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Sustaining Empire - Venezuela's Trade with the United States during the Age of Revolutions, 1797-1828 (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R1,471
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Sustaining Empire - Venezuela's Trade with the United States during the Age of Revolutions, 1797-1828 (Hardcover)
Series: Studies in Early American Economy and Society from the Library Company of Philadelphia
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Why did trade with the United States prolong Spanish colonial rule
during the Venezuelan independence struggles? From 1790 to 1815,
much of the Atlantic World was roiled by European imperial wars.
While the citizens of the United States profited from the waste of
blood and treasure, Spanish American colonists struggled to
preserve their prosperity on an imperial periphery. Along the
Caribbean coast of South America, colonial elites and officials
fought to secure Venezuela from threats of foreign invasion, slave
rebellion, and revolution. For these elites, trading with the
United States and other neutral nations was not a way to subvert
colonial rule but to safeguard the prosperity and happiness of
loyal subjects of the Spanish Crown. Food insecurity, deprivation,
and political uncertainty left Venezuela vulnerable to revolution,
however. In Sustaining Empire, Edward P. Pompeian lets readers see
liberal free trade just as colonial Venezuelans did. From the
vantage point of the slave-holding elite to which revolutionary
figures like Simon Bolivar belonged, neutral commerce was a
valuable and effectual way to conserve the colonial status quo. But
after Spain's crisis of sovereignty in 1808, it proved an
impediment to Venezuelan independence. Analyzing the diplomatic and
economic linkages between the new US republic and revolutionary
Latin American governments, Pompeian reminds us that the United
States did not, and does not, exist in a vacuum, and that the
historic relationships between nations mattered then and matters
now. Examining an overlooked region, Pompeian offers a novel
interpretation of early United States relations with Latin America,
showing how US merchants executed government contracts and
established flour, tobacco, and slave trading monopolies that
facilitated the maintenance of colonial rule and the Spanish
Empire. Trading with the United States, Pompeian argues, kept both
colony and empire under a tenuous hold despite revolutionary
circumstances. A fascinating revisionist history, Sustaining Empire
challenges long-standing assertions that this commerce served
primarily as a vector for the one-way transmission of
revolutionary, liberal ideas from the North to South Atlantic.
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