Dutch Atlantic Decline During “The Age of Revolutions”
The Age of Revolutions heralded fundamental changes in the Atlantic. The American, Haitian and Latin American revolutions did away with colonialism in most of the Americas, though the Caribbean remained a European stronghold. The British abolition of the slave trade potentially severed the ties betw...
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description | The Age of Revolutions heralded fundamental changes in the Atlantic. The American, Haitian and Latin American revolutions did away with colonialism in most of the Americas, though the Caribbean remained a European stronghold. The British abolition of the slave trade potentially severed the ties between Africa and the Americas and initiated the ending of slavery itself, even if illegal slave trading would continue into the 1860s. The economic ascent of the United States laid the basis for the later political supremacy of the u.s. in the Americas. By 1825, of all the European colonial powers only Great Britain continued to |
doi_str_mv | 10.1163/9789004271319_014 |
format | Book Chapter |
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ispartof | Dutch Atlantic Connections, 1680-1800, 2014, Vol.29, p.309-335 |
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source | OAPEN; DOAB: Directory of Open Access Books; Brill Open E-Book Collection; JSTOR eBooks: Open Access |
subjects | Abolition Age of Revolution Armed conflict Behavioral sciences Businesspeople Colonies Economic disciplines Economics Employment Government Government officials Governors Historical periods History Human geography Jurisprudence Labor economics Law Merchants Metropolitan areas Military science Modern Era Occupations Philosophy of law Political geography Political science Slave trade Slavery Slaves Social organization Social sciences Sociology War |
title | Dutch Atlantic Decline During “The Age of Revolutions” |
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