Negotiated Empires

Negotiated Empires

Author: Christine Daniels

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2013-10-18

Total Pages: 350

ISBN-13: 1136690964

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In this innovative volume, leading historians of the early modern Americas examine the subjects of early modern, continuing colonization, and the relations between established colonies and frontiers of settlement. Their original essays about centers and peripheries in Spanish, Portuguese, French, Dutch, and British America invite comparison.


Negotiated Empires

Negotiated Empires

Author: Christine Daniels

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2013-10-18

Total Pages: 337

ISBN-13: 1136690891

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In this innovative volume, leading historians of the early modern Americas examine the subjects of early modern, continuing colonization, and the relations between established colonies and frontiers of settlement. Their original essays about centers and peripheries in Spanish, Portuguese, French, Dutch, and British America invite comparison.


Negotiated Empires

Negotiated Empires

Author: Christine Daniels

Publisher: Psychology Press

Published: 2002

Total Pages: 328

ISBN-13: 9780415925389

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In this innovative volume, leading historians of the early modern Americas examine the subjects of early modern, continuing colonization, and the relations between established colonies and frontiers of settlement. Their original essays about centers and peripheries in Spanish, Portuguese, French, Dutch, and British America invite comparison.


Borderless Empire

Borderless Empire

Author: Bram Hoonhout

Publisher: University of Georgia Press

Published: 2020

Total Pages: 294

ISBN-13: 0820356085

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Introduction: borderless societies -- The borderland -- Political conflicts -- Rebels and runaways -- The centrality of smuggling -- The web of debt -- Borderless businessmen -- Conclusion: the shape of empire.


Negotiating Empire in the Middle East

Negotiating Empire in the Middle East

Author: M. Talha Çiçek

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 2021-07-15

Total Pages: 295

ISBN-13: 1316518086

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Examines how negotiations between the Ottomans and Arab nomads played a part in the making of the modern Middle East.


Negotiating Paradise

Negotiating Paradise

Author: Dennis Merrill

Publisher: Univ of North Carolina Press

Published: 2009

Total Pages: 347

ISBN-13: 080783288X

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Accounts of U.S. empire building in Latin America typically portray politically and economically powerful North Americans descending on their southerly neighbors to engage in lopsided negotiations. Dennis Merrill's comparative history of U.S. tourism in L


Empire by Treaty

Empire by Treaty

Author: Saliha Belmessous

Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA

Published: 2015

Total Pages: 305

ISBN-13: 0199391785

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Empire by Treaty: Negotiating European Expansion, 1600-1900 includes indigenous voices in the debate over European appropriation of overseas territories. It is concerned with European efforts to negotiate with indigenous peoples the cession of their sovereignty through treaties.


Men of Empire

Men of Empire

Author: Monique O'Connell

Publisher: JHU Press

Published: 2009-04-27

Total Pages: 264

ISBN-13: 0801891450

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The city-state of Venice, with a population of less than 100,000, dominated a fragmented and fragile empire at the boundary between East and West, between Latin Christian, Greek Orthodox, and Muslim worlds. In this institutional and administrative history, Monique O’Connell explains the structures, processes, practices, and laws by which Venice maintained its vast overseas holdings. The legal, linguistic, religious, and cultural diversity within Venice’s empire made it difficult to impose any centralization or unity among its disparate territories. O’Connell has mined the vast archival resources to explain how Venice’s central government was able to administer and govern its extensive empire. O’Connell finds that successful governance depended heavily on the experience of governors, an interlocking network of noble families, who were sent overseas to negotiate the often conflicting demands of Venice’s governing council and the local populations. In this nexus of state power and personal influence, these imperial administrators played a crucial role in representing the state as a hegemonic power; creating patronage and family connections between Venetian patricians and their subjects; and using the judicial system to negotiate a balance between local and imperial interests. In explaining the institutions and individuals that permitted this type of negotiation, O’Connell offers a historical example of an early modern empire at the height of imperial expansion.


A Biography of a Map in Motion

A Biography of a Map in Motion

Author: Christian J. Koot

Publisher: NYU Press

Published: 2018

Total Pages: 313

ISBN-13: 1479837296

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Reveals the little known history of one of history’s most famous maps – and its maker Tucked away in a near-forgotten collection, Virginia and Maryland as it is Planted and Inhabited is one of the most extraordinary maps of colonial British America. Created by a colonial merchant, planter, and diplomat named Augustine Herrman, the map pictures the Mid-Atlantic in breathtaking detail, capturing its waterways, coastlines, and communities. Herrman spent three decades travelling between Dutch New Amsterdam and the English Chesapeake before eventually settling in Maryland and making this map. Although the map has been reproduced widely, the history of how it became one of the most famous images of the Chesapeake has never been told. A Biography of a Map in Motion uncovers the intertwined stories of the map and its maker, offering new insights into the creation of empire in North America. The book follows the map from the waterways of the Chesapeake to the workshops of London, where it was turned into a print and sold. Transported into coffee houses, private rooms, and government offices, Virginia and Maryland became an apparatus of empire that allowed English elites to imaginatively possess and accurately manage their Atlantic colonies. Investigating this map offers the rare opportunity to recapture the complementary and occasionally conflicting forces that created the British Empire. From the colonial and the metropolitan to the economic and the political to the local and the Atlantic, this is a fascinating exploration of the many meanings of a map, and how what some saw as establishing a sense of local place could translate to forging an empire.


Empire and the Social Sciences

Empire and the Social Sciences

Author: Jeremy Adelman

Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing

Published: 2019-08-22

Total Pages: 248

ISBN-13: 1350102520

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This thought-provoking and original collection looks at how intellectuals and their disciplines have been shaped, halted and advanced by the rise and fall of empires. It illuminates how ideas did not just reflect but also moulded global order and disorder by informing public policies and discourse. Ranging from early modern European empires to debates about recent American hegemony, Empire and the Social Sciences shows that world history cannot be separated from the empires that made it, and reveals the many ways in which social scientists constructed empires as we know them. Taking a truly global approach from China and Japan to modern America, the contributors collectively tackle a long durée of the modern world from the Enlightenment to the present day. Linking together specific moments of world history it also puts global history at the centre of a debate about globalization of the social sciences. It thus crosses and integrates several disciplines and offers graduate students, scholars and faculty an approach that intersects fields, crosses regions and maps a history of global social sciences.