Synopses & Reviews
In 1560, England was a weak kingdom on the margins of Europe. A century later, it was on its way to becoming a powerful empire, beginning to impose its will on people around the globe. In this sweeping account, Alison Games explores this century in which England's global stature was transformed.
In their first forays outside of western Europe, the English learned to rely on accommodation and innovation rather than force. They transported this style around the world, always adapting to local opportunities and constraints. Drawing on the fascinating life stories of cosmopolitans who traveled, traded, preached, governed, and colonized all around the world, Games uncovers the knowledge and expectations that people transported to new enterprises and the elements that led ventures to thrive or fail. She links trading posts and colonies, soldier and ministers, merchants and diplomats, English and Scots, devastating failures and improbably successes. She follows her subjects to Japan, North America, Madagascar, Ireland, Tangier, Istanbul, and other destinations.
A comparative imperial study and expansive world history, The Web of Empire makes a lasting argument about the formative years of the English empire.
Review
"Alison Games's newest book is a work of great range and depth that draws on a considerable breadth and variety of sources.... This comprehensive study is meticulously researched and points to a new direction for considering English global activities in this era as well as for understanding the eventual development and growth of the British Empire."--Journal of British Studies
"The Web of Empire: English Cosmopolitanism in an Age of Expansion offers a rather benign view of how global empire was built, with a dazzling array of explorers, travellers, merchants, clerics and even soldiers often more concerned to learn from exotic peoples than to impose on them."--The Independent
"Like Games's earlier effort, The Web of Empire conveys the result of prodigious research; anyone who has attempted archival research of English activity in far-flung locations in this early period will be impressed by Games's energy and tenacity."--New England Quarterly
"An admirable book. It casts light in places where shadows lurked; thereby it brightens a reader's view of the beginnings of the English empire. It proceeds from its author's diligent scouring of sources, her eye for apt detail, her gifts of style, and her careful posing of argument, all of which render this book well worth an investment of one's time."--Warren M. Billings, Virginia Magazine of History and Biography
"This is early, all encompassing, and wide-ranging British imperial history at its finest."--R.D. Long, CHOICE
"This thought-provoking book will doubtless stimulate further studies of the role of cosmopolitan accommodation in European imperial expansion." --Renaissance Quarterly
"Beautifully written, deeply researched, extraordinarily wide-ranging, and pathbreaking book...Indispensible for understanding how the British Empire began and for understanding how its origins shaped its subsequent history" --Journal of Modern History
Synopsis
How did England go from a position of inferiority to the powerful Spanish empire to achieve global pre-eminence? In this important second book, Alison Games, a colonial American historian, explores the period from 1560 to 1660, when England challenged dominion over the American continents, established new long-distance trade routes in the eastern Mediterranean and the East Indies, and emerged in the 17th century as an empire to reckon with. Games discusses such topics as the men and women who built the colonial enterprise, the political and fiscal factors that made such growth possible, and domestic politics that fueled commercial expansion. Her cast of characters includes soldiers and diplomats, merchants and mariners, ministers and colonists, governors and tourists, revealing the surprising breath of foreign experiences ordinary English people had in this period. This book is also unusual in stretching outside Europe to include Africa, Asia, and the Middle East. A comparative imperial study and expansive world history, this book makes a lasting argument about the formative years of the English empire.
About the Author
Alison Games is Dorothy M. Brown Distinguished Professor of History, Georgetown University. She is the author of
Migration and the Origins of the English Atlantic World and co-author of
The Atlantic World: A History, 1400-1888.
Table of Contents
Introduction
1. Before the Grand Tour: The Domestication of Travel
2. The Mediterranean Origins of the British Empire
3. English Overseas Merchants in an Expanding World of Trade, 1590-1650
4. Virginia, 1607-1622
5. All the King's Men: Governors, Consuls, and Ambassadors, 1590-1650
6. Madagascar, 1635-1650
7. The Cosmopolitan Clergy, 1620-1660
8. Ireland, 1649-1660
Conclusion