Women in exile in early modern Europe and the Americas
Women in exile in early modern Europe and the Americas
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Abstract
Exile, loss of homeland through compulsion or choice, has confronted women from prehistory to the present day. Women in Exile in Early Modern Europe and the Americas analyzes the important yet largely untold stories of women exiles of diverse status, origin, and political and religious outlook between 1492 and 1790. They include Jewish women expelled from Spain, Indigenous women enslaved and taken to Spain, British indentured women crossing the Atlantic, and enslaved African women transported to the Americas. Religious and political upheavals of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries created other exiles: Huguenot women went to the Netherlands and England, English royalists left for the Netherlands and France, while English radicals went to various countries on the continent. Women in Exile in Early Modern Europe and the Americas explores how these women faced life-changing questions of whether and where to go and how to create a new life in a new home. The book’s themes include women’s crucial efforts to turn to religious, political, and family networks, although not always with success. Whether poor or royal, their financial circumstances remained precarious. Drawing on varied primary sources, the book captures women’s narratives of exile. In many ways, the experience of exile could become a constitutive element of identity, shaping how these women viewed themselves and how they were viewed by others. Women often exercised extraordinary agency; many grasped new opportunities despite adversity. Women in Exile in Early Modern Europe and the Americas not only provides a new vantage point from which to enrich the study of exile but also contributes significant new scholarship to the history of women.
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Front Matter
- Introduction
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Part I Religion and exile
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1
Iberian women in exile from the fourteenth to the seventeenth centuries
Renée Levine Melammed
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2
Hitting bottom before reaching the top: the two exiles of Anne Marguerite Petit Dunoyer, 1686 and 1702
Colette H. Winn
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3
Friends without friends: exile and excommunication from early Quakerism, c.1660–1800
Naomi Pullin
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1
Iberian women in exile from the fourteenth to the seventeenth centuries
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Part II Enslavement, freedom, and exile
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4
Notes to a former self: slavery’s time in sixteenth-century Indigenous women’s freedom suits
Nancy E. van Deusen
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5
‘Be sure thou stay at home’: indentured women in the British Atlantic during the seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries
Anna Suranyi
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6
‘A Mulatto woman named Margaret’: fugitivity and forced exile in the age of American revolution, 1770–1783
Karen Cook Bell
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4
Notes to a former self: slavery’s time in sixteenth-century Indigenous women’s freedom suits
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Part III Politics and political culture
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7
Sixteenth-century cast-off consorts: the internal exiles of Catherine of Aragon and Anne of Cleves
Carole Levin
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8
Refuge of ill-repute: the characterization of Marguerite de Valois’ exile at Usson, 1586–1605
Adrianna E. Bakos
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9
Queen without a country: Elizabeth of Bohemia 1596–1662, exile and the Esther story
Georgianna Ziegler
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10
Choosing exile: Aletheia, Countess of Arundel and Elizabeth Ludlow, 1641–1703
Linda Levy Peck
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7
Sixteenth-century cast-off consorts: the internal exiles of Catherine of Aragon and Anne of Cleves
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End Matter
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