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The Glasgow Sugar Aristocracy: Scotland and Caribbean Slavery, 1775–1838: New Historical Perspectives

The Glasgow Sugar Aristocracy: Scotland and Caribbean Slavery, 1775–1838
New Historical Perspectives
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Notes

table of contents
  1. Cover
  2. Series
  3. Title
  4. Copyright
  5. Dedication
  6. Contents
  7. List of Illustrations
  8. List of Tables
  9. List of Abbreviations
  10. Maps
  11. Acknowledgements
  12. Introduction
  13. 1. Emergence
  14. 2. Trade and Commerce
  15. 3. A Glasgow-West India House
  16. 4. ‘Wanted, to Serve in the West Indies’
  17. 5. Jamaica
  18. 6. Grenada and Carriacou
  19. 7. Trinidad
  20. 8. Glasgow-West India ‘Spheres of Influence’: Embedding the Profits of Caribbean Slavery
  21. Conclusion
  22. Appendix
  23. Bibliography and Manuscript Sources
  24. Index

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New Historical Perspectives is a book series for early career scholars within the UK and the Republic of Ireland. Books in the series are overseen by an expert editorial board to ensure the highest standards of peer-reviewed scholarship. Commissioning and editing is undertaken by the Royal Historical Society, and the series is published under the imprint of the Institute of Historical Research by the University of London Press.

The series is supported by the Economic History Society and the Past and Present Society.

Series co-editors: Professor Elizabeth Hurren (University of Leicester) and Professor Heather Shore (Manchester Metropolitan University)

Founding co-editors: Simon Newman (University of Glasgow) and Penny Summerfield (University of Manchester)

New Historical Perspectives Editorial Board

Professor Charlotte Alston

Northumbria University

Professor David Andress

University of Portsmouth

Dr Christopher Bahl

Durham University

Dr Milinda Banerjee

University of St Andrews

Dr Robert Barnes

York St John University

Dr Karin Bowie

University of Glasgow

Professor Catherine Clarke

Institute of Historical Research, University of London

Professor Neil Fleming

University of Worcester

Professor Ian Forrest

University of Oxford

Dr Emma Gallon

University of London Press

Professor Leigh Gardner

London School of Economics

Dr Sarah Longair

University of Lincoln

Dr Charlotte Wildman

University of Manchester

Dr Nick Witham

University College London

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