This study explores the relationship between geographic knowledge and imaginative geographies in the early modern English Atlantic. As is exemplified by English efforts to colonize Providence Island, the Western Design and the economic activities it set in motion, and English and Scottish plans to colonize the Darien region of Panama, everyday geographic knowledge contributed to and was informed by English imaginative geographies in ways that shaped English plans to occupy or attack Central America. Despite a maturation of governing institutions, scientific practices, and commercial networks that gathered geographic information by the last quarter of the seventeenth century, imaginative geographies obscured a more sober assessment of Centra...
“Borders Maritime” explores how the English imagined maritime geography, politics, and culture from ...
This essay studies the landscape and the history of cartography in colonial America, and focuses on ...
Between 1500 and 1700 English and Algonquians in New England possessed different spatial epistemolog...
This study explores the relationship between geographic knowledge and imaginative geographies in the...
The aim of this article is to analyze how the English became interested in Central America and plann...
This paper explores the Spanish construction of geographical knowledges of sixteenth and early seven...
From Borders to Topographies examines representations of the cultural, social, and economic exchange...
After Christopher Columbus’s 1492 landfall on the island of Guanahaní, artistic representations over...
Thomas Gage, a seventeenth century English priest, traveler, and scholar was the first non-Spanish ...
International audienceUntil the 17th century, the area currently occupied by Belize appeared in maps...
The purpose of this dissertation is to compare the strategies of conquest of two competing imperial ...
Since the early decades of the invasion and beginning of European occupation in America, numerous wo...
Early European projects for the colonisation of the Americas blur fact and fiction. Colonists risked...
Reflecting the growing scholarly interest in transnational and comparative approaches to studying th...
In the 1580s, almost a century after Christopher Columbus first set foot in the New World, England c...
“Borders Maritime” explores how the English imagined maritime geography, politics, and culture from ...
This essay studies the landscape and the history of cartography in colonial America, and focuses on ...
Between 1500 and 1700 English and Algonquians in New England possessed different spatial epistemolog...
This study explores the relationship between geographic knowledge and imaginative geographies in the...
The aim of this article is to analyze how the English became interested in Central America and plann...
This paper explores the Spanish construction of geographical knowledges of sixteenth and early seven...
From Borders to Topographies examines representations of the cultural, social, and economic exchange...
After Christopher Columbus’s 1492 landfall on the island of Guanahaní, artistic representations over...
Thomas Gage, a seventeenth century English priest, traveler, and scholar was the first non-Spanish ...
International audienceUntil the 17th century, the area currently occupied by Belize appeared in maps...
The purpose of this dissertation is to compare the strategies of conquest of two competing imperial ...
Since the early decades of the invasion and beginning of European occupation in America, numerous wo...
Early European projects for the colonisation of the Americas blur fact and fiction. Colonists risked...
Reflecting the growing scholarly interest in transnational and comparative approaches to studying th...
In the 1580s, almost a century after Christopher Columbus first set foot in the New World, England c...
“Borders Maritime” explores how the English imagined maritime geography, politics, and culture from ...
This essay studies the landscape and the history of cartography in colonial America, and focuses on ...
Between 1500 and 1700 English and Algonquians in New England possessed different spatial epistemolog...