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John Hawkins's Troublesome Voyages: Merchants, Bureaucrats, and the Origin of the Slave Trade*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 January 2014
Extract
There is nothing particularly subtle about a coat of arms with a crest depicting “a demi-Moor proper bound in a cord.” Nearly anyone can deduce from it that the bearer of these arms was probably a figure in the black-slave trade. Deductions along those lines would be right on the mark in the case of this particular heraldic device, for it was granted in 1565 by Queen Elizabeth I to John Hawkins on the recommendation of Sir William Cecil and the Earl of Leicester. The arms commemorate the origin of the English slave trade during the first decade of Elizabeth's reign. Under closer scrutiny, they reveal a wealth of further information about late Tudor history, telling us something about the nature and direction of economic enterprise in the 1560s, the interests of some of the key personalities of the period, and the ways in which diverse elements of society and the state combined their resources for mercantile purposes. Altogether, the crest of John Hawkins constitutes a remarkable lens through which can be seen in microcosm the variety, aggressiveness, and daring which have come to characterize Elizabethan England.
During the past quarter century, a number of distinguished scholars have analyzed Elizabethan overseas enterprise, of which the Hawkins slaving voyages were an important part. Lawrence Stone was the first to ask fundamental questions about the late Tudor economy in a provocative essay published in 1949. The same year saw the appearance of James Williamson's revised biography of John Hawkins, replete with substantial new material drawn from Spanish sources.
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- Research Article
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- Copyright © North American Conference of British Studies 1973
Footnotes
The research for this article was supported by a Faculty Research Fellowship ofthe University of Cincinnati, and the author is indebted to W. D. Aeschbacher for advice and critical assistance.
References
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37. The author is currently at work on a biography of Lincoln, who inexplicably has never been recognized for the importance of his role in Tudor history.
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52. Scott, W., The Constitution and Finance of English, Scottish and Irish Joint-Stock Companies to 1720 (Cambridge, 1912), I, 41–43Google Scholar.
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