Historical geography is the study of the
human,
physical,
fictional, theoretical, and "real"
geographies of the past. Historical
geography studies a wide variety of issues and
topics. A common theme is the study of the geographies of the past
and how a place or region changes through time. Many historical
geographers study geographical patterns through time, including how
people have interacted with their environment, and created the
cultural landscape.
Historical geography seeks to determine how cultural features of
various societies across the planet emerged and evolved, by
understanding their interaction with their local environment and
surroundings.
For some
in the United States, the term historical geography has a
more specialized meaning: the name given by Carl Ortwin Sauer of the University of
California, Berkeley
to his program of reorganizing cultural geography
(some say all geography) along regional lines, beginning in the
first decades of the 20th
century. To Sauer, a landscape and the cultures in it
could only be understood if all of its influences through history
were taken into account: physical, cultural, economic, political,
environmental. Sauer stressed regional specialization as the only
means of gaining sufficient expertise on regions of the world.
Sauer's philosophy was the principal shaper of American geographic
thought in the mid-20th century. Regional specialists remain in
academic geography departments to this day. But some geographers
feel that it harmed the discipline; that too much effort was spent
on data collection and classification, and too little on analysis
and explanation. Studies became more and more area-specific as
later geographers struggled to find places to make names for
themselves. These factors may have led in turn to the
1950s
crisis in geography, which raised serious questions about
geography as an academic discipline in the United States.
This sub-branch of
human geography
is closely related to
history and
environmental history.
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