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The first book to detail the global impact of copper production in
Swansea, Wales, and how a major technological shift transformed the
British Isles into the world's most dynamic center of copper
smelting. Eighteenth-century Swansea, Wales, was to copper what
nineteenth-century Manchester was to cotton or twentieth-century
Detroit to the automobile. Beginning around 1700, Swansea became
the place where a revolutionary new method of smelting copper,
later christened the Welsh Process, flourished. Using mineral coal
as a source of energy, Swansea's smelters were able to produce
copper in volumes that were quite unthinkable in the old,
established smelting centers of central Europe and Scandinavia.
After some tentative first steps, the Swansea district became a
smelting center of European, then global, importance. Between the
1770s and the 1840s, the Swansea district routinely produced
one-third of the world's smelted copper, sometimes more. In Swansea
Copper, Chris Evans and Louise Miskell trace the history of copper
making in Britain from the late seventeenth century, when the Welsh
Process transformed Britain's copper industry, to the 1890s, when
Swansea's reign as the dominant player in the world copper trade
entered an absolute decline. Moving backward and forward in time,
Evans and Miskell begin by examining the place of copper in baroque
Europe, surveying the productive landscape into which Swansea
Copper erupted and detailing the means by which it did so. They
explain how Swansea copper achieved global dominance in the years
between the Seven Years' War and Waterloo, explore new commercial
regulations that allowed the importation to Britain of copper ore
from around the world, and connect the rise of the copper trade to
the rise of the transatlantic slave trade. They also examine the
competing rise of the post-Civil War US copper industry. Whereas
many contributions to global history focus on high-end consumer
goods-Chinese ceramics, Indian cottons, and the like-Swansea Copper
examines a producer good, a metal that played a key role in
supporting new technologies of the industrial age, like steam power
and electricity. Deftly showing how deeply mineral history is
ingrained in the history of the modern world, Evans and Miskell
present new research not just on Swansea itself but on the places
its copper industry affected: mining towns in Cuba, Chile, southern
Africa, and South Australia. This insightful book will be of
interest to anyone concerned with the historical roots of
globalization and the Industrial Revolution as a global phenomenon.
The promotion of knowledge was a major preoccupation of the
Victorian era and, beginning in 1831 with the establishment of the
British Association for the Advancement of Science, a number of
national bodies were founded which used annual, week-long meetings
held each year in a different town or city as their main tool of
knowledge dissemination. Historians have long recognised the power
of 'cultural capital' in the competitive climate of the
mid-Victorian years, as towns raced to equip themselves with
libraries, newspapers, 'Lit. and Phil.' societies and reading
rooms, but the staging of the great annual knowledge festivals of
the period have not previously been considered in this context. The
four national associations studied are the British Association for
the Advancement of Science (BAAS), the National Association for the
Promotion of Social Science (NAPSS), the Royal Archaeological
Institute (RAI) and the Royal Agricultural Society of England
(RASE), who held annual meetings in 62 different provincial towns
and cities from 1831 to 1884. In this book it is contended that
these meetings were as important as royal visits and major civic
ceremonies in providing towns with an opportunity to promote their
own status and identity. By deploying a wealth of primary source
material, much of which has not been previously utilised by urban
historians, this book offers a new and genuinely Britain-wide
perspective on a period when comparison and competition with
neighbouring places was a constant preoccupation of town leaders.
The promotion of knowledge was a major preoccupation of the
Victorian era and, beginning in 1831 with the establishment of the
British Association for the Advancement of Science, a number of
national bodies were founded which used annual, week-long meetings
held each year in a different town or city as their main tool of
knowledge dissemination. Historians have long recognised the power
of 'cultural capital' in the competitive climate of the
mid-Victorian years, as towns raced to equip themselves with
libraries, newspapers, 'Lit. and Phil.' societies and reading
rooms, but the staging of the great annual knowledge festivals of
the period have not previously been considered in this context. The
four national associations studied are the British Association for
the Advancement of Science (BAAS), the National Association for the
Promotion of Social Science (NAPSS), the Royal Archaeological
Institute (RAI) and the Royal Agricultural Society of England
(RASE), who held annual meetings in 62 different provincial towns
and cities from 1831 to 1884. In this book it is contended that
these meetings were as important as royal visits and major civic
ceremonies in providing towns with an opportunity to promote their
own status and identity. By deploying a wealth of primary source
material, much of which has not been previously utilised by urban
historians, this book offers a new and genuinely Britain-wide
perspective on a period when comparison and competition with
neighbouring places was a constant preoccupation of town leaders.
Victorian Dundee: a city grown prosperous on more than a century's
lead in linen production and for a time the world's jute capital -
'Juteopolis'. But textile production was accompanied by a strong
sense of civic pride, some remarkable architectural triumphs and
perhaps a surprising enthusiasm for public and private art. The
traditional view of Dundee in this period is of a grim industrial
town marred by social deprivation and riven by workplace conflict.
This was only part of the story, and comes later. Early Victorian
Dundee provided regular work and better wages than had been paid in
the countryside (many of the town's inhabitants were migrants).
Working people enjoyed spending money as well as earning it and
were able to enjoy a range of social amenities such as the town's
grand parks. This book, the first edition of which attracted very
favourable reviews, reveals aspects of Dundee that have been hidden
from history. This second, extended edition of Victorian Dundee:
Image and Realities goes further than the 2000 edition in
challenging myth-history. Included are two altogether new
chapters.One is on the development - and desecration - of Dundee's
ancient waterfront, resulting from the opening of new rail routes.
The other reveals who Dundee' s local heroes were, in the shape of
the public statues erected in Albert Square. Original chapters have
been revised whilst in addition the book is supplemented by more
than forty new illustrations that offer fresh and sometimes
stunning visual perspectives on a great Scottish city. This is the
third in the series Dundee - A New History, the others being Jute
No More: Transforming Dundee which span Dundee's history from the
sixteenth century to the present. Dundee: Renaissance to
Enlightenment.
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