Roots of Empire: Forests and State Power in Early Modern Spain, c.1500-1750: Brill's Series in the History of the Environment, cartea 4
Autor John T. Wingen Limba Engleză Hardback – 7 ian 2015
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9789004261365
ISBN-10: 9004261362
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0.57 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Brill's Series in the History of the Environment
ISBN-10: 9004261362
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0.57 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Brill's Series in the History of the Environment
Cuprins
Acknowledgements ix
List of Maps, Figures, and Tables xiii
Introducing Spanish State Forestry 1
The Widow’s Oak and the Spanish State in the Valley of Carriedo 1
The Politics of Wood Shortage Fears in the Early Modern World 19
Spanish Forest Landscapes from Prehistory to the Reconquest 29
Plan of the Work 38
1 A New State Forestry for the First Global Age 44
Crown and Forests, Redefined 44
Spanish Forest Landscapes from the Reconquest to the Habsburgs 47
Medieval Forest Regulations and Naval Power in the Reign of Carlos I (1516–1556) 54
A New Era of Naval Strategy in the Reign of Felipe II (1556–1598) 65
Forests and the Collection of Geographic Knowledge 70
The Enterprise of England: Recovery and Response 76
2 Forests of the Ultramar 85
Colonial Forest Territoriality in the Sixteenth Century 85
Geographic Knowledge Channels Across the Atlantic 87
Spanish Shipbuilding in the Old and New Worlds 91
Regulating Colonial Forest Use in the Sixteenth Century 96
Naval Forestry and Imperial Rivalries 116
3 The Struggle to Stay Afloat in the Seventeenth Century 120
Transition and Persistence in Spanish Forests under the Later Habsburgs 120
State Forestry in Times of Peace and Global Conflict in the Early 1600s 122
To a New Generation of Forest Inspectors: Barros’s Letter to Riva Herrera 127
The Formation of Forest Superintendent Dynasties 130
The Waning of Spanish Imperial Might 138
Toribio Perez de Bustamante’s Instrucción of 1650 141
Colonial Forest Territoriality in the Seventeenth Century 145
Habsburg State Forestry in an Era of Naval Decline 156
4 Bottoming Out and Revival under the First Bourbon, 1700–1746 165
Expansion of State Forestry in the Reign of Felipe V (1700–1746) 165
Voices for Reform from the North Coast 168
Patino’s Tenure and the Reestablishment of the Almirantazgo 174
Forest Reconnaissance in the Naval Departments of Ferrol, Cartagena, and Cadiz 178
The Forest Inspections of Juan Valdes y Castro in Segura and Catalonia 183
Colonial Forest Territoriality in the Eighteenth Century 193
Accomplishments of Felipe V’s Reign 201
5 The Triumph of State Forestry: 1748–1754 203
Ensenada’s Push for Peace and Naval Revival, 1743–1748 203
Spain’s Naval Forest Conservation Ordinance of January 31, 1748 206
Other Forest Legislation, 1748–1751 215
Resistance to the New Legislation 219
Forest Inspection Reports after 1748 222
Other Reforms and Ensenada’s Fall from Power, 1749–1754 232
Accomplishments of Fernando VI’s Reign (1746–1759) 236
General Conclusion 240
Bibliography 247
Index 263
List of Maps, Figures, and Tables xiii
Introducing Spanish State Forestry 1
The Widow’s Oak and the Spanish State in the Valley of Carriedo 1
The Politics of Wood Shortage Fears in the Early Modern World 19
Spanish Forest Landscapes from Prehistory to the Reconquest 29
Plan of the Work 38
1 A New State Forestry for the First Global Age 44
Crown and Forests, Redefined 44
Spanish Forest Landscapes from the Reconquest to the Habsburgs 47
Medieval Forest Regulations and Naval Power in the Reign of Carlos I (1516–1556) 54
A New Era of Naval Strategy in the Reign of Felipe II (1556–1598) 65
Forests and the Collection of Geographic Knowledge 70
The Enterprise of England: Recovery and Response 76
2 Forests of the Ultramar 85
Colonial Forest Territoriality in the Sixteenth Century 85
Geographic Knowledge Channels Across the Atlantic 87
Spanish Shipbuilding in the Old and New Worlds 91
Regulating Colonial Forest Use in the Sixteenth Century 96
Naval Forestry and Imperial Rivalries 116
3 The Struggle to Stay Afloat in the Seventeenth Century 120
Transition and Persistence in Spanish Forests under the Later Habsburgs 120
State Forestry in Times of Peace and Global Conflict in the Early 1600s 122
To a New Generation of Forest Inspectors: Barros’s Letter to Riva Herrera 127
The Formation of Forest Superintendent Dynasties 130
The Waning of Spanish Imperial Might 138
Toribio Perez de Bustamante’s Instrucción of 1650 141
Colonial Forest Territoriality in the Seventeenth Century 145
Habsburg State Forestry in an Era of Naval Decline 156
4 Bottoming Out and Revival under the First Bourbon, 1700–1746 165
Expansion of State Forestry in the Reign of Felipe V (1700–1746) 165
Voices for Reform from the North Coast 168
Patino’s Tenure and the Reestablishment of the Almirantazgo 174
Forest Reconnaissance in the Naval Departments of Ferrol, Cartagena, and Cadiz 178
The Forest Inspections of Juan Valdes y Castro in Segura and Catalonia 183
Colonial Forest Territoriality in the Eighteenth Century 193
Accomplishments of Felipe V’s Reign 201
5 The Triumph of State Forestry: 1748–1754 203
Ensenada’s Push for Peace and Naval Revival, 1743–1748 203
Spain’s Naval Forest Conservation Ordinance of January 31, 1748 206
Other Forest Legislation, 1748–1751 215
Resistance to the New Legislation 219
Forest Inspection Reports after 1748 222
Other Reforms and Ensenada’s Fall from Power, 1749–1754 232
Accomplishments of Fernando VI’s Reign (1746–1759) 236
General Conclusion 240
Bibliography 247
Index 263
Recenzii
This is a complex and well-written book that presents a powerful argument about the emergence of the state in connection to local practices (the use of forests) and global activities (empire, commerce, war).
- Antonio Barrera (Colgate University) American Historical Review, December 2018, 1752-1753 pp.
This book provides a rich, well-presented raw narrative for anyone interested in learning about processes of central state formation in early modern Europe, the military in mercantile empires, environmental history in the early modern world economy, and of course for specialists in Spanish history.
- Eva-Maria Swidler (Goddard College & The Curtis Institute of Music), Environmental History, vol 21, no 4, October 2016, 768-769 pp.
[…] it should be apparent that Wing makes a major contribution to our understanding of early modern Spain, Spanish seapower, Spanish environmental history, and state formation in early modern Spain. […] His monograph [...] is also a major contribution to the burgeoning field of environmental history in all its aspects. It is founded on an impressive command of the secondary literature and of key primary (archival) source materials, above all the Guerra series in Simancas for the Habsburg era and the Marina series in the same archive for the eighteenth century. The work is the more effective for Wing’s lucidity of conceptualization, argument and expression. While Spanish seapower, forests and state formation have been explored before for different periods […] they have not been put together hitherto in this way for the entire period and in English.[...] In sum, a work to be recommended for all interested in maritime history – and others.Christopher Storrs (University of Dundee, UK), The International Journal of Maritime History 2016, Vol. 28(3) 576–600 pp.
The author states several times his affinity for the area, which comes across in this engagingly written, entertaining, and informative work. Maritime historians and anyone with an interest in human interactions along the world’s waterways will find it useful reading.
- Robert S. Shelton (Cleveland State University), The International Journal of Maritime History, 2016, Vol. 28(3): 635-636 pp.
Forests were not only strategic resources for state navies, but also commons for local groups. John Wing’s Roots of Empire explores the process through which the Spanish monarchy gained increasing legal and effective control over littoral forests first and inland forest later. [...] Wing studies the history of forest management in relationship to the geopolitics of imperial naval expansion (or lack thereof ) during three distinct historical periods.
- Jorge Cañizares-Esguerra (University of Texas at Austin), Renaissance Quarterly, Vol. LXIX, No. 4, 1495-1496 pp.
- Antonio Barrera (Colgate University) American Historical Review, December 2018, 1752-1753 pp.
This book provides a rich, well-presented raw narrative for anyone interested in learning about processes of central state formation in early modern Europe, the military in mercantile empires, environmental history in the early modern world economy, and of course for specialists in Spanish history.
- Eva-Maria Swidler (Goddard College & The Curtis Institute of Music), Environmental History, vol 21, no 4, October 2016, 768-769 pp.
[…] it should be apparent that Wing makes a major contribution to our understanding of early modern Spain, Spanish seapower, Spanish environmental history, and state formation in early modern Spain. […] His monograph [...] is also a major contribution to the burgeoning field of environmental history in all its aspects. It is founded on an impressive command of the secondary literature and of key primary (archival) source materials, above all the Guerra series in Simancas for the Habsburg era and the Marina series in the same archive for the eighteenth century. The work is the more effective for Wing’s lucidity of conceptualization, argument and expression. While Spanish seapower, forests and state formation have been explored before for different periods […] they have not been put together hitherto in this way for the entire period and in English.[...] In sum, a work to be recommended for all interested in maritime history – and others.Christopher Storrs (University of Dundee, UK), The International Journal of Maritime History 2016, Vol. 28(3) 576–600 pp.
The author states several times his affinity for the area, which comes across in this engagingly written, entertaining, and informative work. Maritime historians and anyone with an interest in human interactions along the world’s waterways will find it useful reading.
- Robert S. Shelton (Cleveland State University), The International Journal of Maritime History, 2016, Vol. 28(3): 635-636 pp.
Forests were not only strategic resources for state navies, but also commons for local groups. John Wing’s Roots of Empire explores the process through which the Spanish monarchy gained increasing legal and effective control over littoral forests first and inland forest later. [...] Wing studies the history of forest management in relationship to the geopolitics of imperial naval expansion (or lack thereof ) during three distinct historical periods.
- Jorge Cañizares-Esguerra (University of Texas at Austin), Renaissance Quarterly, Vol. LXIX, No. 4, 1495-1496 pp.
Notă biografică
John T. Wing, Ph.D. (2009), University of Minnesota, is Assistant Professor of History at the College of Staten Island, The City University of New York. He has published articles on Spanish forest history in Environmental History and the Journal of Early Modern History.