The Atlantic Slave Trade in World History
In: Themes in World History
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In: Themes in World History
In: The Atlantic Slave Trade Ser.
Cover -- Half Title -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Original Half Title -- Series Page -- Original Title Page -- Original Copyright Page -- Table of Contents -- Acknowledgements -- Series Preface -- Dedication -- Introduction -- 1 The Causes of Slavery or Serfdom: A Hypothesis -- 2 Some Considerations Relating to Property Rights in Man -- 3 The Volume of the Atlantic Slave Trade: A Synthesis -- 4 The Inter-Atlantic Paradigm: The Failure of Spanish Medieval Colonization of the Canary and Caribbean Islands -- 5 Wangara, Akan and Portuguese in the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Centuries: The Matter of Bitu -- 6 Slavery in Africa and the Slave Trades from Africa -- 7 Slaves and Society in Western Africa, c. 1445-c. 1700 -- 8 Estimating Aboriginal American Population: An Appraisal of Techniques with a New Hemispheric Estimate -- 9 The Indian Population of North America in 1492 -- 10 The Tanios of Hispaniola: The Island's First Inhabitants -- 11 Indian Labor and New World Plantations: European Demands and Indian Responses in Northeastern Brazil -- 12 Cultural Change and Military Resistance in Araucanian Chile, 1550-1730 -- 13 From Indian to Slave: Forced Native Labour and Colonial Society in São Paulo During the Seventeenth Century -- 14 Iberian Expansion and the Issue of Black Slavery: Changing Portuguese Attitudes, 1440-1770 -- 15 English Trade with the Portuguese Empire in West Africa 1581-1629 -- 16 Protestants as Pirates, Slavers, and Proto-Missionaries: Sierra Leone 1568 and 1582 -- 17 From Africa to the Americas: Ethnicity in the Early Black Communities of the Americas -- Name Index.
This timely book offers a world history of insurgencies and of counterinsurgency warfare. Working beyond traditional Western-centric narrative, arguing that it is crucial to ground experiences in Afghanistan and Iraq in a global framework. Unlike other studies that begin with the American and French revolutions, this book reaches back to antiquity to trace the pre-modern origins of war. Interweaving thematic and chronological narratives, Black probes the enduring linkages between beliefs, events, and people on the one hand and changes over time on the other hand. He shows the extent to which politics, technologies, and ideologies have evolved, creating new parameters and paradigms that have framed both governmental and public views.Tracing insurgencies ranging from China to Africa to Latin America, Black highlights the widely differing military and political dimensions of each conflict. He weighs how, and why, lessons were learned or, rather, asserted, in both insurgency and counterinsurgency warfare. At every stage, he considers lessons learned by contemporaries, the ways in which norms developed within militaries and societies, and their impact on doctrine and policy. His sweeping study of insurrectionary warfare and its counterinsurgency counterpart will be essential reading for all students of military history
In: The Atlantic Slave Trade Ser.
Cover -- Half Title -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Original Title Page -- Original Copyright Page -- Table of Contents -- Acknowledgements -- Series Preface -- Dedication -- Introduction -- 1 African Slavery and Other Forms of Social Oppression on the Upper Guinea Coast in the Context of the Atlantic Slave-Trade -- 2 African Societies and the Atlantic Slave Trade -- 3 "Here is No Resisting the Country": The Realities of Power in Afro-European Relations on the West African "Slave Coast -- 4 Hunting for Rents: The Economics of Slaving in Pre-Colonial Africa -- 5 Encomienda, African Slavery, and Agriculture in Seventeenth-Century Caracas -- 6 The French Slave Trade: An Overview -- 7 The Economic Origins of Black Slavery in the British West Indies, 1640-1680: A Tentative Analysis of the Barbados Model -- 8 The Economics of Transition to the Black Labor System in Barbados, 1630-1680 -- 9 Trade, Plunder, and Economic Development in Early English Jamaica, 1655-89 -- 10 Who Bought Slaves in Early America? Purchasers of Slaves from the Royal African Company in Jamaica, 1674-1708 -- 11 "To Procure Negroes": The English Slave Trade to Barbados, 1627-60 -- 12 "The Countrie Continues Sicklie": White Mortality in Jamaica, 1655-1780 -- 13 The Passion to Exist: Slave Rebellions in the British West Indies, 1650-1832 -- 14 The Influence of Disease on Race, Logistics and Colonization in the Antilles -- 15 The Profitability of Sugar Planting in the British West Indies, 1650-1834 -- 16 The First American Boom: Virginia 1618 to 1630 -- 17 From Servants to Slaves: The Transformation of the Chesapeake Labor System -- 18 The Tobacco Industry in the Chesapeake Colonies, 1617-1730: An Interpretation -- 19 The Origins Debate: Slavery and Racism in Seventeenth-Century Virginia -- 20 The English Sugar Islands and the Founding of South Carolina.
In: The Atlantic Slave Trade Ser.
Cover -- Half Title -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Original Title Page -- Original Copyright Page -- Table of Contents -- Acknowledgements -- Series Preface -- Dedication -- Introduction -- 1 Slave Exports from West and West-Central Africa, 1700-1810: New Estimates of Volume and Distribution -- 2 Prices of Slaves in West and West-Central Africa: Toward an Annual Series, 1698-1807 -- 3 King Agaja of Dahomey, the Slave Trade, and the Question of West African Plantations: The Embassy of Bulfinch Lambe and Adomo Tomo to England, 1726-32 -- 4 Whitehaven and the Eighteenth-Century British Slave Trade -- 5 The Commercial and Financial Organization of the British Slave Trade, 1750-1807 -- 6 Market Structure and the Profits of the British African Trade in the Late Eighteenth Century -- 7 Profitability of the British Trade in Slaves Once Again -- 8 Productivity in the Transatlantic Slave Trade -- 9 Evidence on English/African Terms of Trade in the Eighteenth Century -- 10 Characteristics of British Slaving Vessels, 1698-1775 -- 11 The World an Absentee Planter and His Slaves Made: Sir William Stapleton and His Nevis Sugar Estate, 1722-1740 -- 12 "Prodigious Riches": The Wealth of Jamaica Before the American Revolution -- 13 The Condition of the Slaves in the Settlement and Economic Development of the British Windward Islands, 1763-1775 -- 14 Measuring the French Slave Trade, 1713-1792/3 -- 15 The French Sugar Business in the Eighteenth Century: A Quantitative Study -- 16 Profitability of Slave and Long-Distance Trading in Context: The Case of Eighteenth-Century France -- 17 A Reassessment of the Dutch Atlantic Slave Trade -- 18 The History of the Danish Negro Slave Trade, 1733-1807 -- 19 Worlds Apart: Africans' Encounters and Africa's Encounters with the Atlantic in Angola, Before 1800.
In: The Weight of Words Series
Intro -- Cover Page -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Dedication -- Table of Contents -- Preface -- Abbreviations -- 1. A Summary Biography -- 2. Dramas -- 3. Politics and the Press -- 4. London Settings -- 5. Travel and Travellers -- 6. The Rural World -- 7. Women and Families -- 8. Society -- 9. Religion -- 10. Into Novels -- 11. The Magisterial Fielding -- 12. Novels Anew -- 13. Conclusions -- Selected Further Reading -- Index.
In: Brief histories
The Atlantic has borne witness to major historic events that have drastically shaped humanity with each crossing of its path. In this broad and readable book, Jeremy Black takes the reader through its evolution to becoming one of the most important oceans in the world. Black discusses the importance of the Atlantic in relation to world history as well as addressing topics such as those bravest to attempt to cross the ocean before Columbus, the beginnings of slavery from 1400-1600, the struggle for control between empires in the 1600s, the way technology adapted with steamships to telegraph cables, the battle of the Falkland, and the Cold War. Black also touches on the Atlantic we know today, and the struggles it faces due to urgent global issues including climate change, pollution, and the trials of the economic rise in the Indo-Pacific world. If you have ever yearned to know more about this famed and vital ocean, this clear and concise history will be a key read as one of the first of its kind on its evolution to becoming an established world ocean