Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/56198
Title: The African Atlantic islands in maritime history during the Ancien Régime
Authors: Santana Pérez, Juan Manuel 
UNESCO Clasification: 550404 Historia moderna
Keywords: African history
Atlantic
Islands
Spanish and Portuguese empire
Triangular trade
Issue Date: 2018
Journal: International Journal of Maritime History 
Abstract: This paper aims at describing and explaining certain common characteristics that have endured in the African Atlantic islands by virtue of the fact that these islands depend on centres of authority located at considerable distances away. Their location on linking routes to three continents led to the first globalization since the world economic shifts of the 16th century. The islands have sometimes been described metaphorically as a bridge, but we prefer to speak of maritime doors. These islands have been an entrance and exit for goods, people, culture, and ideas, opened or closed, depending on your point of view, through the modern age as European penetration spread. It includes the archipelagos of the Middle Atlantic, the cases of Madeira, the Canaries, Cape Verde, São Tomé, and Principe, and the Guinea Islands of Bioko, Corisco, and Annobon.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/56198
ISSN: 0843-8714
DOI: 10.1177/0843871418803301
Source: International Journal of Maritime History [ISSN 0843-8714], v. 30 (4), p. 634-648
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