WARRIOR TRADERS: A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF EARLY SEVENTEENTHCENTURY FRENCH AND ENGLISH NORTH AMERICAN TRADE AND COLONIZATION

This thesis examines French and English trade voyages and trade colonies in North American during the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries, and French and English relations with Native Americans. The colonies of Port Royal, Jamestown, and Sagadahoc included members of previous French and E...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Abney, Kilroy
Other Authors: Department of History, Master of Arts, *, Colin Mitchell, Jerry Bannister, Jack Crowley, Justin Roberts, Not Applicable
Language:English
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10222/15270
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spelling ftdalhouse:oai:DalSpace.library.dal.ca:10222/15270 2024-06-02T07:54:09+00:00 WARRIOR TRADERS: A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF EARLY SEVENTEENTHCENTURY FRENCH AND ENGLISH NORTH AMERICAN TRADE AND COLONIZATION Abney, Kilroy Department of History Master of Arts * Colin Mitchell Jerry Bannister, Jack Crowley Justin Roberts Not Applicable 2012-08-17T17:49:49Z http://hdl.handle.net/10222/15270 en eng http://hdl.handle.net/10222/15270 France England Virginia Maine Acadia North America Jamestown Port Royal Sagadahoc Seventeenth century sixteenth century Atlantic history Comparative colonization Powhatans Mi'kmaq trade national identity ethnohistory 2012 ftdalhouse 2024-05-06T11:40:25Z This thesis examines French and English trade voyages and trade colonies in North American during the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries, and French and English relations with Native Americans. The colonies of Port Royal, Jamestown, and Sagadahoc included members of previous French and English trade voyages and depended on the experience and information gained during trade voyages to formulate their economic objectives and colonial policies. French and English North American activity was intrinsically connected in this era through a plethora of amiable and competitive associations. National, transnational, and regional frameworks are all necessary in explaining Port Royal, Jamestown, and Sagadahoc. French and English interaction with Native American groups during these voyages and colonies was distinctly similar, and the diverse cultures of the native Mi’kmaq, Eastern Abenaki, Powhatans, and Armouchiquois, rather than the divisions between French and English culture, were central in shaping colonist-Native relations in the seventeenth century. Other/Unknown Material abenaki Mi’kmaq Dalhousie University: DalSpace Institutional Repository
institution Open Polar
collection Dalhousie University: DalSpace Institutional Repository
op_collection_id ftdalhouse
language English
topic France
England
Virginia
Maine
Acadia
North America
Jamestown
Port Royal
Sagadahoc
Seventeenth century
sixteenth century
Atlantic history
Comparative colonization
Powhatans
Mi'kmaq
trade
national identity
ethnohistory
spellingShingle France
England
Virginia
Maine
Acadia
North America
Jamestown
Port Royal
Sagadahoc
Seventeenth century
sixteenth century
Atlantic history
Comparative colonization
Powhatans
Mi'kmaq
trade
national identity
ethnohistory
Abney, Kilroy
WARRIOR TRADERS: A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF EARLY SEVENTEENTHCENTURY FRENCH AND ENGLISH NORTH AMERICAN TRADE AND COLONIZATION
topic_facet France
England
Virginia
Maine
Acadia
North America
Jamestown
Port Royal
Sagadahoc
Seventeenth century
sixteenth century
Atlantic history
Comparative colonization
Powhatans
Mi'kmaq
trade
national identity
ethnohistory
description This thesis examines French and English trade voyages and trade colonies in North American during the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries, and French and English relations with Native Americans. The colonies of Port Royal, Jamestown, and Sagadahoc included members of previous French and English trade voyages and depended on the experience and information gained during trade voyages to formulate their economic objectives and colonial policies. French and English North American activity was intrinsically connected in this era through a plethora of amiable and competitive associations. National, transnational, and regional frameworks are all necessary in explaining Port Royal, Jamestown, and Sagadahoc. French and English interaction with Native American groups during these voyages and colonies was distinctly similar, and the diverse cultures of the native Mi’kmaq, Eastern Abenaki, Powhatans, and Armouchiquois, rather than the divisions between French and English culture, were central in shaping colonist-Native relations in the seventeenth century.
author2 Department of History
Master of Arts
*
Colin Mitchell
Jerry Bannister, Jack Crowley
Justin Roberts
Not Applicable
author Abney, Kilroy
author_facet Abney, Kilroy
author_sort Abney, Kilroy
title WARRIOR TRADERS: A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF EARLY SEVENTEENTHCENTURY FRENCH AND ENGLISH NORTH AMERICAN TRADE AND COLONIZATION
title_short WARRIOR TRADERS: A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF EARLY SEVENTEENTHCENTURY FRENCH AND ENGLISH NORTH AMERICAN TRADE AND COLONIZATION
title_full WARRIOR TRADERS: A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF EARLY SEVENTEENTHCENTURY FRENCH AND ENGLISH NORTH AMERICAN TRADE AND COLONIZATION
title_fullStr WARRIOR TRADERS: A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF EARLY SEVENTEENTHCENTURY FRENCH AND ENGLISH NORTH AMERICAN TRADE AND COLONIZATION
title_full_unstemmed WARRIOR TRADERS: A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF EARLY SEVENTEENTHCENTURY FRENCH AND ENGLISH NORTH AMERICAN TRADE AND COLONIZATION
title_sort warrior traders: a comparative study of early seventeenthcentury french and english north american trade and colonization
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10222/15270
genre abenaki
Mi’kmaq
genre_facet abenaki
Mi’kmaq
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10222/15270
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