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Page 1: Week 3 - Slide 1
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European Landscapes

• Physical Landscapes

– Climate

– Geomorphology

– Hydrography

• Cultural Landscapes

– Cultural Attributes

– Religion

– Selected Aspects of the Cultural Landscape

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Physical Landscapes

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European Climates

What’s significant about European Climates?

• Location of Continent– Further to the North than North America

– Climate classification: Koeppen

• Gulf Stream– North Atlantic Circulation

– Climate Change debate

• Predominant Weather Patterns– Grosswetterlagen(GWL) – Weather Patterns

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What makes the European Weather?

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What makes the European Weather?

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Contemporary European Climates

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Contemporary European Climates

• A Climates = Tropical• B Climates = Subtropical• C Climates = Temperate • D Climates = Continental• E Climates = Polar• Subgroups indicate season

changes in precipitation and temperature variation

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Contemporary European Climates

Dominant European Climate Types

• Cfb = Maritime Temperate = Fluctuating weather patterns, often overcast skies, high humidity, cool summers, warm winters

• Dfb = Warm Summer Continental = Often Dryer summer than Cfb, cool, wet winter

• Csa = Mediterranean Climate = Hot, Dry Summer, Wet, cool, rainy winter

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The Gulf Stream Effect – Real or Imagined?

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The Gulf Stream –North Atlantic Circulation

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The Jet Stream Effect – Typical Winter Air Movements

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Grosswetterlagen

Predominant Weather Patterns

• Dependent upon north/south movement of the Polar Front

• Position of Highs and Lows over Europe

• Drive or block the movement of Low Pressure Systems from the Atlantic

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Contemporary European Landscapes

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Contemporary European Landscapes

General Divisions of the European Landscape

• Mountains

• Orogeny

• Caledonian

• Hercynian

• Alpine

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Contemporary European Landscapes

General Divisions of the European Landscape

• Caledonian

• Northern Europe

• Norway, Sweden, UK and Ireland

• Cambrian (542-488 mya)

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Contemporary European Landscapes

General Divisions of the European Landscape

• Hercynnian

• Central Europe

• Germany, France, Spain

• Silurian (443-416 mya) to Carboniferous (359-299 mya)

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Contemporary European Landscapes

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Contemporary European Landscapes

General Division of the European Landscape

• Alpine

• Southern Europe

• Alps, Pyrenees, Dinaric Alps

• Spain, France, Italy, Germany, Switzerland, Austria

• Tertiary (65-1.8 mya)

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Contemporary European Landscapes

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Contemporary European Landscapes

Impact of Glaciation

• European Lowlands

• Glacial Remnants

• Northern Europe

• Moraines– Terminal moraines

• Loess Belt – Windblown glacial outwash deposits

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Contemporary European Landscapes

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General Hydrography of Europe

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Cultural Landscapes

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Overview

• Introduction

• How should geographers study religion in Europe?

• Exploring the evolving religious landscape of Europe– Prehistoric

– The Greeks and Romans

– Jewish Europe

– Christian Europe

– Islamic Europe

• Examining European sacred places

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How should geographers study religion in Europe?

They should focus on

• Origins, diffusion and distribution

• Spatial characteristics of individual places and movements

– Significance, drawing power

– Pilgrimage paths, spatial connections

• Sharing of and struggling over religious space

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How do geographers study religion?

Origins, diffusion and distribution

• Origins

– Life, death and place of religious teachers

• Founders

• Missionaries

• Saints

– Supernatural events

• Miracles, apparitions

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How do geographers study religion?

Origins, diffusion and distribution• Diffusion

– Paths of conversion

– Hierarchy

– Networks of modern religious movement

• Distribution

– Expansion

– Drawing power

– Networks and overlap

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How do geographers study religion?

Spatial characteristics of individual places• Sacrality

– Why is it sacred?

• Hierophany

– Encounter with a manifestation of the sacred -miracle, apparition, vision

• Life of founder or saint

• Node of larger movement

– How did the sacred manifest itself?

– How sacred is it?

• Drawing power

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Exploring the evolving religious landscape of Europe

Prehistoric Europe

• Animistic

• Nature religion

• “pagan” myths

– Examples

• The cave at Lascaux

• Stonehenge and the Celtic Druids

• Athens as a model of greek cosmology

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Exploring the evolving religious landscape of Europe

Prehistoric Europe

• Animistic - The cave at Lascaux (17000 BP)

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Exploring the evolving religious landscape of Europe

Prehistoric Europe

• Nature religions • Stonehenge and druidic sun cult

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Exploring the evolving religious landscape of Europe

Prehistoric Europe

• Nature religions • Stonehenge and druidic sun cult

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Exploring the evolving religious landscape of Europe

Prehistoric Europe

• Pagan religious systems • Athens and Greek cosmology - The Golden Ratio

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Exploring the evolving religious landscape of Europe

Jewish Europe

• End of Jewish State under Roman Empire - 66CE– Diaspora development

– Coexistence in early Christian Europe (4th Century AD onwards)

• Heavy persecution in Christian Europe– Crusades beginning in 11th Century

– Expulsions - Inquisition

• Eastern European Tolerance– Poland

• Enlightenment reintegration– Emancipation Period in 1700 -1800s

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Exploring the evolving religious landscape of Europe

Jewish Europe

• Renewed Anti-semitism from late 1800s onwards– Racial (Racist) Science

– Zionism

– Large-scale emigration

– Holocaust

• Return to Europe after WW II– Russian and Eastern European Jews

– Remaining anti-semitism

– The Holocaust Memorial (Berlin)

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Exploring the evolving religious landscape of Europe

Christian Europe

• Apostle Paul

• Birth of Christianity

• Gnostic and Literalist Christians

• Christianity unifies Europe

– Literalist dominance

– Edict of Milan 313

– State religion

• Christianity splits Europe

– Council of Nicea 325 AD

– Series of Ecumenical Councils

– Creedal difference

– Great Schism 1054 split Latin from Orthodox Churches

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The Roman Empire at the height of its political power and maximum geographic expansion

The gradual spread of Christianity to Europe

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Exploring the evolving religious landscape of Europe

Christian Europe

• Christianity splits Europe

– 1517 Martin Luther

– Reformation movement begins

– Calvin, Zwingly

– 16/17th Century Church of England

– Arrival of LDS in Europe - 19th Century

• Results

– Europe is predominantly Christian Continent today, yet very diverse denominations exist

– Most European nation states have “state churches”

– Certain brands of Christianity are officially sanctioned

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The Roman Empire after its split in 330, divided into an Eastern and a Western Section

The fragmented Western Empire at the beginning of Frankish expansion

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Exploring the evolving religious landscape of Europe

Islamic Europe• Birth of Islam

– 622 AD

• Advancement of Islam – Spain – Ottoman Empire – Challenges to Christianity

• Questions of Church vs. State in Islam – Sharia– Example of Turkey – Modern Controversies

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What should the European reaction to the increasing presence of

Muslims be?

Should they react at all?

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Examining European sacred places

Why are some sacred places more popular than others? The example of Christian sacred places

• What makes places sacred? – The place itself

– The movement associated with it

• What places can we distinguish?

• Where are these places? – Santiago de Compostella

– St. Marie De la Mer

• What happens at these places? – The anatomy of a pilgrimage

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Examining European sacred places

Ancient Pilgrimage Route to Santiago de Compostela

Main Cathedral in Compostela - Final Point of the Journey

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Examining European sacred places

What makes Santiago de Compostela sacred?

• The place itself– UNESCO World Heritage Site

– Camino de Santiago (Way of St. James)

– Pilgrimage route(s) from France to Spain

– One of the most visited religious sites in Europe and the world

– Tremendous Infrastructure

– Santiago = Saint James

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Examining European sacred places

What makes Santiago de Compostela sacred?

• The place itself– Santiago = Saint James

– One of the 12 Apostles

– Early missionary

– Returned to Palestine AD 44

– Martyred

– His remains were moved to Spain

– Hermit Paleyo is led to remains by vision in 813

– Declaration as Holy Town in 1213 by Pope Alexander

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Examining European sacred places

What makes Santiago de Compostela sacred?

• The movement associated with it– Movement from sacred sites

to holy cities

– Movement of increasing intensity