieval and industrial era on the everyday life of Europeans and considers how cultural, social and material changes in the home facilitated the transition towards a more energy-demanding world.

This book delves deeper into the interactions between early modern consumers and the ecological constraints of the world surrounding them. Experts on specific aspects of domestic energy use departing from different case studies in early modern Europe confront these central issues. This book therefore offers a wide range of approaches within a long-term and comparative perspective. Different ‘material cultures of energy’ across time and space and across different climates in Europe are explored.

Ultimately, this book aims to consider how the early modern home not just adapted to energy changes, but perhaps even prepared the way for our modern addiction to fossil energy. Energy in the Early Modern Home is the perfect resource for students and scholars of early modern Europe, premodern environmental history, the history of consumption and material culture, and the history of science and technology.

part I|75 pages

The materiality of energy

chapter 1|19 pages

Continuity and change in the search for domestic warmth

Material culture, fuels and practices (France, sixteenth–nineteenth centuries)

chapter 2|24 pages

A Warm Renaissance

Material culture and heating techniques in Venetian artisans' homes (sixteenth-seventeenth centuries)

part III|78 pages

The spaces of energy

chapter 6|16 pages

The kitchen

An early modern power house? Antwerp, sixteenth–eighteenth centuries

chapter 7|14 pages

Warmth for men

Kitchens and stables in peasant houses in Italy (seventeenth–eighteenth centuries)

chapter 8|25 pages

Energy usage in the kitchen

Heat and material culture in sixteenth- and seventeenth-century Dutch cookbooks

chapter 9|21 pages

Energy and the functional specialisation of domestic space in eighteenth-century Ghent and Leiden

The early modern home as an ‘energyscape’

part IV|27 pages

The social life of energy

chapter 10|25 pages

‘Those closest to the fire enjoy the most of its glow’

Inequality and energy in eighteenth-century Flanders 1