Explores the history of British Atlantic trading colonies
List of Illustrations, Maps, and TablesAcknowledgments Introduction Part one Beginnings, 1620-16591 Interimperial Foundations: Early Anglo-Dutch Trade in the Caribbean and New Amsterdam2 "Courted and Highly Prized": Anglo-Dutch Trade at Midcentury Part Two Achieving Stability, 1660-16893 Mercantilist Goals and Colonial Needs: Interimperial Trade amidst War and Crisis 4 Local Adaptations I: Anglo-Dutch Trade in the English West Indies 5 Local Adaptations II: Anglo-Dutch Trade in New York Part Three Maturity, 1689-17136 "A Conspiracy in People of All Ranks": The Evolution of Intracolonial Networks Epilogue. Diverging Interests: Anglo-Dutch Trade and the Molasses ActNotes Index About the Author
Christian J. Koot is Associate Professor of History at Towson University, where he teaches courses on Colonial and Revolutionary America. He is author of Empire at the Periphery: British Colonists, Anglo-Dutch Trade, and the Development of the British Atlantic, 1621-1713.
[This] book advances historians' understanding of the genesis of
the British Atlantic, the mechanics of legal and illegal trade, the
far-flung networks of the Dutch, and the development of political
ideologies.
*The Historian*
A thoughtful and impressive book.
*Journal of European Studies*
Christian Koot's aim in this study is to enrich our understanding
of the interrelations between English-Dutch Atlantic trade, the
economic behavior of English settlers in North America, and English
politics between 1621 and 1713.
*EH.Net*
Interesting and persuasive
*English Historical Review*
Scholars of Atlantic history, the British Empire, and maritime
history should all find Empire at the Periphery a worthwhile
read.
*International Journal of Maritime History*
Koots book is a very useful addition to the historiography of the
English Atlantic, especially as it takes the periphery, rather than
the metropole, as its focus.
*Enterprise and Society*
Employing fascinating examples from an impressive array of sources,
Koot provides compelling evidence that English colonists economic
ideologies drew in profound ways on their long-standing reliance on
Dutch trade. Koots deep understanding of both conditions on the
ground and of European political theory allows readers to see the
evolution of particularly colonial commercial cultures in Barbados,
the Leeward Islands, and New York. He attends carefully to changes
in local circumstances to argue that this history of Dutch trade
was central to an eighteenth-century divergence in Caribbean and
mainland theories of empire.
*April Hartfield,author of Atlantic Virginia: Intercolonial
Relations in the Seventeenth Century*
Koot deals in a fresh and convincing manner and in an accessible
style with Anglo-Dutch trade in the western Atlantic world, leaving
no stone unturned.
*Wim Klooster,author Revolutions in the Atlantic World: A
Comparative History*
Koot weaves a fascinating tale of the tensions between center and
periphery during the early decades of the British Empire. The new
English colonies struggled to acquire a staple crop or trade and to
get the provisions and commodities they needed to continue to
grow. England could not supply them adequately and the Dutch
could. The resulting conflicts fueled the arguments between London
and its nascent empire and shaped the ultimate form of the empire.
Koot has given us a new and fresh look at English trade and
empire.
*Robert Ritchie,Senior Research Associate, Huntington Library*
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