Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-2plfb Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-21T20:13:17.993Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Bibliography

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 November 2022

Sara Caputo
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge
Get access

Summary

Image of the first page of this content. For PDF version, please use the ‘Save PDF’ preceeding this image.'
Type
Chapter
Information
Foreign Jack Tars
The British Navy and Transnational Seafarers during the Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars
, pp. 252 - 289
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2022

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Primary Sources

AIM Processi criminali 137.Google Scholar
Affari Esteri, Raccolta di trattati diplomatici estratti dall’Archivio del Ministero degli affari esteri, Volume 5: Trattati diplomatici dal 1791 al 1799.Google Scholar
Affari Esteri, 3662, Marina Real Ministero – 1793–9.Google Scholar
Affari Esteri, 3663, Marina Real Ministero – Gennaio–Maggio 1800.Google Scholar
Affari Esteri, 3664, Marina Real Ministero – Giugno 1800.Google Scholar
Affari Esteri, 3666, Marina Real Ministero – Agosto 1800.Google Scholar
Affari Esteri, 3668, Marina Real Ministero – Novembre e Dicembre 1800.Google Scholar
Affari Esteri, 4333, Generi Somministrati agli Inglesi dai Regj Arsenali 1800–13.Google Scholar
Affari Esteri, 4339, Tolone. Spedizione delle truppe di Sua Maestà Siciliana. Carteggio fra Acton e il generale Bartolomeo Forteguerri, capo della squadra napoletana e carteggio di lord Hamilton, 1793–94.Google Scholar
Affari Esteri, 4377, Viaggio del re Francesco I in Spagna, 1829–30 – Suppliche.Google Scholar
Ministero degli affari esteri – Decennio Francese, Busta 5338.Google Scholar
Ruoli Regie Navi Registri di Marina, Busta 3, n. 5, Frag.a Minerva, January 1810.Google Scholar
Ruoli Regie Navi Registri di Marina, Busta 3, n. 6, Frag.a Sirena, 1810.Google Scholar
Segreteria antica, 377, Accademia di Marina (Sicilia), 1809–12.Google Scholar
Segreteria antica, 378, Accademia di Marina (Sicilia), 1813–15.Google Scholar
Egerton MS 2639, General Sir John Francis Edward Acton, 6th Baronet Neapolitan Prime Minister: Correspondence with Sir W. Hamilton, vol. i., 1781–98.Google Scholar
Egerton MS 2640, General Sir John Francis Edward Acton, 6th Baronet Neapolitan Prime Minister: Correspondence with Sir W. Hamilton, vol. ii., 1797–1800.Google Scholar
ADL/J/9, Impressment Exemption Form for Reyer Torsen, 25 April 1807.Google Scholar
ADM/B/202, Board of Admiralty, In-Letters, August–November 1801.Google Scholar
ADM/B/203, Board of Admiralty, In-Letters, December 1801–February 1802.Google Scholar
ADM/B/205, Board of Admiralty, In-Letters, June–September 1802.Google Scholar
ADM/B/206, Board of Admiralty, In-Letters, October–December 1802.Google Scholar
ADM/B/212, Board of Admiralty, In-Letters, November–December 1803.Google Scholar
ADM/B/213, Board of Admiralty, In-Letters, January–February 1804.Google Scholar
ADM/B/215, Board of Admiralty, In-Letters, May–June 1804.Google Scholar
ADM/B/216, Board of Admiralty, In-Letters, July–October 1804.Google Scholar
ADM/B/219, Board of Admiralty, In-Letters, June–August 1805.Google Scholar
ADM/B/220, Board of Admiralty, In-Letters, September–November 1805.Google Scholar
ADM/B/221, Board of Admiralty, In-Letters, December 1805–March 1806.Google Scholar
ADM/B/222, Board of Admiralty, In-Letters, April–June 1806.Google Scholar
ADM/B/223, Board of Admiralty, In-Letters, July–September 1806.Google Scholar
ADM/B/225, Board of Admiralty, In-Letters, January–March 1807.Google Scholar
ADM/B/229, Board of Admiralty, In-Letters, November 1807–January 1808.Google Scholar
ADM/B/231, Board of Admiralty, In-Letters, April–May 1808.Google Scholar
ADM/B/232, Board of Admiralty, In-Letters, June–July 1808.Google Scholar
ADM/B/235, Board of Admiralty, In-Letters, January–February 1809.Google Scholar
CRK/7/43, Lord Hood to Sir William Hamilton, 20 November 1793.Google Scholar
CRK/7/44, Lord Hood to Sir William Hamilton, 22 November 1793.Google Scholar
CRK/7/45, Lord Hood to Sir William Hamilton, 3 December 1793.Google Scholar
CRK/7/49, Lord Hood to Sir William Hamilton, 24 December 1793.Google Scholar
CRK/7/55, Lord Hood to Sir William Hamilton, 30 January 1794.Google Scholar
CRK/7/57, Lord Hood to Sir William Hamilton, 19 February 1794.Google Scholar
CRK/7/60, Lord Hood to Sir William Hamilton, 15 March 1794.Google Scholar
BSA/D1/5/4, Bible Society Correspondence Books (Home and Foreign), vol. 4, June 1810–September 1812.Google Scholar
152M/C/1798/ON, Political and Personal Papers of Henry Addington, 1st Viscount Sidmouth, 1705–1824, Correspondence & Papers for the Year 1798, Naval Correspondence.Google Scholar
SL115/2/1, Aliens Register, 1798–1803.Google Scholar
mssHM81125–81166, Robert Saunders Dundas, Viscount Melville Papers, 1812–14.Google Scholar
mssFB 1-1920, Sir Francis Beaufort Papers, 1710–1953.Google Scholar
Willem V A 31 Inv.nr. 2241, Notities over de organisatie en de staat van de Engelse marine, 1799.Google Scholar
Willem V A 31 Inv.nr. 2267, Stukken betreffende Nederlandse troepen en marineschepen in Engelse dienst, 1799–1800.Google Scholar
Willem V A 31 Inv.nr. 2271, Stukken betreffende de Nederlandse marineschepen en hun bemanningen in Engeland en de daarbij behorende briefwisseling tussen Willem V en B.P. van Lelyveld, commissaris van de prins voor het contact met de Engelse overheid, 1796, 1800–2.Google Scholar
Willem V A 31 Inv.nr. 2272, Stukken betreffende de Nederlandse marineschepen en hun bemanningen in Engeland en de daarbij behorende briefwisseling tussen Willem V en B.P. van Lelyveld, commissaris van de prins voor het contact met de Engelse overheid, 1803–4.Google Scholar
ADM 1/392, Letters from Commanders-in-Chief, Mediterranean, 1794.Google Scholar
ADM 1/493, Letters from Commanders-in-Chief, North America, 1795–6.Google Scholar
ADM 1/725, Letters from Commanders-in-Chief, Nore, 1795.Google Scholar
ADM 1/732, Letters from Commanders-in-Chief, Nore, 1800.Google Scholar
ADM 1/733, Letters from Commanders-in-Chief, Nore, 1801, nn. 2–600.Google Scholar
ADM 1/734, Letters from Commanders-in-Chief, Nore, 1801, nn. 615–909.Google Scholar
ADM 1/736, Letters from Commanders-in-Chief, Nore, 1803.Google Scholar
ADM 1/815, Letters from Commanders-in-Chief, Plymouth, 1800.Google Scholar
ADM 1/834, Letters from Commanders-in-Chief, Plymouth, 1814, nn. 1–876.Google Scholar
ADM 1/837, Letters from Commanders-in-Chief, Plymouth, 1815, nn. 501–1269.Google Scholar
ADM 1/1041, Letters from Commanders-in-Chief, Portsmouth, 1800, nn. 401–600.Google Scholar
ADM 1/1043, Letters from Commanders-in-Chief, Portsmouth, 1800, nn. 801–999.Google Scholar
ADM 1/1052, Letters from Commanders-in-Chief, Portsmouth, 1802, nn. 201–400.Google Scholar
ADM 1/1065, Letters from Commanders-in-Chief, Portsmouth, 1804, nn. 1–150.Google Scholar
ADM 1/1066, Letters from Commanders-in-Chief, Portsmouth, 1804, nn. 153–300.Google Scholar
ADM 1/1113, Letters from Commanders-in-Chief, Portsmouth, 1807, nn. 1801–1947.Google Scholar
ADM 1/1180, Letters from Commanders-in-Chief, Portsmouth, 1811, nn. 3501–3600.Google Scholar
ADM 1/1229, Letters from Commanders-in-Chief, Portsmouth, 1814, nn. 1–99.Google Scholar
ADM 1/1230, Letters from Commanders-in-Chief, Portsmouth, 1814, nn. 101–200.Google Scholar
ADM 1/1236, Letters from Commanders-in-Chief, Portsmouth, 1814, nn. 802–900.Google Scholar
ADM 1/1248, Letters from Commanders-in-Chief, Portsmouth, 1815, nn. 153–300.Google Scholar
ADM 1/1249, Letters from Commanders-in-Chief, Portsmouth, 1815, nn. 301–450.Google Scholar
ADM 1/1524, Letters from Captains, Surnames B., 1800, nn. 251–485.Google Scholar
ADM 1/1660, Letters from Captains, Surnames C., 1811, nn. 579–800.Google Scholar
ADM 1/1715, Letters from Captains, Surnames D., 1794.Google Scholar
ADM 1/1922, Letters from Captains, Surnames H., 1800, nn. 1–350.Google Scholar
ADM 1/1943, Letters from Captains, Surnames H., 1811, nn. 496–700.Google Scholar
ADM 1/1945, Letters from Captains, Surnames H., 1812.Google Scholar
ADM 1/2066, Letters from Captains, Surnames L., 1800, nn. 1–200.Google Scholar
ADM 1/2128, Letters from Captains, Surnames M., 1794.Google Scholar
ADM 1/2134, Letters from Captains, Surnames M., 1797, nn. 201–363.Google Scholar
ADM 1/2338, Letters from Captains, Surnames P., 1811, nn. 349–500.Google Scholar
ADM 1/2495, Letters from Captains, Surnames S., 1797.Google Scholar
ADM 1/2497, Letters from Captains, Surnames S., 1798, nn. 1–200.Google Scholar
ADM 1/2501, Letters from Captains, Surnames S., 1800, nn. 1–200.Google Scholar
ADM 1/2679, Letters from Captains, Surnames W., 1794.Google Scholar
ADM 1/2684, Letters from Captains, Surnames W., 1797, nn. 1–200.Google Scholar
ADM 1/3062, Letters from Lieutenants, Surnames P., 1793–4.Google Scholar
ADM 1/3167, Letters from Lieutenants, Surnames T., 1793–6.Google Scholar
ADM 1/3740, Letters from the Transport Board, July 1800–March 1801.Google Scholar
ADM 1/3751, Letters from the Transport Board, February–June 1807.Google Scholar
ADM 1/3760, Letters from the Transport Board, January–September 1810.Google Scholar
ADM 1/3766, Letters from the Transport Board, January–August 1814.Google Scholar
ADM 1/3850, Letters from Foreign Consuls, 1796–8.Google Scholar
ADM 1/3851, Letters from Foreign Consuls, 1799–1800.Google Scholar
ADM 1/4183, Admiralty, Letters from Secretaries of State, January–April 1800.Google Scholar
ADM 1/4185, Admiralty, Letters from Secretaries of State, September–December 1800.Google Scholar
ADM 1/4232, Admiralty, Letters from Secretaries of State, January–March 1815.Google Scholar
ADM 1/5364, Courts Martial Papers, August–September 1798.Google Scholar
ADM 1/5486, Courts Martial Papers: Nore Mutiny, 1797.Google Scholar
ADM 3/184, Admiralty Rough Minutes, January–May 1815.Google Scholar
ADM 3/185, Admiralty Rough Minutes, June–August 1815.Google Scholar
ADM 3/186, Admiralty Rough Minutes, September–December 1815.Google Scholar
ADM 7/303, Law Officers’ Opinions, 1796–7.Google Scholar
ADM 7/305, Law Officers’ Opinions, 1800–2.Google Scholar
ADM 7/307, Law Officers’ Opinions, 1805–8.Google Scholar
ADM 7/308, Law Officers’ Opinions, 1809–10.Google Scholar
ADM 7/313, Law Officers’ Opinions, 1816–19.Google Scholar
ADM 7/398, Register of Protections from Being Pressed – Apprentices, Foreigners and Others, 1795–1801.Google Scholar
ADM 8/69, The Present Disposition of His Majesty’s Ships and Vessels in Sea Pay, 1793.Google Scholar
ADM 8/83, The Present Disposition of His Majesty’s Ships and Vessels in Sea Pay, 1802.Google Scholar
ADM 8/100, The Present Disposition of His Majesty’s Ships and Vessels in Sea Pay, 1813.Google Scholar
ADM 12/26, Analysis and digest of court martial convictions, arranged by offence: SI-W, 1755–1806.Google Scholar
ADM 12/63, Admiralty Digest 1794 – Part 2.Google Scholar
ADM 12/67, Admiralty Digest 1795 – Part 2.Google Scholar
ADM 12/75, Admiralty Digest 1797 – Part 2.Google Scholar
ADM 12/79, Admiralty Digest 1798 – Part 2.Google Scholar
ADM 12/86, Admiralty Digest 1800 – Part 1.Google Scholar
ADM 12/87, Admiralty Digest 1800 – Part 2.Google Scholar
ADM 12/93, Admiralty Digest 1801 – Part 3.Google Scholar
ADM 12/99, Admiralty Digest 1802 – Part 3.Google Scholar
ADM 12/105, Admiralty Digest 1803 – Special.Google Scholar
ADM 12/129, Admiralty Digest 1807 – Part 3.Google Scholar
ADM 12/147, Admiralty Digest 1810–11 – Part 3.Google Scholar
ADM 12/162, Admiralty Digest 1813 – Part 3.Google Scholar
ADM 12/168, Admiralty Digest 1814 – Part 3.Google Scholar
ADM 12/174, Admiralty Digest 1815 – Part 3.Google Scholar
ADM 12/185, Admiralty Digest 1817 – Part 2.Google Scholar
ADM 30/63/6, Pay Lists of Maltese Seamen, 1793–8.Google Scholar
ADM 35/2948, Pay Book of HMS Nassau, 1 May 1807–24 November 1809.Google Scholar
ADM 36/8615, Muster Books of HMS Marlborough, April 1780–January 1781.Google Scholar
ADM 36/8616, Muster Books of HMS Marlborough, June 1779–August 1780.Google Scholar
ADM 36/8962, Muster Books of HMS Marlborough, February–November 1781.Google Scholar
ADM 36/11194, Muster Book of HMS Minerva, November–December 1793.Google Scholar
ADM 36/11578, Muster Book of HMS Victory, May–October 1794.Google Scholar
ADM 36/11981, Muster Book of HMS Penelope, November–December 1793.Google Scholar
ADM 36/12177, Muster Book of HMS Blanche, August–December 1793.Google Scholar
ADM 36/12279, Muster Book of HMS Circe, September–October 1797.Google Scholar
ADM 36/12756, Muster Book of HMS Montagu, September–October 1797.Google Scholar
ADM 36/14336, Muster Book of HMS Alexander, July–August 1800.Google Scholar
ADM 36/14389, Muster Book of HMS Santa Dorotea, January 1801–May 1802.Google Scholar
ADM 36/14781, Muster Book of HMS Quebec, March–April 1802.Google Scholar
ADM 36/15330, Muster Book of HMS Jupiter, March–April 1802.Google Scholar
ADM 36/15379, Muster Book of HMS Centurion, February–March 1802.Google Scholar
ADM 36/15834, Muster Books of HMS Leviathan, January–April 1804.Google Scholar
ADM 36/16370, Muster Book of HMS Termagant, October–November 1804.Google Scholar
ADM 36/16809, Muster Book of HMS Phoebe, September–October 1805.Google Scholar
ADM 37/32, Muster Book of HMS Nassau, 1–20 September 1807.Google Scholar
ADM 37/280, Muster Book of HMS Arethusa, November–December 1805.Google Scholar
ADM 37/3109, Muster Book of HMS Nightingale, September–October 1811.Google Scholar
ADM 37/3701, Muster Book of HMS Bucephalus, June–July 1813.Google Scholar
ADM 37/4214, Muster Book of HMS Astrea, July–August 1813.Google Scholar
ADM 37/4303, Muster Book of HMS Garland, June–July 1813.Google Scholar
ADM 37/5665, Muster Book of HMS Impregnable, July–October 1816.Google Scholar
ADM 37/5682, Muster Book of HMS Queen Charlotte, July–December 1816.Google Scholar
ADM 37/5747, Muster Book of HMS Hebrus, September 1815–December 1816.Google Scholar
ADM 37/5762, Muster Book of HMS Leander, July 1816–February 1817.Google Scholar
ADM 37/5826, Muster Book of HMS Britomart, August 1815–April 1817.Google Scholar
ADM 37/5919, Muster Book of HMS Prometheus, August 1815–December 1816.Google Scholar
ADM 51/577, Captains’ Logs, Including MARLBOROUGH (18 June 1779–22 July 1783).Google Scholar
ADM 52/1858, Master’s Log HMS Marlborough, 18 June 1779–30 June 1781.Google Scholar
ADM 98/16, Sick and Hurt Board to the Admiralty, 1793–4.Google Scholar
ADM 98/17, Sick and Hurt Board to the Admiralty, 1795–6.Google Scholar
ADM 98/24, Sick and Hurt Board to the Admiralty, 1806–8.Google Scholar
ADM 101/84/6A, Medical journal HMS Ambuscade for 26 August 1800 to 27 August 1801 by Thomas Hendry.Google Scholar
ADM 101/86/1, Journal of HMS Arethusa by Thomas Simpson, Surgeon, 14 May 1805–14 June 1806.Google Scholar
ADM 101/91/4, Journal of HMS Bombay by John Knox, Surgeon, 14 May 1808–13 May 1809.Google Scholar
ADM 101/93/1, Medical and surgical journal of HMS Canopus for 17 June 1806–16 June 1807 by A. Martin, Surgeon.Google Scholar
ADM 101/112/5, Medical journal of His Majesty’s Prison Hospital ship Le Pegaze [Le Pegase] from the 25 January 1804 to 14 January 1805 by [William Bickley Smith?], Surgeon.Google Scholar
ADM 101/120/3, Medical and Surgical Journal of HMS Shannon by Alexander Jack, 30 July 1812–29 July 1813.Google Scholar
ADM 101/121/3B, Medical journal of HMS Swiftsure for 8 July 1798 to 9 July 1799 by James Dalziel.Google Scholar
ADM 101/121/3C, Medical journal of HMS Swiftsure for 9 July 1799 to 9 July 1800 by James Dalziel.Google Scholar
ADM 101/123/1, Medical journal of HMS Theban for 16 November 1813 to 16 November 1814 by William Ure, Surgeon.Google Scholar
ADM 101/125/3, Medical and surgical journal of HMS Ville de Paris for 25 March 1813 to 24 March 1814 by William Warner, Surgeon.Google Scholar
ADM 106/1549, Navy Board In-Letters Promiscuous Letters I.J., 1814–22.Google Scholar
ADM 106/1559, Navy Board In-Letters Promiscuous Letters L., 1790–1804.Google Scholar
ADM 106/1569, Navy Board In-Letters Promiscuous Letters M., 1790–1801.Google Scholar
FO 49/2, Consul William England, Captain Alexander John Ball, and the Grand Master, April 1789–1800.Google Scholar
FO 70/1, General correspondence before 1906: Sicily and Naples – Sir William Hamilton and Consuls, 1780–1.Google Scholar
FO 70/7, General correspondence before 1906: Sicily and Naples – Sir William Hamilton, and Consuls, 1794.Google Scholar
HO 28/45, Home Office Admiralty Correspondence: Letters and Papers, 1816–18.Google Scholar
HO 44/47, Home Office: Domestic Correspondence, 1814–38.Google Scholar
PROB 11/1933/71, Will of Philip otherwise Filippo Thovez of Bronte, Sicily, 4 August 1840.Google Scholar
WO 1/921, j. Intelligence: Prince de Bouillon: Correspondence, 1794–6.Google Scholar
RG 59 Entry A1 928 (1227194), Letters Received Regarding Impressed Seamen, 1794–1815.Google Scholar
AOM, 1817, ‘Nave S. Zaccaria Com.te Lista di paga fatta all’Equipag. della med. li 28. Aple 1789’.Google Scholar
AOM 1927, [Comm. Manso], ‘Instruzione per il Cappellano di Galera’, n.d.Google Scholar
AOM 1931, ‘[Ruolo dell’equipaggio della] “S. Giovanni”’, 1712–35.Google Scholar
GB233/MS.3599, Lynedoch Papers.Google Scholar
GB233/MS.9232, Robert Ritchie, Journal of Voyages, 1811–12.Google Scholar
1988/417(1) 621, Press Warrants, 1793–7.Google Scholar
1988/500, The Papers of the Penrose and Coode Families, 1772–c.1880.Google Scholar
1977/301, Officers’ Letters, 1688–1900.Google Scholar
HL/PO/JO/10/7/965, Records of the House of Lords: Main Papers, British Mariners Bill – Amendments and Clauses, 3 April 1794.Google Scholar
Pw Jd 751/1, ‘Memorie relative to the Health of the Army in Sicily, submitted to His Excellency Lt. General Lord William Bentinck’, 1812.Google Scholar
Pw Jd 4028, Plan for Discharged Men from Foreign Corps, n.d.Google Scholar
Pw Jd 5564, Papers relating to the Sicilian flotilla.Google Scholar
Pw Jd 5660, Instructions to Brig. Genl. Hall commanding the combined flotilla, 1812.Google Scholar
Pw Jd 5940, State of the royal flotilla, 1814.Google Scholar

Secondary Sources

AIM Processi criminali 137.Google Scholar
Affari Esteri, Raccolta di trattati diplomatici estratti dall’Archivio del Ministero degli affari esteri, Volume 5: Trattati diplomatici dal 1791 al 1799.Google Scholar
Affari Esteri, 3662, Marina Real Ministero – 1793–9.Google Scholar
Affari Esteri, 3663, Marina Real Ministero – Gennaio–Maggio 1800.Google Scholar
Affari Esteri, 3664, Marina Real Ministero – Giugno 1800.Google Scholar
Affari Esteri, 3666, Marina Real Ministero – Agosto 1800.Google Scholar
Affari Esteri, 3668, Marina Real Ministero – Novembre e Dicembre 1800.Google Scholar
Affari Esteri, 4333, Generi Somministrati agli Inglesi dai Regj Arsenali 1800–13.Google Scholar
Affari Esteri, 4339, Tolone. Spedizione delle truppe di Sua Maestà Siciliana. Carteggio fra Acton e il generale Bartolomeo Forteguerri, capo della squadra napoletana e carteggio di lord Hamilton, 1793–94.Google Scholar
Affari Esteri, 4377, Viaggio del re Francesco I in Spagna, 1829–30 – Suppliche.Google Scholar
Ministero degli affari esteri – Decennio Francese, Busta 5338.Google Scholar
Ruoli Regie Navi Registri di Marina, Busta 3, n. 5, Frag.a Minerva, January 1810.Google Scholar
Ruoli Regie Navi Registri di Marina, Busta 3, n. 6, Frag.a Sirena, 1810.Google Scholar
Segreteria antica, 377, Accademia di Marina (Sicilia), 1809–12.Google Scholar
Segreteria antica, 378, Accademia di Marina (Sicilia), 1813–15.Google Scholar
Egerton MS 2639, General Sir John Francis Edward Acton, 6th Baronet Neapolitan Prime Minister: Correspondence with Sir W. Hamilton, vol. i., 1781–98.Google Scholar
Egerton MS 2640, General Sir John Francis Edward Acton, 6th Baronet Neapolitan Prime Minister: Correspondence with Sir W. Hamilton, vol. ii., 1797–1800.Google Scholar
ADL/J/9, Impressment Exemption Form for Reyer Torsen, 25 April 1807.Google Scholar
ADM/B/202, Board of Admiralty, In-Letters, August–November 1801.Google Scholar
ADM/B/203, Board of Admiralty, In-Letters, December 1801–February 1802.Google Scholar
ADM/B/205, Board of Admiralty, In-Letters, June–September 1802.Google Scholar
ADM/B/206, Board of Admiralty, In-Letters, October–December 1802.Google Scholar
ADM/B/212, Board of Admiralty, In-Letters, November–December 1803.Google Scholar
ADM/B/213, Board of Admiralty, In-Letters, January–February 1804.Google Scholar
ADM/B/215, Board of Admiralty, In-Letters, May–June 1804.Google Scholar
ADM/B/216, Board of Admiralty, In-Letters, July–October 1804.Google Scholar
ADM/B/219, Board of Admiralty, In-Letters, June–August 1805.Google Scholar
ADM/B/220, Board of Admiralty, In-Letters, September–November 1805.Google Scholar
ADM/B/221, Board of Admiralty, In-Letters, December 1805–March 1806.Google Scholar
ADM/B/222, Board of Admiralty, In-Letters, April–June 1806.Google Scholar
ADM/B/223, Board of Admiralty, In-Letters, July–September 1806.Google Scholar
ADM/B/225, Board of Admiralty, In-Letters, January–March 1807.Google Scholar
ADM/B/229, Board of Admiralty, In-Letters, November 1807–January 1808.Google Scholar
ADM/B/231, Board of Admiralty, In-Letters, April–May 1808.Google Scholar
ADM/B/232, Board of Admiralty, In-Letters, June–July 1808.Google Scholar
ADM/B/235, Board of Admiralty, In-Letters, January–February 1809.Google Scholar
CRK/7/43, Lord Hood to Sir William Hamilton, 20 November 1793.Google Scholar
CRK/7/44, Lord Hood to Sir William Hamilton, 22 November 1793.Google Scholar
CRK/7/45, Lord Hood to Sir William Hamilton, 3 December 1793.Google Scholar
CRK/7/49, Lord Hood to Sir William Hamilton, 24 December 1793.Google Scholar
CRK/7/55, Lord Hood to Sir William Hamilton, 30 January 1794.Google Scholar
CRK/7/57, Lord Hood to Sir William Hamilton, 19 February 1794.Google Scholar
CRK/7/60, Lord Hood to Sir William Hamilton, 15 March 1794.Google Scholar
BSA/D1/5/4, Bible Society Correspondence Books (Home and Foreign), vol. 4, June 1810–September 1812.Google Scholar
152M/C/1798/ON, Political and Personal Papers of Henry Addington, 1st Viscount Sidmouth, 1705–1824, Correspondence & Papers for the Year 1798, Naval Correspondence.Google Scholar
SL115/2/1, Aliens Register, 1798–1803.Google Scholar
mssHM81125–81166, Robert Saunders Dundas, Viscount Melville Papers, 1812–14.Google Scholar
mssFB 1-1920, Sir Francis Beaufort Papers, 1710–1953.Google Scholar
Willem V A 31 Inv.nr. 2241, Notities over de organisatie en de staat van de Engelse marine, 1799.Google Scholar
Willem V A 31 Inv.nr. 2267, Stukken betreffende Nederlandse troepen en marineschepen in Engelse dienst, 1799–1800.Google Scholar
Willem V A 31 Inv.nr. 2271, Stukken betreffende de Nederlandse marineschepen en hun bemanningen in Engeland en de daarbij behorende briefwisseling tussen Willem V en B.P. van Lelyveld, commissaris van de prins voor het contact met de Engelse overheid, 1796, 1800–2.Google Scholar
Willem V A 31 Inv.nr. 2272, Stukken betreffende de Nederlandse marineschepen en hun bemanningen in Engeland en de daarbij behorende briefwisseling tussen Willem V en B.P. van Lelyveld, commissaris van de prins voor het contact met de Engelse overheid, 1803–4.Google Scholar
ADM 1/392, Letters from Commanders-in-Chief, Mediterranean, 1794.Google Scholar
ADM 1/493, Letters from Commanders-in-Chief, North America, 1795–6.Google Scholar
ADM 1/725, Letters from Commanders-in-Chief, Nore, 1795.Google Scholar
ADM 1/732, Letters from Commanders-in-Chief, Nore, 1800.Google Scholar
ADM 1/733, Letters from Commanders-in-Chief, Nore, 1801, nn. 2–600.Google Scholar
ADM 1/734, Letters from Commanders-in-Chief, Nore, 1801, nn. 615–909.Google Scholar
ADM 1/736, Letters from Commanders-in-Chief, Nore, 1803.Google Scholar
ADM 1/815, Letters from Commanders-in-Chief, Plymouth, 1800.Google Scholar
ADM 1/834, Letters from Commanders-in-Chief, Plymouth, 1814, nn. 1–876.Google Scholar
ADM 1/837, Letters from Commanders-in-Chief, Plymouth, 1815, nn. 501–1269.Google Scholar
ADM 1/1041, Letters from Commanders-in-Chief, Portsmouth, 1800, nn. 401–600.Google Scholar
ADM 1/1043, Letters from Commanders-in-Chief, Portsmouth, 1800, nn. 801–999.Google Scholar
ADM 1/1052, Letters from Commanders-in-Chief, Portsmouth, 1802, nn. 201–400.Google Scholar
ADM 1/1065, Letters from Commanders-in-Chief, Portsmouth, 1804, nn. 1–150.Google Scholar
ADM 1/1066, Letters from Commanders-in-Chief, Portsmouth, 1804, nn. 153–300.Google Scholar
ADM 1/1113, Letters from Commanders-in-Chief, Portsmouth, 1807, nn. 1801–1947.Google Scholar
ADM 1/1180, Letters from Commanders-in-Chief, Portsmouth, 1811, nn. 3501–3600.Google Scholar
ADM 1/1229, Letters from Commanders-in-Chief, Portsmouth, 1814, nn. 1–99.Google Scholar
ADM 1/1230, Letters from Commanders-in-Chief, Portsmouth, 1814, nn. 101–200.Google Scholar
ADM 1/1236, Letters from Commanders-in-Chief, Portsmouth, 1814, nn. 802–900.Google Scholar
ADM 1/1248, Letters from Commanders-in-Chief, Portsmouth, 1815, nn. 153–300.Google Scholar
ADM 1/1249, Letters from Commanders-in-Chief, Portsmouth, 1815, nn. 301–450.Google Scholar
ADM 1/1524, Letters from Captains, Surnames B., 1800, nn. 251–485.Google Scholar
ADM 1/1660, Letters from Captains, Surnames C., 1811, nn. 579–800.Google Scholar
ADM 1/1715, Letters from Captains, Surnames D., 1794.Google Scholar
ADM 1/1922, Letters from Captains, Surnames H., 1800, nn. 1–350.Google Scholar
ADM 1/1943, Letters from Captains, Surnames H., 1811, nn. 496–700.Google Scholar
ADM 1/1945, Letters from Captains, Surnames H., 1812.Google Scholar
ADM 1/2066, Letters from Captains, Surnames L., 1800, nn. 1–200.Google Scholar
ADM 1/2128, Letters from Captains, Surnames M., 1794.Google Scholar
ADM 1/2134, Letters from Captains, Surnames M., 1797, nn. 201–363.Google Scholar
ADM 1/2338, Letters from Captains, Surnames P., 1811, nn. 349–500.Google Scholar
ADM 1/2495, Letters from Captains, Surnames S., 1797.Google Scholar
ADM 1/2497, Letters from Captains, Surnames S., 1798, nn. 1–200.Google Scholar
ADM 1/2501, Letters from Captains, Surnames S., 1800, nn. 1–200.Google Scholar
ADM 1/2679, Letters from Captains, Surnames W., 1794.Google Scholar
ADM 1/2684, Letters from Captains, Surnames W., 1797, nn. 1–200.Google Scholar
ADM 1/3062, Letters from Lieutenants, Surnames P., 1793–4.Google Scholar
ADM 1/3167, Letters from Lieutenants, Surnames T., 1793–6.Google Scholar
ADM 1/3740, Letters from the Transport Board, July 1800–March 1801.Google Scholar
ADM 1/3751, Letters from the Transport Board, February–June 1807.Google Scholar
ADM 1/3760, Letters from the Transport Board, January–September 1810.Google Scholar
ADM 1/3766, Letters from the Transport Board, January–August 1814.Google Scholar
ADM 1/3850, Letters from Foreign Consuls, 1796–8.Google Scholar
ADM 1/3851, Letters from Foreign Consuls, 1799–1800.Google Scholar
ADM 1/4183, Admiralty, Letters from Secretaries of State, January–April 1800.Google Scholar
ADM 1/4185, Admiralty, Letters from Secretaries of State, September–December 1800.Google Scholar
ADM 1/4232, Admiralty, Letters from Secretaries of State, January–March 1815.Google Scholar
ADM 1/5364, Courts Martial Papers, August–September 1798.Google Scholar
ADM 1/5486, Courts Martial Papers: Nore Mutiny, 1797.Google Scholar
ADM 3/184, Admiralty Rough Minutes, January–May 1815.Google Scholar
ADM 3/185, Admiralty Rough Minutes, June–August 1815.Google Scholar
ADM 3/186, Admiralty Rough Minutes, September–December 1815.Google Scholar
ADM 7/303, Law Officers’ Opinions, 1796–7.Google Scholar
ADM 7/305, Law Officers’ Opinions, 1800–2.Google Scholar
ADM 7/307, Law Officers’ Opinions, 1805–8.Google Scholar
ADM 7/308, Law Officers’ Opinions, 1809–10.Google Scholar
ADM 7/313, Law Officers’ Opinions, 1816–19.Google Scholar
ADM 7/398, Register of Protections from Being Pressed – Apprentices, Foreigners and Others, 1795–1801.Google Scholar
ADM 8/69, The Present Disposition of His Majesty’s Ships and Vessels in Sea Pay, 1793.Google Scholar
ADM 8/83, The Present Disposition of His Majesty’s Ships and Vessels in Sea Pay, 1802.Google Scholar
ADM 8/100, The Present Disposition of His Majesty’s Ships and Vessels in Sea Pay, 1813.Google Scholar
ADM 12/26, Analysis and digest of court martial convictions, arranged by offence: SI-W, 1755–1806.Google Scholar
ADM 12/63, Admiralty Digest 1794 – Part 2.Google Scholar
ADM 12/67, Admiralty Digest 1795 – Part 2.Google Scholar
ADM 12/75, Admiralty Digest 1797 – Part 2.Google Scholar
ADM 12/79, Admiralty Digest 1798 – Part 2.Google Scholar
ADM 12/86, Admiralty Digest 1800 – Part 1.Google Scholar
ADM 12/87, Admiralty Digest 1800 – Part 2.Google Scholar
ADM 12/93, Admiralty Digest 1801 – Part 3.Google Scholar
ADM 12/99, Admiralty Digest 1802 – Part 3.Google Scholar
ADM 12/105, Admiralty Digest 1803 – Special.Google Scholar
ADM 12/129, Admiralty Digest 1807 – Part 3.Google Scholar
ADM 12/147, Admiralty Digest 1810–11 – Part 3.Google Scholar
ADM 12/162, Admiralty Digest 1813 – Part 3.Google Scholar
ADM 12/168, Admiralty Digest 1814 – Part 3.Google Scholar
ADM 12/174, Admiralty Digest 1815 – Part 3.Google Scholar
ADM 12/185, Admiralty Digest 1817 – Part 2.Google Scholar
ADM 30/63/6, Pay Lists of Maltese Seamen, 1793–8.Google Scholar
ADM 35/2948, Pay Book of HMS Nassau, 1 May 1807–24 November 1809.Google Scholar
ADM 36/8615, Muster Books of HMS Marlborough, April 1780–January 1781.Google Scholar
ADM 36/8616, Muster Books of HMS Marlborough, June 1779–August 1780.Google Scholar
ADM 36/8962, Muster Books of HMS Marlborough, February–November 1781.Google Scholar
ADM 36/11194, Muster Book of HMS Minerva, November–December 1793.Google Scholar
ADM 36/11578, Muster Book of HMS Victory, May–October 1794.Google Scholar
ADM 36/11981, Muster Book of HMS Penelope, November–December 1793.Google Scholar
ADM 36/12177, Muster Book of HMS Blanche, August–December 1793.Google Scholar
ADM 36/12279, Muster Book of HMS Circe, September–October 1797.Google Scholar
ADM 36/12756, Muster Book of HMS Montagu, September–October 1797.Google Scholar
ADM 36/14336, Muster Book of HMS Alexander, July–August 1800.Google Scholar
ADM 36/14389, Muster Book of HMS Santa Dorotea, January 1801–May 1802.Google Scholar
ADM 36/14781, Muster Book of HMS Quebec, March–April 1802.Google Scholar
ADM 36/15330, Muster Book of HMS Jupiter, March–April 1802.Google Scholar
ADM 36/15379, Muster Book of HMS Centurion, February–March 1802.Google Scholar
ADM 36/15834, Muster Books of HMS Leviathan, January–April 1804.Google Scholar
ADM 36/16370, Muster Book of HMS Termagant, October–November 1804.Google Scholar
ADM 36/16809, Muster Book of HMS Phoebe, September–October 1805.Google Scholar
ADM 37/32, Muster Book of HMS Nassau, 1–20 September 1807.Google Scholar
ADM 37/280, Muster Book of HMS Arethusa, November–December 1805.Google Scholar
ADM 37/3109, Muster Book of HMS Nightingale, September–October 1811.Google Scholar
ADM 37/3701, Muster Book of HMS Bucephalus, June–July 1813.Google Scholar
ADM 37/4214, Muster Book of HMS Astrea, July–August 1813.Google Scholar
ADM 37/4303, Muster Book of HMS Garland, June–July 1813.Google Scholar
ADM 37/5665, Muster Book of HMS Impregnable, July–October 1816.Google Scholar
ADM 37/5682, Muster Book of HMS Queen Charlotte, July–December 1816.Google Scholar
ADM 37/5747, Muster Book of HMS Hebrus, September 1815–December 1816.Google Scholar
ADM 37/5762, Muster Book of HMS Leander, July 1816–February 1817.Google Scholar
ADM 37/5826, Muster Book of HMS Britomart, August 1815–April 1817.Google Scholar
ADM 37/5919, Muster Book of HMS Prometheus, August 1815–December 1816.Google Scholar
ADM 51/577, Captains’ Logs, Including MARLBOROUGH (18 June 1779–22 July 1783).Google Scholar
ADM 52/1858, Master’s Log HMS Marlborough, 18 June 1779–30 June 1781.Google Scholar
ADM 98/16, Sick and Hurt Board to the Admiralty, 1793–4.Google Scholar
ADM 98/17, Sick and Hurt Board to the Admiralty, 1795–6.Google Scholar
ADM 98/24, Sick and Hurt Board to the Admiralty, 1806–8.Google Scholar
ADM 101/84/6A, Medical journal HMS Ambuscade for 26 August 1800 to 27 August 1801 by Thomas Hendry.Google Scholar
ADM 101/86/1, Journal of HMS Arethusa by Thomas Simpson, Surgeon, 14 May 1805–14 June 1806.Google Scholar
ADM 101/91/4, Journal of HMS Bombay by John Knox, Surgeon, 14 May 1808–13 May 1809.Google Scholar
ADM 101/93/1, Medical and surgical journal of HMS Canopus for 17 June 1806–16 June 1807 by A. Martin, Surgeon.Google Scholar
ADM 101/112/5, Medical journal of His Majesty’s Prison Hospital ship Le Pegaze [Le Pegase] from the 25 January 1804 to 14 January 1805 by [William Bickley Smith?], Surgeon.Google Scholar
ADM 101/120/3, Medical and Surgical Journal of HMS Shannon by Alexander Jack, 30 July 1812–29 July 1813.Google Scholar
ADM 101/121/3B, Medical journal of HMS Swiftsure for 8 July 1798 to 9 July 1799 by James Dalziel.Google Scholar
ADM 101/121/3C, Medical journal of HMS Swiftsure for 9 July 1799 to 9 July 1800 by James Dalziel.Google Scholar
ADM 101/123/1, Medical journal of HMS Theban for 16 November 1813 to 16 November 1814 by William Ure, Surgeon.Google Scholar
ADM 101/125/3, Medical and surgical journal of HMS Ville de Paris for 25 March 1813 to 24 March 1814 by William Warner, Surgeon.Google Scholar
ADM 106/1549, Navy Board In-Letters Promiscuous Letters I.J., 1814–22.Google Scholar
ADM 106/1559, Navy Board In-Letters Promiscuous Letters L., 1790–1804.Google Scholar
ADM 106/1569, Navy Board In-Letters Promiscuous Letters M., 1790–1801.Google Scholar
FO 49/2, Consul William England, Captain Alexander John Ball, and the Grand Master, April 1789–1800.Google Scholar
FO 70/1, General correspondence before 1906: Sicily and Naples – Sir William Hamilton and Consuls, 1780–1.Google Scholar
FO 70/7, General correspondence before 1906: Sicily and Naples – Sir William Hamilton, and Consuls, 1794.Google Scholar
HO 28/45, Home Office Admiralty Correspondence: Letters and Papers, 1816–18.Google Scholar
HO 44/47, Home Office: Domestic Correspondence, 1814–38.Google Scholar
PROB 11/1933/71, Will of Philip otherwise Filippo Thovez of Bronte, Sicily, 4 August 1840.Google Scholar
WO 1/921, j. Intelligence: Prince de Bouillon: Correspondence, 1794–6.Google Scholar
RG 59 Entry A1 928 (1227194), Letters Received Regarding Impressed Seamen, 1794–1815.Google Scholar
AOM, 1817, ‘Nave S. Zaccaria Com.te Lista di paga fatta all’Equipag. della med. li 28. Aple 1789’.Google Scholar
AOM 1927, [Comm. Manso], ‘Instruzione per il Cappellano di Galera’, n.d.Google Scholar
AOM 1931, ‘[Ruolo dell’equipaggio della] “S. Giovanni”’, 1712–35.Google Scholar
GB233/MS.3599, Lynedoch Papers.Google Scholar
GB233/MS.9232, Robert Ritchie, Journal of Voyages, 1811–12.Google Scholar
1988/417(1) 621, Press Warrants, 1793–7.Google Scholar
1988/500, The Papers of the Penrose and Coode Families, 1772–c.1880.Google Scholar
1977/301, Officers’ Letters, 1688–1900.Google Scholar
HL/PO/JO/10/7/965, Records of the House of Lords: Main Papers, British Mariners Bill – Amendments and Clauses, 3 April 1794.Google Scholar
Pw Jd 751/1, ‘Memorie relative to the Health of the Army in Sicily, submitted to His Excellency Lt. General Lord William Bentinck’, 1812.Google Scholar
Pw Jd 4028, Plan for Discharged Men from Foreign Corps, n.d.Google Scholar
Pw Jd 5564, Papers relating to the Sicilian flotilla.Google Scholar
Pw Jd 5660, Instructions to Brig. Genl. Hall commanding the combined flotilla, 1812.Google Scholar
Pw Jd 5940, State of the royal flotilla, 1814.Google Scholar
The History and Proceedings of the House of Commons, 14 vols. (London: Richard Chandler, 1742–4).Google Scholar
Journals of the House of Lords, Beginning Anno Tricesimo Quarto Georgii Tertii, 1794.Google Scholar
The Parliamentary Debates from the Year 1803 to the Present Time, ed. Hansard, T. C. (London: Longman et al., 1812).Google Scholar
The Parliamentary History of England, from the Earliest Period to the Year 1803, 36 vols. (London: T. C. Hansard, 1819).Google Scholar
Tomlins, Thomas Edlyne and Raithby, John (eds.), The Statutes at Large, of England and of Great-Britain: From Magna Carta to the Union of the Kingdoms of Great Britain and Ireland, 20 vols. (London: George Eyre and Andrew Strahan, 1811).Google Scholar
Tomlins, Thomas Edlyne, John, Raithby, and Simons, N. (eds.), The Statutes of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, multiple vols. (London: George Eyre and Andrew Strahan, 1804–57).Google Scholar
Courier and Evening Gazette, London.Google Scholar
The Edinburgh Advertiser.Google Scholar
The Edinburgh Evening Courant.Google Scholar
The Herald and Chronicle, Edinburgh.Google Scholar
The London Gazette.Google Scholar
The London Packet, or New Lloyd’s Evening Post.Google Scholar
The Morning Chronicle, London.Google Scholar
The Morning Post and Daily Advertiser [later The Morning Post], London.Google Scholar
The Naval Chronicle.Google Scholar
The Sun, London.Google Scholar
The Times.Google Scholar
The Universal Magazine of Knowledge and Pleasure, London.Google Scholar
An Address to the Seamen in the British Navy (London: W. Richardson, 1797).Google Scholar
Blackstone, William, Commentaries on the Laws of England, in Four Books, 13th ed. (London: A. Strahan, 1800).Google Scholar
Bowers, William, Naval Adventures during Thirty-Five Years’ Service, 2 vols. (London: Richard Bentley, 1833).Google Scholar
[Brauw, J. de Vaandrig], Mijne emigratie in Duitschland, Engeland en Ierland, in de jaren 1799–1802 (Utrecht: N. van der Monde, 1837).Google Scholar
British and Foreign State Papers – 1812–1814, Volume I, 170 vols. (London: James Ridgway and Sons, 1841).Google Scholar
Bromley, J. S. (ed.), The Manning of the Royal Navy: Selected Public Pamphlets 1693–1873 (London: Navy Records Society, 1974).Google Scholar
Byrn, John D. (ed.), Naval Courts Martial, 1793–1815 (Farnham and Burlington, VT: Routledge, 2009).Google Scholar
Chitty, Joseph, A Treatise on the Law of the Prerogatives of the Crown (London: Joseph Butterworth and Son and Dublin: John Cooke, 1820).Google Scholar
Convention between His Britannick Majesty and His Sicilian Majesty. Signed at Naples, the 12th of July, 1793. (London: Edward Johnston, 1793).Google Scholar
Cuoco, Vincenzo, ‘La politica inglese e l’Italia’, in Scritti vari – Parte prima: Periodo milanese (1801–1806), eds. Cortese, Nino and Nicolini, Fausto (Bari: Gius. Laterza e figli, 1924), 201–13 [Giornale Italiano, 5–8 January 1806].Google Scholar
D’Ayala, Mariano, Le vite de’ più celebri capitani e soldati napoletani dalla giornata di Bitonto fino a’ dì nostri (Naples: Stamperia dell’Iride, 1843).Google Scholar
De Boisgelin, Louis, Travels through Denmark and Sweden, 2 vols. (London: Wilkie and Robinson, 1810).Google Scholar
Divitiis, De, Pagano, Gigliola (ed.), Il commercio inglese nel Mediterraneo dal ‘500 al ‘700: Corrispondenza consolare e documentazione britannica tra Napoli e Londra (Naples: Guida Editori, 1984).Google Scholar
Dillon, William Henry, A Narrative of My Professional Adventures (1790–1839), ed. Lewis, Michael A., 2 vols. (London: Navy Records Society, 1953–6).Google Scholar
Gutteridge, H. C. (ed.), Nelson and the Neapolitan Jacobins: Documents Relating to the Suppression of the Jacobin Revolution at Naples June 1799 (London: Navy Records Society, 1903).Google Scholar
Hall, Basil, Fragments of Voyages and Travels: Chiefly for the Use of Young Persons, 9 vols. (Edinburgh: R. Cadell and London: Whittaker & Co., 1831–3).Google Scholar
Hay, Robert, Landsman Hay: The Memoirs of Robert Hay 1789–1847, ed. Hay, M. D. (London: Rupert Hart-Davis, 1953).Google Scholar
Historical Manuscripts Commission, Report on the Manuscripts of J. B. Fortescue, Esq., Preserved at Dropmore, 10 vols. (London: His Majesty’s Stationery Office, 1892–1927).Google Scholar
Hitchcock, Tim et al., The Old Bailey Proceedings Online, 1674–1913, version 7.0, www.oldbaileyonline.org.Google Scholar
Hoffman, Frederick, A Sailor of King George, ed. Beckford Bevan, A. and Wolryche-Whitmore, H. B. (London: John Murray, 1901).Google Scholar
Home, Henry, Lord, Kames, Sketches of the History of Man, 4 vols., 2nd ed. (London: W. Strahan and T. Cadell and Edinburgh: W. Creech, 1778).Google Scholar
Hume, David, Essays Moral, Political, and Literary, ed. Eugene, F. Miller (Indianapolis, IN: Liberty Fund, 1987 [1777]).Google Scholar
Hunter, William, An Essay on the Diseases Incident to Indian Seamen, or Lascars, on Long Voyages (Calcutta: The Honorable Company Press, 1804).Google Scholar
The Impress, Considered as the Cause Why British Seamen Desert from Our Service to the Americans (London, 1810).Google Scholar
Jackson, John, Reflections on the Commerce of the Mediterranean (London: W. Clarke and Sons, 1804).Google Scholar
Johnson, Samuel, A Dictionary of the English Language, 10th ed. (London: various, 1792).Google Scholar
[Johnson, Samuel], Johnson’s Dictionary of the English Language in Miniature (London: S. Jordan, 1795).Google Scholar
Lloyd, Christopher (ed.), The Keith Papers, 2 vols. (London: Navy Records Society, 1950).Google Scholar
Mangin, Edward, ‘Some Account of the Writer’s Situation as Chaplain in the British Navy’, in Five Naval Journals 1789–1817, ed. Thursfield, H. G. (London: Navy Records Society, 1951).Google Scholar
Meyer, J. D., Esprit, origine et progrès des institutions judiciaires des principaux pays de l’Europe, 2 vols. (Paris: G. Dufour et Ed. D’Ocagne, 1823).Google Scholar
Montesquieu, De l’esprit des lois, par Montesquieu. Précédé de l’analyse de cet ouvrage par D’Alembert, 2 vols. (Paris: P. Pourrat Fres, 1831).Google Scholar
Narrative of the Travels and Voyages of Davis Bill (Brattleborough, VT: William Fessenden, [1810]).Google Scholar
The Navy List, Corrected to the End of December, 1819 (London: John Murray, [1820]).Google Scholar
Nicol, John, Life and Adventures 1776–1801, ed. Flannery, Tim (Melbourne: The Text Publishing Company, 1997 [Edinburgh, 1822]).Google Scholar
Nicolas, Nicholas Harris (ed.), The Dispatches and Letters of Vice Admiral Lord Viscount Nelson, 2 vols. (London: Henry Colburn, 1845).Google Scholar
The Register of the Times – Volume 4 (London, 1795).Google Scholar
Regulations and Instructions Relating to His Majesty’s Service at Sea, 13th ed. (London, 1790).Google Scholar
Regulations and Instructions Relating to His Majesty’s Service at Sea (London: W. Winchester and Son, 1808).Google Scholar
Rodger, N. A. M. (ed.), Articles of War: The Statutes Which Governed Our Fighting Navies 1661, 1749 and 1886 (Havant: Kenneth Mason, 1982).Google Scholar
Rogers, Nicholas (ed.), Manning the Royal Navy in Bristol: Liberty, Impressment and the State, 1739–1815 (Bristol: Bristol Record Society, 2014).Google Scholar
Ryan, A. N. (ed.), The Saumarez Papers: Selections from the Baltic Correspondence of Vice-Admiral Sir James Saumarez 1808–1812 (London: Navy Records Society, 1968).Google Scholar
Scott, Robert, The History of England; During the Reign of George III Designed as a Continuation of Hume and Smollett, 4 vols. (London: J. Robins and Co., 1824).Google Scholar
Sheridan, Thomas, A Complete Dictionary of the English Language, both with regard to Sound and Meaning, 2nd ed. (London: Charles Dilly, 1789).Google Scholar
Smyth, James Carmichael, An Account of the Experiment Made at the Desire of the Lords Commissioners of the Admiralty, on Board the Union Hospital Ship, to Determine the Effect of the Nitrous Acid in Destroying Contagion, and the Safety with Which It May Be Employed (London: J. Johnson, 1796).Google Scholar
Spavens, William, Memoirs of a Seafaring Life, ed. Rodger, N. A. M. (London: The Folio Society, 2000 [1796]).Google Scholar
Supplementary Treaty between His Majesty and the King of the Two Sicilies; Signed at Palermo the 12th of September 1812 (London: R. G. Clarke, 1812).Google Scholar
Treaty of Alliance and Subsidy between His Majesty the King of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, and His Majesty the King of the Two Sicilies; Signed at Palermo, the 13th May 1809 (London: A. Strahan, 1811).Google Scholar
Vernon, Francis V., Voyages and Travels of a Sea Officer (London, 1792).Google Scholar
Volunteers… Let Us, Who Are Englishmen, Protect and Defend Our Good King and Country against the Attempts of All Republicans and Levellers, and against the Designs of Our Natural Enemies… ([Lewes]: W. & A. Lee, c.1797) (Caird Library, 659.133.1:355.216:094, Item PBB7084).Google Scholar
A Voyage to St. Petersburg in 1814, with Remarks on the Imperial Russian Navy. By a Surgeon in the British Navy (London: Sir Richard Phillips & Co., 1822).Google Scholar
Walsh, E., A Narrative of the Expedition to Holland, in the Autumn of the Year 1799 (London: G. G. and J. Robinson, 1800).Google Scholar
Watt, Helen and Hawkins, Anne (eds.), Letters of Seamen in the Wars with France 1793–1815, (Woodbridge: The Boydell Press, 2016).Google Scholar
Wildman, Richard, Institutes of International Law, 2 vols. (London: William Benning & Co., 1850).Google Scholar
The History and Proceedings of the House of Commons, 14 vols. (London: Richard Chandler, 1742–4).Google Scholar
Journals of the House of Lords, Beginning Anno Tricesimo Quarto Georgii Tertii, 1794.Google Scholar
The Parliamentary Debates from the Year 1803 to the Present Time, ed. Hansard, T. C. (London: Longman et al., 1812).Google Scholar
The Parliamentary History of England, from the Earliest Period to the Year 1803, 36 vols. (London: T. C. Hansard, 1819).Google Scholar
Tomlins, Thomas Edlyne and Raithby, John (eds.), The Statutes at Large, of England and of Great-Britain: From Magna Carta to the Union of the Kingdoms of Great Britain and Ireland, 20 vols. (London: George Eyre and Andrew Strahan, 1811).Google Scholar
Tomlins, Thomas Edlyne, John, Raithby, and Simons, N. (eds.), The Statutes of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, multiple vols. (London: George Eyre and Andrew Strahan, 1804–57).Google Scholar
Courier and Evening Gazette, London.Google Scholar
The Edinburgh Advertiser.Google Scholar
The Edinburgh Evening Courant.Google Scholar
The Herald and Chronicle, Edinburgh.Google Scholar
The London Gazette.Google Scholar
The London Packet, or New Lloyd’s Evening Post.Google Scholar
The Morning Chronicle, London.Google Scholar
The Morning Post and Daily Advertiser [later The Morning Post], London.Google Scholar
The Naval Chronicle.Google Scholar
The Sun, London.Google Scholar
The Times.Google Scholar
The Universal Magazine of Knowledge and Pleasure, London.Google Scholar
An Address to the Seamen in the British Navy (London: W. Richardson, 1797).Google Scholar
Blackstone, William, Commentaries on the Laws of England, in Four Books, 13th ed. (London: A. Strahan, 1800).Google Scholar
Bowers, William, Naval Adventures during Thirty-Five Years’ Service, 2 vols. (London: Richard Bentley, 1833).Google Scholar
[Brauw, J. de Vaandrig], Mijne emigratie in Duitschland, Engeland en Ierland, in de jaren 1799–1802 (Utrecht: N. van der Monde, 1837).Google Scholar
British and Foreign State Papers – 1812–1814, Volume I, 170 vols. (London: James Ridgway and Sons, 1841).Google Scholar
Bromley, J. S. (ed.), The Manning of the Royal Navy: Selected Public Pamphlets 1693–1873 (London: Navy Records Society, 1974).Google Scholar
Byrn, John D. (ed.), Naval Courts Martial, 1793–1815 (Farnham and Burlington, VT: Routledge, 2009).Google Scholar
Chitty, Joseph, A Treatise on the Law of the Prerogatives of the Crown (London: Joseph Butterworth and Son and Dublin: John Cooke, 1820).Google Scholar
Convention between His Britannick Majesty and His Sicilian Majesty. Signed at Naples, the 12th of July, 1793. (London: Edward Johnston, 1793).Google Scholar
Cuoco, Vincenzo, ‘La politica inglese e l’Italia’, in Scritti vari – Parte prima: Periodo milanese (1801–1806), eds. Cortese, Nino and Nicolini, Fausto (Bari: Gius. Laterza e figli, 1924), 201–13 [Giornale Italiano, 5–8 January 1806].Google Scholar
D’Ayala, Mariano, Le vite de’ più celebri capitani e soldati napoletani dalla giornata di Bitonto fino a’ dì nostri (Naples: Stamperia dell’Iride, 1843).Google Scholar
De Boisgelin, Louis, Travels through Denmark and Sweden, 2 vols. (London: Wilkie and Robinson, 1810).Google Scholar
Divitiis, De, Pagano, Gigliola (ed.), Il commercio inglese nel Mediterraneo dal ‘500 al ‘700: Corrispondenza consolare e documentazione britannica tra Napoli e Londra (Naples: Guida Editori, 1984).Google Scholar
Dillon, William Henry, A Narrative of My Professional Adventures (1790–1839), ed. Lewis, Michael A., 2 vols. (London: Navy Records Society, 1953–6).Google Scholar
Gutteridge, H. C. (ed.), Nelson and the Neapolitan Jacobins: Documents Relating to the Suppression of the Jacobin Revolution at Naples June 1799 (London: Navy Records Society, 1903).Google Scholar
Hall, Basil, Fragments of Voyages and Travels: Chiefly for the Use of Young Persons, 9 vols. (Edinburgh: R. Cadell and London: Whittaker & Co., 1831–3).Google Scholar
Hay, Robert, Landsman Hay: The Memoirs of Robert Hay 1789–1847, ed. Hay, M. D. (London: Rupert Hart-Davis, 1953).Google Scholar
Historical Manuscripts Commission, Report on the Manuscripts of J. B. Fortescue, Esq., Preserved at Dropmore, 10 vols. (London: His Majesty’s Stationery Office, 1892–1927).Google Scholar
Hitchcock, Tim et al., The Old Bailey Proceedings Online, 1674–1913, version 7.0, www.oldbaileyonline.org.Google Scholar
Hoffman, Frederick, A Sailor of King George, ed. Beckford Bevan, A. and Wolryche-Whitmore, H. B. (London: John Murray, 1901).Google Scholar
Home, Henry, Lord, Kames, Sketches of the History of Man, 4 vols., 2nd ed. (London: W. Strahan and T. Cadell and Edinburgh: W. Creech, 1778).Google Scholar
Hume, David, Essays Moral, Political, and Literary, ed. Eugene, F. Miller (Indianapolis, IN: Liberty Fund, 1987 [1777]).Google Scholar
Hunter, William, An Essay on the Diseases Incident to Indian Seamen, or Lascars, on Long Voyages (Calcutta: The Honorable Company Press, 1804).Google Scholar
The Impress, Considered as the Cause Why British Seamen Desert from Our Service to the Americans (London, 1810).Google Scholar
Jackson, John, Reflections on the Commerce of the Mediterranean (London: W. Clarke and Sons, 1804).Google Scholar
Johnson, Samuel, A Dictionary of the English Language, 10th ed. (London: various, 1792).Google Scholar
[Johnson, Samuel], Johnson’s Dictionary of the English Language in Miniature (London: S. Jordan, 1795).Google Scholar
Lloyd, Christopher (ed.), The Keith Papers, 2 vols. (London: Navy Records Society, 1950).Google Scholar
Mangin, Edward, ‘Some Account of the Writer’s Situation as Chaplain in the British Navy’, in Five Naval Journals 1789–1817, ed. Thursfield, H. G. (London: Navy Records Society, 1951).Google Scholar
Meyer, J. D., Esprit, origine et progrès des institutions judiciaires des principaux pays de l’Europe, 2 vols. (Paris: G. Dufour et Ed. D’Ocagne, 1823).Google Scholar
Montesquieu, De l’esprit des lois, par Montesquieu. Précédé de l’analyse de cet ouvrage par D’Alembert, 2 vols. (Paris: P. Pourrat Fres, 1831).Google Scholar
Narrative of the Travels and Voyages of Davis Bill (Brattleborough, VT: William Fessenden, [1810]).Google Scholar
The Navy List, Corrected to the End of December, 1819 (London: John Murray, [1820]).Google Scholar
Nicol, John, Life and Adventures 1776–1801, ed. Flannery, Tim (Melbourne: The Text Publishing Company, 1997 [Edinburgh, 1822]).Google Scholar
Nicolas, Nicholas Harris (ed.), The Dispatches and Letters of Vice Admiral Lord Viscount Nelson, 2 vols. (London: Henry Colburn, 1845).Google Scholar
The Register of the Times – Volume 4 (London, 1795).Google Scholar
Regulations and Instructions Relating to His Majesty’s Service at Sea, 13th ed. (London, 1790).Google Scholar
Regulations and Instructions Relating to His Majesty’s Service at Sea (London: W. Winchester and Son, 1808).Google Scholar
Rodger, N. A. M. (ed.), Articles of War: The Statutes Which Governed Our Fighting Navies 1661, 1749 and 1886 (Havant: Kenneth Mason, 1982).Google Scholar
Rogers, Nicholas (ed.), Manning the Royal Navy in Bristol: Liberty, Impressment and the State, 1739–1815 (Bristol: Bristol Record Society, 2014).Google Scholar
Ryan, A. N. (ed.), The Saumarez Papers: Selections from the Baltic Correspondence of Vice-Admiral Sir James Saumarez 1808–1812 (London: Navy Records Society, 1968).Google Scholar
Scott, Robert, The History of England; During the Reign of George III Designed as a Continuation of Hume and Smollett, 4 vols. (London: J. Robins and Co., 1824).Google Scholar
Sheridan, Thomas, A Complete Dictionary of the English Language, both with regard to Sound and Meaning, 2nd ed. (London: Charles Dilly, 1789).Google Scholar
Smyth, James Carmichael, An Account of the Experiment Made at the Desire of the Lords Commissioners of the Admiralty, on Board the Union Hospital Ship, to Determine the Effect of the Nitrous Acid in Destroying Contagion, and the Safety with Which It May Be Employed (London: J. Johnson, 1796).Google Scholar
Spavens, William, Memoirs of a Seafaring Life, ed. Rodger, N. A. M. (London: The Folio Society, 2000 [1796]).Google Scholar
Supplementary Treaty between His Majesty and the King of the Two Sicilies; Signed at Palermo the 12th of September 1812 (London: R. G. Clarke, 1812).Google Scholar
Treaty of Alliance and Subsidy between His Majesty the King of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, and His Majesty the King of the Two Sicilies; Signed at Palermo, the 13th May 1809 (London: A. Strahan, 1811).Google Scholar
Vernon, Francis V., Voyages and Travels of a Sea Officer (London, 1792).Google Scholar
Volunteers… Let Us, Who Are Englishmen, Protect and Defend Our Good King and Country against the Attempts of All Republicans and Levellers, and against the Designs of Our Natural Enemies… ([Lewes]: W. & A. Lee, c.1797) (Caird Library, 659.133.1:355.216:094, Item PBB7084).Google Scholar
A Voyage to St. Petersburg in 1814, with Remarks on the Imperial Russian Navy. By a Surgeon in the British Navy (London: Sir Richard Phillips & Co., 1822).Google Scholar
Walsh, E., A Narrative of the Expedition to Holland, in the Autumn of the Year 1799 (London: G. G. and J. Robinson, 1800).Google Scholar
Watt, Helen and Hawkins, Anne (eds.), Letters of Seamen in the Wars with France 1793–1815, (Woodbridge: The Boydell Press, 2016).Google Scholar
Wildman, Richard, Institutes of International Law, 2 vols. (London: William Benning & Co., 1850).Google Scholar
Colledge, J. J., Ships of the Royal Navy: An Historical Index, 2 vols. (Newton Abbot: David & Charles, 1969).Google Scholar
Colledge, J. J. and Warlow, Ben, Ships of the Royal Navy: The Complete Record of All Fighting Ships of the Royal Navy (Philadelphia, PA and Newbury: Casemate, 2010).Google Scholar
Pappalardo, Bruno, Royal Navy Lieutenants’ Passing Certificates (1691–1902), 2 vols. (Kew: List and Index Society, 2001).Google Scholar
Pappalardo, Bruno, ‘Trafalgar Ancestors’, The National Archives www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/trafalgarancestors/advanced_search.asp.Google Scholar
Rodger, N. A. M., Naval Records for Genealogists (Kew: PRO Publications, 1998).Google Scholar
Sheldon, Matthew, Guide to the Manuscript Collections of the Royal Naval Museum (Portsmouth: Royal Naval Museum, 1997).Google Scholar
Syrett, David and DiNardo, R. L. (eds.), The Commissioned Sea Officers of the Royal Navy 1660–1815 (Aldershot and Brookfield, VT: Scolar Press, 1994).Google Scholar
Woelderink, Bernard, Inventaris van de archieven van stadhouder Willem V 1745–1808 en de Hofcommissie van Willem IV en Willem V 1732–1794 (Hilversum: Verloren, 2005).Google Scholar
Abulafia, David, ‘Mediterraneans’, in Harris, W. V. (ed.), Rethinking the Mediterranean (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005), 6493.Google Scholar
Acerra, Martine and Zysberg, André, L’essor des marines de guerres européennes (vers 1680 – vers 1790) (Paris: SEDES, 1997).Google Scholar
Ackerknecht, Erwin H., ‘Anticontagionism between 1821 and 1867’, Bulletin of the History of Medicine 22 (1948), 562–93.Google Scholar
Adkins, Roy and Adkins, Lesley, Jack Tar: The Extraordinary Lives of Ordinary Seamen in Nelson’s Navy, 2nd ed. (London: Abacus, 2009).Google Scholar
A’Hearn, Brian, Baten, Jörg, and Crayen, Dorothee, ‘Quantifying Quantitative Literacy: Age Heaping and the History of Human Capital’, The Journal of Economic History 69:3 (2009), 783808.Google Scholar
Ahuja, Ravi, ‘Mobility and Containment: The Voyages of South Asian Seamen, c.1900–1960’, International Review of Social History 51:S14 (2006), 111–41.Google Scholar
Allardyce, Alexander, Memoir of the Honourable George Keith Elphinstone K. B. Viscount Keith, Admiral of the Red (Edinburgh and London: William Blackwood and Sons, 1882).Google Scholar
Allen, W. O. B. and Edmund, McClure, Two Hundred Years: The History of the Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge, 1698–1898 (London: Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge, 1898).Google Scholar
Alsop, J. D., ‘Warfare and the Creation of British Imperial Medicine, 1600–1800’, in Hudson, Geoffrey L. (ed.), British Military and Naval Medicine, 1600–1830 (Amsterdam and New York: Rodopi, 2007), 2350.Google Scholar
Ambrosini, Filippo, L’albero della libertà: Le Repubbliche Giacobine in Italia 1796–1799 (Turin: Edizioni del Capricorno, 2013).Google Scholar
Andersen, Dan H. and Voth, Hans-Joachim, ‘The Grapes of War: Neutrality and Mediterranean Shipping under the Danish Flag, 1747–1807’, Scandinavian Economic History Review 48:1 (2000), 527.Google Scholar
Anderson, Benedict, Imagined Communities: Reflections on the Origin and Spread of Nationalism, 2nd ed. (London and New York: Verso, 1991).Google Scholar
Anderson, Olive, ‘The Treatment of Prisoners of War in Britain during the American War of Independence’, Historical Research 28:77 (1955), 6383.Google Scholar
Anderson, Warwick, ‘Disease, Race, and Empire’, Bulletin of the History of Medicine 70:1 (1996), 62–7.Google Scholar
Anderson, Warwick, ‘Immunities of Empire: Race, Disease, and the New Tropical Medicine, 1900–1920’, Bulletin of the History of Medicine 70:1 (1996), 94118.Google Scholar
Arielli, Nir and Collins, Bruce, ‘Introduction: Transnational Military Service Since the Eighteenth Century’, in Arielli, Nir and Collins, Bruce (eds.), Transnational Soldiers: Foreign Military Enlistment in the Modern Era (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2013), 112.Google Scholar
Atkins, Gareth, ‘Christian Heroes, Providence, and Patriotism in Wartime Britain, 1793–1815’, The Historical Journal 58:2 (2015), 393414.Google Scholar
Atkins, Gareth, ‘Religion, Politics and Patronage in the Late Hanoverian Navy, c.1780–c.1820’, Historical Research 88:240 (2015), 272–90.Google Scholar
Atwood, Rodney, The Hessians: Mercenaries from Hessen-Kassel in the American Revolution (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1980).Google Scholar
Avallone, Paola, ‘Il controllo dei “forestieri” a Napoli tra XVI e XVIII secolo. Prime note’, Mediterranea 3 (2006), 169–78.Google Scholar
Badham, F. P., ‘Nelson and the Neapolitan Republicans’, The English Historical Review 13:50 (1898), 261–82.Google Scholar
Balachandran, G., ‘Recruitment and Control of Indian Seamen: Calcutta, 1880–1935’, International Journal of Maritime History 9:1 (1997), 118.Google Scholar
Balkin, David B. and Schjoedt, Leon, ‘The Role of Organizational Cultural Values in Managing Diversity: Learning from the French Foreign Legion’, Organizational Dynamics 41 (2012), 4451.Google Scholar
Ball, Philip, A Waste of Blood and Treasure: The 1799 Anglo-Russian Invasion of the Netherlands (Barnsley: Pen & Sword, 2017).Google Scholar
Bartlett, C. J., Great Britain and Sea Power 1815–1853 (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1963).Google Scholar
Bartlett, Roger P., Human Capital: The Settlement of Foreigners in Russia 1762–1804 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1979).Google Scholar
Basilica Pontificia Santa Maria del Lauro, Storie di tempeste e di fede: Gli ex voto nel Santuario Santa Maria del Lauro (Castellammare di Stabia: Eidos, 1998).Google Scholar
Basker, James G., ‘Scotticisms and the Problem of Cultural Identity in Eighteenth-Century Britain’, in Dwyer, John and Sher, Richard B. (eds.), Sociability and Society in Eighteenth-Century Scotland (Edinburgh: Mercat Press, 1993), 8195.Google Scholar
Battaglini, Mario, Francesco Caracciolo: La misteriosa tragica avventura del grande ammiraglio di Napoli (Naples: Generoso Procaccini, 1998).Google Scholar
Baugh, Daniel A., British Naval Administration in the Age of Walpole (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1965).Google Scholar
Bayly, C. A. et al., ‘AHR Conversation: On Transnational History’, The American Historical Review 111:5 (2006), 1441–64.Google Scholar
Beasley, T. Mark and Schumacker, Randall E., ‘Multiple Regression Approach to Analysing Contingency Tables: Post Hoc and Planned Comparison Procedures’, The Journal of Experimental Education 64:1 (1995), 7993.Google Scholar
Beck, Catherine, ‘Patronage and Insanity: Tolerance, Reputation and Mental Disorder in the British Navy 1740–1820’, Historical Research 94:263 (2021), 7395.Google Scholar
Beerbühl, Margrit Schulte, ‘British Nationality Policy as a Counter-Revolutionary Strategy During the Napoleonic Wars: The Emergence of Modern Naturalisation Regulations’, in Fahrmeir, Andreas, Faron, Olivier, and Weil, Patrick (eds.), Migration Control in the North Atlantic World: The Evolution of State Practices in Europe and the United States from the French Revolution to the Inter-War Period (New York and Oxford: Berghahn Books, 2003), 5570.Google Scholar
Behrman, Cynthia Fansler, Victorian Myths of the Sea (Athens, OH: Ohio University Press, 1977).Google Scholar
Belich, James, Making Peoples: A History of the New Zealanders from Polynesian Settlement to the End of the Nineteenth Century (Auckland: Penguin Books, 1996).Google Scholar
Bell, David, The First Total War: Napoleon’s Europe and the Birth of Modern Warfare (London: Bloomsbury, 2007).Google Scholar
Benton, Lauren, Law and Colonial Cultures: Legal Regimes in World History, 1400–1900 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002).Google Scholar
Bianco, Giuseppe, La Sicilia durante l’occupazione inglese (1806–1815) (Palermo: Alberto Reber, 1902).Google Scholar
Blake, Lauren E. and Garcia-Blanco, Mariano A., ‘Human Genetic Variation and Yellow Fever Mortality during 19th Century U.S. Epidemics’, mBio 5:3 (2014), 16.Google Scholar
Blake, Nicholas, ‘The Complements of Four Dutch Ships Taken at the Texel in 1799’, The Mariner’s Mirror 106:3 (2020), 349–55.Google Scholar
Blake, Richard, Evangelicals in the Royal Navy 1775–1815: Blue Lights & Psalm-Singers (Woodbridge: The Boydell Press, 2008).Google Scholar
Blakemore, Richard J., ‘The Legal World of English Sailors, c. 1575–1729’, in Fusaro, Maria, Allaire, Bernard, Blakemore, Richard J., and Vanneste, Tijl (eds.), Law, Labour and Empire: Comparative Perspectives on Seafarers, c. 1500–1800 (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2015), 100–20.Google Scholar
Blakemore, Richard J., ‘Pieces of Eight, Pieces of Eight: Seamen’s Earnings and the Venture Economy of Early Modern Seafaring’, The Economic History Review 70:4 (2017), 1153–84.Google Scholar
Blum, Matthias and Krauss, Karl-Peter, ‘Age Heaping and Numeracy: Looking behind the Curtain’, Economic History Review 71:2 (2018), 464–79.Google Scholar
Bolster, W. Jeffrey, Black Jacks: African American Seamen in the Age of Sail (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1997).Google Scholar
Bolster, W. Jeffrey, ‘Letters by African American Sailors, 1799–1814’, The William and Mary Quarterly 3rd Series 64:1 (2007), 167–82.Google Scholar
Booker, John, Maritime Quarantine: The British Experience, c.1650–1900 (Aldershot and Burlington, VT: Ashgate, 2007).Google Scholar
Bravo, Martino Ferrari, ‘The Nautical School of Venice of 1739 and the English Teachers. Navigation Training in Venice: Between Seamanship and Science’, Transactions of the Naval Dockyards Society 5 (2009), 3949.Google Scholar
Brockliss, Laurence, Cardwell, John and Moss, Michael, Nelson’s Surgeon: William Beatty, Naval Medicine, and the Battle of Trafalgar (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005).Google Scholar
Broderick, George, ‘The Development of Insular Celtic’, in Ureland, Per Sture (ed.), Entstehung von Sprachen und Völkern: Glotto- und ethnogenetische Aspekte europäischer Sprachen – Akten des 6. Symposions über Sprachkontakt in Europa, Mannheim 1984 (Tübingen: Max Niemeyer Verlag, 1985), 153–80.Google Scholar
Brown, Anthony G., ‘The Nore Mutiny – Sedition or Ships’ Biscuits? A Reappraisal’, The Mariner’s Mirror 92:1 (2006), 6074.Google Scholar
Brown, Christopher L., ‘From Slaves to Subjects: Envisioning an Empire without Slavery, 1772–1834’, in Morgan, Philip D. and Hawkins, Sean (eds.), Black Experience and the Empire (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2006), 111–40.Google Scholar
Brubaker, Rogers, Ethnicity without Groups (Cambridge, MA and London: Harvard University Press, 2004).Google Scholar
Brubaker, Rogers, ‘In the Name of the Nation: Reflections on Nationalism and Patriotism’, Citizenship Studies 8:2 (2004), 115–27.Google Scholar
Brubaker, Rogers and Cooper, Frederick, ‘Beyond “Identity”’, Theory and Society 29 (2000), 147.Google Scholar
Bruijn, Jaap, ‘Zeevarenden’, in Asaert, G. et al. (eds.), Maritieme Geschiedenis der Nederlanden – Deel 3: Achttiende eeuw en eerste helft negentiende eeuw, van ca. 1680 tot 1850–1860 (Bussum: Uitgeverij De Boer Maritiem, 1976–8), 146–90.Google Scholar
Bruijn, Jaap R., ‘Seafarers in Early Modern and Modern Times: Change and Continuity’, International Journal of Maritime History 17:1 (2005), 116.Google Scholar
Bruijn, Jaap, The Dutch Navy of the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries (St John’s, Newfoundland: International Maritime Economic History Association, 2011).Google Scholar
Bruijn, Jaap R., Zeegang: Zeevarend Nederland in de achttiende eeuw (Zutphen: WalburgPers, 2016).Google Scholar
Brunsman, Denver, The Evil Necessity: British Naval Impressment in the Eighteenth-Century Atlantic World (Charlottesville, VA and London: University of Virginia Press, 2013).Google Scholar
Buchanan, Ian (ed.), A Dictionary of Critical Theory, 2nd ed. (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2018).Google Scholar
Buchet, Christian, ‘La Royal Navy et les levées d’hommes aux Antilles (1689–1763) : Difficultés rencontrées et modalités évolutives’, Histoire, économie et société 4 (1990), 521–43.Google Scholar
Burg, B. R., Boys at Sea: Sodomy, Indecency, and Courts Martial in Nelson’s Navy (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2007).Google Scholar
Burke, Peter, Languages and Communities in Early Modern Europe (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2004).Google Scholar
Burroughs, Robert and Huzzey, Richard (eds.), The Suppression of the Atlantic Slave Trade: British Policies, Practices and Representations of Naval Coercion (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2017).Google Scholar
Cabantous, Alain, Le ciel dans la mer : Christianisme et civilisation maritime, XVIe-XIXe siècles (Paris: Fayard, 1990).Google Scholar
Calaresu, Melissa, ‘Looking for Virgil’s Tomb: The End of the Grand Tour and the Cosmopolitan Ideal in Europe’, in Elsner, Jaś and Rubiés, Joan-Pau (eds.), Voyages and Visions: Towards a Cultural History of Travel (London: Reaktion Books, 1999), 138–61.Google Scholar
Calaresu, Melissa, ‘From the Street to Stereotype: Urban Space, Travel and the Picturesque in Late Eighteenth-Century Naples’, Italian Studies 62:2 (2007), 189203.Google Scholar
Calaresu, Melissa, ‘Thomas Jones’ Neapolitan Kitchen: The Material Cultures of Food on the Grand Tour’, Journal of Early Modern History 24:1 (2020), 84102.Google Scholar
Calaresu, Melissa and Hills, Helen, ‘Between Exoticism and Marginalization: New Approaches to Naples’, in Calaresu, Melissa and Hills, Helen (eds.), New Approaches to Naples c.1500–c.1800: The Power of Place (Farnham and Burlington, VT: Ashgate, 2013), 18.Google Scholar
Callister, Graeme, War, Public Opinion and Policy in Britain, France and the Netherlands, 1785–1815 (Cham: Palgrave Macmillan, 2017).Google Scholar
Camargo, Anyela, Francisco, Azuaje, Haiying, Wang, and Huiru, Zheng, ‘Permutation-based Statistical Tests for Multiple Hypotheses’, Source Code for Biology and Medicine 3 (2008), 15.Google Scholar
Caputo, Sara, ‘Scotland, Scottishness and the British Navy, c.1793–1815’ (unpublished MSc dissertation, The University of Edinburgh, 2015).Google Scholar
Caputo, Sara, ‘Scotland, Scottishness, British Integration and the Royal Navy, 1793–1815’, The Scottish Historical Review 97:1 (2018), 85118.Google Scholar
Caputo, Sara, ‘Alien Seamen in the British Navy, British Law, and the British State, c.1793–c.1815’, The Historical Journal 62:3 (2019), 685707.Google Scholar
Caputo, Sara, ‘Vers une histoire transnationale de la marine Britannique au XVIIIe siècle’, Annales historiques de la Révolution Française 397 (2019), 1332.Google Scholar
Caputo, Sara, ‘Mercenary Gentlemen? The Transnational Service of Foreign Quarterdeck Officers in the Royal Navy of the American and French Wars, 1775–1815’, Historical Research 94:266 (2021), 806–26.Google Scholar
Caputo, Sara, ‘Treating, Preventing, Feigning, Concealing: Sickness, Agency, and the Medical Culture of the British Naval Seaman at the End of the Long Eighteenth Century’, Social History of Medicine (advance article, 2021).Google Scholar
Caputo, Sara, ‘“Contriving to Pick Up Some Sailors”: The Royal Navy and Foreign Manpower, 1815–1865’, in Dodman, Thomas and Lignereux, Aurélien (eds.), From the Napoleonic Empire to the Age of Empire – Empire after the Emperor (Palgrave Macmillan, forthcoming 2023).Google Scholar
Carastro, Mario, ‘E dopo Graefer? Gli amministratori della Ducea sino al 1873’, Bronte Insieme – La ducea inglese ai piedi dell’Etna (1799–1981), 2005 www.bronteinsieme.it/2st/nelson_graefer1.htm.Google Scholar
Cardwell, M. John, ‘Royal Navy Surgeons, 1793–1815: A Collective Biography’, in Boyd Haycock, David and Archer, Sally (eds.), Health and Medicine at Sea, 1700–1900 (Woodbridge: The Boydell Press, 2009), 3862.Google Scholar
Carpenter, Kirsty and Mansel, Philip (eds.), The French Émigrés in Europe and the Struggle against Revolution, 1789–1814 (Basingstoke: Macmillan Press Ltd, 1999).Google Scholar
Carretta, Vincent, ‘Naval Records and Eighteenth-Century Black Biography’, Journal for Maritime Research 5:1 (2003), 143–58.Google Scholar
Carus, A. W. and Ogilvie, Sheilagh, ‘Turning Qualitative into Quantitative Evidence: A Well-Used Method Made Explicit’, Economic History Review 62:4 (2009), 893925.Google Scholar
Cavell, S. A., Midshipmen and Quarterdeck Boys in the British Navy, 1771–1831 (Woodbridge: The Boydell Press, 2012).Google Scholar
Cerutti, Simona, Étrangers: Étude d’une condition d’incertitude dans une société d’Ancien Régime (Montrouge Cedex: Bayard, 2012).Google Scholar
Charters, Erica, Disease, War, and the Imperial State: The Welfare of the British Armed Forces during the Seven Years’ War (Chicago, MI and London: The University of Chicago Press, 2014).Google Scholar
Chase-Levenson, Alex, The Yellow Flag: Quarantine and the British Mediterranean World, 1780–1860 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2020).Google Scholar
Chesterman, John, ‘Natural-Born Subjects? Race and British Subjecthood in Australia’, Australian Journal of Politics and History 51:1 (2005), 30–9.Google Scholar
‘Chi-Square Test of Independence in R’, STHDA: Statistical Tools for High-Throughput Data Analysis, www.sthda.com/english/wiki/chi-square-test-of-independence-in-r.Google Scholar
Chin, Aimee, Juhn, Chinhui, and Thompson, Peter, ‘Technical Change and the Demand for Skills during the Second Industrial Revolution: Evidence from the Merchant Marine, 1891–1912’, The Review of Economics and Statistics 88:3 (2006), 572–8.Google Scholar
Chircop, John, ‘The Narrow-Sea Complex: A Hidden Dimension in Mediterranean Maritime History’, in Boyce, Gordon and Gorski, Richard (eds.), Resources and Infrastructures in the Maritime Economy, 1500–2000 (St. John’s, Newfoundland: International Maritime Economic History Association, 2002), 4361.Google Scholar
Churchill, Wendy D., ‘Efficient, Efficacious and Humane Responses to Non-European Bodies in British Military Medicine, 1780–1815’, The Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History 40:2 (2012), 137–58.Google Scholar
Clarke, Joseph, ‘Encountering the Sacred: British and French Soldiers in the Revolutionary and Napoleonic Mediterranean’, in Clarke, Joseph and Horne, John (eds.), Militarized Cultural Encounters in the Long Nineteenth Century: Making War, Mapping Europe (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2018), 4973.Google Scholar
Clemente, Alida, Il Mestiere dell’incertezza. La pesca nel Golfo di Napoli tra XVIII e XX secolo (Napoli: Alfredo Guida, 2005).Google Scholar
Coats, Ann Veronica and MacDougall, Philip (eds.), The Naval Mutinies of 1797: Unity and Perseverance (Woodbridge: The Boydell Press, 2011).Google Scholar
Cobley, Alan, ‘Black West Indian Seamen in the British Merchant Marine in the Mid Nineteenth Century’, History Workshop Journal 58 (2004), 259–74.Google Scholar
Cockburn, Alexander, Nationality: or the Law Relating to Subjects and Aliens, Considered with a View to Future Legislation (London: William Ridgway, 1869).Google Scholar
Cogliano, Francis D., ‘“We All Hoisted the American Flag”: National Identity among American Prisoners in Britain during the American Revolution’, Journal of American Studies 32:1 (1998), 1937.Google Scholar
Cohen, Paul, ‘Langues et pouvoirs politiques en France sous l’Ancien Régime : Cinq anti-lieux de mémoire pour une contre-histoire de la langue française’, in Lusignan, Serge et al. (eds.), L’introuvable unité du français. Contacts et variations linguistiques en Europe et en Amérique (XIIe- XVIIIe siècle) (Quebec City: Presses de l’Université Laval, 2012), 109–43.Google Scholar
Colville, Quintin and Davey, James (eds.), A New Naval History (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2018).Google Scholar
Connor, Walker, Ethnonationalism: The Quest for Understanding (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1994).Google Scholar
Constable, Marianne, The Law of the Other: The Mixed Jury and Changing Conceptions of Citizenship, Law, and Knowledge (Chicago, IL, and London: The University of Chicago Press, 1994).Google Scholar
Convertito, Coriann, ‘The Health of British Seamen in the West Indies, 1770–1806’ (unpublished PhD thesis, University of Exeter, 2011).Google Scholar
Conway, Stephen, ‘Continental Connections: Britain and Europe in the Eighteenth Century’, History 90:299 (2005), 353–74.Google Scholar
Conway, Stephen, Britain, Ireland, and Continental Europe in the Eighteenth Century: Similarities, Connections, Identities (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2011).Google Scholar
Conway, Stephen, ‘Continental European Soldiers in British Imperial Service, c.1756–1792’, English Historical Review 129:536 (2014), 79106.Google Scholar
Conway, Stephen, ‘Another Look at the Navigation Acts and the Coming of the American Revolution’, in McAleer, John and Petley, Christer (eds.), The Royal Navy and the British Atlantic World, c. 1750–1820 (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2016), 7796.Google Scholar
Conway, Stephen, Britannia’s Auxiliaries: Continental Europeans and the British Empire, 1740–1800 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2017).Google Scholar
Cordingly, David, Billy Ruffian – The Bellerophon and the Downfall of Napoleon: The Biography of a Ship of the Line, 1782–1836 (London: Bloomsbury, 2003).Google Scholar
Cortese, Nino, ‘Bausan, Giovanni’, Dizionario biografico degli Italiani – Volume 7, Treccani, 1970 www.treccani.it/enciclopedia/giovanni-bausan_(Dizionario-Biografico)/.Google Scholar
Cox, Myron K. and Key, Coretta H., ‘Post Hoc Pair-Wise Comparisons for the Chi-Square Test of Homogeneity of Proportions’, Educational and Psychological Measurement 53 (1993), 951–62.Google Scholar
Craies, W. F., ‘The Right of Aliens to Enter British Territory’, Law Quarterly Review 6 (1890), 2741.Google Scholar
Cressy, David, ‘Levels of Illiteracy in England, 1530–1730’, The Historical Journal 20:1 (1977), 123.Google Scholar
Crimmin, Pat, ‘The Sick and Hurt Board and the Problem of Scurvy’, Journal for Maritime Research 15:1 (2013), 4753.Google Scholar
Cross, Anthony, ‘The Elphinstones in Catherine the Great’s Navy’, in Cornwall, Mark and Frame, Murray (eds.), Scotland and the Slavs: Cultures in Contact 1500–2000 (Newtonville, MA: Oriental Research Partners, 2001), 5571.Google Scholar
Curtin, P. D., ‘“The White Man’s Grave:” Image and Reality, 1780–1850’, Journal of British Studies 1:1 (1961), 94110.Google Scholar
Daae, Ludvig, Nordmænds Udvandringer til Holland of England i nyere tid (Christiania: Alb. Cammermeyer, 1880).Google Scholar
Dainotto, Roberto M., ‘Does Europe Have a South? An Essay on Borders’, The Global South 5:1 (2011), 3750.Google Scholar
Dakhlia, Jocelyne, Lingua Franca : Histoire d’une langue métisse en Méditerranée (Arles: Actes Sud, 2008).Google Scholar
Dancy, J. Ross, The Myth of the Press Gang: Volunteers, Impressment and the Naval Manpower Problem in the Late Eighteenth Century (Woodbridge: The Boydell Press, 2015).Google Scholar
Dancy, J. Ross, ‘Sources and Methods in the British Impressment Debate’, The International Journal of Maritime History 30:4 (2018), 733–46.Google Scholar
D’Angelo, Michela, ‘Oltre lo stretto. “Viva lu ‘ngrisi, mannaja la Franza!”’, in De Lorenzo, Renata (ed.), Ordine e disordine. Amministrazione e mondo militare nel Decennio francese – Atti del sesto seminario di studi “Decennio francese (1806–1815)” (Napoli: Giannini Editore, 2012), 309–32.Google Scholar
Davey, James, ‘Within Hostile Shores: Victualling the Royal Navy in European Waters during the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars’, International Journal of Maritime History 21:2 (2009), 241–60.Google Scholar
Davey, James, ‘The Royal Navy and the War with Denmark, 1808–1814’, in Arstad, Knut (ed.), Krig på sjø og land: Norden i Napoleonskrigene (Oslo: Forsvarsmuseet, 2014), 97124.Google Scholar
Davey, James and Johns, Richard, Broadsides: Caricature and the Navy 1756–1815 (Barnsley: Seaforth Publishing, 2012).Google Scholar
Davids, Karel, ‘Maritime Labour in the Netherlands, 1570–1870’, in van Royen, Paul, Bruijn, Jaap, and Lucassen, Jan (eds.), ‘Those Emblems of Hell’? European Sailors and the Maritime Labour Market, 1570–1870 (St John’s, Newfoundland: International Maritime Economic History Association, 1997), 4171.Google Scholar
Davies, J. D., Britannia’s Dragon: A Naval History of Wales (Stroud: The History Press, 2013).Google Scholar
Davis, John A., ‘The Neapolitan Revolution of 1799’, Journal of Modern Italian Studies 4:3 (1999), 350–8.Google Scholar
Davis, John A., Naples and Napoleon: Southern Italy and the European Revolutions (1780–1860) (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2006).Google Scholar
Dawson, Kevin, ‘Enslaved Swimmers and Divers in the Atlantic World’, The Journal of American History 92:4 (2006), 1327–55.Google Scholar
Dawson, Kevin, ‘Enslaved Ship Pilots in the Age of Revolutions: Challenging Notions of Race and Slavery between the Boundaries of Land and Sea’, Journal of Social History 47:1 (2013), 71100.Google Scholar
Dawson, Kevin, Undercurrents of Power: Aquatic Culture in the African Diaspora (Philadelphia, PA: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2018).Google Scholar
Dawson, Kevin, ‘History Below the Waterline: Enslaved Salvage Divers Harvesting Seaports’ Hinter-Seas in the Early Modern Atlantic’, International Review of Social History 64 (2019), 4370.Google Scholar
Dempsey, Guy C. Jr., Napoleon’s Mercenaries: Foreign Units in the French Army under the Consulate and Empire, 1799–1814 (London and Mechanicsburg, PA: Greenhill Books and Stackpole Books, 2002).Google Scholar
Desrosières, Alain, The Politics of Large Numbers: A History of Statistical Reasoning, trans. Naish, Camille (Cambridge, MA and London: Harvard University Press, 1998).Google Scholar
Dixon, Conrad, ‘Lascars: The Forgotten Seamen’, in Ommer, Rosemary and Panting, Gerald (eds.), Working Men Who Got Wet: Proceedings of the Fourth Conference of the Atlantic Canada Shipping Project July 24–July 26, 1980 (St. John’s, Newfoundland: Memorial University of Newfoundland, 1980), 263–81.Google Scholar
Duffy, Michael, ‘British Naval Intelligence and Bonaparte’s Egyptian Expedition of 1798’, The Mariner’s Mirror 84:3 (1998), 278–90.Google Scholar
Duncan, James S., In the Shadows of the Tropics: Climate, Race and Biopower in Nineteenth Century Ceylon (Aldershot: Ashgate, 2007).Google Scholar
Dursteler, Eric R., ‘Speaking in Tongues: Language and Communication in the Early Modern Mediterranean’, Past & Present 217 (2012), 4777.Google Scholar
Dye, Ira, ‘American Maritime Prisoners of War, 1812–1815’, in Runyan, Timothy J. (ed.), Ships, Seafaring, and Society: Essays in Maritime History (Detroit, MI: Wayne State University Press, 1987), 293320.Google Scholar
Earle, Rebecca, ‘The Political Economy of Nutrition in the Eighteenth Century’, Past & Present 242 (2019), 79117.Google Scholar
Easton, Callum, ‘Counter-Theatre during the 1797 Fleet Mutinies’, International Review of Social History 64:3 (2019), 389414.Google Scholar
Eder, Markus, Crime and Punishment in the Royal Navy of the Seven Years’ War, 1755–1763 (Aldershot and Burlington, VT: Ashgate, 2004).Google Scholar
Elias, Norbert and Scotson, John L., The Established and the Outsiders: A Sociological Enquiry into Community Problems, 2nd ed. (London: SAGE, 1994).Google Scholar
Elliott, Marianne, Partners in Revolution: The United Irishmen and France (New Haven, CT and London: Yale University Press, 1982).Google Scholar
Emsley, Clive, ‘The Recruitment of Petty Offenders during the French Wars 1793–1815’, The Mariner’s Mirror 66:3 (1980), 199208.Google Scholar
Enea, Maria Rosaria and Gatto, Romano, Matematica e marineria: Accademia e Scuole di Marina nel Regno di Napoli (Naples: La Città del Sole, 2013?).Google Scholar
Evans, Neil, ‘Across the Universe: Racial Violence and the Post-War Crisis in Imperial Britain, 1919–1925’, in Frost, Diane (ed.), Ethnic Labour and British Imperial Trade: A History of Ethnic Seafarers in the UK (London: Frank Cass, 1995), 5988.Google Scholar
Evans, Robin, The Fabrication of Virtue: English Prison Architecture, 1750–1840 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1982).Google Scholar
Fabel, Robin F. A., ‘Self-Help in Dartmoor: Black and White Prisoners in the War of 1812’, Journal of the Early Republic 9:2 (1989), 165–90.Google Scholar
Fahrmeir, Andreas, Citizens and Aliens: Foreigners and the Law in Britain and the German States, 1789–1870 (New York and Oxford: Berghahn Books, 2000).Google Scholar
Falck, Oliver, Heblich, Stephan, Lameli, Alfred, and Südekum, Jens, ‘Dialects, Cultural Identity, and Economic Exchange’, Journal of Urban Economics 72 (2012), 225–39.Google Scholar
Falck, Oliver, Lameli, Alfred, and Ruhose, Jens, ‘Cultural Biases in Migration: Estimating Non-Monetary Migration Costs’, Papers in Regional Science 97:2 (2018), 411–38.Google Scholar
Fedosov, Dmitry, ‘Under the Saltire: Scots and the Russian Navy, 1690s–1910s’, in Cornwall, Mark and Frame, Murray (eds.), Scotland and the Slavs: Cultures in Contact 1500–2000 (Newtonville, MA: Oriental Research Partners, 2001), 2153.Google Scholar
Feinberg, H. M., ‘New Data on European Mortality in West Africa: The Dutch on the Gold Coast, 1719–1760’, Journal of African History 15:3 (1974), 357–71.Google Scholar
Ferreiro, Larrie D., ‘Spies versus Prize: Technology Transfer between Navies in the Age of Trafalgar’, The Mariner’s Mirror 93:1 (2007), 1627.Google Scholar
Field, Andy, Miles, Jeremy, and Field, Zoë, Discovering Statistics Using R (London: SAGE, 2012).Google Scholar
Field, Clive D., ‘Counting Religion in England and Wales: The Long Eighteenth Century, c.1680–c.1840’, Journal of Ecclesiastical History 63:4 (2012), 693720.Google Scholar
Fiorini, Stanley, ‘A Survey of Maltese Nicknames I: The Nicknames of Naxxar, 1832’, Journal of Maltese Studies 16 (1986), 6282.Google Scholar
Fisher, Michael H., ‘Working across the Seas: Indian Maritime Labourers in India, Britain, and in Between, 1600–1857’, International Review of Social History 51 (2006), 2145.Google Scholar
Fisher, Michael H., ‘Indian Ghat Sarangs as Maritime Labour Recruiting Intermediaries during the Age of Sail’, Journal for Maritime Research 16:2 (2014), 153–66.Google Scholar
Fitzgerald, Ian and Smoczynski, Rafal, ‘Anti-Polish Migrant Moral Panic in the UK: Rethinking Employment Insecurities and Moral Regulation’, Sociologický Časopis/Czech Sociological Review 51:3 (2015), 339–61.Google Scholar
Fothergill, Brian, Sir William Hamilton: Envoy Extraordinary (London: Faber and Faber, 1969).Google Scholar
Foy, Charles R., ‘Uncovering Hidden Lives: Developing a Database of Mariners in the Black Atlantic’, Common-Place 9:2 (2009) www.common-place-archives.org/vol-09/no-02/tales/.Google Scholar
Foy, Charles R., ‘“Unkle Sommerset’s” Freedom: Liberty in England for Black Sailors’, Journal for Maritime Research 13:1 (2011), 2136.Google Scholar
Foy, Charles, ‘Seamen “Love Their Bellies”: How Blacks Became Ship Cooks’, 10 August 2014, Uncovering Hidden Lives: Eighteenth Century Black Mariners https://uncoveringhiddenlives.com/.Google Scholar
Foy, Charles R., ‘The Royal Navy’s Employment of Black Mariners and Maritime Workers, 1754–1783’, The International Journal of Maritime History 28:1 (2016), 635.Google Scholar
Frost, Diane, ‘Racism, Work and Unemployment: West African Seamen in Liverpool 1880s–1960s’, in Frost, Diane (ed.), Ethnic Labour and British Imperial Trade: A History of Ethnic Seafarers in the UK (London: Frank Cass, 1995), 2233.Google Scholar
Frykman, Niklas, ‘Seamen on Late Eighteenth-Century European Warships’, International Review of Social History 54 (2009), 6793.Google Scholar
Frykman, Niklas, ‘The Mutiny on the Hermione: Warfare, Revolution, and Treason in the Royal Navy’, Journal of Social History 44:1 (2010), 159–87.Google Scholar
Frykman, Niklas, ‘Connections between Mutinies in European Navies’, in Anderson, Clare, Frykman, Niklas, van Voss, Lex Heerma, and Rediker, Marcus (eds.), Mutiny and Maritime Radicalism in the Age of Revolution (Cambridge: Press Syndicate of the University of Cambridge, 2013), 87107.Google Scholar
Frykman, Niklas, The Bloody Flag: Mutiny in the Age of Atlantic Revolution (Oakland, CA: University of California Press, 2020).Google Scholar
Galani, Katerina, British Shipping in the Mediterranean during the Napoleonic Wars: The Untold Story of a Successful Adaptation (Leiden and Boston, MA: Brill, 2017).Google Scholar
Gallagher, John, ‘The Italian London of John North: Cultural Contact and Linguistic Encounter in Early Modern England’, Renaissance Quarterly 70 (2017), 88131.Google Scholar
Gallagher, John, ‘Language-Learning, Orality, and Multilingualism in Early Modern Anglophone Narratives of Mediterranean Captivity’, Renaissance Studies 33:4 (2019), 639–61.Google Scholar
Galster, Kjeld Hald, ‘Den Britiske invasion i Danmark, terrorbombardementet af København og Flådens ran’, in Arstad, Knut (ed.), Krig på sjø og land: Norden i Napoleonskrigene (Oslo: Forsvarsmuseet, 2014), 7395.Google Scholar
Garrett, Aaron and Sebastiani, Silvia, ‘David Hume on Race’, in Zack, Naomi (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy and Race (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2017).Google Scholar
Gash, N., ‘After Waterloo: British Society and the Legacy of the Napoleonic Wars’, Transactions of the Royal Historical Society 28 (1978), 145–57.Google Scholar
Gellner, Ernest, Nations and Nationalism (Oxford: Blackwell Publishers, 1983).Google Scholar
Giardino, Antonio Ermanno and Rak, Michele, Per grazia ricevuta: Le tavolette dipinte ex voto per la Madonna dell’Arco – Il Cinquecento (Naples: Ci.esse.ti cooperativa editrice, 1983).Google Scholar
Gilje, Paul A., ‘“Free Trade and Sailors’ Rights”: The Rhetoric of the War of 1812’, Journal of the Early Republic 30 (2010), 123.Google Scholar
Gilje, Paul A., Free Trade and Sailors’ Rights in the War of 1812 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2013).Google Scholar
Gilje, Paul A., To Swear like a Sailor: Maritime Culture in America, 1750–1850 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2016).Google Scholar
Glenn, Myra C., ‘Forging Manhood and Nationhood Together: American Sailors’ Accounts of their Exploits, Sufferings, and Resistance in the Antebellum United States’, American Nineteenth Century History 8:1 (2007), 2749.Google Scholar
Glenthøj, Rasmus and Ottosen, Morten Nordhagen, Experiences of War and Nationality in Denmark and Norway, 1807–1815 (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2014).Google Scholar
Glete, Jan, Navies and Nations: Warships, Navies and State Building in Europe and America, 1500–1860, 2 vols. (Stockholm: Almqvist & Wiksell International, 1993).Google Scholar
Golby, David J., ‘Corri Family (per. c.1770–1860)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, online ed. (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014) www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/69602.Google Scholar
Gooskens, Charlotte and Swarte, Femke, ‘Linguistic and Extra-Linguistic Predictors of Mutual Intelligibility between Germanic Languages’, Nordic Journal of Linguistics 40:2 (2017), 123–47.Google Scholar
Gooskens, Charlotte et al., ‘Mutual Intelligibility between Closely Related Languages in Europe’, International Journal of Multilingualism (2017), 1–25.Google Scholar
Gould, Eliga H., ‘Zones of Law, Zones of Violence: The Legal Geography of the British Atlantic, circa 1772’, The William and Mary Quarterly 60:3 (2003), 471510.Google Scholar
Gradish, Stephen F., The Manning of the British Navy during the Seven Years’ War (London: Royal Historical Society, 1980).Google Scholar
Graf, Arturo, L’anglomania e l’influsso inglese in Italia nel secolo XVIII (Turin: Ermanno Loescher, 1911).Google Scholar
Grant, James, Cassell’s Old and New Edinburgh: Its History, Its People, and Its Places, 6 vols. (London: Cassell, Petter, Galpin & Co., 1881–7).Google Scholar
Green, Geoffrey L., The Royal Navy and Anglo-Jewry 1740–1820: Traders and Those Who Served (London: Geoffrey Green [The Self Publishing Association], 1989).Google Scholar
Green, Nancy L., The Limits of Transnationalism (Chicago, IL, and London: The University of Chicago Press, 2019).Google Scholar
Green, Samuel G., The Story of the Religious Tract Society for One Hundred Years (London: The Religious Tract Society, 1899).Google Scholar
Greene, Molly, ‘The Mediterranean Sea’, in Armitage, David, Bashford, Alison, and Sivasundaram, Sujit (eds.), Oceanic Histories (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2017), 134–55.Google Scholar
Greenwood, Michael J., ‘Research on Internal Migration in the United States: A Survey’, Journal of Economic Literature 13:2 (1975), 397433.Google Scholar
Gregory, Desmond, Malta, Britain, and the European Powers, 1793–1815 (Cranbury, NJ: Associated University Presses, 1996).Google Scholar
Greiling, Meredith, ‘Sacred Vessels: British Church Ship Models’, The International Journal of Maritime History 27:4 (2015), 793–7.Google Scholar
Grima, Joseph F., The Fleet of the Knights of Malta: Its Organisation during the Eighteenth Century (San Ġwann: BDL Publishing, 2016).Google Scholar
Guyatt, Nicholas, The Hated Cage: An American Tragedy in Britain’s Most Terrifying Prison (New York: Basic Books, 2022).Google Scholar
Haas, J. M., A Management Odyssey: The Royal Dockyards, 1714–1914 (Lanham, MD: University Press of America, 1994).Google Scholar
Hailwood, Mark, ‘“The Rabble That Cannot Read”? Ordinary People’s Literacy in Seventeenth-Century England’, The Many-Headed Monster, 13 October 2014 https://manyheadedmonster.wordpress.com/2014/10/13/the-rabble-that-cannot-read-ordinary-peoples-literacy-in-seventeenth-century-england/.Google Scholar
Hamilton, Douglas, ‘“A Most Active, Enterprising Officer”: Captain John Perkins, the Royal Navy and the Boundaries of Slavery and Liberty in the Caribbean’, Slavery & Abolition 39:1 (2018), 80100.Google Scholar
Hamilton, W. Mark, The Nation and the Navy: Methods and Organization of British Navalist Propaganda, 1889–1914 (New York and London: Garland Publishing Inc., 1986).Google Scholar
Hammar, AnnaSara, ‘How to Transform Peasants into Seamen: The Manning of the Swedish Navy and a Double-Faced Maritime Culture’, The International Journal of Maritime History 27:4 (2015), 696707.Google Scholar
Hanley, Will, Identifying with Nationality: Europeans, Ottomans, and Egyptians in Alexandria (New York: Columbia University Press, 2017).Google Scholar
Hansen, Kim Philip, Military Chaplains and Religious Diversity (New York and Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2012).Google Scholar
Harland, John, Seamanship in the Age of Sail: An Account of the Shiphandling of the Sailing Man-of-War 1600–1860, Based on Contemporary Sources (London: Conway, 2015).Google Scholar
Harper, Lawrence A., The English Navigation Laws: A Seventeenth-Century Experiment in Social Engineering (New York: Columbia University Press, 1939).Google Scholar
Harrison, Mark, ‘“The Tender Frame of Man”: Disease, Climate, and Racial Difference in India and the West Indies, 1760–1860’, Bulletin of the History of Medicine 70:1 (1996), 6893.Google Scholar
Haudrère, Philippe, ‘Heurs et malheurs des voyages maritimes sur la route des indes orientales au XVIIIe siècle’, Annales de Bretagne et des Pays de l’Ouest 121:3 (2014), 165–75.Google Scholar
Haupt, Heinz-Gerhard, ‘Une nouvelle sensibilité : la perspective “transnationale”’, Cahiers Jaurès 200 (2011–12), 173–80.Google Scholar
Hay, Douglas, ‘Property, Authority and the Criminal Law’, in Hay, Douglas et al., Albion’s Fatal Tree: Crime and Society in Eighteenth-Century England (London: Allen Lane and New York: Pantheon, 1975), 1763.Google Scholar
Hayman, John G., ‘Notions on National Characters in the Eighteenth Century’, Huntington Library Quarterly 35:1 (1971), 117.Google Scholar
Heimburger, Franziska, ‘Of Go-Betweens and Gatekeepers: Considering Disciplinary Biases in Interpreting History through Exemplary Metaphors. Military Interpreters in the Allied Coalition during the First World War’, in Fischer, Beatrice and Jensen, Matilde Nisbeth (eds.), Translation and the Reconfiguration of Power Relations. Revisiting Role and Context of Translation and Interpreting (Zurich and Berlin: Lit Verlag, 2012), 2134.Google Scholar
Hobsbawm, E. J., Nations and Nationalism since 1780: Programme, Myth, Reality, 2nd ed. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1990).Google Scholar
Hogarth, Rana A., Medicalizing Blackness: Making Racial Difference in the Atlantic World, 1780–1840 (Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press, 2017).Google Scholar
Horden, Peregrine and Purcell, Nicholas, The Corrupting Sea: A Study of Mediterranean History (Oxford: Blackwell Publishing, 2000).Google Scholar
Horden, Peregrine and Purcell, Nicholas, ‘The Mediterranean and “the New Thalassology”’, The American Historical Review 111:3 (2006), 722–40.Google Scholar
Hudson, Nicholas, ‘From “Nation” to “Race”: The Origin of Racial Classification in Eighteenth-Century Thought’, Eighteenth-Century Studies 29:3 (1996), 247–64.Google Scholar
Hudson, Pat and Ishizu, Mina, History by Numbers: An Introduction to Quantitative Approaches, 2nd ed. (London and New York: Bloomsbury, 2017).Google Scholar
Hunt, Margaret, ‘Credit, Crime and Gender in English Maritime Communities 1650–1750’, The Eighteenth-Century Seminar, University of Cambridge, 23 October 2018.Google Scholar
Iermano, Toni, ‘Forteguerri, Bartolomeo’, Dizionario biografico degli Italiani – Volume 49, Treccani, 1997 www.treccani.it/enciclopedia/bartolomeo-forteguerri_(Dizionario-Biografico)/.Google Scholar
Immerwahr, John, ‘Hume’s Revised Racism’, Journal of the History of Ideas 53:3 (1992), 481–6.Google Scholar
Jaffer, Aaron, Lascars and Indian Ocean Seafaring, 1780–1860: Shipboard Life, Unrest and Mutiny (Woodbridge: The Boydell Press, 2015).Google Scholar
James, William, The Naval History of Great Britain, from the Declaration of War by France, in February 1793; to the Accession of George IV in January 1820, 6 vols., new ed. (London: Richard Bentley, 1886).Google Scholar
Jenks, Timothy, Naval Engagements: Patriotism, Cultural Politics, and the Royal Navy 1793–1815 (Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press, 2006).Google Scholar
Jianu, Angela and Barbu, Violeta (eds.), Earthly Delights: Economies and Cultures of Food in Ottoman and Danubian Europe, c. 1500–1900 (Leiden and Boston, MA: Brill, 2018).Google Scholar
Johansen, Hans Chr., ‘Scandinavian Shipping in the Late Eighteenth Century in a European Perspective’, The Economic History Review 45:3 (1992), 479–93.Google Scholar
Johansen, Hans Chr., ‘Danish Sailors, 1570–1870’, in van Royen, Paul, Bruijn, Jaap, and Lucassen, Jan (eds.), Those Emblems of Hell’? European Sailors and the Maritime Labour Market, 1570–1870 (St John’s, Newfoundland: International Maritime Economic History Association, 1997), 233–52.Google Scholar
Johnsen, Berit Eide, Han sad i prisonen… Sjøfolk i engelsk fangenskap 1807–1814 (Oslo: Universitetsforlaget, 1993).Google Scholar
Johnsen, Berit Eide, ‘Norske sjøfolk i prisonen’, in Gamrath, Helge et al (eds.), Nordjylland under Englandskrigen 1807–1814 (Aalborg: Aalborg Universitetsforlag, 2009), 285–96.Google Scholar
Jones, Elin, ‘Space, Sound and Sedition on the Royal Naval Ship, 1756–1815’, Journal of Historical Geography 70 (2020), 6573.Google Scholar
Juan y Ferragut, Mariano, ‘Jorge Juan: Su misión en Londres y la construcción naval española’, in Cuaderno n. 68 del Instituto de Historia y Cultura Naval – Jorge Juan y la ciencia ilustrada en España (Madrid: Ministerio de Defensa, 2013), 91107.Google Scholar
Kert, Faye Margaret, Prize and Prejudice: Privateering and Naval Prize in Atlantic Canada in the War of 1812 (St John’s, Newfoundland: International Maritime Economic History Association, 1997).Google Scholar
Kidd, Colin, ‘Race, Empire, and the Limits of Nineteenth-Century Scottish Nationhood’, The Historical Journal 46:4 (2003), 873–92.Google Scholar
Kidd, Colin, The Forging of Races: Race and Scripture in the Protestant Atlantic World, 1600–2000 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2006).Google Scholar
Kikkert, J. G., Geld, macht & eer: Willem I, Koning der Nederlanders en Belgen 1772–1843 (Utrecht: Scheffers, 1995).Google Scholar
King, Peter, ‘Decision-Makers and Decision-Making in the English Criminal Law, 1750–1800’, The Historical Journal 27:1 (1984), 2558.Google Scholar
Kiple, Kenneth F. and Kiple, Virginia H., ‘Black Yellow Fever Immunities, Innate and Acquired, as Revealed in the American South’, Social Science History 1:4 (1977), 419–36.Google Scholar
Kirch, Max S., ‘Non-Verbal Communication across Cultures’, The Modern Language Journal 63:8 (1979), 416–23.Google Scholar
Knight, Roger, The Pursuit of Victory: The Life and Achievement of Horatio Nelson (London: Penguin Books, 2006).Google Scholar
Knight, Roger, ‘Changing the Agenda: The “New” Naval History of the British Sailing Navy’, The Mariner’s Mirror 97:1 (2011), 225–42.Google Scholar
Knight, Roger and Wilcox, Martin, Sustaining the Fleet, 1793–1815: War, the British Navy and the Contractor State (Woodbridge: The Boydell Press, 2010).Google Scholar
Kostantaras, Dean, ‘Perfecting the Nation: Enlightenment Perspectives on the Coincidence of Linguistic and “National” Refinement’, European Review of History: Revue européenne d’histoire 24:5 (2017), 659–82.Google Scholar
Koziurenok, K. L., ‘Γолландске офицеры в Ρоссийском Военно-морском флоте (вторая половина XVIII – начало XIX в.)’, in Bespiatykh, Yu. N., Veluvenkamp, Ia. V., and Popova, L. D. (eds.), Нидерланды и северная Россия (Saint Petersburg: Русско–Балтийский информационный центр, 2003), 299324.Google Scholar
Kverndal, Roald, Seamen’s Missions: Their Origin and Early Growth – A Contribution to the History of the Church Maritime (Pasadena, CA: William Carey Library, 1986).Google Scholar
Lafi, Nora, ‘La langue des marchands de Tripoli au XIXe siècle : Langue franque et langue arabe dans un port méditerranéen’, in Dakhlia, Jocelyne (ed.), Trames de langues : Usages et métissages linguistiques dans l’histoire du Maghreb (Paris: Maisonneuve & Larose, 2004), 215–22.Google Scholar
Land, Isaac, ‘Customs of the Sea: Flogging, Empire, and the “True British Seaman” 1770 to 1870’, Interventions 3:2 (2001), 169–85.Google Scholar
Land, Isaac, ‘The Many-Tongued Hydra: Sea Talk, Maritime Culture, and Atlantic Identities, 1700–1850’, Journal of American & Comparative Cultures 25:3–4 (2002), 412–17.Google Scholar
Land, Isaac, War, Nationalism, and the British Sailor, 1750–1850 (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2009).Google Scholar
Land, Isaac, ‘New Scholarship on the Press Gang – Part 2 of 2’, Port Towns & Urban Cultures, 3 August 2015 http://porttowns.port.ac.uk/press-gang2/.Google Scholar
Lande, R. Gregory, Madness, Malingering, and Malfeasance: The Transformation of Psychiatry and the Law in the Civil War Era (Washington, DC: Brassey’s, Inc., 2003).Google Scholar
Lane, Tony, ‘The Political Imperatives of Bureaucracy and Empire: The Case of the Coloured Alien Seamen Order, 1925’, in Frost, Diane (ed.), Ethnic Labour and British Imperial Trade: A History of Ethnic Seafarers in the UK (London: Frank Cass, 1995), 104–29.Google Scholar
Langbein, John H., ‘Albion’s Fatal Flaws’, Past & Present 98 (1983), 96120.Google Scholar
Langley, Harold D., ‘The Negro in the Navy and Merchant Service – 1789–1860 1798’, The Journal of Negro History 52:4 (1967), 273–86.Google Scholar
Laughton, J. K., ‘The National Study of Naval History’, Transactions of the Royal Historical Society 12 (1898), 8193.Google Scholar
Laughton, J. K. and Morris, R. O., ‘Smyth, William Henry (1788–1865)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, online ed. (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2015) www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/25961.Google Scholar
Lavery, Brian, Nelson’s Navy: The Ships, Men and Organisation 1793–1815 (London: Conway Maritime Press, 1989).Google Scholar
Lavery, Brian (ed.), Shipboard Life and Organisation, 1731–1815 (Aldershot and Brookfield, VT: Ashgate, 1998).Google Scholar
Lavery, Brian, Shield of Empire: The Royal Navy and Scotland (Edinburgh: Birlinn, 2007).Google Scholar
Lawless, Dick, ‘The Role of Seamen’s Agents in the Migration for Employment of Arab Seafarers in the Early Twentieth Century’, in Frost, Diane (ed.), Ethnic Labour and British Imperial Trade: A History of Ethnic Seafarers in the UK (London: Frank Cass, 1995), 3458.Google Scholar
Lawrence, Christopher, ‘Disciplining Disease: Scurvy, the Navy, and Imperial Expansion, 1750–1825’, in Philip Miller, David and Hanns Reill, Peter (eds.), Visions of Empire: Voyages, Botany, and Representations of Nature (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996), 80106.Google Scholar
Lemisch, Jesse, ‘Jack Tar in the Streets: Merchant Seamen in the Politics of Revolutionary America’, The William and Mary Quarterly 25:3 (1968), 371407.Google Scholar
Lemisch, Jesse, ‘Listening to the “Inarticulate”: William Widger’s Dream and the Loyalties of American Revolutionary Seamen in British Prisons’, Journal of Social History 3:1 (1969), 129.Google Scholar
Lemmi, Francesco, Nelson e Caracciolo e la Repubblica Napoletana (1799) (Florence: G. Carnesecchi e figli, 1898).Google Scholar
Lemmings, David, ‘Introduction: Law and Order, Moral Panics, and Early Modern England’, in Lemmings, David and Walker, Claire (eds.), Moral Panics, the Media and the Law in Early Modern England (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2009), 121.Google Scholar
Leow, Rachel, Taming Babel: Language in the Making of Malaysia (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2016).Google Scholar
Letters by Historicus on Some Questions of International Law (London and Cambridge: Macmillan and Co., 1863).Google Scholar
Leunig, Tim, Jelle, van Lottum, and Bo, Poulsen, ‘How Bad Were British Prison Hulks in the Napoleonic Wars? Evidence from Captured Danish and Norwegian Seamen’, The London School of Economics and Political Science – Economic History Working Papers, No: 232/20160 (January 2016).Google Scholar
Leunig, Tim, Jelle, van Lottum, and Bo, Poulsen, ‘Surprisingly Gentle Confinement: British Treatment of Danish and Norwegian Prisoners of War during the Napoleonic Wars’, Scandinavian Economic History Review 66:3 (2018), 282–97.Google Scholar
Lewis, Michael, The Navy in Transition 1814–1864: A Social History (London: Hodder and Stoughton, 1965).Google Scholar
Lewis, Michael, A Social History of the Navy 1793–1815, new ed. (London and Mechanicsburg, PA: Chatham Publishing, 2004 [1960]).Google Scholar
Liauzu, Claude, ‘Mots et migrants méditerranéens’, Cahiers de la Méditerranée 54:1 (1997), 114.Google Scholar
Lijó, J. M. Vázquez, ‘La Matrícula de Mar y sus repercusiones en la Galicia del siglo XVIII’ (unpublished PhD thesis, Universidad de Santiago de Compostela, 2005).Google Scholar
Lin, Patricia Y. C. E., ‘Caring for the Nation’s Families: British Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Families and the State, 1793–1815’, in Forrest, Alan, Hagemann, Karen, and Rendall, Jane (eds.), Soldiers, Citizens and Civilians: Experiences and Perceptions of the Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars, 1790–1820 (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2009), 99117.Google Scholar
Linch, Kevin, ‘The Politics of Foreign Recruitment in Britain during the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars’, in Arielli, Nir and Collins, Bruce (eds.), Transnational Soldiers: Foreign Military Enlistment in the Modern Era (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2013), 5066.Google Scholar
Lincoln, Margarette, Representing the Royal Navy: British Sea Power, 1750–1815 (Aldershot and Burlington, VT: Ashgate, 2002).Google Scholar
Lincoln, Margarette, Naval Wives & Mistresses (London: National Maritime Museum, 2007).Google Scholar
Lincoln, Margarette, Trading in War: London’s Maritime World in the Age of Cook and Nelson (New Haven, CT and London: Yale University Press, 2018).Google Scholar
Linebaugh, Peter and Rediker, Marcus, The Many-Headed Hydra: Sailors, Slaves, Commoners, and the Hidden History of the Revolutionary Atlantic (London and New York: Verso, 2000).Google Scholar
Lloyd, Christopher, The British Seaman 1200–1860: A Social Survey (London: Collins, 1968).Google Scholar
Lo Basso, Luca, ‘Lavoro marittimo, tutela istituzionale e conflittualità sociale a bordo dei bastimenti della Repubblica di Genova nel XVIII secolo’, Mediterranea 12 (2015), 147–68.Google Scholar
Lo Sardo, Eugenio, Napoli e Londra nel XVIII secolo: Le relazioni economiche (Naples: Jovene, 1991).Google Scholar
Lockwood, Matthew, ‘“Love Ye Therefore the Strangers”: Immigration and the Criminal Law in Early Modern England’, Continuity and Change 29 (2014), 349–71.Google Scholar
López, Carolina et al., ‘Mechanisms of Genetically-Based Resistance to Malaria’, Gene 467 (2010), 112.Google Scholar
Loveman, Mara, ‘Is “Race” Essential?’, American Sociological Review 64:6 (1999), 891–8.Google Scholar
Lucassen, Jan and Penninx, Rinus, Newcomers: Immigrants and Their Descendants in the Netherlands, 1550–1995 (Amsterdam: Het Spinhuis, 1997).Google Scholar
Lucker, Ivonne, ‘Jacob Dirksen: A Norwegian Sailor in the Dutch Republic (1727–1754)’, in Sicking, Louis, de Bles, Harry, and des Bouvrie, Erlend (eds.), Dutch Light in the ‘Norwegian Night’: Maritime Relations and Migration across the North Sea in Early Modern Times (Hilversum: Uitgeverij Verloren, 2004), 8191.Google Scholar
Luttrell, Anthony, ‘Eighteenth-Century Malta: Prosperity and Problems’, Hyphen 3:2 (1982), 3751.Google Scholar
Macdonald, Janet, Feeding Nelson’s Navy: The True Story of Food at Sea in the Georgian Era (London and Mechanicsberg, PA: Chatham Publishing and Stackpole Books, 2004).Google Scholar
MacDougall, Ian, All Men Are Brethren: French, Scandinavian, Italian, German, Dutch, Belgian, Spanish, Polish, West Indian, American, and Other Prisoners of War in Scotland during the Napoleonic Wars, 1803–1814 (Edinburgh: Birlinn, 2008).Google Scholar
Mackesy, Piers, Statesmen at War: The Strategy of Overthrow 1798–1799 (London and New York: Longman, 1974).Google Scholar
Macleod, Donald John, ‘Hebridean Service with the Royal Navy’, in The Islands Book Trust, Island Heroes: The Military History of the Hebrides (Isle of Lewis: Islands Book Trust, 2010), 7390.Google Scholar
Magra, Christopher P., ‘Faith at Sea: Exploring Maritime Religiosity in the Eighteenth Century’, International Journal of Maritime History 19:1 (2007), 87106.Google Scholar
Magra, Christopher P., Poseidon’s Curse: British Naval Impressment and Atlantic Origins of the American Revolution (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2016).Google Scholar
Mahan, A. T., The Influence of Sea Power upon the French Revolution and Empire, 1793–1812, 2 vols. (Boston, MA: Little, Brown, and Company, 1892).Google Scholar
Mahan, A. T., The Life of Nelson the Embodiment of the Sea Power of Great Britain, 2nd ed. (Boston, MA: Little, Brown, and Company, 1899).Google Scholar
Malcomson, Thomas, ‘Freedom by Reaching the Wooden World: American Slaves and the British Navy during the War of 1812’, The Northern Mariner/Le marin du nord 22:4 (2012), 361–92.Google Scholar
[Maresca, Benedetto], ‘I marinai napoletani nella spedizione del 1784 contro Algieri (da un diario contemporaneo)’, Archivio storico per le province napoletane 17:1 (1892), 808–50.Google Scholar
Maresca, Massimo, Il Museo navale Mario Maresca di Meta (Castellammare di Stabia: Nicola Longobardi editore, 2008).Google Scholar
Maresca, Massimo and Passaro, Biagio, La Marineria della Penisola Sorrentina e la cantieristica in legno da Marina d’Equa a Marina Grande: Shipowners, Shipping and Wooden Shipbuilding in the Sorrento Peninsula (Sorrento: Con-fine edizioni, 2011).Google Scholar
Martin, Philip and Zürcher, Gottfried, ‘Managing Migration: The Global Challenge’, Population Bulletin 63:1 (2008), 320.Google Scholar
Marzagalli, Silvia, ‘Négoce et politique des étrangers en France à l’époque moderne : discours et pratiques de rejet et d’intégration’, in Augeron, Mickaël and Éven, Pascal (eds.), Les Étrangers dans les villes-ports atlantiques : Expériences françaises et allemandes XVe-XIXe siècle (Paris: Les Indes Savantes, 2011), 4562.Google Scholar
Marzagalli, Silvia, ‘Maritimity: How the Sea Affected Early Modern Life in the Mediterranean World’, in Dabag, Mihran, Haller, Dieter, Jaspert, Nikolas, and Lichtenberger, Achim (eds.), New Horizons: Mediterranean Research in the Twenty-first Century (Paderborn: Ferdinand Schöningh, 2016), 309–31.Google Scholar
Marzagalli, Silvia and Müller, Leos, ‘“In Apparent Disagreement with All Law of Nations in the World”: Negotiating Neutrality for Shipping and Trade during the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars’, The International Journal of Maritime History 28:1 (2016), 108–17.Google Scholar
Massey, Douglas S. et al., ‘Theories of International Migration: A Review and Appraisal’, Population and Development Review 19:3 (1993), 431–66.Google Scholar
McCain, Stewart, The Language Question under Napoleon (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2017).Google Scholar
McCranie, Kevin, ‘The Recruitment of Seamen for the British Navy, 1793–1815: “Why Don’t You Raise More Men?”’, in Stoker, Donald, Schneid, Frederick C., and Blanton, Harold D. (eds.), Conscription in the Napoleonic Era: A Revolution in Military Affairs? (London and New York: Routledge, 2009), 84101.Google Scholar
McEvoy, Timothy, ‘Finding a Teacher of Navigation Abroad in Eighteenth-Century Venice: A Study of the Circulation of Useful Knowledge’, History of Science 51 (2013), 100–23.Google Scholar
McGerr, Michael, ‘The Price of the “New Transnational History”’, The American Historical Review 96:4 (1991), 1056–67.Google Scholar
McLachlan, N. D., ‘Bathurst at the Colonial Office, 1812–1827: A Reconnaissance’, Australian Historical Studies 13:52 (1969), 477502.Google Scholar
McNeill, J. R., Mosquito Empires: Ecology and War in the Greater Caribbean, 1620–1914 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2010).Google Scholar
Mifsud, A., Knights Hospitallers of the Ven. Tongue of England in Malta (Valletta: Herald Print. Off., 1914).Google Scholar
Miller, Marion S., ‘Italian Jacobinism’, Eighteenth-Century Studies 11:2 (1977–8), 246–52.Google Scholar
Miller, R. W. H., One Firm Anchor: The Church and the Merchant Seafarer, an Introductory History (Cambridge: The Lutterworth Press, 2012).Google Scholar
Molhuysen, P. C. and Blok, P. J. (eds.), Nieuw Nederlandsch biografisch woordenboek, 10 vols. (Leiden: A. W. Sijthoff, 1911).Google Scholar
Morgan, Philip D., ‘Black Experiences in Britain’s Maritime World’, in Cannadine, David (ed.), Empire, the Sea and Global History: Britain’s Maritime World, c.1760–c.1840 (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2007), 105–33.Google Scholar
Morieux, Renaud, ‘Des règles aux pratiques juridiques : Le droit des étrangers en France et en Angleterre pendant la Révolution (1792–1802)’, in Chassaigne, Ph. and Genet, J.-P. (eds.), Droit et société en France et en Grande-Bretagne (XIIe–XXe siècles). Fonctions, usages et représentations (Paris: Publications de la Sorbonne, 2003), 127–47.Google Scholar
Morieux, Renaud, Une mer pour deux royaumes : La Manche, frontière franco-anglaise (XVIIe–XVIIIe siècles) (Rennes: Presses Universitaires de Rennes, 2008).Google Scholar
Morieux, Renaud, ‘Diplomacy from Below and Belonging: Fishermen and Cross-Channel Relations in the Eighteenth Century’, Past & Present 202 (2009), 83125.Google Scholar
Morieux, Renaud, ‘Patriotisme humanitaire et prisonniers de guerre en France et en Grande-Bretagne pendant la Révolution française et l’Empire’, in Bourquin, Laurent et al. (eds.), La politique par les armes. Conflits internationaux et politisation, XVe–XIXe siècles (Rennes: Presses Universitaires de Rennes, 2014), 301–16.Google Scholar
Morieux, Renaud, The Channel: England, France and the Construction of a Maritime Border in the Eighteenth Century (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2016).Google Scholar
Morieux, Renaud, ‘Indigenous Comparisons’, in Arnold, John H., Hilton, Matthew, and Rüger, Jan (eds.), History after Hobsbawm: Writing the Past for the Twenty-First Century (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2017), 5075.Google Scholar
Morieux, Renaud, The Society of Prisoners: Anglo–French Wars and Incarceration in the Eighteenth Century (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2019).Google Scholar
Morriss, Roger, The Royal Dockyards during the Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars (Leicester: Leicester University Press, 1983).Google Scholar
Morriss, Roger, The Foundations of British Maritime Ascendancy: Resources, Logistics and the State, 1755–1815 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2011).Google Scholar
Morrow, John, British Flag Officers in the French Wars, 1793–1815: Admirals’ Lives (London and New York: Bloomsbury Academic, 2018).Google Scholar
Mozzillo, Atanasio, La frontiera del Grand Tour: Viaggi e viaggiatori nel Mezzogiorno borbonico (Naples: Liguori Editore, 1992).Google Scholar
Munch-Petersen, Thomas, ‘The Causes of the British Attack on Denmark in 1807 and the Danish Alliance with France’, in Arstad, Knut (ed.), Krig på sjø og land: Norden i Napoleonskrigene (Oslo: Forsvarsmuseet, 2014), 4371.Google Scholar
Newman, Brooke N., ‘Contesting “Black” Liberty and Subjecthood in the Anglophone Caribbean, 1730s–1780s’, Slavery & Abolition 32:2 (2011), 169–83.Google Scholar
Noiriel, Gérard, État, nation et immigration : Vers une histoire du pouvoir (Paris: Belin, 2001).Google Scholar
Ojala, Jari and Pehkonen, Jaakko, ‘Technological Changes, Wage Inequality and Skill Premiums: Evidence over Three Centuries’, Government Institute for Economic Research – VATT Working Papers 5 (Helsinki, 2009).Google Scholar
Ojala, Jari, Pehkonen, Jaakko, and Eloranta, Jari, ‘Deskilling and Decline in Skill Premium during the Age of Sail: Swedish and Finnish Seamen, 1751–1913’, Explorations in Economic History 61 (2016), 8594.Google Scholar
Oldham, James C., ‘The Origins of the Special Jury’, The University of Chicago Law Review 50:1 (1983), 137221.Google Scholar
Palermo, Daniele, Dal feudo alla proprietà: Il caso della Ducea di Bronte, electronic ed. (Palermo: Mediterranea – Ricerche Storiche, 2012).Google Scholar
Parry, Clive, British Nationality Law and the History of Naturalisation (Milan: Giuffrè, 1954).Google Scholar
Passaro, Biagio, ‘Polacche, tartane e feluche. Navi e navigazione mercantile napoletane nel Settecento’, in Navis: Rassegna di studi di archeologia, etnologia e storia navale. Atti del II convegno nazionale, Cesenatico – Museo della Marineria (13–14 aprile 2012) (Padua: libreriauniversitaria.it edizioni, 2014), 219–25.Google Scholar
Passaro, Biagio, Sirago, Maria, and Trizio, Pasquale Bruno, Al servizio della Capitale e della Corte: La marineria napoletana nel Settecento (Naples: Edizioni Scientifiche Italiane, 2019).Google Scholar
Paulino, Maria Clara, ‘The “Alien” European: British Accounts of Portugal and the Portuguese, 1780–1850’, in Farr, Martin and Guégan, Xavier (eds.), The British Abroad since the Eighteenth Century, Volume 1: Travellers and Tourists (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2013), 101–16.Google Scholar
Pavlenko, Alexander, ‘On the Use of “Be” as a Perfective Auxiliary in Modern Shetland Dialect: Hybridization and Synctactic Change’, in Sture Ureland, P. and Clarkson, Iain (eds.), Language Contact across the North Atlantic: Proceedings of the Working Groups Held at University College, Galway (Ireland), August 29–September 3, 1992 and the University of Göteborg (Sweden), August 16–21, 1993 (Tübingen: Max Niemeyer Verlag, 1996), 7582.Google Scholar
Pedemonte, Danilo, ‘Deserters, Mutineers and Criminals: British Sailors and Problems of Port Jurisdiction in Genoa and Livorno during the Eighteenth Century’, in Fusaro, Maria, Allaire, Bernard, Blakemore, Richard J., and Vanneste, Tijl (eds.), Law, Labour and Empire: Comparative Perspectives on Seafarers, c. 1500–1800 (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2015), 256–71.Google Scholar
Percy, Sarah V., ‘Mercenaries: Strong Norm, Weak Law’, International Organization 61 (2007), 367–97.Google Scholar
Percy, Sarah, Mercenaries: The History of a Norm in International Relations (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2007).Google Scholar
Perl-Rosenthal, Nathan, Citizen Sailors: Becoming American in the Age of Revolution (Cambridge, MA, and London: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2015).Google Scholar
Phillips, Carla Rahn, ‘The Labour Market for Sailors in Spain, 1570–1870’, in van Royen, Paul, Bruijn, Jaap, and Lucassen, Jan (eds.), Those Emblems of Hell’? European Sailors and the Maritime Labour Market, 1570–1870 (St John’s, Newfoundland: International Maritime Economic History Association, 1997), 329–48.Google Scholar
Phillips, Carla Rahn, ‘“The Life Blood of the Navy”: Recruiting Sailors in Eighteenth-Century Spain’, The Mariner’s Mirror 87:4 (2001), 420–45.Google Scholar
Philp, Mark, ‘Introduction: The British Response to the Threat of Invasion, 1797–1815’, in Philp, Mark (ed.), Resisting Napoleon: The British Response to the Threat of Invasion, 1797–1815 (Aldershot: Ashgate, 2006), 117.Google Scholar
Pieri, Piero, ‘L’origine della dominazione inglese a Malta’, Archivio storico di Malta 19:4 (1938), 377410.Google Scholar
Pietsch, Roland, ‘Ships’ Boys and Youth Culture in Eighteenth Century Britain: The Navy Recruits of the London Marine Society’, The Northern Mariner/Le marin du nord 14:4 (2004), 1124.Google Scholar
Pitte, Jean-Robert, French Gastronomy: The History and Geography of a Passion, trans. Gladding, Jody (New York: Columbia University Press, 2002).Google Scholar
Po-ching, Yu, ‘Chinese Seamen in London and St Helena in the Early Nineteenth Century’, in Fusaro, Maria, Allaire, Bernard, Blakemore, Richard J., and Vanneste, Tijl (eds.), Law, Labour and Empire: Comparative Perspectives on Seafarers, c. 1500–1800 (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2015), 287303.Google Scholar
Pope, Dudley, Life in Nelson’s Navy, 2nd ed. (London: Chatham Publishing, 1997).Google Scholar
Porcaro, Giuseppe, Francesco Caracciolo (Naples: Arturo Berisio editore, 1967).Google Scholar
Potter, David M., ‘The Historian’s Use of Nationalism and Vice Versa’, The American Historical Review 67:4 (1962), 924–50.Google Scholar
Prins, A. H. J., In Peril on the Sea: Marine Votive Paintings in the Maltese Islands (Valletta: Said, 1989).Google Scholar
Pullicino, J. Cassar, ‘Social Aspects of Maltese Nicknames’, Scientia 12:2 (1956), 6694.Google Scholar
Quilley, Geoff, ‘“All Ocean Is Her Own”: The Image of the Sea and the Identity of the Maritime Nation in Eighteenth-Century British Art’, in Cubitt, Geoffrey (ed.), Imagining Nations (Manchester and New York: Manchester University Press, 1998), 132–52.Google Scholar
Radogna, Lamberto, Storia della marina militare delle Due Sicilie (1734–1860) (Milan: Mursia, 1978).Google Scholar
Rankin, John, ‘Nineteenth-Century Royal Navy Sailors from Africa and the African Diaspora: Research Methodology’, African Diaspora 6 (2013), 179–95.Google Scholar
Ransley, Jesse, ‘Introduction: Asian Sailors in the Age of Empire’, Journal for Maritime Research 16:2 (2014), 117–23.Google Scholar
Rao, Anna Maria, ‘“Missed Opportunities” in the History of Naples’, in Calaresu, Melissa and Hills, Helen (eds.), New Approaches to Naples c.1500 – c.1800: The Power of Place (Farnham and Burlington, VT: Ashgate, 2013), 203–23.Google Scholar
Rapport, Michael, Nationality and Citizenship in Revolutionary France: The Treatment of Foreigners 1789–1799 (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 2000).Google Scholar
Rediker, Marcus, Between the Devil and the Deep Blue Sea: Merchant Seamen, Pirates, and the Anglo-American Maritime World 1700–1750 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1987).Google Scholar
Rediker, Marcus, ‘Afterword: Reflections on the Motley Crew as Port City Proletariat’, International Review of Social History 64 (2019), 255–62.Google Scholar
Reid, Stuart, ‘Acton, Sir John Francis Edward, Sixth Baronet (1736–1811)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, online ed. (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2008) www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/76.Google Scholar
Riall, Lucy, Under the Volcano: Revolution in a Sicilian Town (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013).Google Scholar
Richards, Jake Christopher, ‘Anti-Slave-Trade Law, “Liberated Africans” and the State in the South Atlantic World, c.1839–1852’, Past & Present 241 (2018), 179219.Google Scholar
Richter, Dieter, Napoli cosmopolita: Viaggiatori e comunità straniere nell’Ottocento (Naples: Electa Napoli, 2002).Google Scholar
Ried, Walter, Deutsche Segelschiffahrt seit 1470 (Munich: J. F. Lehmanns Verlag, 1974).Google Scholar
Riionheimo, Helka, Kaivapalu, Annekatrin, and Härmävaara, Hanna-Ilona, ‘Introduction: Receptive Multilingualism’, Nordic Journal of Linguistics 40:2 (2017), 117–21.Google Scholar
Robertson, J. D. M., The Press Gang in Orkney and Shetland (Kirkwall: Orcadian (Kirkwall Press), 2011).Google Scholar
Rodger, N. A. M., The Wooden World: An Anatomy of the Georgian Navy (London: Fontana Press, 1988).Google Scholar
Rodger, N. A. M., ‘The British View of the Functioning of the Anglo-Dutch Alliance, 1688–1795’, in Raven, G. J. A. and Rodger, N. A. M. (eds.), Navies and Armies: The Anglo–Dutch Relationship in War and Peace 1688–1988 (Edinburgh: John Donald Publishers Ltd, 1990), 1232.Google Scholar
Rodger, Nicholas, ‘“A Little Navy of Your Own Making”: Admiral Boscawen and the Cornish Connection in the Royal Navy’, in Duffy, Michael (ed.), Parameters of British Naval Power 1650–1850 (Exeter: University of Exeter Press, 1992), 8292.Google Scholar
Rodger, N. A. M., ‘The Naval Chaplain in the Eighteenth Century’, Journal for Eighteenth Century Studies 18:1 (1995), 3345.Google Scholar
Rodger, N. A. M., ‘Honour and Duty at Sea, 1660–1815’, Historical Research 75:190 (2002), 425–47.Google Scholar
Rodger, N. A. M., ‘Form and Function in European Navies, 1660–1815’, in Akveld, Leo et al. (eds.), In het kielzog: maritiem-historische studies aangeboden aan Jaap R. Bruijn bij zijn vertrek als hoogleraar zeegeschiedenis aan de Universiteit Leiden (Amsterdam: De Bataafsche Leeuw, 2003), 8597.Google Scholar
Rodger, N. A. M., ‘Mutiny or Subversion? Spithead and the Nore’, in Bartlett, Thomas, Dickson, David, Keogh, Dáire, and Whelan, Kevin (eds.), 1798: A Bicentenary Perspective (Dublin: Four Courts Press, 2003), 549–64.Google Scholar
Rodger, N. A. M., The Command of the Ocean: A Naval History of Britain, 1649–1815 (London: Allen Lane, 2004).Google Scholar
Rodger, N. A. M., ‘Perkins, John [nicknamed Jack Punch] (c. 1745–1812)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, online ed. (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2008) www.oxforddnb.com/view/10.1093/ref:odnb/9780198614128.001.0001/odnb-9780198614128-e-50232.Google Scholar
Roding, Juliette and van Voss, Lex Heerma (eds.), The North Sea and Culture (1550–1800): Proceedings of the International Conference Held at Leiden 21–22 April 1995 (Hilversum: Verloren, 1996).Google Scholar
Rogers, Nicholas, ‘The Sea Fencibles, Loyalism and the Reach of the State’, in Philp, Mark (ed.), Resisting Napoleon: The British Response to the Threat of Invasion, 1797–1815 (Aldershot: Ashgate, 2006), 4159.Google Scholar
Rogers, Nicholas, The Press Gang: Naval Impressment and Its Opponents in Georgian Britain (London and New York: Continuum, 2007).Google Scholar
Rogers, Nicholas, ‘British Impressment and Its Discontents’, The International Journal of Maritime History 30:1 (2018), 5273.Google Scholar
Rose, J. Holland, Lord Hood and the Defence of Toulon (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1922).Google Scholar
Sætra, Gustav, ‘The International Labour Market for Seamen, 1600–1900: Norway and Norwegian Participation’, in van Royen, Paul C., Bruijn, Jaap R., and Lucassen, Jan (eds.), ‘Those Emblems of Hell’? European Sailors and the Maritime Labour Market, 1570–1870 (St John’s, Newfoundland: International Maritime Economic History Association, 1997), 173210.Google Scholar
Sahlins, Peter, ‘The Eighteenth-Century Citizenship Revolution in France’, in Fahrmeir, Andreas, Faron, Olivier, and Weil, Patrick (eds.), Migration Control in the North Atlantic World: The Evolution of State Practices in Europe and the United States from the French Revolution to the Inter-War Period (New York and Oxford: Berghahn Books, 2003), 1124.Google Scholar
Sahlins, Peter, Unnaturally French: Foreign Citizens in the Old Regime and After (Ithaca, NY and London: Cornell University Press, 2004).Google Scholar
Sahlins, Peter, ‘Sur la citoyenneté et le droit d’aubaine à l’époque moderne : Réponse à Simona Cerutti’, Annales. Histoire, Sciences Sociales 63:2 (2008), 385–98.Google Scholar
Salvemini, Raffaella, ‘A tutela della salute e del commercio nel Mediterraneo: La sanità marittima nel Mezzogiorno pre-unitario’, in Salvemini, Raffaella (ed.), Istituzioni e traffici nel Mediterraneo tra età antica e crescita moderna (Rome: Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche, Istituto di Studi sulle Società del Mediterraneo, 2009), 259–96.Google Scholar
Sampson, Helen, International Seafarers and Transnationalism in the Twenty-First Century (Manchester and New York: Manchester University Press, 2013).Google Scholar
Samuel, Raphael, ‘Perils of the Transcript’, Oral History 1:2 (1972), 1922.Google Scholar
Sánchez, Rafael Torres, Javier Gómez, Biscarri, and Fernando Pérez, de Gracia, ‘Exchange Rate Behavior and Exchange Rate Puzzles: Why the Eighteenth Century Might Help’, Revista de Historia Economica/Journal of Iberian and Latin American Economic History 23:1 (2005), 143–74.Google Scholar
Saunier, Pierre-Yves, Transnational History (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2013).Google Scholar
Scanlan, Padraic Xavier, ‘The Rewards of Their Exertions: Prize Money and British Abolitionism in Sierra Leone, 1808–1823’, Past & Present 225 (2014), 113–42.Google Scholar
Schaffer, Simon, ‘Introduction’, in Schaffer, Simon, Roberts, Lissa, Raj, Kapil, and Delbourgo, James (eds.), The Brokered World: Go-Betweens and Global Intelligence, 1770–1820 (Sagamore Beach, MA: Science History Publications, 2009), ixxxxviii.Google Scholar
Schama, Simon, Patriots and Liberators: Revolution in the Netherlands 1780–1813, 2nd ed. (London: Fontana Press, 1992).Google Scholar
Schiller, Nina Glick, Linda, Basch, and Cristina, Szanton Blanc, ‘From Immigrant to Transmigrant: Theorizing Transnational Migration’, Anthropological Quarterly 68:1 (1995), 4863.Google Scholar
Schmidt, H. D., ‘The Hessian Mercenaries: The Career of a Political Cliché’, History 43:149 (1958), 207–12.Google Scholar
Schofield, R. S., ‘Dimensions of Illiteracy, 1750–1850’, Explorations in Economic History 10:4 (1973), 437–54.Google Scholar
Schotte, Margaret E., Sailing School: Navigating Science and Skill, 1550–1800 (Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2019).Google Scholar
Schüppert, Anja, Hilton, Nanna Haug, and Gooskens, Charlotte, ‘Introduction: Communicating across Linguistic Borders’, Linguistics 53:2 (2015), 211–17.Google Scholar
Schutte, G. J., ‘Willem IV en Willem V’, in Tamse, C. A. (ed.), Nassau en Oranje in de Nederlandse geschiedenis (Alphen aan den Rijn: A. W. Sijthoff, 1979), 187228.Google Scholar
Schwartz, Aba, ‘Interpreting the Effect of Distance on Migration’, Journal of Political Economy 81:5 (1973), 1153–69.Google Scholar
Sebastiani, Silvia, ‘Race and National Characters in Eighteenth-Century Scotland: The Polygenic Discourses of Kames and Pinkerton’, Cromohs 8 (2003), 114.Google Scholar
Sebastiani, Silvia, ‘Nations, Nationalism and National Characters’ in Garrett, Aaron (ed.), The Routledge Companion to Eighteenth Century Philosophy (London and New York: Routledge, 2014), 593617.Google Scholar
Seerup, Joen Jakob, ‘Søetaten i 1700-tallet: Organisation, personel og daglidag i 1700-tallets danske flåde’ (unpublished PhD thesis, University of Copenhagen, 2010).Google Scholar
Sen, Sudipta, ‘Imperial Subjects on Trial: On the Legal Identity of Britons in Late Eighteenth-Century India’, Journal of British Studies 45:3 (2006), 532–55.Google Scholar
Seth, Suman, Difference and Disease: Medicine, Race, and the Eighteenth-Century British Empire (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2018).Google Scholar
Sherwood, Marika, ‘Race, Nationality and Employment among Lascar Seamen, 1660 to 1945’, Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 17:2 (1991), 229–44.Google Scholar
Slope, Nick, ‘Serving in Nelson’s Navy: A Social History of Three Amazon Class Frigates Utilising Database Technology’ (unpublished PhD thesis, The University of West London, 2006).Google Scholar
Smith, Alison K., ‘National Cuisines’, in Pilcher, Jeffrey M. (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of Food History (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012), 444–58.Google Scholar
Sogner, Sølvi, ‘Norwegian-Dutch Migrant Relations in the Seventeenth Century’, in Sicking, Louis, de Bles, Harry, and des Bouvrie, Erlend (eds.), Dutch Light in the ‘Norwegian Night’: Maritime Relations and Migration across the North Sea in Early Modern Times (Hilversum: Uitgeverij Verloren, 2004), 4356.Google Scholar
Spence, Daniel Owen, ‘“They Had the Sea in Their Blood”: Caymanian Naval Volunteers in the Second World War’, in Arielli, Nir and Collins, Bruce (eds.), Transnational Soldiers: Foreign Military Enlistment in the Modern Era (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2013), 105–23.Google Scholar
Stark, Suzanne J., Female Tars: Women aboard Ship in the Age of Sail, 2nd ed. (London: Pimlico, 1998).Google Scholar
Starkey, David J., British Privateering Enterprise in the Eighteenth Century (Exeter: University of Exeter Press, 1990).Google Scholar
Starkey, David J., ‘War and the Market for Seafarers in Britain, 1736–1792’, in Fischer, Lewis R. and Nordvik, Helge W. (eds.), Shipping and Trade, 1750–1950: Essays in International Maritime Economic History (Pontefract: Lofthouse Publications, 1990), 2542.Google Scholar
Statt, Daniel, Foreigners and Englishmen: The Controversy over Immigration and Population, 1660–1760 (Cranbury, NJ: Associated University Presses, 1995).Google Scholar
Stein, Tristan, ‘Passes and Protection in the Making of a British Mediterranean’, Journal of British Studies 54 (2015), 602–31.Google Scholar
Stock, Paul, ‘“Almost a Separate Race”: Racial Thought and the Idea of Europe in British Encyclopaedias and Histories, 1771–1830’, Modern Intellectual History 8:1 (2011), 329.Google Scholar
‘Sustaining the Empire: War, the Navy and the Contractor State’, University of Greenwich, 2006–9 www.gre.ac.uk/ach/gmc/research/projects/sustaining-the-empire.Google Scholar
Taylor, Gordon, The Sea Chaplains: A History of the Chaplains of the Royal Navy (Oxford: Oxford Illustrated Press, 1978).Google Scholar
Thomas, Keith, ‘Introduction’, in Bremmer, Jan and Roodenburg, Herman (eds.), A Cultural History of Gesture: From Antiquity to the Present Day (Cambridge: Polity Press, 1991), 114.Google Scholar
Thompson, Neville, Earl Bathurst and the British Empire 1762–1834 (Barnsley: Leo Cooper, 1999).Google Scholar
Thomson, Janice E., Mercenaries, Pirates, and Sovereigns: State-Building and Extraterritorial Violence in Early Modern Europe (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1994).Google Scholar
Torpey, John C., The Invention of the Passport: Surveillance, Citizenship and the State, 2nd ed. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2018).Google Scholar
Tozzi, Christopher J., Nationalizing France’s Army: Foreign, Black, and Jewish Troops in the French Military, 1715–1831 (Charlottesville, VA and London: University of Virginia Press, 2016).Google Scholar
Tsiamis, Costas, Thalassinou, Eleni, Poulakou-Rebelakou, Effie, and Hatzakis, Angelos, ‘Quarantine and British “Protection” of the Ionian Islands, 1815–64’, in Chircop, John and Martínez, Francisco Javier (eds.), Mediterranean Quarantines, 1750–1915: Space, Identity and Power (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2018), 256–79.Google Scholar
Tzoref-Ashkenazi, Chen, ‘German Auxiliary Troops in the British and Dutch East India Companies’, in Arielli, Nir and Collins, Bruce (eds.), Transnational Soldiers: Foreign Military Enlistment in the Modern Era (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2013), 3249.Google Scholar
Ulrich, Nicole, ‘International Radicalism, Local Solidarities: The 1797 British Naval Mutinies in Southern African Waters’, in Anderson, Clare, Frykman, Niklas, Heerma van Voss, Lex, and Rediker, Marcus (eds.), Mutiny and Maritime Radicalism in the Age of Revolution (Cambridge: Press Syndicate of the University of Cambridge, 2013), 6185.Google Scholar
Unger, Richard W., ‘Overview. Trades, Ports and Ships: The Roots of Difference in Sailors’ Lives’, in Fusaro, Maria, Allaire, Bernard, Blakemore, Richard J., and Vanneste, Tijl (eds.), Law, Labour and Empire: Comparative Perspectives on Seafarers, c. 1500–1800 (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2015), 117.Google Scholar
Vale, Brian, ‘The Conquest of Scurvy in the Royal Navy 1793–1800: A Challenge to Current Orthodoxy’, The Mariner’s Mirror 94:2 (2008), 160–75.Google Scholar
Van Breda Vriesman, Dorothea Josephine Antoinette, In woelig vaarwater: Marineofficieren in de jaren 1779–1802 (Amsterdam: De Bataafsche Leeuw, 1998).Google Scholar
Van Eyck van Heslinga, E. S., ‘A Competitive Ally. The Delicate Balance of Naval Alliance and Maritime Competition between Great Britain and the Dutch Republic, 1674–1795’, in Raven, G. J. A. and Rodger, N. A. M. (eds.), Navies and Armies: The Anglo-Dutch Relationship in War and Peace 1688–1988 (Edinburgh: John Donald Publishers Ltd, 1990), 111.Google Scholar
Van Heuven, Vincent J., Gooskens, Charlotte S., and Renée, van Bezooijen, ‘Introducing MICRELA: Predicting Mutual Intelligibility between Closely Related Languages in Europe’, In Navracsics, J. and Bátyi, S. (eds.), First and Second Language: Interdisciplinary Approaches – Studies in Psycholinguistics 6 (Budapest: Tinta könyvkiadó, 2015), 127–45.Google Scholar
Van Lottum, Jelle, Across the North Sea: The Impact of the Dutch Republic on International Labour Migration, c. 1550–1850 (Amsterdam: Aksant, 2007).Google Scholar
Van Lottum, Jelle, ‘Some Thoughts about Migration of Maritime Workers in the Eighteenth-Century North Sea Region’, The International Journal of Maritime History 27:4 (2015), 647–61.Google Scholar
Van Lottum, Jelle, Jan, Lucassen, and Lex, Heerma van Voss, ‘Sailors, National and International Labour Markets and National Identity, 1600–1850’, in Unger, Richard W. (ed.), Shipping and Economic Growth 1350–1850 (Leiden and Boston: Brill, 2011), 309–51.Google Scholar
Van Lottum, Jelle and Bo, Poulsen, ‘Estimating Levels of Numeracy and Literacy in the Maritime Sector of the North Atlantic in the Late Eighteenth Century’, Scandinavian Economic History Review 59:1 (2011), 6782.Google Scholar
Van Lottum, Jelle and Jan Luiten, van Zanden, ‘Labour Productivity and Human Capital in the European Maritime Sector of the Eighteenth Century’, Explorations in Economic History 53 (2014), 83100.Google Scholar
Van Rossum, Matthias and Jeannette, Kamp (eds.), Desertion in the Early Modern World a Comparative History (New York: Bloomsbury Academic, 2016).Google Scholar
Van Rossum, Matthias, Lex Heerma, van Voss, Jelle, van Lottum, and Jan, Lucassen, ‘National and International Labour Markets for Sailors in European, Atlantic and Asian Waters, 1600–1850’, in Fusaro, Maria and Polónia, Amélia (eds.), Maritime History as Global History (St. John’s, Newfoundland: International Maritime Economic History Association, 2010), 4772.Google Scholar
Van Royen, Paul C., ‘Mariners and Markets in the Age of Sail: The Case of the Netherlands’, in Fischer, Lewis R. (ed.), The Market for Seamen in the Age of Sail (St John’s, Newfoundland: International Maritime Economic History Association, 1994), 4757.Google Scholar
Vergé-Franceschi, Michel, La marine française au XVIIIe siècle : guerres – administration – exploration (Paris: SEDES, 1996).Google Scholar
Walsh, Patrick, ‘Ireland and the Royal Navy in the Eighteenth Century’, in McAleer, John and Petley, Christer (eds.), The Royal Navy and the British Atlantic World, c. 1750–1820 (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2016), 5176.Google Scholar
Walter, Bronwen, ‘“Shamrocks Growing out of Their Mouths”: Language and the Racialisation of the Irish in Britain’, in Kershen, Anne J. (ed.), Language, Labour and Migration (Aldershot and Burlington, VT: Ashgate, 2000), 5773.Google Scholar
Watts, A. D., ‘The Protection of Alien Seamen’, The International and Comparative Law Quarterly 7:4 (1958), 691711.Google Scholar
Weiss Muller, Hannah, ‘Bonds of Belonging: Subjecthood and the British Empire’, Journal of British Studies 53:1 (2014), 2958.Google Scholar
Weiss Muller, Hannah, Subjects and Sovereign: Bonds of Belonging in the Eighteenth-Century British Empire (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2017).Google Scholar
Wells, J. C., Accents of English 2: The British Isles (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1986).Google Scholar
Wilcox, Martin, ‘The “Poor Decayed Seamen” of Greenwich Hospital, 1705–1763’, International Journal of Maritime History 25:1 (2013), 6590.Google Scholar
Wilkinson, Clive, The British Navy and the State in the Eighteenth Century (Woodbridge: The Boydell Press, 2004).Google Scholar
Williams, Siân, ‘The Royal Navy and Caribbean Colonial Society during the Eighteenth Century’, in McAleer, John and Petley, Christer (eds.), The Royal Navy and the British Atlantic World, c. 1750–1820 (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2016), 2750.Google Scholar
Wills, Mary, Envoys of Abolition: British Naval Officers and the Campaign against the Slave Trade in West Africa (Liverpool: Liverpool University Press, 2019).Google Scholar
Wilson, Evan, A Social History of British Naval Officers, 1775–1815 (Woodbridge: Boydell Press, 2017).Google Scholar
Wilson, Evan, Hammar, AnnaSara, and Seerup, Jakob (eds.), Eighteenth-Century Naval Officers: A Transnational Perspective (Cham: Palgrave Macmillan, 2019).Google Scholar
Wilson, Kathleen, The Sense of the People: Politics, Culture and Imperialism in England, 1715–1785 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995).Google Scholar
Wilson, Kathleen, The Island Race: Englishness, Empire and Gender in the Eighteenth Century (London and New York: Routledge, 2003).Google Scholar
Wilson, Peter H., ‘“Mercenary” Contracts as Fiscal-Military Instruments’, in Norrhem, Svante and Thomson, Erik (eds.), Subsidies, Diplomacy, and State Formation in Europe, 1494–1789: Economies of Allegiance (Lund: Lund University Press, 2020), 6892.Google Scholar
Wilson, Thomas M. and Hastings, Donnan, ‘Nation, State and Identity at International Borders’, in Wilson, Thomas M. and Donnan, Hastings (eds.), Border Identities: Nation and State at International Frontiers (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1998), 130.Google Scholar
Wimmer, Andreas and Schiller, Nina Glick, ‘Methodological Nationalism and Beyond: Nation-State Building, Migration and the Social Sciences’, Global Networks 2:4 (2002), 301–34.Google Scholar
Wismayer, Joseph M., The Fleet of the Order of St John 1530–1798 (Valletta: Midsea Books Ltd., 1997).Google Scholar
Wolf, Joshua, ‘“To Be Enslaved or Thus Deprived”: British Impressment, American Discontent, and the Making of the Chesapeake-Leopard Affair, 1803–1807’, War & Society 29:1 (2010), 119.Google Scholar
Wolff, Larry, ‘La géographie philosophique des Lumières : L’Europe de l’Est et les Tartares de Sibérie au regard de la civilisation’, in Lilti, Antoine and Spector, Céline (eds.), Penser l’Europe au XVIIIe siècle : Commerce, civilisation, empire (Oxford: Voltaire Foundation, 2014), 167–80.Google Scholar
Zarate, Juan Carlos, ‘The Emergence of a New Dog of War: Private International Security Companies, International Law, and the New World Disorder’, Stanford Journal of International Law 34:75 (1998), 75162.Google Scholar
Zimmerman, James Fulton, Impressment of American Seamen (New York: [N/A], 1925).Google Scholar
Bloody Foreigners: The Untold Battle of Trafalgar, series 1, episode 3 (Channel 4, 28 June 2010).Google Scholar
Horrible Histories, series 4, episode 12, written by Laurence Ricard (BBC, 2012).Google Scholar
Meyer, David, Achim, Zeileis, and Kurt, Hornik, vcd: Visualizing Categorical Data (2021, version 1.4-9) https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/vcd/index.html.Google Scholar
Warnes, Gregory R., Ben, Bolker, Thomas, Lumley, and Johnson, Randall C., gmodels: Various R Programming Tools for Model Fitting (2018, version 2.18.1) https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/gmodels/index.html.Google Scholar
Wei, Taiyun and Viliam, Simko, R Package ‘corrplot’: Visualization of a Correlation Matrix (2021, Version 0.92) https://github.com/taiyun/corrplot.Google Scholar
Wickham, Hadley, ggplot2: Elegant Graphics for Data Analysis (New York: Springer-Verlag, 2016) https://ggplot2.tidyverse.org.Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure coreplatform@cambridge.org is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

  • Bibliography
  • Sara Caputo, University of Cambridge
  • Book: Foreign Jack Tars
  • Online publication: 03 November 2022
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009199841.017
Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

  • Bibliography
  • Sara Caputo, University of Cambridge
  • Book: Foreign Jack Tars
  • Online publication: 03 November 2022
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009199841.017
Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

  • Bibliography
  • Sara Caputo, University of Cambridge
  • Book: Foreign Jack Tars
  • Online publication: 03 November 2022
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009199841.017
Available formats
×