Gateways to Empire
eBook - ePub

Gateways to Empire

Quebec and New Amsterdam to 1664

  1. English
  2. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  3. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

Gateways to Empire

Quebec and New Amsterdam to 1664

About this book

In Gateways to Empire: Quebec and New Amsterdam to 1664, historian Daniel Weeks has provided the first comprehensive comparative study of the North-American fur-trading colonies New France and New Netherland. While neither colony profited very much, if at all, from the fur trade (though many individuals fortunes were undoubtedly made), Weeks finds that New France, which far outpaced New Netherland in this trade, grew more slowly and had greater difficulty sustaining itself. As he demonstrates in Gateways to Empire, other factors, including New Netherland's openness to religious and ethnic diversity and wider connections to the Atlantic World, allowed it to become more economically secure than its rival north of the St. Lawrence. And yet, in both cases, the principal towns of these European colonies—Quebec and New Amsterdam—moved beyond their initial purposes as hubs for trade with the indigenous peoples to become gateways to European settlement. In this, New Amsterdam, by the late 1640s, was singularly successful, so that it rapidly fostered the production of new European towns in its hinterlands, organizing the landscape for settlement and also for trade within the European-dominated Atlantic-World system.

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Yes, you can access Gateways to Empire by Daniel J. Weeks in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in History & Early American History. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

Table of contents

  1. Acknowledgments
  2. Introduction
  3. 1 Reconnaissance and the Shaping of Colonial Policy
  4. 2 First Attempts at Settlement in New France
  5. 3 Building the Network: Champlain on the St. Lawrence
  6. 4 Reconnaissance and Staking a Claim—New Netherland
  7. 5 Building the Network—New Netherland
  8. 6 The Fur Trade—the Dominant Flow?
  9. 7 Native American Networks, Flows of Disease, and the Fur Trade
  10. 8 Flows of People
  11. 9 Flows of Ideas
  12. Conclusion: The Diffuse and Specific Networks of New Amsterdam and Quebec
  13. Bibliography
  14. About the Author