Description
Book SynopsisThe book presents 125 letters carried aboard a ship, the Two Sisters of Dublin, captured at sea in 1757, in the midst of the Seven Years War (1756-1763). Most of the letters lay unopened for 250 years until they were rediscovered in the UK National Archives in 2011.The letters from members of the Irish community in Bordeaux and their relatives, friends and trading partners in Ireland communicate the concerns and understandings of ordinary people in a diasporic community during wartime. Written by sailors, merchants, servants, prisoners of war, priests, clerks, and many women, the letters vividly illustrate social and economic structures familiar to historians of early modern trade and the expatriate communities of the Atlantic world. They underline the central role of familial relationships in structuring commerce, and illustrate how communities were sustained across wide expanses of ocean by streams of correspondence, by favours asked and received, and by a flow of commodities, gifts,
Trade ReviewHere the case is made that together the letters offer a precious series of insights into the multifarious links between Ireland and southern France under the ancien régime, links severely tested by the onset of a war fought mainly on the seas. * William Doyle, Irish Economic and Social History *
fascinating and unique publication * Oliver OHanlon, Irish Studies Review *
This is much more than a mere edition of letters. It should be read by anyone interested in eighteenth-century Britain, France, trade or war. * David Hancock, Huguenot Society Journal *
Table of ContentsIntroduction ; I. The Two Sisters of Dublin ; II. 1757 ; III. The Irish Community in Bordeaux ; IV. The Letters ; V. Methodology ; THE BORDEAUX-DUBLIN LETTERS, 1757 ; Appendices