The ‘long’ eighteenth-century British Navy is the subject of a vast and growing secondary literature. Almost all of it, however, has an exclusively national focus. This would not be problematic, given the Navy’s character as a national institution, were it not for the fact that many seamen serving in it – likely at least 14% of crews in foreign stations – were not British or Irish. This article suggests that integrating them into the study of the Navy can significantly affect several ongoing historiographical debates, for example on the modalities of naval recruitment, or on the quality of life in the service, as well as, more predictably, discussions of seamen’s patriotism. The aim is to propose the Navy as an example of how a transnationa...
With few exceptions, existing research in British social and maritime history has never focused on t...
No detailed study of the causes of desertion, the scale of the problem, or its effects on naval oper...
This thesis examines the experiences of the sailors who worked in the Royal Navy from the 1830s to t...
This thesis focuses on the foreign seamen who served in the Royal Navy during the French Revolutiona...
Between 1688 and 1742, the Royal Navy emerged as the largest navy in Europe. New bases, increasing l...
Abstract In the late eighteenth century, like most European fleets, the British Royal...
This book foregrounds the role of the Royal Navy in creating the British Atlantic in the eighteenth ...
This is the author accepted manuscript.During the early decades of the eighteenth century the first ...
Maritime history seems to be suffering an identity crisis, rising in popularity but unsure of its pl...
This thesis argues that British naval officers provide a useful category of analysis for social and ...
The article is devoted to United Kingdom Royal Navy role in British national self-identity and Briti...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Taylor & Francis via the...
Intersecting the fields of naval, imperial and Caribbean history, this thesis examines the Royal Nav...
In eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century Britain, sailors occupied a paradoxical place in the nat...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis examines the place occupied by the royal navy in...
With few exceptions, existing research in British social and maritime history has never focused on t...
No detailed study of the causes of desertion, the scale of the problem, or its effects on naval oper...
This thesis examines the experiences of the sailors who worked in the Royal Navy from the 1830s to t...
This thesis focuses on the foreign seamen who served in the Royal Navy during the French Revolutiona...
Between 1688 and 1742, the Royal Navy emerged as the largest navy in Europe. New bases, increasing l...
Abstract In the late eighteenth century, like most European fleets, the British Royal...
This book foregrounds the role of the Royal Navy in creating the British Atlantic in the eighteenth ...
This is the author accepted manuscript.During the early decades of the eighteenth century the first ...
Maritime history seems to be suffering an identity crisis, rising in popularity but unsure of its pl...
This thesis argues that British naval officers provide a useful category of analysis for social and ...
The article is devoted to United Kingdom Royal Navy role in British national self-identity and Briti...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Taylor & Francis via the...
Intersecting the fields of naval, imperial and Caribbean history, this thesis examines the Royal Nav...
In eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century Britain, sailors occupied a paradoxical place in the nat...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis examines the place occupied by the royal navy in...
With few exceptions, existing research in British social and maritime history has never focused on t...
No detailed study of the causes of desertion, the scale of the problem, or its effects on naval oper...
This thesis examines the experiences of the sailors who worked in the Royal Navy from the 1830s to t...