No Wood, No Kingdom

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15th 16th 17th 18th century
A01=Keith Pluymers
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America
Author_Keith Pluymers
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Barbados Bermuda history
Britain
British empire natural resources
Caribbean
Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=HBJK
Category=NHK
Colonial deforestation
colony colonialism
COP=United States
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Early modern colonization
Elizabethan England
Environmental History
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eq_history
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Ireland history colonization
King's Broad Arrow
Language_English
North American Woods
PA=Available
Political ecology
Price_€50 to €100
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softlaunch

Product details

  • ISBN 9780812253078
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 21 May 2021
  • Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
  • Language: English
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In early modern England, wood scarcity was a widespread concern. Royal officials, artisans, and common people expressed their fears in laws, petitions, and pamphlets, in which they debated the severity of the problem, speculated on its origins, and proposed solutions to it. No Wood, No Kingdom explores these conflicting attempts to understand the problem of scarcity and demonstrates how these ideas shaped land use, forestry, and the economic vision of England's earliest colonies.
Popular accounts have often suggested that deforestation served as a "push" for English colonial expansion. Keith Pluymers shows that wood scarcity in England, rather than a problem of absolute supply and demand, resulted from social conflict over the right to define and regulate resources, difficulties obtaining accurate information, and competing visions for trade, forestry, and the English landscape. Domestic scarcity claims did encourage schemes to develop wood-dependent enterprises in the colonies, but in practice colonies competed with domestic enterprises rather than supplanting them. Moreover, close studies of colonial governments and the actions of individual landholders in Ireland, Virginia, Bermuda, and Barbados demonstrate that colonists experimented with different, often competing approaches to colonial woods and trees, including efforts to manage them as long-term resources, albeit ones that nonetheless brought significant transformations to the land.
No Wood, No Kingdom explores the efforts to knot together woods around the Atlantic basin as resources for an English empire and the deep underlying conflicts and confusion that largely frustrated those plans. It speaks to historians of early modern Europe, early America, and the Atlantic World but also offers key insights on early modern resource politics, forest management, and political ecology of interest to readers in the environmental humanities and social sciences as well as those interested in colonialism or economic history.

Keith Pluymers is Assistant Professor of History at Illinois State University.

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