Introduction: Ceremonies of Possession in Europe's Conquest of the New World, 1492-1640 -- 1. Houses, Gardens, and Fences: Signs of English Possession in the New World -- 2. Ceremonies: The Theatrical Rituals of French Political Possession -- 3. The Requirement: A Protocol for Conquest -- 4. "A New Sky and New Stars": Arabic and Hebrew Science, Portuguese Seamanship, and the Discovery of America -- 5. Sailing in the Wake of the Portuguese
Summary
This work of comparative history explores the array of ceremonies that Europeans performed to enact their taking possession of the New World. Frenchmen reproduced the grandeur of royal processions wherever possible, always ending in dialogue with the indigenous peoples. Spaniards made solemn speeches before launching military attacks. Dutchmen drew intensely detailed maps, scrutinizing harbors and coastlines as they disembarked. The Portuguese superimposed the grid of latitudes upon lands they were later to take by the sword. The English calmly laid out fences and hedges in the manner of their native shires. Through such activities each power considered itself to be creating imperial authority over the Americas; yet each failed to acknowledge the same significance in the ceremonies of other powers. This book develops the historic cultural contexts of these ceremonies and tackles the implications of these histories for contemporary nation-states of the postcolonial era
Analysis
Ceremonies History
America
Europe
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes
English
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