'To the foundation of a common-wealth' : English society and the colonisation of Virginia, c. 1607-1642

The colonisation of Jamestown, Virginia, in 1607 marked the beginning of permanent English settlement in North America. This history of colonisation in Virginia has traditionally been told from the perspective of settlers in the Jamestown fort, or Virginia Company investors who were embroiled in fac...

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Main Author: Ewen, Misha Odessa
Other Authors: Peacey, J. ; Conway, S.
Published: University College London (University of London) 2017
Subjects:
900
Online Access:https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.746641
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-7466412019-03-05T15:54:01Z'To the foundation of a common-wealth' : English society and the colonisation of Virginia, c. 1607-1642Ewen, Misha OdessaPeacey, J. ; Conway, S.2017The colonisation of Jamestown, Virginia, in 1607 marked the beginning of permanent English settlement in North America. This history of colonisation in Virginia has traditionally been told from the perspective of settlers in the Jamestown fort, or Virginia Company investors who were embroiled in faction. In contrast, historians have rarely engaged with how colonisation in Virginia interconnected with English society more broadly, including the impact that colonisation had on the cultural and political landscape of early modern England. This thesis explores this significant reciprocal component of colonisation, drawing on a wider range of historical actors and issues to explore how colonisation shaped contemporary English society. To do this, this study adopts the concept of commonwealth as the key lens of analysis, as it framed how individuals across the English Atlantic world responded to colonisation: investment in the colony, transatlantic transportation and trade, as well as representations of Virginia in letters, print and on stage, were articulated in terms of commonwealth. This approach tests the claim that the motivation for colonisation in Virginia was ‘trade and plunder’, by considering the wider social and political context of overseas expansion; however, it also offers a new interpretation of how people across the social spectrum in English society experienced and responded to colonisation in Virginia. Thus, the thesis offers a new interpretation of colonisation as it shaped English society, politics and culture in the early seventeenth century.900University College London (University of London)https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.746641http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/1561341/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
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topic 900
spellingShingle 900
Ewen, Misha Odessa
'To the foundation of a common-wealth' : English society and the colonisation of Virginia, c. 1607-1642
description The colonisation of Jamestown, Virginia, in 1607 marked the beginning of permanent English settlement in North America. This history of colonisation in Virginia has traditionally been told from the perspective of settlers in the Jamestown fort, or Virginia Company investors who were embroiled in faction. In contrast, historians have rarely engaged with how colonisation in Virginia interconnected with English society more broadly, including the impact that colonisation had on the cultural and political landscape of early modern England. This thesis explores this significant reciprocal component of colonisation, drawing on a wider range of historical actors and issues to explore how colonisation shaped contemporary English society. To do this, this study adopts the concept of commonwealth as the key lens of analysis, as it framed how individuals across the English Atlantic world responded to colonisation: investment in the colony, transatlantic transportation and trade, as well as representations of Virginia in letters, print and on stage, were articulated in terms of commonwealth. This approach tests the claim that the motivation for colonisation in Virginia was ‘trade and plunder’, by considering the wider social and political context of overseas expansion; however, it also offers a new interpretation of how people across the social spectrum in English society experienced and responded to colonisation in Virginia. Thus, the thesis offers a new interpretation of colonisation as it shaped English society, politics and culture in the early seventeenth century.
author2 Peacey, J. ; Conway, S.
author_facet Peacey, J. ; Conway, S.
Ewen, Misha Odessa
author Ewen, Misha Odessa
author_sort Ewen, Misha Odessa
title 'To the foundation of a common-wealth' : English society and the colonisation of Virginia, c. 1607-1642
title_short 'To the foundation of a common-wealth' : English society and the colonisation of Virginia, c. 1607-1642
title_full 'To the foundation of a common-wealth' : English society and the colonisation of Virginia, c. 1607-1642
title_fullStr 'To the foundation of a common-wealth' : English society and the colonisation of Virginia, c. 1607-1642
title_full_unstemmed 'To the foundation of a common-wealth' : English society and the colonisation of Virginia, c. 1607-1642
title_sort 'to the foundation of a common-wealth' : english society and the colonisation of virginia, c. 1607-1642
publisher University College London (University of London)
publishDate 2017
url https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.746641
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