Mutiny on the Black Prince

Mutiny on the Black Prince
Author: James H Sweet
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 265
Release: 2025-01-07
Genre: History
ISBN: 0197692729

The dramatic story of a mutiny aboard an eighteenth-century British ship and how its owners effectively rallied the power of the British Crown to protect their investment and expand their wealth and political power across multiple generations. In 1768, the British slave ship Black Prince, departed the port of Bristol, bound for West Africa. It never arrived. Before reaching Old Calabar, the crew mutinied, murdering the captain and his officers. The mutineers renamed the ship Liberty, elected new officers, and set out for Brazil. By the time the ship arrived there, the crew had disintegrated into a violent mob and fired into the port city. After the Black Prince wrecked off the coast of Hispaniola, the rebels fled to outposts around the Atlantic world. An eight-year manhunt ensued. This book follows the crew's turn to piracy and the merchant-owners' response to the uprising. At the very moment that the American Revolution unfolded in North America, the Black Prince's owners conducted a "shadow" revolution, mobilizing the power of the British Crown to seek justice and restitution on their behalf. These private merchants used state surveillance, policing, extradition, capital punishment, international diplomacy, and even warfare in order to protect their wealth. During an era of professed liberty and freedom, the privatization of state power was already emerging, replacing monarchies with corporate oligarchies, presaging a new kind of political power in the Atlantic world. The eighteenth-century Bristol slave merchants and subsequent generations of their families accrued great fortunes from the trade and invested it in early British banks, railroads, insurance companies, industrial manufacturing, and even the Anglican Church. Mutiny on the Black Prince narrates the dramatic story of the events onboard and the merchant owners' efforts to capture the rebels from around the Atlantic world, as well as the way that British slavery shaped the industrializing Atlantic economy and the evolution of the modern corporate state.

Religion, Community and Territory

Religion, Community and Territory
Author: Stephen James Yeates
Publisher: British Archaeological Reports
Total Pages: 286
Release: 2006
Genre: History
ISBN:

A three-part volume, consisting of synthesis, and a two-part gazetteer. Examines what is known about the development of religion in the area of the Severn Valley from the Late Bronze Age to the foundation of the minsters in the early medieval period. The second part of the survey is concerned with the association of religion, community and territory, and consequently deals with the ways in which these aspects were interrelated. A framework is proposed for explaining the long-term development of communities in the region from late prehistory to the historical period.

American Notes Queries

American Notes Queries
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 294
Release: 2006
Genre: American literature
ISBN:

A quarterly journal of short articles, notes and reviews.