Essai de géographie historique de la Caraïbe révolutionnaire (fin XVIIIe s.-ca. 1820)

The cartographic representations commonly offered of the late eighteenth to early nineteenth centuries Caribbean by historians and contemporaries alike do not reflect its complexity or dynamics. They reflect far more European Powers’ aspirations in America than the reality of the multiple sovereignt...

Descripción completa

Guardado en:
Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Nicolas Terrien
Formato: article
Lenguaje:EN
FR
PT
Publicado: Centre de Recherches sur les Mondes Américains 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/897e9a164d96440d86edac96e60f7438
Etiquetas: Agregar Etiqueta
Sin Etiquetas, Sea el primero en etiquetar este registro!
id oai:doaj.org-article:897e9a164d96440d86edac96e60f7438
record_format dspace
spelling oai:doaj.org-article:897e9a164d96440d86edac96e60f74382021-12-02T10:35:01ZEssai de géographie historique de la Caraïbe révolutionnaire (fin XVIIIe s.-ca. 1820)1626-025210.4000/nuevomundo.78317https://doaj.org/article/897e9a164d96440d86edac96e60f74382019-12-01T00:00:00Zhttp://journals.openedition.org/nuevomundo/78317https://doaj.org/toc/1626-0252The cartographic representations commonly offered of the late eighteenth to early nineteenth centuries Caribbean by historians and contemporaries alike do not reflect its complexity or dynamics. They reflect far more European Powers’ aspirations in America than the reality of the multiple sovereignties, particularly Amerindian, that exercised there – or the very absence of sovereignty. The revolutions of that period and the concomitant dissolution of Spanish and French imperial sovereignties in the Caribbean amplified the range and volume of the fraudulent trans-imperial maritime circulations which, already endemic in the 18th century, had long thwarted the colonial states' claims to any monopoly. The study of these circulations at the turn of the 19th century reveals an alternative geography of the Caribbean, composed of an archipelago of sovereignties underpinned by a maritime framework, the interloping Caribbean. This geography did not evade the supporters of the new sovereignties in America – the United States, Haiti and the independent governments of Spanish America – who were the product of this as much as they benefited from it; upon it then arose, around Saint-Domingue, the revolutionary Caribbean.Nicolas TerrienCentre de Recherches sur les Mondes AméricainsarticleCaribbeangeographysovereigntyrevolutionindependenceAmerindiansAnthropologyGN1-890Latin America. Spanish AmericaF1201-3799ENFRPTNuevo mundo - Mundos Nuevos (2019)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
FR
PT
topic Caribbean
geography
sovereignty
revolution
independence
Amerindians
Anthropology
GN1-890
Latin America. Spanish America
F1201-3799
spellingShingle Caribbean
geography
sovereignty
revolution
independence
Amerindians
Anthropology
GN1-890
Latin America. Spanish America
F1201-3799
Nicolas Terrien
Essai de géographie historique de la Caraïbe révolutionnaire (fin XVIIIe s.-ca. 1820)
description The cartographic representations commonly offered of the late eighteenth to early nineteenth centuries Caribbean by historians and contemporaries alike do not reflect its complexity or dynamics. They reflect far more European Powers’ aspirations in America than the reality of the multiple sovereignties, particularly Amerindian, that exercised there – or the very absence of sovereignty. The revolutions of that period and the concomitant dissolution of Spanish and French imperial sovereignties in the Caribbean amplified the range and volume of the fraudulent trans-imperial maritime circulations which, already endemic in the 18th century, had long thwarted the colonial states' claims to any monopoly. The study of these circulations at the turn of the 19th century reveals an alternative geography of the Caribbean, composed of an archipelago of sovereignties underpinned by a maritime framework, the interloping Caribbean. This geography did not evade the supporters of the new sovereignties in America – the United States, Haiti and the independent governments of Spanish America – who were the product of this as much as they benefited from it; upon it then arose, around Saint-Domingue, the revolutionary Caribbean.
format article
author Nicolas Terrien
author_facet Nicolas Terrien
author_sort Nicolas Terrien
title Essai de géographie historique de la Caraïbe révolutionnaire (fin XVIIIe s.-ca. 1820)
title_short Essai de géographie historique de la Caraïbe révolutionnaire (fin XVIIIe s.-ca. 1820)
title_full Essai de géographie historique de la Caraïbe révolutionnaire (fin XVIIIe s.-ca. 1820)
title_fullStr Essai de géographie historique de la Caraïbe révolutionnaire (fin XVIIIe s.-ca. 1820)
title_full_unstemmed Essai de géographie historique de la Caraïbe révolutionnaire (fin XVIIIe s.-ca. 1820)
title_sort essai de géographie historique de la caraïbe révolutionnaire (fin xviiie s.-ca. 1820)
publisher Centre de Recherches sur les Mondes Américains
publishDate 2019
url https://doaj.org/article/897e9a164d96440d86edac96e60f7438
work_keys_str_mv AT nicolasterrien essaidegeographiehistoriquedelacaraiberevolutionnairefinxviiiesca1820
_version_ 1718397006493253632