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Nature and Environment. Historische Klimatologie Mitteleuropas. News Distribution. Warfare โ This article discusses water as a substance and a historical subject matter. The focus is on the different historical, social and cultural functions that water performed. The following article will illustrate that water is not conceivable without land, and the diverse contact zones between the two are illustrated by means of sample transverse perspectives.
On the one hand, water is a natural substance. Water accounts for the greater part of the Earth's surface and most of the mass of the human body. It is the basis of life on Earth. On the other hand, water is a historical topic. Water played a large role in daily life, and not just in "water cultures" 1 such as Venice and Holland.
Histories of materials and environmental histories โ such as those that exist for wood, for example โ have not yet been written for water. Its natural form changes depending on the temperature. Strictly speaking, the term "water" only refers to the liquid state. When frozen, this substance is ice. In its gaseous state, it is steam. It also crosses borders as a constituent part of the environment.
Rivers, lakes and seas do not adhere to national boundaries. In the s, the sociologist and sinologist Karl August Wittfogel โ found a succinct term to encapsulate the social significance of water. He coined the term "hydraulic society". Wittfogel's theory was intended to give the "Marxist worldview a worldwide dimension" 5 by also incorporating non-European societies and their forms of production.