Image for Global Lives

Global Lives : Britain and the World, 1550–1800

Part of the Cambridge Studies in Historical Geography series
See all formats and editions

This is a fascinating and unique account of Britain's rise as a global imperial power told through the lives of over forty individuals from a huge range of backgrounds.

Miles Ogborn relates and connects the stories of monarchs and merchants, planters and pirates, slaves and sailors, captives and captains, reactionaries and revolutionaries, artists and abolitionists from all corners of the globe.

These dramatic stories give new life to the exploration of the history and geography of changing global relationships, including settlement in North America, the East India Company's trade and empire, transatlantic trade, the slave trade, the rise and fall of piracy, and scientific voyaging in the Pacific.

Through these many biographies, including those of Anne Bonny, Captain Cook, Queen Elizabeth I, Pocahontas, and Walter Ralegh, early modern globalisation is presented as something through which different people lived in dramatically contrasting ways, but in which everyone played a part.

Read More
Special order line: only available to educational & business accounts. Sign In
£22.94 Save 15.00%
RRP £26.99
Product Details
Cambridge University Press
0521607183 / 9780521607186
Paperback / softback
30/10/2008
United Kingdom
English
360 p. : ill.
academic/professional/technical Learn More