Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

British Atlantic World

View through CrossRef
The English were latecomers into the Atlantic, with permanent settlement not beginning in earnest until the 17th century. From 1607 and the founding of Jamestown until the latter part of the 19th century, the English and, after the union of England and Scotland in 1707, the British were the most numerous of all European migrants across the Atlantic. The British world was a world in motion, both at home and in the Americas. The sources collected here reflect the dynamism, restlessness, and willingness to take risks that characterized early modern British imperial expansion both into the Americas and into Asia, Africa, and the Pacific. The British Atlantic was most important in the two centuries before the American Revolution but continued to be important after the creation of the United States, as Canada and the West Indies grew while under British control. The British Atlantic world began after the Spanish Atlantic world and changed earlier than the Spanish world into a different sort of polity (one composed of nation-states as well as an empire) but was at least as important in shaping the Atlantic world. British Atlantic world history does not stand by itself: It needs to be placed within an imperial and “British world” perspective and needs to be connected to manifold changes that happened between the mid-16th and mid-19th centuries in Britain itself.
Oxford University Press
Title: British Atlantic World
Description:
The English were latecomers into the Atlantic, with permanent settlement not beginning in earnest until the 17th century.
From 1607 and the founding of Jamestown until the latter part of the 19th century, the English and, after the union of England and Scotland in 1707, the British were the most numerous of all European migrants across the Atlantic.
The British world was a world in motion, both at home and in the Americas.
The sources collected here reflect the dynamism, restlessness, and willingness to take risks that characterized early modern British imperial expansion both into the Americas and into Asia, Africa, and the Pacific.
The British Atlantic was most important in the two centuries before the American Revolution but continued to be important after the creation of the United States, as Canada and the West Indies grew while under British control.
The British Atlantic world began after the Spanish Atlantic world and changed earlier than the Spanish world into a different sort of polity (one composed of nation-states as well as an empire) but was at least as important in shaping the Atlantic world.
British Atlantic world history does not stand by itself: It needs to be placed within an imperial and “British world” perspective and needs to be connected to manifold changes that happened between the mid-16th and mid-19th centuries in Britain itself.

Related Results

Red Atlantic
Red Atlantic
The Red Atlantic is a concept by scholars in Native American history and Native American and Indigenous studies (NAIS) to address one of the perennial issues facing the study of th...
Teaching & Learning Guide for: Slavery and Romanticism
Teaching & Learning Guide for: Slavery and Romanticism
Author's Introduction Although it was long neglected on history courses, and almost entirely forgotten on literature courses, slavery and its abolition is now r...
Early Modern Amazonia
Early Modern Amazonia
A bibliography on the Amazon and the Atlantic has to take into account a double perspective. First, and frequently forgotten, the fact that the Amazon region has an Atlantic shore ...
Protestantism
Protestantism
Protestants arrived relatively late in the Atlantic world. They founded no permanent settlements until the early 17th century, giving the Roman Catholics a head start of more than ...
Green Atlantic: the Irish in the Atlantic World
Green Atlantic: the Irish in the Atlantic World
Does an Irish Atlantic exist? Indeed, forgetting Ireland when studying the Atlantic world was frequent as the island was easily integrated into English or British history. However,...
Poetry in the British Atlantic
Poetry in the British Atlantic
Poetry in the Atlantic world is a vast subject whose critical study has bourgeoned since around the turn of the millennium, in tandem with the rise of Atlantic Studies as a histori...
The demography of Atlantic brant (Branta bernicla hrota)
The demography of Atlantic brant (Branta bernicla hrota)
Animal population dynamics are driven by variation in survival and productivity. Long-lived species such as Arctic-nesting geese often are characterized by high adult survival and ...
Death in the Atlantic World
Death in the Atlantic World
Death studies emerged as a distinct field of scholarly inquiry in the 1970s. From the beginning the field was animated at least in part by presentist concerns. Jessica Mitford’s Th...

Back to Top