Abstract

AbstractBoth an essential national resource and members of a transnational group of skilled laboring men, sailors played an important but troublesome role in early modern Britain's rise to global commercial and military power. Historians have studied how the state and merchant employers sought to mobilize and control their labor, how sailors responded, and how “Britishness” was defined at sea. Three intertwined strands of analysis – labor history, sailors and the state, and the interaction between racial, gendered, religious, and professional identities at sea – dominate the historiography, with the 18th‐century Atlantic receiving the bulk of scholarly attention. This article surveys the field and suggests that a wider geographical and chronological scope is needed to recapture sailors' bottom‐up perspective on early modern British capitalism and empire.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call