At the turn of the nineteenth century, the Caribbean was rife with revolutionary fervor and political turmoil. Yet, with such upheaval came unparalleled opportunities. In this innovative and richly detailed study, Jeppe Mulich explores the interconnected nature of imperial politics and colonial law in the maritime borderlands of the Leeward Islands, where British, Danish, Dutch, French, Spanish, and Swedish colonies both competed and cooperated with one another. By exploring the transnational networks involved in trade, slavery, smuggling, privateering, and marronage, he offers a new account of the age of revolutions in the Caribbean, emphasizing the border-crossing nature of life in the region. By approaching major shifts in politics, economy, and law from the bottom-up, a new story of early nineteenth-century globalization emerges - one that emphasizes regional integration and a multiplicity of intersecting networks.
Jeppe Mulich is Teaching Associate in Global History at the University of Cambridge and St John's College.
1. Introduction; 2. Free ports and black markets; 3. Imperial warfare, colonial violence; 4. Prize courts and privateers; 5. Slave laws and free communities; 6. Abolition and the illegal slave trade; Conclusion.
'Through its examination of illicit trade, privateering and slave trading in the Leeward Islands, this book uncovers hitherto unstudied trans-imperial networks, intercolonial relations and inter-imperial politics. Its exploration of the role of small powers – particularly the long-neglected Scandinavian empires – will be of particular interest to scholars of historical sociology and global and imperial history.' Lisa Ford, University of New South Wales
David Armitage, Alison Bashford, Sujit Sivasundaram, Massachusetts) Armitage, David (Harvard University, Sydney) Bashford, Alison (University of New South Wales, Sujit (University of Cambridge) Sivasundaram