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England's Global Transition and the Cosmopolitans Who Made It Possible (Forum: English Cosmopolitanism and the Early Modern Moment)

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eBook details

  • Title: England's Global Transition and the Cosmopolitans Who Made It Possible (Forum: English Cosmopolitanism and the Early Modern Moment)
  • Author : Shakespeare Studies
  • Release Date : January 01, 2007
  • Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines,Books,Professional & Technical,Education,
  • Pages : * pages
  • Size : 205 KB

Description

THE SINGLE MOST DRAMATIC shift in English history in the early modern period lay in the kingdom's altered status in a transformed world beyond its shores. For all the upheavals and transitions at home, from the consolidation of the national state to the tumult of civil war, from the turmoil of successive religious reformations to the population explosion and ensuing economic strains of the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries, it was England's new position as an emerging world power that defined England's early modern moment. Cosmopolitanism--and especially cosmopolitans--were central to this transition. Perched on the western fringes of Europe, the most remote sovereign kingdom in a trading world centered around the Mediterranean, England was a nation characterized above all by its weakness in the middle of the sixteenth century. Annual fleets carrying silver and other treasures from the Americas enabled Spain to achieve unprecedented power in Europe and the Mediterranean while the English and other rivals watched in frustration. England's geographic position, however, turned out to be crucial. After Columbus's voyage in 1492 and especially after Spain's spectacular conquests on the American mainland in the early sixteenth century, a European trading world once oriented toward the Mediterranean shifted toward the Atlantic. Through no initiative of its own, these larger geopolitical shifts transformed England from a kingdom on the European margins to one well positioned to take advantage of new opportunities to the west. But it took considerable enterprise and ingenuity for the English to turn this accidental geographic advantage into a real opportunity, and in the period between 1560 and 1700 they did so. In this remarkable period the English dislodged the Spanish from some of their holdings in the Americas, challenged Spanish dominion over the American continents, established new long-distance trade routes to the eastern Mediterranean and the East Indies, and emerged in the seventeenth century as a kingdom on the rise. Cosmopolitanism and cosmopolitans facilitated this shift. Men and women voyaged overseas in numbers sufficient to secure colonial holdings, and they traveled around the globe on commercial ventures that pushed English trade routes into America, eastern Europe, the Mediterranean, and India. And in their travels they demonstrated their interest in and sympathy for foreign mores, worked with and for foreigners, sometimes immersed themselves in foreign worlds, and gradually dislodged themselves from unthinking attachments to a single nation.


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