Indentured Migration and the Servant Trade from London to America, 1618-1718: 'There is Great Want of Servants'
Autor John Wareingen Limba Engleză Hardback – 14 dec 2016
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780198788904
ISBN-10: 0198788908
Pagini: 316
Ilustrații: black and white figures
Dimensiuni: 162 x 240 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.59 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 0198788908
Pagini: 316
Ilustrații: black and white figures
Dimensiuni: 162 x 240 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.59 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Recenzii
His work is a nice addition to the existing scholarship. It provides a careful exploration of the London side of the servant trade and the work that went into gathering both willing and unwilling volunteers for transport across the Atlantic.
This is a very important book. The major contribution of Wareing's work is that he uncovered how the servant trade operated, focusing on London. His detailed analysis of indentured servant recruitment and the structure of the servant trade in England is a much needed contribution to the field.
Wareing's study wonderfully illuminates the shadowy world of the servant trade, revealing how national ambitions, demand for labor, and moral reaction to exploitation created a complex market in human capital, which servants and procurers alike hoped to manipulate for their own gain.
Wareing sheds new light on the trade in indentured servants and presents a story wherein 'motive, opportunity, and means often operated as a criminal trinity'. His work is a nice addition to the existing scholarship. It provides a careful exploration of the London side of the servant trade and the work that went into gathering both willing and unwilling volunteers for transport across the Atlantic.
This study of the better-documented legal and other processes in London and Middlesex has opened the door to understanding indentured servitude and its role in the westward enterprise; and the problems of both the servants and the authorities in controlling the abuses to which the process was always vulnerable.
Wareing's book undoubtedly makes an important contribution to the history of early modern migration in the Atlantic world, where 'indentured servants' played a central role in the process of European colonization.
John Wareing's fine book deserves a wide readership for its important contributions to early modern English economic history, set within a wider colonial context.
Indentured Migration and the Servant Trade from London to America is a valuable study that adds appreciably to our knowledge of the history of indentured servitude in the seventeenth-century English Atlantic world ... Scholars interested in the history of servitude, migration, and empire during the Stuart era have much to gain from a careful reading of Wareing's book.
for historians and graduate students interested in early modern English population movements, servant migration to the Americas, the place of London in developing the system of servitude, and above all the shadowy world of servant procurement, there is much to recommend in Wareing's book.
The book is at its strongest in explaining how the servant trade in England worked ... this book adds significantly to our understanding of how English merchants organized one major stream of migration to the Americas
This is a very important book. The major contribution of Wareing's work is that he uncovered how the servant trade operated, focusing on London. His detailed analysis of indentured servant recruitment and the structure of the servant trade in England is a much needed contribution to the field.
Wareing's study wonderfully illuminates the shadowy world of the servant trade, revealing how national ambitions, demand for labor, and moral reaction to exploitation created a complex market in human capital, which servants and procurers alike hoped to manipulate for their own gain.
Wareing sheds new light on the trade in indentured servants and presents a story wherein 'motive, opportunity, and means often operated as a criminal trinity'. His work is a nice addition to the existing scholarship. It provides a careful exploration of the London side of the servant trade and the work that went into gathering both willing and unwilling volunteers for transport across the Atlantic.
This study of the better-documented legal and other processes in London and Middlesex has opened the door to understanding indentured servitude and its role in the westward enterprise; and the problems of both the servants and the authorities in controlling the abuses to which the process was always vulnerable.
Wareing's book undoubtedly makes an important contribution to the history of early modern migration in the Atlantic world, where 'indentured servants' played a central role in the process of European colonization.
John Wareing's fine book deserves a wide readership for its important contributions to early modern English economic history, set within a wider colonial context.
Indentured Migration and the Servant Trade from London to America is a valuable study that adds appreciably to our knowledge of the history of indentured servitude in the seventeenth-century English Atlantic world ... Scholars interested in the history of servitude, migration, and empire during the Stuart era have much to gain from a careful reading of Wareing's book.
for historians and graduate students interested in early modern English population movements, servant migration to the Americas, the place of London in developing the system of servitude, and above all the shadowy world of servant procurement, there is much to recommend in Wareing's book.
The book is at its strongest in explaining how the servant trade in England worked ... this book adds significantly to our understanding of how English merchants organized one major stream of migration to the Americas
Notă biografică
John Wareing was formerly Head of the School of Geography and Environmental Studies in the University of North London. He is a well-travelled Historical Geographer with a doctorate in History and a long-standing interest in migration and indentured service to the American colonies. He has spent enjoyable periods in libraries and record offices in England, North America, and the West Indies, and his early retirement gave him the opportunity to question and revise some of the conclusions published about the early indentured servant trade from London.