This article is a preliminary case study of legal and normative entanglement in Spanish West Florida — which stretched across the Gulf Coast of present-day Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, and Florida — between 1803-1810. Between the time of the Louisiana Purchase (1803) and the annexation of Westernmost part of West Florida by the United States (1810), the laws and norms of the Territory criss-crossed in various ways those of Spain and the United States. Indeed, the territory was, in turn, French, British, and Spanish before being annexed, in part, by the Americans. For the period under study here, and decades before, its settlers were largely Anglophone, while its laws were a variant of the Spanish colonial ius commune. West Florida had a...
When Britain lost control of Florida in 1783 to Spain, many English merchants and public officials, ...
When Bernardo de Galvez raised the lion-and-castle banner over Pensacola in 1781, British rule in We...
The territory embraced within the state of Florida was not acquired by the United States through dir...
Florida passed to British control in 1763 with the signing of the Treaty of Paris. A Royal Proclamat...
Florida emerged from the Revolutionary War “entangled.” A pawn of the United States, British, and Sp...
The military occupation by the British troops of the former French and Spanish forts on the Gulf coa...
Integrating social, cultural, economic, and political history, this is a study of the factors that g...
In the course of its historical development, Florida has endured shifting and contested lines of dem...
After returning the two Floridas to Spain by the Treaty of Paris of 1783, England watched with satis...
On April 30, 1803, in one of the great real estate transactions of history, France sold the United S...
The Louisiana and Florida territories sat at the intersection of empires in the late eighteenth cent...
Upheaval characterized eighteenth-century Florida. European powers continued to fight for dominance ...
In 1793-1794 a motley group of South Carolina and Georgia backcountrymen entered into a conspiracy w...
England acquired legal and sovereign control of Spanish Florida on February 10, 1763. After more tha...
Situated north of St. Augustine, Florida, Amelia Island lay at the frontier of the growing United St...
When Britain lost control of Florida in 1783 to Spain, many English merchants and public officials, ...
When Bernardo de Galvez raised the lion-and-castle banner over Pensacola in 1781, British rule in We...
The territory embraced within the state of Florida was not acquired by the United States through dir...
Florida passed to British control in 1763 with the signing of the Treaty of Paris. A Royal Proclamat...
Florida emerged from the Revolutionary War “entangled.” A pawn of the United States, British, and Sp...
The military occupation by the British troops of the former French and Spanish forts on the Gulf coa...
Integrating social, cultural, economic, and political history, this is a study of the factors that g...
In the course of its historical development, Florida has endured shifting and contested lines of dem...
After returning the two Floridas to Spain by the Treaty of Paris of 1783, England watched with satis...
On April 30, 1803, in one of the great real estate transactions of history, France sold the United S...
The Louisiana and Florida territories sat at the intersection of empires in the late eighteenth cent...
Upheaval characterized eighteenth-century Florida. European powers continued to fight for dominance ...
In 1793-1794 a motley group of South Carolina and Georgia backcountrymen entered into a conspiracy w...
England acquired legal and sovereign control of Spanish Florida on February 10, 1763. After more tha...
Situated north of St. Augustine, Florida, Amelia Island lay at the frontier of the growing United St...
When Britain lost control of Florida in 1783 to Spain, many English merchants and public officials, ...
When Bernardo de Galvez raised the lion-and-castle banner over Pensacola in 1781, British rule in We...
The territory embraced within the state of Florida was not acquired by the United States through dir...