This work demonstrates the connections that exist in rhetoric and planning between the Irish plantation projects in the Ards, Munster , Ulster and the Jamestown colony in Virginia . The planners of these projects focused on the creation of internal stability rather than the mission to 'civilize' the natives. The continuity between these projects is examined on several points: the rhetoric the English used to describe the native peoples and the lands to be colonized, who initiated each project, funding and financial terms, the manner of establishing title, the manner of granting the lands to settlers, and the status the natives were expected to hold in the plantation. Comparison of these points highlights the early English colonial idea and ...
In the 1580s, almost a century after Christopher Columbus first set foot in the New World, England c...
Plantation by the English in Ireland, and Ulster in particular, has received considerable scholarly ...
Plantation by the English in Ireland, and Ulster in particular, has received considerable scholarly ...
Plantation is a key theme, and in the eyes of some historians the key theme, in the history of Early...
Recent years have seen renewed scholarly interest in Ireland s position within the English colonial ...
Excerpt As numerous historians and geographers have pointed out, there are countless parallels betwe...
The sixteenth century is critical to our reading of Ireland's subsequent colonial and indeed postcol...
Colonial language discourse typically consists of evaluations concerning the respective merits of tw...
This thesis aims to examine the ideologies employed in justifying English conquest and plantation of...
This thesis offers a new model for understanding the rise of the word plantation as a keyword of ang...
In May 1607, 105 Englishmen arrived at what would become the first viable English colony in North Am...
The Colonial Logistics of English Literature: The Sidney Circle and Settler World-Making in Ireland ...
This is an important book. Smyth begins by setting out his three main themes: forging, colonialism ...
This dissertation seeks to consider the colonial experiences of Britain in Ireland and India in a co...
Fears of wood scarcity were common in early modern England, and proponents of colonial expansion int...
In the 1580s, almost a century after Christopher Columbus first set foot in the New World, England c...
Plantation by the English in Ireland, and Ulster in particular, has received considerable scholarly ...
Plantation by the English in Ireland, and Ulster in particular, has received considerable scholarly ...
Plantation is a key theme, and in the eyes of some historians the key theme, in the history of Early...
Recent years have seen renewed scholarly interest in Ireland s position within the English colonial ...
Excerpt As numerous historians and geographers have pointed out, there are countless parallels betwe...
The sixteenth century is critical to our reading of Ireland's subsequent colonial and indeed postcol...
Colonial language discourse typically consists of evaluations concerning the respective merits of tw...
This thesis aims to examine the ideologies employed in justifying English conquest and plantation of...
This thesis offers a new model for understanding the rise of the word plantation as a keyword of ang...
In May 1607, 105 Englishmen arrived at what would become the first viable English colony in North Am...
The Colonial Logistics of English Literature: The Sidney Circle and Settler World-Making in Ireland ...
This is an important book. Smyth begins by setting out his three main themes: forging, colonialism ...
This dissertation seeks to consider the colonial experiences of Britain in Ireland and India in a co...
Fears of wood scarcity were common in early modern England, and proponents of colonial expansion int...
In the 1580s, almost a century after Christopher Columbus first set foot in the New World, England c...
Plantation by the English in Ireland, and Ulster in particular, has received considerable scholarly ...
Plantation by the English in Ireland, and Ulster in particular, has received considerable scholarly ...