Emily Mann
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Two islands, many forts
Ireland and Bermuda in 1624
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This chapter puts into comparative perspective contemporaneous images of fortifications in Ireland and Bermuda – The State of the Forts of Ireland and ‘A Mappe of the Somer Isles and Fortresses’ – presented and published, respectively, in 1624. The year was one of considerable crisis and consequence for an emergent British nation and empire. In this final year of King James VI/I’s reign, with his foreign policy in tatters, a new war loomed with Spain. Reinforcements were sent to Ireland, regarded by the Spaniards as both a ‘back door’ to and a ‘bridle upon England’, while Bermuda was imagined as an English bridle on Spanish power. The contemporaneous production of surveys of defences in Ireland and Bermuda not only suggests these colonies’ connected roles at a critical moment in England’s international affairs and ambitions, but also underlines the agency of architecture and its representation in parallel processes of colonisation and the pursuit of empire. The visual sources at the centre of the essay expose the comparable construction in Ireland and Bermuda of militarised landscapes of subjugation and oppression that, in future decades and centuries, were together crucial in shoring up English efforts to expand and maintain the empire, and were to dominate the slave trade, in the Caribbean and beyond.

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Ireland, slavery and the Caribbean

Interdisciplinary perspectives

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