The Smugglers' World
Jesse Cromwell
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Omohundro Institute and University of North Carolina Press
Geisteswissenschaften, Kunst, Musik / Geschichte
Beschreibung
The Smugglers' World examines a critical part of Atlantic trade for a neglected corner of the Spanish Empire. Testimonies of smugglers, buyers, and royal officials found in Venezuelan prize court records reveal a colony enmeshed in covert commerce. Forsaken by the Spanish fleet system, Venezuelan colonists struggled to obtain European foods and goods. They found a solution in exchanging cacao, a coveted luxury, for the necessities of life provided by contrabandists from the Dutch, English, and French Caribbean.
Jesse Cromwell paints a vivid picture of the lives of littoral peoples who normalized their subversions of imperial law. Yet laws and borders began to matter when the Spanish state cracked down on illicit commerce in the 1720s as part of early Bourbon reforms. Now successful merchants could become convict laborers just as easily as enslaved Africans could become free traders along the unruly coastlines of the Spanish Main. Smuggling became more than an economic transaction or imperial worry; persistent local need elevated the practice to a communal ethos, and Venezuelans defended their commercial autonomy through passive measures and even violent political protests. Negotiations between the Spanish state and its subjects over smuggling formed a key part of empire making and maintenance in the eighteenth century.
Kundenbewertungen
commercial history of the Caribbean, smuggling in the Caribbean, Real Compañía Guipuzcoana, early-modern crime and punishment, contraband trade, Juan Francisco de León Rebellion, the French Caribbean, maritime violence and piracy, commercial history of Venezuela, the Dutch Caribbean, inter-imperial relations, the social history of trade, Curaçao, the moral economy, commercial history of the Spanish Empire, eighteenth-century commercial history, the history of chocolate, merchant networks, commodities, maritime history of the Caribbean, the English Caribbean, eighteenth-century Venezuelan history, the Bourbon Reforms, Caracas, the Spanish Caribbean, maritime slavery, the Caracas Company, Atlantic history, bureaucratic corruption, commercial reform and free trade