José Brownrigg-Gleeson
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Soldiers, settlers, slavers
"Irish lives on the Spanish borderlands of North America and the Caribbean in the revolutionary 1790s
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This chapter proposes an exploration of the lives of Irish enslavers on the Spanish borderlands of North America and the Caribbean in the late eighteenth century. It first documents how, following the redrawing of the contours of the Greater Caribbean at the close of the Seven Years War, Spanish authorities had increasingly turned to Irish subjects for assistance in administering territories inhabited by culturally, religiously and linguistically diverse communities. In this fluid context, new opportunities arose for members of the multilingual Hiberno-European networks: soldiers, priests and merchants of Irish extraction soon acquired prominence and put down roots in the region. The chapter then moves to the turbulent environment of the 1790s, when the outbreak of revolution in Saint-Domingue increased tensions in Spanish North America and the Caribbean. Fears of insurrection exacerbated government responses and conditioned the attitudes of the Irish living under Spanish rule. In order to navigate these changing circumstances successfully, Irish enslavers often appealed to their loyalty to the Crown and to their economic utility. The chapter addresses the role of multilingualism in the shaping of a generation of Irish agents in the service of Spain who were dependent on the preservation of an imperial status quo, and highlights the Hispanic dimensions of the Irish Age of Revolutions.

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Ireland, slavery and the Caribbean

Interdisciplinary perspectives

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