Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- List of Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- List of Abbreviations
- 1 Constructing Atlantic Peripheries: A Critical View of the Historiography
- 2 Did Prussia have an Atlantic History? The Partitions of Poland-Lithuania, the French Colonization of Guiana, and Climates in the Caribbean, c. 1760s to 1780s
- 3 A Fierce Competition! Silesian Linens and Indian Cottons on the West African Coast in the Late Seventeenth and Early Eighteenth Centuries
- 4 Prussia’s New Gate to the World: Stettin’s Overseas Imports (1720–1770) and Prussia’s Rise to Power
- 5 Luxuries from the Periphery: The Global Dimensions of the Eighteenth-Century Russian Rhubarb Trade
- 6 Atlantic Sugar and Central Europe: Sugar Importers in Hamburg and their Trade with Bordeaux and Lisbon, 1733–1798
- 7 A Gateway to the Spanish Atlantic? The Habsburg Port City of Trieste as Intermediary in Commodity Flows between the Habsburg Monarchy and Spain in the Eighteenth Century
- 8 A Cartel on the Periphery: Wupper Valley Merchants and their Strategies in Atlantic Trade (1790s–1820s)
- 9 Linen and Merchants from the Duchy of Berg, Lower Saxony and Westphalia, and their Global Trade in Eighteenth-Century London
- 10 Ambiguous Passages: Non-Europeans Brought to Europe by the Moravian Brethren during the Eighteenth Century
- 11 German Emigrants as a Commodity in the Eighteenth-Century Atlantic World
- 12 Reorienting Atlantic World Financial Capitalism: America and the German States
- 13 Afterword
- Bibliography of Secondary Works Cited
- Index
- People, Markets, Goods: Economies and Societies in History
1 - Constructing Atlantic Peripheries: A Critical View of the Historiography
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 January 2023
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- List of Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- List of Abbreviations
- 1 Constructing Atlantic Peripheries: A Critical View of the Historiography
- 2 Did Prussia have an Atlantic History? The Partitions of Poland-Lithuania, the French Colonization of Guiana, and Climates in the Caribbean, c. 1760s to 1780s
- 3 A Fierce Competition! Silesian Linens and Indian Cottons on the West African Coast in the Late Seventeenth and Early Eighteenth Centuries
- 4 Prussia’s New Gate to the World: Stettin’s Overseas Imports (1720–1770) and Prussia’s Rise to Power
- 5 Luxuries from the Periphery: The Global Dimensions of the Eighteenth-Century Russian Rhubarb Trade
- 6 Atlantic Sugar and Central Europe: Sugar Importers in Hamburg and their Trade with Bordeaux and Lisbon, 1733–1798
- 7 A Gateway to the Spanish Atlantic? The Habsburg Port City of Trieste as Intermediary in Commodity Flows between the Habsburg Monarchy and Spain in the Eighteenth Century
- 8 A Cartel on the Periphery: Wupper Valley Merchants and their Strategies in Atlantic Trade (1790s–1820s)
- 9 Linen and Merchants from the Duchy of Berg, Lower Saxony and Westphalia, and their Global Trade in Eighteenth-Century London
- 10 Ambiguous Passages: Non-Europeans Brought to Europe by the Moravian Brethren during the Eighteenth Century
- 11 German Emigrants as a Commodity in the Eighteenth-Century Atlantic World
- 12 Reorienting Atlantic World Financial Capitalism: America and the German States
- 13 Afterword
- Bibliography of Secondary Works Cited
- Index
- People, Markets, Goods: Economies and Societies in History
Summary
As a field, Atlantic history developed primarily in Anglo-American academia and has consequently produced more information on certain Atlantic regions (and subjects) than on others. The early modern Atlantic World, with its flows of bullion, of free and unfree laborers, of colonial produce and of manufactures from Europe and Asia, with its mercantile networks and rent-seeking capital, has to date been described as a preserve almost entirely of the Western sea-powers. Central and Eastern Europe have been notably absent from the narrative, with few exceptions. The reluctance of the historical profession in these very regions to engage with Atlantic history, and of ‘Western’ scholars to engage with these more eastern regions, has certainly contributed to this state of affairs. In 2009, when Jack P. Greene and Philip D. Morgan published their still very readable critical appraisal of the field of Atlantic history, hardly anyone would have regarded Central and Eastern European history as an area of study for the Atlantic historian. In their introduction, they proclaimed that ‘developments in Central and Eastern Europe … may well be less tightly linked to those in the Atlantic and better approached through other perspectives’. The notion that this part of Europe was not an integral part of the early modern Atlantic economy continues to be prominent in the field to this day.
This attitude is not just characteristic of Anglophone scholarship. Already in 1994, Hans-Heinrich Nolte proclaimed that German scholarship was too ‘self-centered’ to be occupied with such global narratives. In 2002, Sebastian Conrad remarked that German historiography had hardly been touched by globalization and showed a continuing tendency to write history from the perspective of the nation. This tendency, he continued, had in fact intensified after 1989. This is all the more curious, considering that contemporaries in past centuries were perfectly aware of Central and Eastern Europe’s dense entanglements with the Atlantic World. For Abbé Raynal (1713–1796), editor of the Histoire des deux Indes (1770), it was evident that the maritime expansion not only stimulated the economies of European sea-powers, but that more continental territories like those of Prussia and even Russia were also closely involved.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Globalized PeripheriesCentral Europe and the Atlantic World, 1680-1860, pp. 1 - 18Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2020