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Claiming Land, Claiming Water: Borders and the People Who Crossed Them in the Early Modern Atlantic: Cover
Claiming Land, Claiming Water: Borders and the People Who Crossed Them in the Early Modern Atlantic
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table of contents
Cover
Series Page
Title Page
Copyright
Contents
Introduction. Borders, Places, and Movement
Part I. Ways to Think About Borders
Chapter 1. Toward a Prehistory of Territory: Thomas Hobbes, the Maryland Palatinate, and the Colonial Boundary Problem
Chapter 2. Things to Think With: The Use of Borders on a Seventeenth-Century Map of New England
Chapter 3. Lines on a Map: Crafting and Contesting Borders in Guillaume Delisle’s and Herman Moll’s Early Eighteenth-Century Maps of North America
Chapter 4. Data Maps of Downeast Maine: Missionary Records from the Early Republic Borderlands
Part II. Creating Place
Chapter 5. Depicting and Defining the Plantation in the Early English Caribbean, 1625–1675
Chapter 6. When a River Is a Border: Rivalries and Commercial Networks in the Riverine West
Chapter 7. Military Lines: How the Introduction of Contours Affected Maps and Movement
Part III. Movement
Chapter 8. Indian Centers, Colonial Peripheries: Locating the International in Early America
Chapter 9. “Playing the Old Game of Double”: Navigating Creek and Spanish Geopolitics in the Post-Revolutionary Gulf South
Chapter 10. Comercio Libre: Revisiting a Concept on Trade and Borders in Creek Homelands
Chapter 11. Possibilities and Peril: Exploring the Transnational Experiences of Black People in the Maritimes, 1783–1792
Chapter 12. Amphibious Tales: Villagers and Strangers in a Border-Crossing World
List of Contributors
Index
Acknowledgments
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STUDIES IN EARLY AMERICAN ECONOMY AND SOCIETY FROM THE LIBRARY COMPANY OF PHILADELPHIA
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