Frontiers of Possession
Spain and Portugal in Europe and the Americas
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Harvard University Press
Published:6th Jan '15
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Frontiers of Possession asks how territorial borders were established in Europe and the Americas during the early modern period and challenges the standard view that national boundaries are largely determined by military conflicts and treaties. Focusing on Spanish and Portuguese claims in the New and Old Worlds, Tamar Herzog reconstructs the different ways land rights were negotiated and enforced, sometimes violently, among people who remembered old possessions or envisioned new ones: farmers and nobles, clergymen and missionaries, settlers and indigenous peoples.
Questioning the habitual narrative that sees the Americas as a logical extension of the Old World, Herzog portrays Spain and Portugal on both sides of the Atlantic as one unified imperial space. She begins in the Americas, where Iberian conquerors had to decide who could settle the land, who could harvest fruit and cut timber, and who had river rights for travel and trade. The presence of indigenous peoples as enemies to vanquish or allies to befriend, along with the vastness of the land, complicated the picture, as did the promise of unlimited wealth. In Europe, meanwhile, the formation and re-formation of boundaries could last centuries, as ancient entitlements clashed with evolving economic conditions and changing political views and juridical doctrines regarding how land could be acquired and maintained.
Herzog demonstrates that the same fundamental questions had to be addressed in Europe and in the Americas. Territorial control was always subject to negotiation, as neighbors and outsiders, in their quotidian interactions, carved out and defended new frontiers of possession.
Herzog succeeds in her aim of moving beyond the usually separate histories of Spain and Portugal—and of Europe and the Americas—to complicate the accepted understanding of national and imperial boundaries as immutable facts rather than as ongoing sites of contestation. -- William O’Connor * Daily Beast *
This book is about as thorough a research work as this reviewer has ever encountered… This is a truly innovative and well-documented interpretation of this topic. -- D. L. Tengwall * Choice *
The best account we now have of the long legal and political rivalry between the world’s first modern imperial powers. -- Anthony Pagden, author of The Enlightenment and Why It Still Matters
- Winner of James A. Rawley Prize in Atlantic History 2016
- Nominated for Friedrich Katz Prize 2016
- Nominated for Jerry Bentley Prize 2016
- Nominated for Leo Gershoy Award 2016
- Nominated for Bolton-Johnson Prize 2016
ISBN: 9780674735385
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
400 pages