Susanah Shaw Romney locates the foundations of the early modern Dutch empire in interpersonal transactions among women and men. As West India Company ships began sailing westward in the early seventeenth century, soldiers, s...

Buy Now From Amazon

Susanah Shaw Romney locates the foundations of the early modern Dutch empire in interpersonal transactions among women and men. As West India Company ships began sailing westward in the early seventeenth century, soldiers, sailors, and settlers drew on kin and social relationships to function within an Atlantic economy and the nascent colony of New Netherland. In the greater Hudson Valley, Dutch newcomers, Native American residents, and enslaved Africans wove a series of intimate networks that reached from the West India Company slave house on Manhattan, to the Haudenosaunee longhouses along the Mohawk River, to the inns and alleys of maritime Amsterdam.

Using vivid stories culled from Dutch-language archives, Romney brings to the fore the essential role of women in forming and securing these relationships, and she reveals how a dense web of these intimate networks created imperial structures from the ground up. These structures were equally dependent on male and female labor and rested on small- and large-scale economic exchanges between people from all backgrounds. This work pioneers a new understanding of the development of early modern empire as arising out of personal ties.



Similar Products

The Saltwater Frontier: Indians and the Contest for the American Coast (New Directions in Narrative History)The Web of Empire: English Cosmopolitans in an Age of Expansion, 1560-1660The Colony of New Netherland: A Dutch Settlement in Seventeenth-Century America (Cornell Paperbacks)Bonds of Alliance: Indigenous and Atlantic Slaveries in New France (Published for the Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture, Williamsburg, Virginia)Independence Lost: Lives on the Edge of the American RevolutionPirate Nests and the Rise of the British Empire, 1570-1740 (Published for the Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture, Williamsburg, Virginia)Laboring Women: Reproduction and Gender in New World Slavery (Early American Studies)American Colonies: The Settling of North America, Vol. 1