Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-t5tsf Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-16T02:15:34.045Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Bibliography

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 June 2018

Charles E. Orser, Jr.
Affiliation:
Vanderbilt University, Tennessee
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
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2018

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

, A. B. 1699. The Mystery of Atheism, Or, the Devices Made Use of to Countenance and Propagate It: Together With the Evil and Danger of Them. A. and J. Churchil, London.Google Scholar
A Member of the Community. 1826. The Mutualist, No. 1, or, practical remarks on the social system of mutual cooperation. The New-Harmony Gazette 1(38):301302.Google Scholar
Aalen, Frederick. 1989. Imprint of the past. In The Irish Countryside: Landscape, Wildlife, History, People, Gillmor, Desmond, ed., pp. 83119. Wolfhound, Dublin.Google Scholar
Aalen, F. H. A. and Whelan, Kevin. 1997. Fields. In Atlas of the Irish Rural Landscape, Aalen, F. H. A., Whelan, Kevin, and Stout, Matthew, eds., pp. 134144. Cork University Press, Cork.Google Scholar
Abbot, George. 1636. A Briefe Description of the Whole World Wherein is Particularly Described All the Monarchies, Empires and Kingdomes of the Same, with Their Academies. T. Harper, London.Google Scholar
Abbot, Robert. 1610. The Old Waye: A Sermon Preached at Oxford. Eleazar Edgar and Ambrose Garbrand, London.Google Scholar
Abbot, Robert. 1653. The Christian Family Builded by God, Directing All Governours How to Act. Philemon Stephens, London.Google Scholar
Abernethy, David B. 2000. The Dynamics of Global Dominance: European Overseas Empires, 1415–1980. Yale University Press, New Haven, CT.Google Scholar
Abu-Lughod, Janet L. 1989. Before European Hegemony: The World System A.D. 1250–1350. Oxford University Press, New York.Google Scholar
Adam, Melchior. 1643. The Life and Death of Dr. Martin Luther. J. L., London.Google Scholar
Adams, Jonathan. 1985. Sea Venture: a second interim report, part 1. International Journal of Nautical Archaeology and Underwater Exploration 14:275299.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Adams, Jonathan. 2001. Ships and boats as archaeological source material. World Archaeology 32:292310.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Adams, Thomas. 1633. A Commentary or Exposition Upon the Divine Second Epistle Generall, Written by the Blessed Apostle St. Peter. Richard Badger, London.Google Scholar
Adams, Thomas. 1652. God’s Anger and Man’s Comfort: Two Sermons. Thomas Maxey, London.Google Scholar
Ady, Thomas. 1655. A Candle in the Dark: Shewing the Divine Cause of the Distractions of the Whole Nation of England, and of the Christian World. Robert Ibb’tson, London.Google Scholar
Ady, Thomas. 1661. A Perfect Discovery of Witches: Shewing the Divine Cause of the Distractions of this Kingdome, and Also of the Christian World. R. I., London.Google Scholar
Agar, Ben. 1643. King James, his Apopthegmes, or Table-Talke as they Were by Him Delivered Occasionally and by the Publisher (His Quondam Servant) Carefully Received, and Now Humbly Offered to Publique View, as Not Impertinent to the Present Times. B. W., London.Google Scholar
Agas, Ralph. 1596. To All Persons Whom these Presents may Concerne, of What Estate and Degree Soever. n.p., London.Google Scholar
Agbe-Davies, Anna S. 2010. Social aspects of the tobacco pipe trade in early colonial Virginia. In Social Archaeologies of Trade and Exchange: Exploring Relationships Among People, Places, and Things, Bauer, Alexander A. and Agbe-Davies, Anna S., eds., pp. 6998. Left Coast Press, Walnut Creek, CA.Google Scholar
Agbe-Davies, Anna S. 2015. Tobacco, Pipes, and Race in Colonial Virginia: Little Tubes of Mighty Power. Left Coast Press, Walnut Creek, CA.Google Scholar
Ager, Thomas. 1680. A Paraphrase on the Canticles, or, Song of Solomon. A. Godbid and J. Playford, London.Google Scholar
Agger, Ben. 1989. Fast Capitalism: A Critical Theory of Significance. University of Illinois Press, Urbana, IL.Google Scholar
Agger, Ben. 2004. Speeding Up Fast Capitalism: Cultures, Jobs, Families, Schools, Bodies. Paradigm, Boulder, CO.Google Scholar
Agostini, Gerolamo. 1926 [1643]. Letter to the Doge and Senate of Venice. Calendar of State Papers Relating to English Affairs in the Archives of Venice, Volume 27, 1643–1647. His Majesty’s Stationery Office, London.Google Scholar
Ainsworth, Henry. 1607. The Communion of Saincts [sic]: A Treatise of the Fellowship that the Faithful Have with God, and his Angels, and One with An Other. Giles Thorp, Amsterdam.Google Scholar
, A. J. B. 1642. What Kind of Parliament Will Please the King and How Well He is Affected to this Present Parliament. n.p., London.Google Scholar
Alexander, Roy. 1989. Wildlife in the countryside. In The Irish Countryside: Landscape, Wildlife, History, People, Gillmor, Desmond, ed., pp. 4981. Wolfhound, Dublin.Google Scholar
Alexander, William, Earl of Stirling. 1624. An Encouragement to Colonies. William Stansby, London.Google Scholar
Allan, John, Barber, James, and Higgins, David. 1992. A seventeenth-century pottery group from Kitto Institute, Plymouth. In Everyday and Exotic Pottery from Europe, c. 650–1900: Studies in Honour of John G. Hurst, Gaimster, David and Redknap, Mark, eds., pp. 225245. Oxbow, Oxford.Google Scholar
Allcroft, A. Hadrian. 1908. Earthwork of England: Prehistoric, Roman, Saxon, Danish, Norman, and Medieval. Macmillan, London.Google Scholar
Alleine, Joseph. 1678. The Way to Happiness in a Serious Treatise. Nevil Simmons, London.Google Scholar
Alleine, Joseph. 1688. A Sure Guide to Heaven, Or, An Earnest Invitation to Sinners to Turn to God in Order to Their Eternal Salvation Shewing the Thoughtful Sinner What He Must Do to be Saved. Thomas Parkhurst, London.Google Scholar
Allen, Benjamin. 1699. The Natural History of the Chalybeat and Purging Waters of England with Their Particular Essays and Uses. S. Smith and B. Walford, London.Google Scholar
Allen, Charles. 1686. The Operator for the Teeth: Showing How to Preserve the Teeth and Gums from All the Accidents They are Subject To. Andrew Crook and Samuel Helshem, Dublin.Google Scholar
Allison, John. 1667. Upon the Late Lamentable Fire in London in an Humble Imitation of the Most Incomparable Mr. Cowley His Pindarick Strain. H. Brome, London.Google Scholar
Allison, Penelope, ed. 1999. The Archaeology of Household Activities. Routledge, London.Google Scholar
Allyn, John. 1694. Their Majesties Colony of Connecticut in New-England Vindicated, From the Abuses of a Pamphlet, Licensed and Printed at New-York 1694. Bartholomew Green, Boston, MA.Google Scholar
Alpern, Stanley B. 1995. What Africans got for their slaves: a master list of European trade goods. History in Africa 22:543.Google Scholar
Amin, Samir. 1989. Eurocentrism. Russell Moore, trans. Monthly Review Press, New York, NY.Google Scholar
Anderson, J. L. 1983. Climatic change, sea-power, and historical discontinuity: the Spanish Armada and the Glorious Revolution of 1688. The Great Circle 5(1):1323.Google Scholar
Andrews, Charles M. 1914. Colonial commerce. American Historical Review 20:4363.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Andrews, John. 1987. The 17th-century pipemakers of York. Society for Clay Pipe Research Newsletter 13:29.Google Scholar
Andrews, John H. 1986. Mapping the past in the past: the cartographer as antiquarian in pre-Ordnance Survey Ireland. In Rural Landscapes and Communities: Essays Presented to Desmond McCourt, Thomas, Colin, ed., pp. 3163. Irish Academic Press, Dublin.Google Scholar
Andrews, John H. 2000. Plantation Ireland: a review of settlement history. In A History of Settlement in Ireland, Barry, Terry, ed., pp. 140157. Routledge, London.Google Scholar
Andrews, John H. 2001. The mapping of Ireland’s cultural landscape, 1550–1630. In Gaelic Ireland, c. 1250–c. 1650: Land, Lordship, and Settlement Duffy, Patrick J., Edwards, David, and FitzPatrick, Elizabeth, eds., pp. 153180. Four Courts, Dublin.Google Scholar
Ankarloo, Bengt. 2002. Witch trials in northern Europe, 1450–1700. In Witchcraft and Magic in Europe: The Period of the Witch Trials. Ankarloo, Bengt and Clark, Stuart, eds., pp. 5395. University of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia, PA.Google Scholar
Annand, William. 1670. Pater Noster, Our Father, Or, The Lord’s Prayer Explained. George Swintoun and James Glen, Edinburgh.Google Scholar
Annesley, Samuel. 1683. A Continuation of Morning-Exercise Questions and Cases of Conscience, Practically Resolved by Sundry Ministers, In October 1682. J. A., London.Google Scholar
Anonymous. 1602. A New and Short Defense of Tobacco with Effects of the Same, and of the Right Use Thereof. V. S., London.Google Scholar
Anonymous. 1605. The Booke of Common Prayer, and Administration of the Sacraments, and Other Rites and Ceremonies of the Church of England. Robert Barker, London.Google Scholar
Anonymous. 1616. By the Kings Majesties Surveyor of Coales to be Shipped at Newcastle upon Tyne, Sunderland, and Blythe, and Other Places Adjacent, to be Brought to the City of London, or Otherwise to be Spent Within the Realme of England. Eliot’s Court Press, London.Google Scholar
Anonymous. 1627. A Catalogue of All the Kings Ships, as Also of All Other Ships, and Pinnances, Together with Their Squadrons, Captaines, Burthen, Seamen, and Land-Men Set Forth in His Majesties Service, the 27 of June, 1627. H. Gosson, London.Google Scholar
Anonymous. 1635. The Articles of the Charge of the Wardmote Enquest. Robert Young, London.Google Scholar
Anonymous. 1641. Ten Propositions Delivered by Master Pimme, From the House of Commons to the Lords, at a Conference, June 24, 1641. n.p., London.Google Scholar
Anonymous. 1643. New England’s First Fruits. R. O. and G. D., London.Google Scholar
Anonymous. 1645. A List of Such of the Navy Royall, as Also of the Merchants Ships as Are Set Forth to Sea for This Summers Expedition 1645. Laurence Blaiklock, London.Google Scholar
Anonymous. 1646a. A List of Such Ships and Friggotts of the Navy Royall, as Also of Such Marchants [sic] Shipps as Are Set Forth to Sea and Prepared for the Service of the King and Parliament in this Summers Expedition 1646. Edward Husband, London.Google Scholar
Anonymous. 1646b. The Answer of the Commissioners of the Navie, to the Scandalous Pamphlet Published by Mr. Andrews Burrell. William Bentley, London.Google Scholar
Anonymous. 1648a. The Charge of the Commons of England Against Charls [sic] Stuart, King of England of High Treason and Other High Crimes. Rapha Harford, London.Google Scholar
Anonymous. 1648b. The Devill Seen at St. Albons, Being a True Relation How the Devill was seen There in a Cellar in the Likeness of a Ram. n.p.Google Scholar
Anonymous. 1657. The Banners of Grace and Love Displayed in the Farther Conversion of the Indians in New-England. W. Godbid, London.Google Scholar
Anonymous. 1665. Alotments [sic] of Goods to be Sold by the Company of Royal Adventurers of England Trading into Africa, and the African House in Broadstreet. n.p., London.Google Scholar
Anonymous. 1672a. A List of His Majesties Navy Royal, Hitherto Designed in the Present Expedition Against the Dutch, with the Commanders Names, Number of Men and Guns, April 30, 1672. E. Crowch, London.Google Scholar
Anonymous. 1672b. The Compleat Gunner, in Three Parts. Robert Pawlet, Thomas Passinger, and Benjamin Hurlock, London.Google Scholar
Anonymous. 1675a. A Brief and True Narration of the Late Wars Risen in New-England: Occasioned by the Quarrelsome Disposition and Perfidious Carriage of the Barbarous, Savage, and Heathenish Natives There. J. S., London.Google Scholar
Anonymous. 1675b. The Women’s Complaint Against Tobacco. n.p., London.Google Scholar
Anonymous. 1675c. An Answer to the Pretended Reasons of Some Drapers, Mercers, Haberdashers, Grocers, and Hosiers, &c. Against Pedlars, Hawkers, & Petty-Chapmen Humbly Offered to the Consideration of the High-Court of Parliament. n.p., London.Google Scholar
Anonymous. 1678. An Account of the Bloody Massacre in Ireland: Acted by the Instigation of the Jesuits, Priests, and Friars, who were Promoters of Those Horrible Murthers, Prodigious Cruelties, Barbarous Villanies, and Inhumane Practices Executed by the Irish Papists Upon the English Protestants. n.p., London.Google Scholar
Anonymous. 1680. Certain Considerations Relating to the Royal African Company of England. n.p.Google Scholar
Anonymous. 1682. Historical Collections, or A Brief Account of the Most Remarkable Transactions of the Last Two Parliaments. 2nd ed. Neale, Simon, London.Google Scholar
Anonymous. 1686. An Abridgment of Military Discipline, For the Use of His Majesties Forces in the Kingdom of Scotland. Andrew Anderson, Edinburgh.Google Scholar
Anonymous. 1687. Certain Sermons or Homilies Appointed to be Read in Churches in the Time of Queen Elizabeth of Famous Memory: And now Reprinted for the Use of Private Families. George Wells, Abel Swall, and George Pawlett, London.Google Scholar
Anonymous. 1690. Some Considerations Relating to the Trade to Guiny. n.p.Google Scholar
Anonymous. 1691a. An Abridgment of the Case of the Cities, Corporations, and Market-Towns of England, Most Humbly Represented to the Right Honourable the Lords Spiritual and Temporal in Parliament Assembled. n.p., London.Google Scholar
Anonymous. 1691b. The Pedlars Case Stated; Some Remarks Upon the Pedlars and All Their Carrying of Goods Abroad to Proffer to Sale in All Cities, Towns, and Places Throughout England and Wales &c. in Order to the Prevention Thereof. n.p.Google Scholar
Anonymous. 1692. An Exact List of Their Majesties and the Dutch Fleet, Designed for the Year 1692 for the Line of Battle. Richard Baldwin, London.Google Scholar
Anonymous. 1693. An Exact List of Their Majesties and the Dutch Fleet, Designed for the Year 1693 for the Line of Battel [sic]. Richard Baldwin, London.Google Scholar
Anonymous. 1698. A True Account of the Forts and Castles Belonging to the Royal African Company, Upon the Gold Coast of Africa. n.p.Google Scholar
Anonymous. 1699a. England’s Happiness Improved: Or, an Infallible Way to Get Riches, Encrease Plenty, and Promote Pleasure. Roger Clavill, London.Google Scholar
Anonymous. 1699b. The Devil in Deptford, Being a True Relation of the Strange Disturbances, Ludicrous Feats, and Malicious Pranks of an Evil Spirit in the House of Mr. G. Living in Back-Lane at Deptford near London, in April and May, 1699. Nathaniel Crouch, London.Google Scholar
Anonymous. 1709. The Case of the Royal African Company. n.p.Google Scholar
Anonymous. 1729. The Case of the Royal African Company of England. n.p.Google Scholar
Anonymous. 1789. Plan and Sections of a Slave Ship. James Phillips, London.Google Scholar
Arber, Edward, ed. 1885. The First Three English Books on America. n.p., Birmingham.Google Scholar
Archer, Michael. 1979. Irish Pottery and Porcelain. Eason, Dublin.Google Scholar
Armitage, David. 2004 The Ideological Origins of the British Empire. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Armitage, David. 2009. Three concepts of Atlantic history. In The British Atlantic World, 1500–1800, 2nd ed., Armitage, David and Braddick, Michael J., eds., pp. 1329. Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke.Google Scholar
Armitage, David and Braddick, Michael J.. 2009. Introduction. In The British Atlantic World, 1500–1800, 2nd ed., Armitage, David and Braddick, Michael J., eds., pp. 19. Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke.Google Scholar
Aston, Michael. 1985. Interpreting the Landscape: Landscape Archaeology in Local Studies. B. T. Batsford, London.Google Scholar
Aston, T. H. and Philpin, C. H. E., eds. 1985. The Brenner Debate: Agrarian Class Structure and Economic Development in Pre-Industrial Europe. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
ASV [Archaeological Society of Virginia]. 2016. The Broaddus Flats site and Virginia frontier fortifications in the seventeenth century. <www.virginiadigs.net/broaddus_flats/essays/fort_1.html>; accessed August 2016.;+accessed+August+2016.>Google Scholar
Atherton, Lewis E. 1945. Itinerant merchandising in the ante-bellum South. Bulletin of the Business Historical Society 19:3559.Google Scholar
Atkinson, D. R. 1965. Clay tobacco pipes and pipemakers of Marlborough. Wiltshire Archaeological and Natural History Magazine 60:8595.Google Scholar
Atkinson, D. R. 1970. Jeffry Hunt pipes. Wiltshire Archaeological and Natural History Magazine 66:156161.Google Scholar
Atkinson, D. R. 1972. Further notes on clay tobacco pipes and pipemakers from the Marlborough and Salisbury districts. Wiltshire Archaeological and Natural History Magazine 67:149156.Google Scholar
Austen, Ralph A. 2010. Trans-Saharan Africa in World History. Oxford University Press, Oxford.Google Scholar
Author [of Westminster Drollery]. 1675. Mock Songs and Joking Poems, All Novel: Consisting of Mocks to Several Late Songs About the Town. William Birtch, London.Google Scholar
Avery, George. 1997. Pots as Packaging: The Spanish Olive Jar and Andalusian Transatlantic Commercial Activity, 16th–18th Centuries. Doctoral dissertation, University of Florida, Gainesville.Google Scholar
Axelrod, Robert. 2006. The Evolution of Cooperation. Rev. ed. Basic, New York.Google Scholar
Ayto, Eric G. 1990. Clay Tobacco Pipes. Shire, Princes Risborough.Google Scholar
, B. A. 1674. The Sick-Mans Jewel, Wherein is Discovered a Speedy Way How Every Man May Recover Lost Health, and Prolong Life, How He May Know What Disease He Hath, and How He Himself May Apply Proper Remedies to Every Disease, with the Description, Definition, Signs, and Syptoms [sic] of Those Diseases. T. R. and N. T., London.Google Scholar
Baart, Jan. 1987. Dutch material civilization: daily life between 1650–1776, evidence from archaeology. In New World Dutch Studies: Dutch Arts and Culture in Colonial America, 1609–1776, Blackburn, Roderic H. and Kelley, Nancy A., eds., pp. 111. Albany Institute of History and Art, Albany, NY.Google Scholar
Babington, Zachary. 1677. Advice to Grand Jurors in Cases of Blood. John Amery, London.Google Scholar
Bachelard, Gaston. 1964. The Poetics of Space. Maria Joles, trans. Orion, New York.Google Scholar
Bacon, Francis. 1605. The Twoo Bookes of Francis Bacon: Of the Proficience and Advancement of Learning, Divine and Humane. Henrie Tomes, London.Google Scholar
Bacon, Francis. 1625. The Essayes or Counsels, Civill and Morall of Francis Lo. Verulam, Viscount St. Alban. John Haviland, London.Google Scholar
Bacon, Robert. 1652. A Taste of the Spirit of God and of This World, as They Have Appeared in Opposition Heretofore, so Now Latest of all at New-Windsor. Giles Calvert, London.Google Scholar
Bagchi, Amiya Kumar. 2005. Perilous Passage: Mankind and the Global Ascendancy of Capital. Rowman and Littlefield, Lanham, MD.Google Scholar
Obarè, Bagodo. 2009. Transatlantic slave trade and endogenous technological backwardness in the Bight of Benin region: an archaeological consideration. In The Changing Worlds of Atlantic Africa: Essays in Honor of Robin Law, Falola, Toyin and Childs, Matt D., eds., pp. 253266. Carolina Academic Press, Durham, NC.Google Scholar
Bagwell, John and Wilson, Thomas. 1661. A Complete Christian Dictionary: Wherein the Significations and Several Acceptations of All the Words Mentioned in the Holy Scriptures of the Old and New Testament, Are Fully Opened, Expressed, Explained. E. Cotes, London.Google Scholar
Bailyn, Bernard. 1964. The Apologia of Robert Keayne: The Self-Portrait of a Puritan Merchant. Harper and Row, New York.Google Scholar
Bailyn, Bernard. 1996. The idea of Atlantic history. Itinerario 20: 1944.Google Scholar
Bailyn, Bernard. 2005. Atlantic History: Concepts and Contours. Harvard University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Baker, Emerson W. 1985. The Clarke & Lake Company: The Historical Archaeology of a Seventeenth-Century Maine Settlement. Maine Historical Preservation Commission, Augusta.Google Scholar
Baker, Emerson W. 2009a. The archaeology of 1690: status and material life on New England’s northern frontier. In New Views of New England: Studies in Material and Visual Culture, 1680–1830, McNamara, Martha J. and Barnhill, George B., eds., pp. 116. Colonial Society of Massachusetts, Boston.Google Scholar
Baker, Emerson W. 2009b. A preliminary report on excavations at the Humphrey and Lucy Chadbourne Site, 1995–2007. <w3.salemstate.edu/~ebaker/chadbourne.html>; accessed July 8, 2016.;+accessed+July+8,+2016.>Google Scholar
Baker, Emerson W. 2016. Excavations at the Shepard Site, Kittery, Maine. <w3.salemstate.edu/~ebaker/chadbourne.html>; accessed July 8, 2016.;+accessed+July+8,+2016.>Google Scholar
Balandier, Georges. 1968. Daily Life in the Kingdom of the Kongo From the Sixteenth to the Eighteenth Century. Pantheon, New York.Google Scholar
Bales, Peter. 1650. Infirmity Inducing to Conformity: Or, A Scourge for Impudent Usurpers; And, A Cordiall for Impotent Christians. n.p., London.Google Scholar
Barber, Edwin Atlee. 1906. Tin Enameled Pottery: Maiolica, Delft, and Stanniferous Faience. Pennsylvania Museum and School of Industrial Art, Philadelphia.Google Scholar
Barber, Edwin Atlee. 1910. Flemish and Rhenish stoneware, and the evolution of Siegburg forms. Bulletin of the Pennsylvania Museum 8(32):5456.Google Scholar
Barbon, Nicholas. 1690. A Discourse of Trade. Thomas Milbourn, London.Google Scholar
Barile, Kerri S. and Brandon, Jamie C., eds. 2004. Theorizing the Domestic Sphere in Historical Archaeology. University of Alabama Press, Tuscaloosa.Google Scholar
Barley, M. W. 1961. The English Farmhouse and Cottage. Routledge and Kegan Paul, London.Google Scholar
Barley, M. W. 1967. Rural housing in England. In The Agrarian History of England and Wales, Volume IV: 1500–1640, Thirsk, Joan, ed., pp. 696766. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Barley, M. W. 1985. Rural building in England. In The Agrarian History of England and Wales, Volume V: 1640–1750, Thirsk, Joan, ed., pp. 590685. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Barlow, William. 1597. The Navigators Supply. Bishop, G., Newbery, R., and Barker, R., London.Google Scholar
Barnard, Toby. 2004. Making the Grand Figure: Lives and Possessions in Ireland, 1641–1770. Yale University Press, New Haven, CT.Google Scholar
Barnes, J. A. 1954. Class and community in a Norwegian island parish. Human Relations 7:3958.Google Scholar
Barnett, William P. and Carroll, Glenn R.. 1987. Competition and mutualism among early telephone companies. Administrative Science Quarterly 32:400421.Google Scholar
Barry, James. 1700. The Only Refuge of a Troubled Soul in Time of Trouble and Affliction. n.p., London.Google Scholar
Barry, Terry. 1993. The archaeology of the tower house in late medieval Ireland. In The Study of Medieval Ireland, Anderson, Hans and Wienberg, Jes, eds., pp. 211217. Almqvist and Wiksell, Stockholm.Google Scholar
Barry, Terry. 1995. The last frontier: defence and settlement in late medieval Ireland. In Colony and Frontier in Medieval Ireland: Essays Presented to J. F. Lydon, Barry, T. B., Frame, Robin, and Simms, Katharine, eds., pp. 217228. Hambleton, London.Google Scholar
Bartra, Roger. 1994. Wild Men in the Looking Glass: The Mythic Origins of European Otherness. Carl T. Berrisford, trans. University of Michigan Press, Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
Bartra, Roger. 1997. The Artificial Savage: Modern Myths of the Wild Man. Christopher Follett, trans. University of Michigan Press, Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
Bar-Yosef, Ofer. 1998. The Natufian Culture in the Levant, threshold to the origins of agriculture. Evolutionary Anthropology 6:159177.Google Scholar
Baudrillard, Jean. 1998. The Consumer Society: Myths and Structures. Sage, London.Google Scholar
Bauer, Andrew M. and Kosiba, Steve. 2016. How things act: an archaeology of materials in political life. Journal of Social Archaeology 16:115141.Google Scholar
Baxter, Richard. 1691. The Certainty of the Worlds of Spirits and Consequently of the Immortality of Souls, Of the Malice and Misery of the Devils, and the Damned. T. Parkhurst, London.Google Scholar
Beauchamp, W. M. 1891. Earth-works and stockades. American Antiquarian and Oriental Journal 13:4251.Google Scholar
Beaudry, Mary C. 1996. Reinventing historical archaeology. In Historical Archaeology and the Study of American Culture, DeCunzo, Lu Ann and Herman, Bernard L., eds., pp. 473497. University of Tennessee Press, Knoxville.Google Scholar
Beaudry, Mary C., Long, Janet, Miller, Henry M., Neiman, Fraser D., Stone, Garry Wheeler. 1983. A vessel typology for early Chesapeake ceramics: the Potomac Typological System. Historical Archaeology 17(1):1839.Google Scholar
Becker, Marshall J. 1980. An American witch bottle. Archaeology 33(2):1823.Google Scholar
Bedell, John. 2000. Archaeology and probate inventories in the study of eighteenth-century life. Journal of Interdisciplinary History 31:223245.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Beeman, Richard R. 1976. Trade and travel in post-Revolutionary Virginia: a diary of an itinerant peddler, 1807–1808. Virginia Magazine of History and Biography 84:174188.Google Scholar
Belk, Russell W. 1995. Studies in the new consumer behaviour. In Acknowledging Consumption: A Review of New Studies, Miller, Daniel, ed., pp. 5895. Routledge, London.Google Scholar
Bellarmino, Roberto. 1611. An Ample Declaration of the Christian Doctrine. R. H., trans. English College at Douai, France.Google Scholar
Bellarmino, Roberto. 1688. A Short Christian Doctrine, Compos’d by the R. Father Robert Bellarmin, of the Society of Jesus and Cardinal. n.p.Google Scholar
Benese, Richard. 1565. The Boke of Measurying of Lande as well of Woodland as Plowland, & Pasture in the Feelde: & to Compt the true Nombre of Acres of the Same. Thomas Coldwell, London.Google Scholar
Benjamin, Thomas. 2009. The Atlantic World: Europeans, Africans, Indians, and Their Shared History, 1400–1900. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Berkeley, William. 1651. The Speech of the Honourable Sr. William Berkeley Goverour and Capt. Generall of Virginea, to the Burgesses in the Grand Assembly at James Towne on the 17 of March 1651. Samuell Broun, The Hague.Google Scholar
Berlin, Brent and Kay, Paul. 1969. Basic Color Terms: Their Universality and Evolution. University of California Press, Berkeley.Google Scholar
Bernheimer, Richard. 1952. Wild Men in the Middle Ages: A Study in Art, Sentiment, and Demonology. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA.Google Scholar
Bestor, Arthur E., Jr. 1948. The evolution of the socialist vocabulary. Journal of the History of Ideas 9:259302.Google Scholar
Beverly, Robert. 1855. The History of Virginia, In Four Parts. J. W. Randolph, Richmond, VA.Google Scholar
Bickerton, L. M. 1984. English Drinking Glasses, 1675–1825. Shire, Haverfordwest.Google Scholar
Bintliff, John, ed. 1991. The Annales School and Archaeology. New York University Press, New York.Google Scholar
Birdwell-Pheasant, Donna and Lawrence-Zúñiga, Denise. 1999. Introduction: houses and families in Europe. In House Life: Space, Place, and Family in Europe, Birdwell-Pheasant, Donna and Lawrence-Zúñiga, Denise, eds., pp. 135. Berg, Oxford.Google Scholar
Birmingham, David. 1965. The Portuguese Conquest of Angola. Oxford University Press, London.Google Scholar
Black, John. 2001. British Tin-Glazed Earthenware. Shire, Princes Risborough.Google Scholar
Blades, Brooke S. 1986. English villages in the Londonderry plantation. Post-Medieval Archaeology 20:257269.Google Scholar
Blagrave, Joseph. 1669. The Epitome of the Whole Art of Husbandry Comprising all Necessary Directions for the Improvement of It. Benjamin Billingsley and Obadiah Blagrave, London.Google Scholar
Blagrave, Joseph. 1671. Blagrave’s Astrological Practice of Physick Discovering the True Way to Cure all Kinds of Diseases and Infirmities which are Naturally Incident of the Body of Man. S. G. and B. G., London.Google Scholar
Blagrave, Joseph. 1674. Blagrave’s Supplement or Enlargement to Mr. Nich. Culpeppers [sic] English Physitian [sic] Containing a Description of the Form, Names, Place, Time, Coelestial Government, and Virtues, All Such Medicinal Plants as Grow in England, and are Omitted in his Book. Obadiah Blagrave, London.Google Scholar
Blanton, Richard E. 1993. Houses and Households: A Comparative Study. Plenum, New York.Google Scholar
Blaut, J. M. 1993. The Colonizer’s Model of the World: Geographical Diffusionism and Eurocentric History. Guilford, New York.Google Scholar
Blith, Walter. 1653. The English Improver Improved. John Wright, London.Google Scholar
Bloch, Maurice. 1985. Marxism and Anthropology: The History of a Relationship. Oxford University Press, Oxford.Google Scholar
Bloice, Brian J. 1971. Norfolk House, Lambeth: excavations at a delftware kiln site, 1968. Post-Medieval Archaeology 5: 99159.Google Scholar
Bloom, Allan. 1968. The Republic of Plato. 2nd ed. Basic, New York.Google Scholar
Blunt, Alison. 2007. Cultural geographies of migration: mobility, transnationality, and diaspora. Progress in Human Geography 31:684694.Google Scholar
Boate, Gerard. 1657. Irelands Naturall History, Being a True and Ample Description of its Situation, Greatness, Shape, and Nature of its Hills, Woods, Heaths, Bogs, of its Fruitfull Parts, and Profitable Grounds. John Wright, London.Google Scholar
Bodley, Josias. 1904 [1602–3]. An account of a journey of Captain Josias Bodley into Lecale, in Ulster, in the Year 1602–3. In Illustrations of Irish History and Topography, Mainly of the Seventeenth Century, Falkiner, C. Litton, ed., pp. 328344. Longmans, Green, London.Google Scholar
Bogan, Zachary. 1653. A View of the Threats and Punishments Recorded in the Scriptures, Alphabetically Composed. H. Hall, Oxford.Google Scholar
Bohun, Ralph. 1671. A Discourse Concerning the Origine and Properties of Wind. W. Hall, Oxford.Google Scholar
Boles, Steve L. 2010. The Guth dugout. Central States Archaeological Journal 57:204207.Google Scholar
Bollwerk, Elizabeth Anne. 2012. Seeing What Smoking Pipes Signal(ed): An Examination of Late Woodland and Early Contact Period (A.D. 900–1665) Native Social Dynamics in the Middle Atlantic. Doctoral dissertation, University of Virginia, Charlottesville.Google Scholar
Bonilla-Silva, Eduardo. 2003. Racism without Racists: Color-Blind Racism and the Persistence of Racial Inequality in the United States. Rowman and Littlefield, Lanham, Md.Google Scholar
Bonoeil, John. 1620. Observations to be Followed for the Making of Fit Rooms to Keepe Silk-wormes in. Felix Kyngston, London.Google Scholar
Bosman, Willam. 1705. A New and Accurate Description of the Coast of Guinea, Divided into the Gold and Slave, and Ivory Coasts. J. Knapton, London.Google Scholar
Botero, Giovanni. 1606. A Treatise Concerning the Causes of the Magnificencie and Greatness of Cities, Devided [sic] into Three Books by Sig: Giovanni Botero, in the Italian Tongue; And Now Done into English by Robert Peterson of Lincolnes Inns Gent. Seene and Allowed. T. Purfoot, London.Google Scholar
Bourdieu, Pierre. 1977. Outline of a Theory of Practice. Richard Nice, trans. Oxford University Press, New York.Google Scholar
Bourdieu, Pierre. 1984. Distinction: A Social Critique of the Judgement of Taste. Richard Nice, trans. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA.Google Scholar
Bourdieu, Pierre. 1985. The social space and the genesis of groups. Theory and Society 14:723744.Google Scholar
Bourdieu, Pierre. 1986. The forms of capital. In Handbook of Theory and Research for the Sociology of Education, Richardson, John G., ed., pp. 241258. Greenwood, New York.Google Scholar
Bourdieu, Pierre. 1988. Homo Academicus. Peter Collier, trans. Stanford University Press, Stanford, Calif.Google Scholar
Bourdieu, Pierre. 1990. The Logic of Practice. Richard Nice, trans. Stanford University Press, Stanford, Calif.Google Scholar
Bourdieu, Pierre. 1993. The Field of Cultural Production: Essays on Art and Literature. Johnson, Randal, ed. Columbia University Press, New York.Google Scholar
Bourdieu, Pierre. 1998. Acts of Resistance: Against the Tyranny of the Market. R. Nice, trans. New Press, New York.Google Scholar
Bourdieu, Pierre and Passeron, Jean Claude. 1977. Reproduction in Education, Society, and Culture. Richard Nice, trans. Sage, London.Google Scholar
Bourdieu, Pierre and Wacquant, Loïc J. D.. 1992. An Invitation to Reflexive Sociology. University of Chicago Press, Chicago.Google Scholar
Boxer, C. R. 1973. The Dutch Seaborne Empire, 1600–1800. Penguin, London.Google Scholar
Boyle, Roger. 1677. A Treatise of the Art of War: Dedicated to the Kings Most Excellent Majesty. T. N., London.Google Scholar
Braddick, Michael. 2009. God’s Fury, England’s Fire: A New History of the English Civil Wars. Penguin, London.Google Scholar
Bradford, William, Winslow, Edward, and Morton, George (?). 1622. Relation or Journall of the Beginning and Proceedings of the English Plantation Setled [sic] at Plimoth in New England, by Certaine English Adventurers Both Merchants and Others. John Bellamie, London.Google Scholar
Bradley, Richard. 2007. The Prehistory of Britain and Ireland. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Bragdon, Kathleen, Chappell, Edward, and Graham, William. 1993. A scant urbanity: Jamestown in the 17th century. In The Archaeology of 17th-Century Virginia, Reinhart, Theodore R. and Pogue, Dennis J., eds., pp. 223249. Dietz Press, Richmond, Va.Google Scholar
Brain, Jeffrey Phipps. 2007. Fort St. George: Archaeological Investigation of the 1607–1608 Popham Colony on the Kennebec River in Maine. Maine State Museum, Augusta.Google Scholar
Brannon, N. F. 1990. Excavations at Brackfield Bawn, County Londonderry. Ulster Journal of Archaeology 53:8–14.Google Scholar
Brantlinger, Patrick. 2003. Dark Vanishings: Discourse on the Extinction of Primitive Races, 1800–1930. Cornell University Press, Ithaca, New York.Google Scholar
Brathwait, Richard. 1630. The English Gentleman: Containing Sundry Excellent Rules or Exquisite Observations Tending to Direction of Every Gentleman of Selecter [sic] Ranke and Qualitie. John Haviland, London.Google Scholar
Braudel, Fernand. 1972. The Mediterranean and the Mediterranean World in the Age of Philip II. Sian Reynolds, trans. Harper and Row, New York.Google Scholar
Braudel, Fernand. 1977. Afterthoughts on Material Civilization and Capitalism. Ranum, Patricia M., ed. Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore.Google Scholar
Braudel, Fernand. 1981. The Structures of Everyday Life: The Limits of the Possible. Sian Reynolds, trans. Harper and Row, New York.Google Scholar
Bray, William, ed. 1901. The Diary of John Evelyn, Volume II. M. Walter Dunne, New York.Google Scholar
Brears, Peter C. D. 1971. The English Country Pottery: Its History and Techniques. David and Charles, Newton Abbot.Google Scholar
Breen, Colin. 2005. The Gaelic Lordship of the O’Sullivan Beare: A Landscape Cultural History. Four Courts, Dublin.Google Scholar
Breen, Colin. 2007. An Archaeology of Southwest Ireland, 1570–1670. Four Courts, Dublin.Google Scholar
Bremer, Francis J. 2012. Review of Race and Redemption in Puritan New England by Richard A. Bailey. New England Quarterly 85:186189.Google Scholar
Brenner, Elise M. 1988. Sociopolitical implications of mortuary ritual remains in 17th-century Native Southern New England. In The Recovery of Meaning: Historical Archaeology in the Eastern United States, Leone, Mark P. and Potter, Parker B., Jr., eds., pp. 147181. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Brenner, Robert. 1976. Agrarian class structure and economic development in pre-industrial Europe. Past and Present 70:3075.Google Scholar
Brenner, Robert. 1977. The origins of capitalist development: a critique of neo-Smithian Marxism. New Left Review 104:2592.Google Scholar
Brenner, Robert. 2003. Merchants and Revolution: Commercial Change, Political Conflict, and London’s Overseas Traders, 1550–1653. Verso, London.Google Scholar
Brereton, John. 1602. A Briefe and True Relation of the Discoverie of the North Part of Virginia, Being a Most Pleasant, Fruitfull and Commodious Soile. George Bishop, London.Google Scholar
Brereton, William. 1904 [1635]. Travels of Sir William Brereton in Ireland, 1635. In In Illustrations of Irish History and Topography, Mainly of the Seventeenth Century, Falkiner, C. Litton, ed., pp. 365407. Longmans, Green, London.Google Scholar
Brerewood, Edward. 1614. Enquiries Touching the Diversity of Languages and Religions Through the Chiefe Parts of the World. John Bill, London.Google Scholar
Brett, Annabel S., ed. and trans. 1998. On the Power of Emperors and Popes by William of Ockham. Thoemmes Press, Bristol.Google Scholar
Brewer, John and Porter, Roy, eds. 1993. Consumption and the World of Goods. Routledge, London.Google Scholar
Bridenbaugh, Carl. 1968. Vexed and Troubled Englishmen, 1590–1642. Oxford University Press, New York.Google Scholar
Brinkelow, Henry. 1542. The Complaynt of Roderyck Mors, Somtyme a Gray Fryre, Unto the Parliament Howse of Ingland his Natural Cuntry for the Redresse of Certen Wicked Lawes, Evel Customs ad [sic] Cruell Decreys. Wolfgang Köpfel, Strasbourg.Google Scholar
Britnell, R. H. 1993. The Commercialisation of English Society, 1000–1500. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Britton, F. 1988. London delftware. The Magazine Antiques 133: 13761392.Google Scholar
Britton, F. 1990. The Pickleherring potteries: an inventory. Post-Medieval Archaeology 24: 6192.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brody, Hugh. 1988. Maps and Dreams: Indians and the British Columbia Frontier. Waveland, Prospect Heights, Ill.Google Scholar
Brook, Timothy. 2008. Vermeer’s Hat: The Seventeenth Century and the Dawn of the Global World. Bloomsbury, London.Google Scholar
Brotton, Jerry. 2007. The Sale of the Late King’s Goods: Charles I and His Art Collection. Pan Macmillan, London.Google Scholar
Brown, Alexander. 1898. The First Republic in America: An Account of the Origin of This Nation, Written From the Records then (1624) Concealed by the Council, Rather Than from the Histories then Licensed by the Crown. Houghton, Mifflin, Boston.Google Scholar
Brown, John. 1678. Quakerisme the Path to Paganisme, Or, A View of the Quakers Religion, Being an Examination of the Theses and Apologie of Robert Barclay, One of their Number. John Cairns, Edinburgh.Google Scholar
Browne, E. Harold. 1858. An Exposition of the Thirty-Nine Articles, Historical and Doctrinal. 4th ed. John W. Parker and Son, London.Google Scholar
Bruce, John, ed. 1842. The Works of Roger Hutchinson. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Brunskill, R. W. 1992. Traditional Buildings of Britain: An Introduction to Vernacular Architecture. Enlarged, ed., Victor Gollancz, London.Google Scholar
Brunskill, R. W. 2000. Vernacular Architecture: An Illustrated Handbook. 4th ed. Faber and Faber, London.Google Scholar
Brugis, Thomas. 1648. The Marrow of Physicke, or, A Learned Discourse of the Severall Parts of Mans [sic] Body. T. H. and M. H., London.Google Scholar
Buchanan, William T., Jr. and Heite, Edward F.. 1971. The Hallowes Site: a seventeenth-century yeoman’s cottage in Virginia. Historical Archaeology 5:3848.Google Scholar
Bull, George. 1995. Michelangelo: A Biography. St. Martin’s, New York.Google Scholar
Bumas, E. Shaskan. 2000. The cannibal butcher shop: Protestant use of Las Casas’s “Brevísima relación” in Europe and the American colonies. Early American Literature 35:107136.Google Scholar
Bunny, Edmund. 1584. A Booke of Christian Exercise Appertaining to Resolution, that is, Shewing How that We Should Resolve Our Selves to Become Christians Indeed. N. Newton and A. Hatfield, London.Google Scholar
Bunny, Francis. 1595. A Survey of the Popes Supremacie, Wherein is a Triall of His Title and a Proofe of His Practices. Valentine Simmes, London.Google Scholar
Bunworth, Richard. 1662. A New Discovery of the French Disease and Running of the Reins Their Causes, Signs, with Plain and Easie Direction of Perfect Curing the Same. Henry Marsh, London.Google Scholar
Bunyan, John. 1689. The Acceptable Sacrifice, or, The Excellency of a Broken Heart Shewing the Nature, Signs, and Proper Effects of a Contrite Spirit. George Larkin, London.Google Scholar
Burgess, Anthony. 1647. Vindiciae Legis: Or, A Vindication of the Morall Law and the Covenants, From the Errours of Papists, Arminians, Socinians, and More Especially, Antinomians. James Young, London.Google Scholar
Burggraf, James 2006. Aboriginal manufacture of wampum on Long Island in the mid 17th century. In Native Forts of the Long Island Sound Area, Stone, Gaynell, ed., pp. 225229. Suffolk County Archaeological Association and Nassau County Archaeological Committee, Stony Brook, New York.Google Scholar
Burke, Peter. 1966. A survey of the popularity of ancient historians, 1450–1700. History and Theory 5:135152.Google Scholar
Burnet, Gilbert. 1724. Bishop Burnet’s History of His Own Time, Vol. I. Thomas Ward, London.Google Scholar
Burnet, Gilbert. 1850. An Exposition of the Thirty-Nine Articles of the Church of England. William Tegg, London.Google Scholar
Burroughs, Jeremiah. 1652. Two Treatises of Mr. Jeremiah Burroughs. Peter Cole, London.Google Scholar
Bury, Edward. 1693. Death Inprov’d, and Immoderate Sorrow for Deceased Friends and Relations Reprov’d Wherein You Have Many Arguments Against Immoderate Sorrow, and Many Profitable Lessons Which We May Learn from Such Providences. Thomas Parkhurst, London.Google Scholar
Busby, Virginia Roche. 2010. Transformation and Persistence: The Nanticoke Indians and Chicone Indian Town in the Context of European Contact and Colonization. Doctoral dissertation, University of Virginia, Charlottesville.Google Scholar
Cairns, C. T. 1987. Irish Tower Houses: A Co. Tipperary Case Study. Temple, Athlone.Google Scholar
Callinicos, Alex. 1994. England’s transition to capitalism. New Left Review 204:124133.Google Scholar
Campbell, James W. P. 2003. The study of bricks and brickwork in England since Nathaniel Lloyd. In Proceedings of the First International Congress on Construction History, Huerta, Santiago, ed., pp. 479489. Instituto Juan de Herrera, Madrid.Google Scholar
Campbell, James W. P. and Saint, Andrew. 2001. A bibliography of works on brick published in England before 1750. Construction History 17: 1730.Google Scholar
Canny, Nicholas. ed. 1994. Europeans on the Move: Studies on European Migration, 1500–1800. Clarendon, Oxford.Google Scholar
Canny, Nicholas. 2001. Making Ireland British, 1580–1650. Oxford University Press, Oxford.Google Scholar
Canny, Nicholas and Morgan, Philip. 2011. The Oxford Handbook of the Atlantic World: 1450–1850. Oxford University Press, Oxford.Google Scholar
Capone, Patricia and Downs, Elinor. 2004. Red clay tobacco pipes: petrographic window into seventeenth-century economics at Jamestown, Virginia, and New England. In Smoking and Culture: The Archaeology of Tobacco Pipes in Eastern North America, Rafferty, Sean and Mann, Rob, eds., pp. 305316. University of Tennessee Press, Knoxville.Google Scholar
Capp, Bernard. 1989. Cromwell’s Navy: The Fleet and the English Revolution, 1648–1660. Clarendon, Oxford.Google Scholar
Capriata, Pietro Giovanni. 1663. The History of the Wars of Italy. Henry Earl of Monmouth, trans. J. Macock, London.Google Scholar
Carew, Richard. 1602. The Survey of Cornwall. S. S., London.Google Scholar
Carr, Edward R. 2000. Meaning (and) materiality: rethinking contextual analysis through cellar-set houses. Historical Archaeology 34(4):3245.Google Scholar
Carrithers, Michael. 1992. Why Humans Have Cultures: Explaining Anthropology and Social Diversity. Oxford University Press, Oxford.Google Scholar
Carson, Cary. 1978. Doing history with material culture. In Material Culture and the Study of American Life, Quimby, Ian M. G., ed., pp. 4164. W. W. Norton, New York.Google Scholar
Carson, Cary, Barka, Norman F., Kelso, William M., Stone, Garry Wheeler, and Upton, Dell. 1981. Impermanent architecture in the southern American colonies. Winterthur Portfolio 16(2/3): 135196.Google Scholar
Carson, Cary, Bowen, Joanne, Graham, Willie, McCartney, Martha, and Walsh, Lorena. 2008. New world, real world: improvising English culture in seventeenth-century Virginia. Journal of Southern History 74:3188.Google Scholar
Cartwright, Thomas. 1611. Christian Religion: Substantially, Methodicallie, Plainlie, and Profitable Treatised. Felix Kingston, London.Google Scholar
Cartwright, William. 1651a. The Lady-Errant: A Tragi-Comedy. Humphrey Moseley, London.Google Scholar
Cartwright, William. 1651b. The Ordinary, A Comedy. Humphrey Moseley, London.Google Scholar
Casimiro, Tânia Manuel. 2011. Portuguese Faience in England and Ireland. British Archaeological Reports International Series, Archaeopress, Oxford.Google Scholar
Castells, Manuel. 2009. The Rise of the Network Society. 2nd ed. Wiley-Blackwell, Hoboken, New Jersey.Google Scholar
Caywood, Louis R. 1955. Excavations at Green Spring Plantation. Colonial National Historical Park, Yorktown, Va.Google Scholar
, C. D. 1680. Bacchanalia: Or a Description of a Drunken Club. Robert Boulter, London.Google Scholar
Ceci, Lynn. 1980. The first fiscal crisis in New York. Economic Development and Cultural Change 28:839847.Google Scholar
Césaire, Aimé. 2000. Discourse on Colonialism. Joan Pinkham, trans. Monthly Review Press, New York.Google Scholar
Chace, Paul G. 1985. Traditional patterning of earthenware entries and the form of the probate inventory in seventeenth-century Plymouth Colony. In Domestic Pottery of the Northeastern United States, 1625–1850, Turnbaugh, Sarah Peabody, ed., pp. 4965. Academic Press, Orlando.Google Scholar
Chaffers, William. 1850. On medieval earthenware vessels. Journal of the British Archaeological Association 5: 2239.Google Scholar
Chakrabarty, Dipesh. 1992. Postcoloniality and the artifice of history: who speaks for “Indian” pasts? Representations 37:126.Google Scholar
Chappell, Edward A. 2013. Architecture at Mathews Manor. In A Glorious Empire: Archaeology and the Tudor-Stuart Atlantic World, Essays in Honor of Ivor Noël Hume, Klingelhofer, Eric, ed., pp. 6478. Oxbow, Oxford.Google Scholar
Charles, I. 1631. By the King, A Proclamation Concerning the Trade of Ginney, and Binney, in the Parts of Africa. Robert Barker, London.Google Scholar
Charles, I. 1635. By the King, A Proclamation Prohibiting the Importation of All Sorts of Glasse Whatsoever, Made in Forreigne Parts. Robert Barker, London.Google Scholar
Charles, II. 1667. Articles of Peace and Alliance Between the Most Serene and Mighty Prince Charles II … and the High and Mighty Lords the States General of the United Netherlands. John Bill and Christopher Barker, London.Google Scholar
Charles, II. 1675. By the King, A Proclamation Prohibiting the Importation of Painted Earthen Wares. John Bill and Christopher Barker, London.Google Scholar
Charles, II. 1819 [1660]. An act for the encourageing [sic] and increasing of shipping and navigation. Statutes of the Realm, Volume 5. Dawsons of Pall Mall, LondonGoogle Scholar
Charles-Edwards, Thomas M., Gillespie, Raymond, Kennedy, Liam, and Johnson, David. 1998. Agriculture. In The Oxford Companion to Irish History, Connolly, S. J., ed., pp. 610. Oxford University Press, Oxford.Google Scholar
Charlesworth, Simon. 2000. Bourdieu, social suffering, and working-class life. In Reading Bourdieu on Society and Culture, Fowler, Bridget, ed., pp. 4964. Blackwell, Oxford.Google Scholar
Chartier, Craig. S. 2010. Report on the Archaeological Collections from the C-07 Harlow Old Fort House Cellar, Plymouth, MA. Plymouth Archaeological Rediscovery Project, New Bedford, MA.Google Scholar
Chartier, Craig. S. 2015. Report on the C-1/RM/Clark Site, Plymouth, Massachusetts. Plymouth Archaeological Rediscovery Project, New Bedford, MA.Google Scholar
Cherry, John F., Ryzewski, Krysta, and Leppard, Thomas P.. 2012. Multi-period landscape survey and site risk assessment on Montserrat, West Indies. Journal of Island and Coastal Archaeology 7:282302.Google Scholar
Child, Josiah. 1690. A Discourse About Trade. A. Sowle, London.Google Scholar
Childs, W. R. 1981. England’s iron trade in the fifteenth century. Economic History Review 34: 2547.Google Scholar
Chute, Anthony. 1595. Tobacco. William Barlow, London.Google Scholar
Cipolla, Carlo M. 1965. Guns, Sails, and Empires: Technological Innovation and the Early Phases of European Expansion, 1400–1700. Pantheon, New York.Google Scholar
Cipolla, Craig N. and Hayes, Katherine Howlett, eds. 2015. Rethinking Colonialism: Comparative Archaeological Approaches. University Press of Florida, Gainesville.Google Scholar
City of New York. 1707. Several Laws, Orders, & Ordinances Established by the Mayor, Recorder, Alder-men, and Assistants of the City of New York. William Bradford, New York.Google Scholar
Clark, Gregory and Clark, Anthony. 2001. Common rights to land in England, 1475–1839. Journal of Economic History 61: 10091036.Google Scholar
Clarke, Aidan. 1995. The colonisation of Ulster and the Rebellion of 1641 (1603–1660). In The Course of Irish History, rev. ed., Martin, F. X., ed., pp. 189216. Roberts Rinehart, Niwot, CO.Google Scholar
Clarke, Rainbird. 1935. The flint-knapping industry at Brandon. Antiquity 9:3856.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clarke, Samuel. 1657. A Geographical Description of All the Countries in the Known World. Thomas Newberry, London.Google Scholar
Clavel, Robert. 1673. A Catalogue of All the Books Printed in England Since the Dreadful Fire of London in 1666 to the End of Michaelmas Term, 1672. Robert Clavel, London.Google Scholar
Cleland, James. 1607. Hero-paidela, Or, the Institution of a Young Noble Man. Joseph Barnes, London.Google Scholar
Clist, Bernard, Cranshof, Els, Schryver, Gilles-Maurice de, Herremans, Davy, Karklins, Karlis, Matonda, Igor, Steyaert, Fanny, and Bostoen, Koen. 2015. African-European contacts in the Kongo Kingdom (sixteenth-eighteenth centuries): new archaeological insights from Ngongo Mbata (Lower Congo, DRC). International Journal of Historical Archaeology 19:464501.Google Scholar
Coclanis, Peter A. 2002. Drang nach osten: Bernard Bailyn, the World-Island, and the idea of Atlantic history. Journal of World History 13: 169182.Google Scholar
Coclanis, Peter A. 2006. Atlantic World or Atlantic/World? William and Mary Quarterly 63: 725742.Google Scholar
Coffin, Edward. 1622. A True Relation of the Last Sickness and Death of Cardinall Bellarmine, Who Dyed in Rome the Seaventeeth Day of September 1621. English College, Douai, France.Google Scholar
Coleman-Smith, Richard, Kiser, R. Taft, and Hughes, Michael J.. 2005. Donyatt-type pottery in 17th- and 18th-century Virginia and Maryland. Post-Medieval Archaeology 39:294310.Google Scholar
Coles, Elisha. 1677. An English Dictionary: Explaining the Difficult Terms that are Used in Divinity, Husbandry, Physick, Phylosophy, Law, Navigation, Mathematics, and Other Arts and Sciences. Peter Parker, London.Google Scholar
Collini, Stefan. 1999. English Pasts: Essays in History and Culture. Oxford University Press, Oxford.Google Scholar
Comer, Douglas C. 1996. Ritual Ground: Bent’s Old Fort, World Formation, and the Annexation of the Southwest. University of California Press, Berkeley.Google Scholar
Company of Glass Sellers. ca. 1695. Reasons Humbly Offered by the Company of Glass and Earthen Ware Sellers, in Answer to the Pot-Makers Printed Reasons for their Bill now Depending in this Honourable House. Company of Glass Sellers, London.Google Scholar
Company of Glass Sellers. 1697. The Case of the Company of Glass-Sellers in London, and All Other Selling Glasses and Earthen Wares, in Any City, Burrough, Town-Corporate, or Market-Town in England and Wales, in Relation to the Bill for Suppressing of Hawkers, Pedlers, &c. Company of Glass Sellers, London.Google Scholar
Compton, Amanda J. 2001. A Seventeenth-Century Planter’s House at Ferryland, Newfoundland (CgAf-2, Area D). Master’s thesis, Memorial University of Newfoundland, St. John’s.Google Scholar
Connolly, S. J. 1998. Cattle acts. In The Oxford Companion to Irish History, Connolly, S. J., ed., p. 79. Oxford University Press, Oxford.Google Scholar
Cook, Minnie G. 1937. The Susan Constant and the Mayflower, Part 1. William and Mary Quarterly 17:229233.Google Scholar
Cook, Moses. 1676. The Manner of Raising, Ordering, and Improving Forrest-Trees. Peter Parker, London.Google Scholar
Cooper, Anthony Ashley [Ashley, Lord]. 1897 [1670]. Lord Ashley to Joseph West, 1 Nov. 70. Collections of the South Carolina Historical Society, Volume 5, pp. 208210. South Carolina Historical Society, Charleston.Google Scholar
Cooper, Anthony Ashley [Ashley, Lord]. 1897 [1671]. To Sir Jo: Yeamans, Sept: 18. 71. Collections of the South Carolina Historical Society, Volume 5, pp. 342344. South Carolina Historical Society, Charleston.Google Scholar
Corbett, Julian S., ed. 1905. Fighting Instructions, 1530–1816. Navy Records Society, London.Google Scholar
Cosgrove, Denis. 1985. Prospect, perspective and the evolution of the landscape idea. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 10: 4562.Google Scholar
Cotter, John L. 1958. Archaeological Excavations at Jamestown Colonial National Historical Park and Jamestown National Historic Site, Virginia. National Park Service, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Cotter, John L. and Hudson, J. P.. 1957. New Discoveries at Jamestown: Site of the First Successful English Settlement in America. National Park Service, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Coughlin, Con. 2010. Falkland Islands: the special relationship is now starting to seem very one-sided. The Telegraph, March 5.Google Scholar
Coward, Barry. 2012. The Stuart Age: England, 1603–1714. 4th ed. Longman, Harlow.Google Scholar
Coyne, Frank and Collins, Tracy. 2004. Excavation of a Post-Medieval Settlement at Rough Point, Killybegs, County Donegal. Ægis Archaeology, Limerick.Google Scholar
Crab, Roger. 1655. The English Hermite, Or, the Wonder of His Age. n.p., London.Google Scholar
Craig, Maurice. 1976. Classic Irish Houses of the Middle Size. Architectural Press, London.Google Scholar
Craig, Maurice. 1982. The Architecture of Ireland from the Earliest Times to 1880. B. T. Batsford, London.Google Scholar
Cranmer, Leon E. 1990. Cushnoc: The History and Archaeology of Plymouth Colony Traders on the Kennebec. Maine Historic Preservation Commission, Augusta.Google Scholar
Craven, W. Frank. 1930. The Earl of Warwick, a speculator in piracy. Hispanic American Historical Review 10:457479.Google Scholar
Cresswell, Tim. 2010. Towards a politics of mobility. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 28:1731.Google Scholar
Croker [misprint Croxer], T. Crofton. 1835. Ancient tobacco pipes. Dublin Penny Journal 4 (160):2830.Google Scholar
Croll, Oswald. 1670. Bazilica Chymica & Praxis Chymiatricae, or, Royal and Practical Chymistry in Three Treatises. Starkey, John and Passinger, Thomas, London.Google Scholar
Crosby, Constance A. 1988. From myth to history, or why King Philip’s ghost walks abroad. In The Recovery of Meaning: Historical Archaeology in the Eastern United States, Leone, Mark P. and Potter, Parker B., Jr., eds., pp. 183209. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Crossley, David. 1990. Post-Medieval Archaeology in Britain. Leicester University Press, London.Google Scholar
Crossley, Pamela Kyle. 2008. What Is Global History? Polity, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Cullen, L. M. 1975. Population trends in seventeenth-century Ireland. Economic and Social Review 6: 149165.Google Scholar
Culpeper, John. 1897 [1672]. Culpeper’s draught of Ashley River. Collections of the South Carolina Historical Society, Volume 5, pp. 339340. South Carolina Historical Society, Charleston.Google Scholar
Cunliffe, B. 1973. Manor Farm, Chalton, Hants. Post-Medieval Archaeology 7: 3159.Google Scholar
Currie, C. K. 1993. The archaeology of the flowerpot in England and Wales, circa 1650–1950. Garden History 21: 227246.Google Scholar
Currie, C. R. J. 1988. Time and chances: modeling the attrition of old houses. Vernacular Architecture 19:19.Google Scholar
Curto, José C. and Gervais, Raymond R.. 2001. The population history of Luanda during the late Atlantic slave trade, 1781–1844. African Economic History 29:159.Google Scholar
Cust, Richard and Hughes, Ann, eds. 1989. Conflict in Early Stuart England: Studies in Religion and Politics, 1603–1642. Routledge, London.Google Scholar
Custer, Jay F. 1994. Current archaeological research in the Middle Atlantic Region of the eastern United States. Journal of Archaeological Research 2:329360.Google Scholar
Dallington, Robert. 1605. A Method for Travell Shewed by Taking the View of France as it Stoode in the Yeare of Our Lord 1598. Thomas Creede, London.Google Scholar
Dana, Charles A. 1896. Proudhon and His “Bank of the People” Being a Defence of the Great French Anarchist, Showing the Evils of a Specie Currency, and That Interest on Capital Can and Ought to be Abolished by a System of Free and Mutual Banking. Benjamin R. Tucker, New York.Google Scholar
Danaher, Kevin. 1964. In Ireland Long Ago. Mercier, Cork.Google Scholar
Dant, Tim. 1999. Material Culture in the Social World: Values, Activities, Lifestyles. Open University Press, Buckingham.Google Scholar
Darby, H. C. 1973. The age of the improver: 1600–1800. In A New Historical Geography of England, Darby, H. C., ed., pp. 302388. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Darrel, John. 1600. A True Narration of the Strange and Grevous [sic] Vexation by the Devil of 7 Persons in Lancashire, and William Somers of Nottingham. n.p.Google Scholar
Darwin, Charles. 1861. On the Origin of Species By Means of Natural Selection. 3rd ed. John Murray, London.Google Scholar
da Silva, Filipa Ribeiro and Sommerdyk, Stacey. 2010. Reexamining the geography and merchants of the West Central African slave trade: looking behind the numbers. African Economic History 38:77105.Google Scholar
Dauncey, John. 1661. A Compendious Chronicle of the Kingdom of Portugal from Alfonso the First King, to Alfonso the Sixth, Now Reigning. Thomas Johnson, London.Google Scholar
Davidson, Thomas E. 1995. The Virginia Earthenware Project: characterizing 17th-century earthenwares by electronic image analysis. Northeast Historical Archaeology 24:5164.Google Scholar
Davidson, Thomas E., Hughes, Richard, and McNamara, Joseph M.. 1985. Where are the Indian towns? Archaeology, ethnohistory, and manifestations of contact on Maryland’s eastern shore. Journal of Middle Atlantic Archaeology 1:4350.Google Scholar
Davies, Oliver. 1967. West Africa Before the Europeans: Archaeology and Prehistory. Methuen, London.Google Scholar
Davis, Ralph. 1962. The Rise of the English Shipping Industry in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries. Macmillan, London.Google Scholar
Davis, W. M. 1884. Whirlwinds, cyclones, and tornadoes: VII. Science 3(49):4044.Google Scholar
Dawson, Aileen. 2010. English and Irish Delftware, 1570–1840. British Museum Press, London.Google Scholar
Dawson, Graham. 1971a. Two defltware kilns at Montague Close, Southwark, Part 1. London Archaeologist 1(10): 228231.Google Scholar
Dawson, Graham. 1971b. Montague Close, Part 2. London Archaeologist 1(11): 250251.Google Scholar
Day, J. 1632. A Publication of Guiana’s Plantation Newly Undertaken by the Right Hon. the Earle of Barkshire (Knight of the Most Noble Order of the Garter) and Company for that Most Famous River of the Amazones in America. William Jones, London.Google Scholar
Deacon, John. 1616. Tobacco Tortured, or, The Filthie Fume of Tobacco Refined. Richard Field, London.Google Scholar
de Acosta, José. 1604. The Naturall and Morall Historie of the East and West Indies. E. G., trans. Edward Blount and William Aspley, London.Google Scholar
DeBoer, Warren R. 2005. Colors for a North American past. World Archaeology 37:6691.Google Scholar
DeCorse, Christopher R. 1993. The Danes on the Gold Coast: culture change and the European presence. African Archaeological Review 11:149173.Google Scholar
DeCorse, Christopher R. 2001. An Archaeology of Elmina: African and Europeans on the Gold Coast, 1400–1900. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
DeCorse, Christopher R. 2005. Coastal Ghana in the first and second millennia AD: change in settlement patterns, subsistence, and technology. Journal des Africanistes 75(2):4354.Google Scholar
Decorse, Christopher R. and Spiers, Sam. 2009. A tale of two polities: socio-political transformation on the Gold Coast in the Atlantic World. Australasian Historical Archaeology 27:2942.Google Scholar
DeCosta, B. F. 1880. The Sagadahoc colony. Proceedings of the Massachusetts Historical Society 18:82117.Google Scholar
Deetz, James F. 1965. The Dynamics of Stylistic Changes in Arikara Ceramics. University of Illinois Press, Urbana.Google Scholar
Deetz, James F. 1968. Late man in North America: archaeology of European Americans. In Anthropological Archaeology in the Americas, Deetz, James and Meggers, Betty, eds., pp. 121130. Anthropological Society of Washington, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Deetz, James F. 1977. In Small Things Forgotten: The Archaeology of Early American Life. Anchor, Garden City, NY.Google Scholar
Deetz, James F. 1983. Scientific humanism and humanistic science: a plea for paradigmatic pluralism in historical archaeology. Geoscience and Man 23:2734.Google Scholar
Deetz, James F. 1988. Material culture and worldview in colonial Anglo-America. In The Recovery of Meaning: Historical Archaeology in the Eastern United States, Leone, Mark P. and Potter, Parker B., Jr., eds., pp. 219233. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Deetz, James F. 1991. Introduction: archaeological evidence of sixteenth- and seventeenth-century encounters. In Historical Archaeology in Global Perspective, Falk, Lisa, ed., pp. 19. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Deetz, James F. 1993. Flowerdew Hundred: The Archaeology of a Virginia Plantation, 1619–1864. University Press of Virginia, Charlottesville.Google Scholar
Deetz, James F. 1996. In Small Things Forgotten: An Archaeology of Early American Life. Expanded and rev. ed. Anchor, New York.Google Scholar
Deetz, James F. and Deetz, Patricia Scott. 2000. The Times of Their Lives: Life, Love, and Death in Plymouth Colony. W. H. Freeman, New York.Google Scholar
Deetz, Patricia Scott and Deetz, James F.. 1998. Vernacular House Forms in Seventeenth Century Plymouth Colony: An Analysis of Evidence from the Plymouth Colony Room-by-Room Probate Inventories, 1633–1685. <www.histarch.illinois.edu/plymouth/folkhouse.htm>>Google Scholar
Defoe, Daniel. 1928 [1724]. A Tour Through England and Wales, Volume One. J. M. Dent and Sons, London.Google Scholar
de Jonge, C. H. 1970. Delft Ceramics. Praegar, New York.Google Scholar
Dekker, Thomas. 1603. The Pleasant Comodie of Patient Grisill as it Hath Beene Sundrie Times Lately Plaid by the Right Honorable the Earle of Nottingham (Lord High Admirall) His Servants. Henry Rocket, London.Google Scholar
Dekker, Thomas. 1606. Newes from Hell: Brought by the Divells Carrier. R. B., London.Google Scholar
De Laune, Thomas. 1681. Tropologia, Or, A Key to Open Scripture Metaphors. John Richardson and John Darby, London.Google Scholar
Delle, James A. 2014. The Colonial Caribbean: Landscapes of Power in the Plantation System. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Denne, Henry. 1645. Grace, Mercy, and Peace. n.p., London.Google Scholar
Dent, Richard J. 1995. Chesapeake Prehistory: Old Traditions, New Directions. Plenum, New York.Google Scholar
De Paor, Liam. 1994. The age of the Viking wars (9th and 10th centuries). In The Course of Irish History, rev. ed., Martin, F. X., ed., pp. 91122. Roberts Rinehart, Niwot, CO.Google Scholar
de Lussan, Raveneau. 1698. A Journal of a Voyage Made into the South Sea, by the Bucaniers [sic] or Freebooters of America, From the Year 1684 to 1689. Thomas Newburgh, London.Google Scholar
Diderot, Denis. 1956 [1769]. Rameau’s Nephew and Other Works. Jacques Barzun and Ralph H. Bowen, trans., pp. 325333. Doubleday, Garden City, New York.Google Scholar
Digby, Kenelm. 1682. A Choice Collection of Rare Secrets and Experiments in Philosophy as also Rare and Unheard-of Medicines, Menstruums, and Alkahests. n.p., London.Google Scholar
Digges, Thomas. 1680. Englands Defence: A Treatise Concerning Invasion. F. Haley, London.Google Scholar
Dimmock, Spencer. 2015. The Origin of Capitalism in England, 1400–1600. Haymarket, Chicago.Google Scholar
Dobb, Maurice. 1964. Studies in the Development of Capitalism. Rev. ed. International, New York.Google Scholar
Doherty, Kieran. 2007. Sea Venture: Shipwreck, Survival, and the Salvation of Jamestown. St. Martin’s, New York.Google Scholar
Donachie, Madeleine J. 2003. Household Ceramics at Port Royal, Jamaica, 1655–1692. British Archaeological Reports International Series, Archaeopress, Oxford.Google Scholar
Donham, Donald L. 1999. History, Power, Ideology: Central Issues in Marxism and Anthropology. University of California Press, Berkeley.Google Scholar
Donne, John. 1626. Five Sermons Upon Speciall Occasions. Thomas Jones, London.Google Scholar
Donohue, Betty Booth. 2011. Bradford’s Indian Book: Being the True Roote & Rise of American Letters as Revealed by the Native Text Embedded in Of Plymouth Plantation. University Press of Florida, Gainesville.Google Scholar
Douglas, Mary and Isherwood, Baron. 1979. The World of Goods. Basic, New York.Google Scholar
Drayton, Michael. 1610. A Heavenly Haromonie of Spirituall Songes and Holy Himmes of Godly Man, Patriarkes, and Prophets. n.p., London.Google Scholar
Duffy, Christopher. 2006. Fire and Stone: The Science of Fortress Warfare, 1660–1860. Castle, Edison, NJ.Google Scholar
Duffy, James. 1962. Portugal in Africa. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA.Google Scholar
Duffy, Patrick J. 2007. Exploring the History and Heritage of Irish Landscapes. Four Courts, Dublin.Google Scholar
Dunaway, Wilma A. 2012. The centrality of the household to the modern world-system. In Routledge Handbook of World-System Analysis, Babones, Salvatore J. and Chase-Dunn, Christopher, eds., pp. 453461. Routledge, New York.Google Scholar
Duncan, Thomas Bentley. 1972. Atlantic Islands: Madeira, the Azores, and the Cape Verdes in Seventeenth-Century Commerce and Navigation. University of Chicago Press, Chicago.Google Scholar
Dungworth, David and Brain, Colin. 2009. Late 17th-century crystal glass: an analytical investigation. Journal of Glass Studies 51:111137.Google Scholar
Dungworth, David, Cromwell, Tom, Ashurst, Denis, Cumberpatch, Chris, Higgins, David, and Willmott, Huge. 2006. Glass and pottery manufacture at Silkstone, Yorkshire. Post-Medieval Archeaology 40: 160190.Google Scholar
Dunlevy, Mairead. 1988. Ceramics in Ireland. National Museum of Ireland, Dublin.Google Scholar
Durkheim, Emile. 1915. The Elementary Forms of the Religious Life: A Study in Religious Sociology. Joseph Ward Swain, trans. George Allen and Unwin, London.Google Scholar
Durst, Jeffrey J. 2009. Sourcing gunflints to their country of manufacture. Historical Archaeology 43:1829.Google Scholar
Dussell, Enrique. 1993. Eurocentrism and modernity. boundary 2 20:6576.Google Scholar
Edwards, Roy. 1981. The Vauxhall Pottery – 1: history and background to 1977–81 excavations. London Archaeologist 4(5): 130136.Google Scholar
Edwards, Roy. 1982. The Vauxhall Pottery – 2: excavations 1977–81. London Archaeologist 4(6): 148154.Google Scholar
Eggan, Fred. 1954. Social anthropology and the method of controlled comparison. American Anthropologist 56: 743763.Google Scholar
Edwards, Andrew C. 2004. Archaeology of a Seventeenth-Century Houselot at Martin’s Hundred, Virginia. Colonial Williamsburg Foundation, Williamsburg, VA.Google Scholar
Edwards, Rhoda. 1971. Dwight’s answer and the descriptions of London pottery manufacture. Post-Medieval Archaeology 5:171181.Google Scholar
Egloff, Keith T. and Potter, Stephen R.. 1982. Indian ceramics from coastal plain Virginia. Archaeology of Eastern North America 10:95117.Google Scholar
Elden, Stuart. 2004. Understanding Henri Lefebvre: Theory and the Possible. Continuum, London.Google Scholar
Eldred, William. 1646. The Gunner’s Glasse. <www.dimacleod.co.uk/history/glass.htm> Accessed February 2016.+Accessed+February+2016.>Google Scholar
Eliot, John. 1671. Indian Dialogues, for Their Instruction in that Great Service of Christ, in Calling Home Their Country-Men to the Knowledge of God, and of Themselves and of Jesus Christ. n.p., Cambridge.Google Scholar
Eliot, Thomas. 1538. The Dictionary by Syr Thomas Eliot, Knight. n.p.Google Scholar
Elliott, J. H. 2006. Empires of the Atlantic World: Britain and Spain in America, 1492–1830. Yale University Press, New Haven, CT.Google Scholar
Ellis, Peter Berresford. 1990. Hell or Connaught! The Cromwellian Colonisation of Ireland, 1652–1660. Blackstaff, Belfast.Google Scholar
Ellis, Peter Berresford. 1991. A Dictionary of Irish Mythology. Oxford University Press, Oxford.Google Scholar
Ellis, Steven G. 1998. Pale. In The Oxford Companion to Irish History, Connolly, S. J., ed., pp. 424425. Oxford University Press, Oxford.Google Scholar
Elsynge, Henry. 1642. His Maiesties Declaration Concerning Robert Earle of Warwick. J. Smith, London.Google Scholar
Elsynge, Henry. 1648. An Ordinance of the Lords and Commons Assembled in Parliament. Edward Husband, London.Google Scholar
Eltis, David. 1999. Atlantic history in global perspective. Itinerario 23: 141161.Google Scholar
Eltis, David. 2001. The volume and structure of the transatlantic slave trade: a reassessment. William and Mary Quarterly 58:1746.Google Scholar
Eltis, David and Richardson, David. 2010. Atlas of the Transatlantic Slave Trade. Yale University Press, New Haven, CT.Google Scholar
Emerson, Matthew C. 1988. Decorated Clay Tobacco Pipes from the Chesapeake. Doctoral dissertation, University of California, Berkeley.Google Scholar
Emerson, Matthew C. 1994. Decorated clay tobacco pipes from the Chesapeake: an African connection. In Historical Archaeology of the Chesapeake, Shackel, Paul A. and Little, Barbara J., eds., pp. 3549. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Emerson, Matthew C. 1999. African inspirations in a New World art and artifact: decorated tobacco pipes from the Chesapeake. In “I, too, am America”: Archaeological Studies of African-American Life, Singleton, Theresa A., ed., pp. 4782. University Press of Virginia, Charlottesville.Google Scholar
Emery, F. V. 1973. England circa 1600. In A New Historical Geography of England, Darby, H. C., ed., pp. 248301. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Engels, Frederick. 1974 [1877]. Karl Marx. In On Historical Materialism, Borodulina, T., comp., pp. 174178. International, New York.Google Scholar
English College. 1825. The Holy Bible, Translated from the Latin Vulgate. Richard Coyne, Dublin.Google Scholar
Ephraim, Charles William. 2003. The Pathology of Euroccntrism: The Burden and Responsibilities of Being Black. Africa World Press, Trenton, NJ.Google Scholar
Epp, Amber M. and Price, Linda L.. 2010. The storied life of singularized objects: forces of agency and network transformation. Journal of Consumer Research 36:820837.Google Scholar
Equiano, Olaudah. 1789. Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano, or Gustavus Vassa, The African, Written by Himself. The author, London.Google Scholar
Erbery, William. 1658. The Testimony of William Erbery, Left Upon Record for the Saints of Suceeding [sic] Ages. Giles Calvert, London.Google Scholar
, E. S. 1615. Britaines Busse, Or A Computation as Well of the Charge of a Busse or Herring-Fishing Ship. William Jaggard, London.Google Scholar
, E. S. 1630. Englands Royall Fishing Revived, Or A Computation as Well of the Charge of a Busse or Herring-Fishing Ship. Nicholas Bourne, London.Google Scholar
Evans, Amanda M. 2007. Defining Jamaica sloops: a preliminary model for identifying an abstract concept. Journal of Maritime Archaeology 2:8392.Google Scholar
Evans, Chris. 2012. The plantation hoe: the rise and fall of an Atlantic commodity, 1650–1850. William and Mary Quarterly 69: 71100.Google Scholar
Evans, E. Estyn. 1957. Irish Folk Ways. Routledge and Kegan Paul, London.Google Scholar
Evelyn, John. 1661. Fumifugium: Or, the Inconvenience of the Aer and Smoak of London Dissipated. W. Godbid, London.Google Scholar
Evelyn, John. 1670. Sylva, or, A Discourse of Forest-Trees, and the Propagation of Timber in His Majesties Dominions. Joseph Martyn and James Allestry, London.Google Scholar
Everard, Giles. 1659. Panacea, or, The Universal Medicine Being a Discovery of the Wonderfull Vertues of Tobacco Taken in a Pipe: With Its Operation and Use Both in Physick and Chirurgery. n.p., London.Google Scholar
Everrett, Nigel. 2014. The Woods of Ireland: A History, 700–1800. Four Courts Press, Dublin.Google Scholar
Everitt, Alan. 1967. Farm labourers. In The Agrarian History of England and Wales, Volume IV: 1500–1640, Thirsk, Joan, ed., pp. 396465. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Fairbanks, Charles H. 1977. Backyard archaeology as research strategy. Conference on Historic Site Archaeology Papers 1976 11:133139.Google Scholar
Fairlie, Simon. 2009. A short history of enclosure in Britain. The Land 7. <www.thelandmagazine.org.uk/articles/short-history-enclosure-britain>Google Scholar
Falkner, Alaric. 1985. Archaeology of the cod fishery: Damariscove Island. Historical Archaeology 19(2):5786.Google Scholar
Fanon, Frantz. 1968. The Wretched of the Earth. Constance Farrington, trans., Grove, New York.Google Scholar
Farewell, James. 1689. The Irish Hudibras, or, Fingallian Prince Taken from the Sixth Book of Virgil’s Æneids, and Adapted to the Present Times. Richard Baldwin, London.Google Scholar
Farley, Michael. 1979. Pottery and pottery kilns of the post-medieval period at Brill, Buckinghamshire. Post-Medieval Archaeology 13:127152.Google Scholar
Farrelly, Jean. 2003. Lost and found: one glasshouse. In Lost and Found: Discovering Ireland’s Past, Fenwick, Joe, ed., pp. 265271. Wordwell, Bray.Google Scholar
Farrelly, Jean, O’Brien, Caimin, Paynter, Sarah, Willmott, Hugh, Fenwick, Joe, Gould, Malcolm, Meenan, Rosanne, and McCann, William. 2014. Excavation of an early 17th-century glassmaking site at Glasshouse, Shinrone, Co. Offaly, Ireland. Post-Medieval Archaeology 48:4589.Google Scholar
Fausz, J. Frederick. 1985. Patterns of Anglo-Indian aggression and accommodation along the mid-Atlantic coast, 1584–1634. In Cultures in Contact: The European Impact on Native Cultural Institutions in Eastern North America, AD 1000–1800, Fitzhugh, William W., ed., pp. 225268. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Feehan, John. 1997. Raised bogs. In Atlas of the Irish Rural Landscape, Aalen, F. H. A., Whelan, Kevin, and Stout, Matthew, eds., pp. 108111. Cork University Press, Cork.Google Scholar
Feehan, John. 2003. Farming in Ireland: History, Heritage, and Environment. University College Dublin, Dublin.Google Scholar
Feehan, John and O’Donovan, Grace. 1996. The Bogs of Ireland: An Introduction to the Natural, Cultural, and Industrial Heritage of Irish Peatlands. University College Dublin, Dublin.Google Scholar
Finch, Martha L. 2005. “Fashions of worldly dames”: separatist discourses of dress in early modern London, Amsterdam, and Plymouth Colony. Church History 74:494533.Google Scholar
Fine, Ben. 1978. On the development of capitalist development remarks. New Left Review 109:8895.Google Scholar
Firth, Raymond. 1971. Elements of Social Organization. 3rd ed. Tavistock, London.Google Scholar
Fischell, Rosalind. 1987. Blue and White China: Origins, Western Influences. Little, Brown, Boston.Google Scholar
Fisher, Linford D. 2014. “Dangerous designes”: the 1676 Barbados act to prohibit New England Indian slave importation. William and Mary Quarterly 71:99124.Google Scholar
Fitzmaurice, Andrew. 2003. Humanism and America: An Intellectual History of English Colonisation, 1500–1625. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Fitzmaurice, Andrew. 2004. The ideology of early modern colonization. History Compass 2(NA 064):114.Google Scholar
Fleckno, Richard. 1658. Enigmaticall Characters, All Taken to the Life, from Severall Persons, Humours & Dispositions. n.p.Google Scholar
Fligstein, Neil. 2001. Social skill and the theory of fields. Sociological Theory 19:105125.Google Scholar
Fligstein, Neil and McAdam, Doug. 2011. Toward a general theory of strategic action fields. Sociological Theory 29:126.Google Scholar
Fligstein, Neil and McAdam, Doug. 2012. A Theory of Fields. Oxford University Press, Oxford.Google Scholar
Fligstein, Neil and Vandebroeck, Dieter. 2014. The frenzy of fields: an interview with Neil Fligstein on field-theory and social skill. Irish Journal of Sociology 22:107129.Google Scholar
Flinn, M. W. 1982. The population history of England, 1541–1871. Economic History Review 35: 443457.Google Scholar
Forgeng, Jeffrey. 2007. Daily Life in Stuart England. Greenwood, Westport, CT.Google Scholar
Forster, Josiah. 1651. Copy of a Petition from the Governor and Company of the Sommer Islands, with Annexed Papers, presented to the Right Honorable the Council of State, July the 19th 1651.Edward Husband, London.Google Scholar
Foss, Peter and O’Connell, Catherine. 1997. Bogland: study and utilization. In Nature in Ireland: A Scientific and Cultural History, Foster, John Wilson, ed., pp. 184198. Lilliput, Dublin.Google Scholar
Foster, R. F., ed. 1989. The Oxford Illustrated History of Ireland. Oxford University Press, Oxford.Google Scholar
Fox, Frank L. 2012. The London of 1656: her history and armament. Transactions of the Naval Dockyards Society 8:5775.Google Scholar
Fox, Georgia L. 2015. The Archaeology of Smoking and Tobacco. University Press of Florida, Gainesville.Google Scholar
Fox, William A. and Molto, J. Eldon. 1994. A special child: the Monarch Knoll burial. Midcontinental Journal of Archaeology 19:99136.Google Scholar
Frame, Robin. 1981. Colonial Ireland, 1169–1369. Helicon, Dublin.Google Scholar
Francis, Peter. 2000. Irish Delftware: An Illustrated History. Jonathan Horne, London.Google Scholar
Frank, Andre Gunder. 1998. ReOrient: Global Economy in the Asian Age. University of California Press, Berkeley.Google Scholar
Franklin, Benjamin. 1749. Poor Richard Improved. Richard Saunders, Philadelphia.Google Scholar
Franklin, Maria and McKee, Larry. 2004. African diaspora archaeologies: present insights and expanding discourses. Historical Archaeology 38(1):19.Google Scholar
Frederich, F. H. W. 1967. Baardmannen. Westerheem 16:77113.Google Scholar
Frederich, F. H. W. 1968. Baardmannen (II). Westerheem 17:1523.Google Scholar
French, H. R. 2000. The search for the “middle sort of people” in England, 1600–1800. Historical Journal 43: 277293.Google Scholar
Froome, Joyce. 2010. Wicked Enchantments: A History of the Pendle Witches and Their Magic. Palatine, Lancaster.Google Scholar
Fuchs, Ronald W., II. 2014. A history of Chinese export porcelain in ten objects. In Ceramics in America 2014, Hunter, Robert, ed., pp. 4160. Chipstone Foundation, Milwaukee, WI.Google Scholar
Fuller, Thomas. 1662. The History of the Worthies of England, Who for Parts and Learning Have Been Eminent in the Several Counties. F. G. W. L. and W. G., London.Google Scholar
Furnivall, Frederick J. 1877. Harrison’s Description of England in Shakspere’s Youth Being the Second and Third Books. Shakspere Society, London.Google Scholar
Fury, Cheryl A. 2012a. The Elizabethan maritime community. In The Social History of English Seamen, 1485–1649, Fury, Cheryl A., ed., pp. 117139. Boydell, Woodbridge.Google Scholar
Fury, Cheryl A. 2012b. Health and health care at sea. In The Social History of English Seamen, 1485–1649, Fury, Cheryl A., ed., pp. 193227. Boydell, Woodbridge.Google Scholar
Fussell, G. E. 1976. Agricultural science and experiment in the eighteenth century: an attempt at a definition. Agricultural History Review 24: 4447.Google Scholar
Gabriel, Thomas. 1698. An Historical and Geographical Account of the Province and Country of Pensilvania [sic], and of the West-New-Jersey in America. A. Baldwin, London.Google Scholar
, G. B. 1856. Antiquity of smoking-pipes. Ulster Journal of Archaeology 4:45.Google Scholar
Gage, John, ed. 1999. What meaning had colour in early societies? Cambridge Archaeological Journal 9:109126.Google Scholar
Gailey, Alan. 1970. The typology of the Irish spade. In The Spade in Northern and Atlantic Europe, Gailey, Alan and Fenton, Alexander, ed., pp. 3548. Institute of Irish Studies, Queen’s University, Belfast.Google Scholar
Gailey, Alan. 1984. Rural Houses of the North of Ireland. John Donald, Edinburgh.Google Scholar
Gailey, Alan. 1987. Changes in Irish rural housing, 1600–1900. In Rural Ireland, 1600–1900: Modernisation and Change. O’Flanagan, Patrick, Ferguson, Paul, and Whelan, Kevin, eds., pp. 86103. Cork University Press, Cork.Google Scholar
Gaimster, David, Boland, Peter, Linnane, Steve, and Cartwright, Caroline. 1996. The archaeology of private life: the Dudley Castle condoms. Post-Medieval Archaeology 30: 129142.Google Scholar
Gaimster, David, Hildyard, Robin, Goodall, John A., Rudoe, Judy, Hook, Duncan R., Freestone, Ian C., and Tite, Mike S.. 1997. German Stoneware, 1200–1900: Archaeology and Cultural History. British Museum Press, London.Google Scholar
Gale, Theophilus. 1677. The Court of the Gentiles. J. Macock, London.Google Scholar
Gallardo, José Miguel. 1936. The Spaniards and the English settlement in Charles Town. South Carolina Historical and Genealogical Magazine 37:4964.Google Scholar
Gallivan, Martin D. 1999. The Late Prehistoric James River Village: Household, Community, and Regional Dynamics. Doctoral dissertation, University of Virginia, Charlottesville.Google Scholar
Gallivan, Martin D. 2007. Powhatan’s Werowocomoco: constructing place, polity, and personhood in the Chesapeake, C.E. 1220-C.E.1609. American Anthropologist 109:85100.Google Scholar
Gallivan, Martin D., Harpole, Thane, Brown, David A., Moretti-Langholtz, Danielle, and Turner, E. Randolph III. 2006. The Werowocomoco (44GL32) Research Project: Background and 2003 Archaeological Field Season Results. Department of Anthropology, College of William and Mary, Williamsburg, VA.Google Scholar
Gallivan, Martin, Moretti-Langholtz, Danielle, and Woodward, Buck. 2011. Collaborative archaeology and strategic essentialism: native empowerment in Tidewater Virginia. Historical Archaeology 45(1):1023.Google Scholar
Games, Alison. 1999. Migration and the Origins of the English Atlantic World. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA.Google Scholar
Games, Alison. 2006. Atlantic history: definitions, challenges, and opportunities. American Historical Review 111: 741757.Google Scholar
Games, Alison. 2008. The Web of Empire: English Cosmopolitans in an Age of Expansion, 1560–1660. Oxford University Press, Oxford.Google Scholar
García-Herrera, Ricardo, Gimeno, Luis, Ribera, Pedro, and Hernández, Emiliano. 2005. New records of Atlantic hurricanes from Spanish documentary sources. Journal of Geophysical Research 10(D03109):17.Google Scholar
Gardyner, George. 1651. A Description of the World, Or, America, Islands, and Continent. Robert Leybourn, London.Google Scholar
Garland, Charles and Klein, Herbert S.. 1985. The allotment of space for slaves aboard eighteenth-century British slave ships. William and Mary Quarterly 42:238248.Google Scholar
Garner, Steve. 2004. Racism in the Irish Experience. Pluto, London.Google Scholar
Gatford, Lionel. 1657. Publick Good Without Private Interest, or, A Compendious Remonstrance of the Present Sad State and Condition of the English Colonie in Virginea. Henry Marsh, London.Google Scholar
Gaulton, Barry C. and Casimiro, Tânia Manuel. 2015. Custom-made ceramics, transatlantic business partnerships, and entrepreneurial spirit in early modern Newfoundland: an examination of the SK vessels from Ferryland. International Journal of Historical Archaeology 19:120.Google Scholar
Gaulton, Barry C. and Hawkins, Catherine. 2014. Interim report: archaeology at Ferryland, Newfoundland, 2014. <www.mun.ca/archaeology/people/faculty/bgaulton/Ferryland_Interim_Report_2014.pdf>>Google Scholar
Gay, Edwin F. 1904. The midland revolt and the inquisitions of depopulation of 1607. Transactions of the Royal Historical Society 18: 195244.Google Scholar
Geldard, J. S., McNeil, J., Rhodes, S. J., Wiggett, A., and Williams, J. K.. 2011. Strategic Stone Study: A Building Stone Atlas of Lancashire. English Heritage, London.Google Scholar
General Laws. 1672. The General Laws and Liberties of the Massachusetts Colony: Revised & Re-printed. Samuel Green, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Gentleman, Tobias. 1614. Englands Way to Wealth, and To Employ Ships and Marriners: Or, A Plaine Description What Great Profite it Will Bring Unto the Common-Wealth of England by the Erecting, Building, and Adventuring of Busses to Sea, a Fishing. Nathaniel Butter, London.Google Scholar
George, Andrew, trans. 1999. The Epic of Gilgamesh: The Babylonian Epic Poem and Other Texts in Akkadian and Sumerian. Penguin, London.Google Scholar
George, Henry. 1910. The Crime of Poverty. Joseph Fels Fund of America, Cincinnati, OH.Google Scholar
Gerbi, Antonello. 1973. The Dispute of the New World: A History of a Polemic, 1750–1900. Jeremy Moyle, trans. University of Pittsburgh Press, Pittsburgh.Google Scholar
German, Lindsey and Rees, John. 2012. A People’s History of London. Verso, London.Google Scholar
Gernon, Luke. 1904 [1620]. A discourse of Ireland, anno 1620. In Illustrations of Irish History and Topography, Mainly of the Seventeenth Century, Falkiner, C. Litton, ed., pp. 348362. Longmans, Green, London.Google Scholar
Gerritsen, Anne and Riello, Giorgio, eds. 2015. Writing Material Culture History, Bloomsbury, London.Google Scholar
Gerritsen, Anne and Riello, Giorgio, eds. 2016. The Global Lives of Things: The Material Culture of Connections in the Early Modern World. Routledge, Oxford.Google Scholar
Gibb, James G. 1996. The Archaeology of Wealth: Consumer Behavior in English America. Plenum, New York.Google Scholar
Gibson, Susan G., ed. 1980. Burr’s Hill: A 17th Century Wampanoag Burial Ground in Warren, Rhode Island. Haffenreffer Museum of Anthropology, Brown University, Providence, RI.Google Scholar
Giddens, Anthony. 1991. Modernity and Self-Identity: Self and Society in the Late Modern Age. Stanford University Press, Stanford, CA.Google Scholar
Gifford, George. 1587. A Discourse of the Subtill Practises of Devilles by Witches and Sorcerers. Toby Cooke, London.Google Scholar
Gilman, Daniel and Noyes, Andrea, eds. 2013. Humanitarianism in the Network Age. United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, New York.Google Scholar
Glanvil, Joseph. 1681. Saducismus Triumplatus: Or, Full and Plain Evidence Concerning Witches and Apparitions. J. Collins and S. Lownds, London.Google Scholar
Glassie, Henry 1975. Folk Housing in Middle Virginia. University of Tennessee Press, Knoxville.Google Scholar
Glauber, Johann Rudolf. 1651. A Description of New Philosophical Furnaces, or, A New Art of Distilling Divided into Five Parts. J. F. D. M., trans. Richard Coats, London.Google Scholar
Glover, Lorri and Smith, Daniel Blake. 2008. The Shipwreck that Saved Jamestown: The Sea Venture Castaways and the Fate of America. Henry Holt, New York.Google Scholar
Goddard, Ives. 1978. Eastern Algonquian languages. In Handbook of North American Indians: Northeast, Trigger, Bruce G., ed., pp. 7077. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Godelier, Maurice. 1988. The Mental and the Material: Thought, Economy, and Society. Martin Thom, trans. Verso, London.Google Scholar
Goldberg, David Theodore. 1993. Racist Culture: Philosophy and the Politics of Meaning. Blackwell, Oxford.Google Scholar
Goldstone, Jack A. and Useem, Bert. 2012. Putting values and institutions back into the theory of strategic action fields. Sociological Theory 30:3747.Google Scholar
Gonner, E. C. K. 1912. Common Land and Inclosure. Macmillan, London.Google Scholar
Goodby, Robert George. 1994. Style, Meaning, and History: A Contextual Study of 17th-Century Native American Ceramics from Southeastern New England. Doctoral dissertation, Brown University, Providence, RI.Google Scholar
Goodwin, Lorinda B. R. 1999. An Archaeology of Manners: The Polite World of the Merchant Elite of Colonial Massachusetts. Kluwer Academic/Plenum, New York.Google Scholar
Goody, Jack. 2006. The Theft of History. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Gordon, Thomas. 1784. Principles of Naval Architecture with Proposals for Improving the Form of Ships. T. Evans, London.Google Scholar
Gosden, Chris. 2004. Archaeology and Colonialism: Cultural Contact from 5000 BC to the Present. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Graeber, David. 2006. Turning modes of production inside out, or, why capitalism is a transformation of slavery. Critique of Anthropology 26:6185.Google Scholar
Grant, Alison. 1983. North Devon Pottery: The Seventeenth Century. University of Exeter, Exeter.Google Scholar
Graves, C. Pamela. 2009. Building a New Jerusalem: the meaning of a group of merchant houses in seventeenth-century Newcastle upon Tyne, England. International Journal of Historical Archaeology 13:385408.Google Scholar
Gray, Robert. 1609. A Good Speed to Virginia. Felix Kyngston, London.Google Scholar
Gray, Stanley and Wyckoff, V. J.. 1940. The international tobacco trade in the seventeenth century. Southern Economic Journal 7:126.Google Scholar
Grayling, A. C. 2016. The Age of Genius: The Seventeenth Century and the Birth of the Modern Mind. Bloomsbury, London.Google Scholar
Griffin, M. T. and Atkins, E. M., eds. 1991. Cicero: On Duties. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Griffith, Owen. 1681. Abraham’s Prospect Being a Sermon Preached at the Funeral of Mr. John Williams, Late Vicar of Devinnocke. H. Brome, London.Google Scholar
Grizzard, Jr., Frank E. and Smith, D. Boyd. 2007. Jamestown Colony: A Political, Social, and Cultural History. ABC Clio, Santa Barbara, CA.Google Scholar
Guasco, Michael. 2014. Slaves and Englishmen: Human Bondage in the Early Modern Atlantic World. University of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia.Google Scholar
Guillet de Saint-Georges, Georges. 1705. The Gentleman’s Dictionary. n.p., London.Google Scholar
Gundaker, Gray. 2000. Discussion: creolization, complexity, and time. Historical Archaeology 34(3):124133.Google Scholar
Gurney, John. 2013. Gerrard Winstanley: The Digger’s Life and Legacy. Pluto, London.Google Scholar
Guzmán, Francisco and Paswan, Audhesh K.. 2009. Cultural brands from emerging markets: brand image across host and home countries. Journal of International Marketing 17:7186.Google Scholar
Gwynn, Aubrey. 19321934. An Irish settlement on the Amazon (1612–1629). Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy, Section C 41:154.Google Scholar
Haile, Edward Wright, ed. 1998. Jamestown Narratives, Eyewitness Accounts of the Virginia Colony, The First Decade: 1607–1617. RoundHouse, Champlain, VA.Google Scholar
Hair, P. E. H., Jones, Adam, and Law, Robin, eds., Barbot on Guinea: The Writings of Jean Barbot on West Africa, 1678–1712. Hakluyt Society, London.Google Scholar
Hakewill, George. 1627. An Apologie of the Power and Providence of God in the Government of the World. John Litchfield and William Turner, Oxford.Google Scholar
Hakewill, George. 1635. An Apologie of the Power and Providence of God in the Government of the World. 3rd ed., Robert Allott, London.Google Scholar
Hakluyt, Richard. 1582. Divers Voyages Touching the Discoverie of America, and the Lands Adjacent unto the Same, Made First of All by Our Englishmen, and Afterward by the Frenchmen and Britons. Thomas Woodcocke, London.Google Scholar
Hakluyt, Richard. 1599. The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation Made by Sea and Over-Land to the Remote and Farthest Distant Quarters of the Earth, at any Time Within the Compasse of These 1600 Yeres. George Bishop, Ralph Newberie, and Robert Barker, London.Google Scholar
Hall, Edward T. 1969. The Hidden Dimension. Doubleday, Garden City, New York.Google Scholar
Hall, Joseph. 1625. The Works of Joseph Hall, Doctor of Divinity and Deane of Worchester. Nathaniel Butter, London.Google Scholar
Hamor, Ralph. 1615. A True Discourse of the Present Estate of Virginia, and the Successe of the Affaires There Till the 18 of June 1614. John Beale, London.Google Scholar
Handler, Jerome S. 2009. The Middle Passage and the material culture of captive Africans. Slavery and Abolition 30:126.Google Scholar
Handler, Jerome S. 2016. Custom and law: the status of enslaved Africans in seventeenth-century Barbados. Slavery and Abolition 37:233255.Google Scholar
Hanke, Lewis. 1974. All Mankind Is One: A Study of the Disputation Between Bartolomé de Las Casas and Juan Ginés de Sepúlveda in 1550 on the Intellectual and Religious Capacity of the American Indians. Northern Illinois University Press, DeKalb.Google Scholar
Hannam, Kevin, Sheller, Mimi, and Urry, John. 2006. Editorial: mobilities, immobilities, and moorings. Mobilities 1:122.Google Scholar
Hantman, Jeffrey L. 1992. Caliban’s own voice: American Indian views of the other in colonial Virginia. New Literary History 23:6981.Google Scholar
Harbison, Peter. 1988. Pre-Christian Ireland: From the First Settlers to the Early Celts. Thames and Hudson, London.Google Scholar
Hariot, Thomas. 1590. A Briefe and True Report of the New Found Land of Virginia, of the Commodities and of the Nature and Manners of the Naturall Inhabitants. Johann Wechell, London.Google Scholar
Harrington, Peter. 1992. Archaeology of the English Civil War. Shire, Princes Risborough.Google Scholar
Harrington, Peter. 2003. English Civil War Fortifications, 1642–51. Osprey, Oxford.Google Scholar
Harris, Edward Cecil. 1980. Archaeological investigations at Sandgate Castle, Kent, 1976–9. Post-Medieval Archaeology 14:5388.Google Scholar
Harris, Edward Cecil. 1997. Bermuda Forts, 1612–1957. Bermuda Maritime Museum Press, Old Royal Navy Dockyard.Google Scholar
Harris, Edward Cecil. 2010. Bermuda’s first forts, 1612–1622. In First Forts: Essays on the Archaeology of Proto-Colonial Fortifications, Klingelhofer, Eric, ed., pp. 105125. Brill, Leiden.Google Scholar
Harris, John. 2009. Sarzana and Sarzanello: transitional design and Renaissance designers. Fort 37: 5078.Google Scholar
Harris, Richard. 1989. The grammar of carpentry. Vernacular Architecture 20: 18.Google Scholar
Harris, Tim. 2005. Restoration: Charles II and His Kingdoms, 1660–1685. Penguin, London.Google Scholar
Harrison, William. 1994 [1577]. The Description of England. Dover, Mineola, New York.Google Scholar
Hart, Jonathan. 2008. Empires and Colonies. Polity, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Hart, John P. and Engelbrecht, William. 2012. Northern Iroquoian ethnic evolution: a social network analysis. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 19:322349.Google Scholar
Hartlib, Samuel. 1655. Samuel Hartlib: His Legacy of Husbandry. J. M., London.Google Scholar
Hartnett, Alexandra. 2004. The politics of the pipe: clay pipes and tobacco consumption in Galway, Ireland. International Journal of Historical Archaeology 8:133147.Google Scholar
Harvey, Gideon. 1675. The Disease of London, or, A New Discovery of the Scorvey Comprising the Nature, Manifold Differences, Various Causes, Signs, Prognostics, Chronology, and Several Methods of Curing the Said Diseases by Remedies, Galenical and Chymical. T. James, London.Google Scholar
Harvey, David. 2010. A Companion to Marx’s Capital. Verso, London.Google Scholar
Harvey, David. 2014. Seventeen Contradictions and the End of Capitalism. Profile, London.Google Scholar
Haslam, Jeremy. 1975. The excavation of a 17th-century pottery site at Cove, E. Hampshire. Post-Medieval Archaeology 9: 164187.Google Scholar
Hausted, Peter. 1636. Ten Sermons Preached Upon Severall Sundayes and Saints Dayes. John Clark, London.Google Scholar
Hawley, Amos H. 1944. Ecology and human ecology. Social Forces 22:398405.Google Scholar
Hawley, Amos H. 1950. Human Ecology: A Theory of Community Structure. Ronald, New York.Google Scholar
Hayes, Katherine H. and Cipolla, Craig N.. 2015. Introduction: re-imagining colonial pasts, influencing colonial futures. In Rethinking Colonialism: Comparative Archaeological Approaches, Cipolla, Craig N. and Hayes, Katherine Howlett, eds., pp. 113. University Press of Florida, Gainesville.Google Scholar
Haynes, Alan. 2010. The Gunpowder Plot. History Press, Stroud.Google Scholar
Hechter, Michael. 1975. Internal Colonialism: The Celtic Fringe in British National Development, 1536–1966. University of California Press, Berkeley.Google Scholar
Heck, Dana B. and Balicki, Joseph F.. 1998. Katherine Naylor’s “house of office”: a seventeenth-century privy. Historical Archaeology 32(3):2437.Google Scholar
Henderson, Lawrence W. 1979. Angola: Five Centuries of Conflict. Cornell University Press, Ithaca, NY.Google Scholar
Hening, William Waller. 1823. The Statutes at Large: Being a Collection of All Laws of Virginia, from the First Session of the Legislature, in the Year 1619. 13 vols, R., W., and G. Bartow, New York.Google Scholar
Henry, Susan L. 1979. Terra-cotta tobacco pipes in 17th-century Maryland and Virginia: a preliminary study. Historical Archaeology 13:1437.Google Scholar
Henry, W. W. 1894. The first legislative assembly in America: sitting at Jamestown, Virginia, 1619. Virginia Magazine of History and Biography 2:5567.Google Scholar
Herbert, Joseph M. 2008. The history and practice of shell tempering in the Middle Atlantic: a useful balance. Southeastern Archaeology 27:265285.Google Scholar
Herzog, Don. 1998. Poisoning the Minds of the Lower Orders. Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ.Google Scholar
Hewett, C. A. 1973. The development of the post-medieval house. Post-Medieval Archaeology 7: 6078.Google Scholar
Hexter, J. H. 1941. The Reign of King Pym. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA.Google Scholar
Heywood, Linda M. and Thornton, John K.. 2007. Central Africans, Atlantic Creoles, and the Foundation of the Americas, 1585–1660. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Heywood, Linda M. and Thornton, John K.. 2011. “Canniball Negroes,” Atlantic Creoles, and the identities of New England’s charter generation. African Diaspora 4:7694.Google Scholar
Heywood, Thomas. 1631. England’s Elizabeth, Her Life and Troubles During Her Minoritie, from the Cradle to the Crowne. John Beale, London.Google Scholar
Heywood, Thomas. 1637. A True Description of His Majesties Royall Ship, Built this Year 1637 at Wooll-witch in Kent. John Okes, London.Google Scholar
Hill, Christopher. 1986. Puritanism and Revolution: Studies in Interpretation of the English Revolution of the 17th Century. Penguin, Harmondsworth.Google Scholar
Hill, Christopher. 1991. The World Turned Upside Down: Radical Ideas During the English Revolution. Penguin, London.Google Scholar
Hill, George. 1877. An Historical Account of the Plantation in Ulster at the Commencement of the Seventeenth Century, 1608–1620. M’Caw, Stevenson, and Orr, Belfast.Google Scholar
Hillier, Bill and Hanson, Julienne. 1984. The Social Logic of Space. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Hilton, Rodney, ed. 1976. The Transition from Feudalism to Capitalism. New Left, London.Google Scholar
Hindle, Steve. 2008. Imagining insurrection in seventeenth-century England: representations of the Midland Rising of 1607. History Workshop Journal 66: 2161.Google Scholar
Hine, Thomas. 2002. I Want That! How We All Became Shoppers. HarperCollins, New York.Google Scholar
His Majesties Officers. 1618. By His Majesties Officers for Licencing of Pedlers and Petty-Chapmen. n.p., London.Google Scholar
Hodder, Ian. 2012. Entangled: An Archaeology of the Relationships Between Humans and Things. John Wiley, Malden, MA.Google Scholar
Hodgen, Margaret T. 1971. Early Anthropology in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries. University of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia.Google Scholar
Hodges, Charles T. 1993. Private fortifications in 17th-century Virginia: a study of six representative works. In The Archaeology of 17th-Century Virginia, Reinhart, Theodore R. and Pogue, Dennis J., eds., pp. 183221. Dietz Press, Richmond, VA.Google Scholar
Hodges, Richard. 1998. The not-so-Dark Ages. Archaeology 51(5):6163, 65.Google Scholar
Hodges, Richard. 2012. Dark Age Economics: A New Audit. Bloomsbury, London.Google Scholar
Hoffman, Philip T. 2011. Prices, the military revolution, and Western Europe’s comparative advantage in violence. Economic History Review 64:3959.Google Scholar
Hofman, Corinne L. and Hoogland, Menno L. P.. 2012. Caribbean encounters: rescue excavations at the early colonial Island Carib site of Argyle, St. Vincent. Analecta Praehistorica Leidensia 4344:6376.Google Scholar
Hoggard, Brian. 2004. The archaeology of counter-witchcraft and popular magic. In Beyond the Witch Trials: Witchcraft and Magic in Enlightenment Europe, Hutton, Ronald, ed., pp. 167186. Manchester University Press, Manchester.Google Scholar
Hoggard, Brian. 2016. Witch bottles: their contents, contexts, and uses. In Physical Evidence for Ritual Acts, Sorcery, and Witchcraft in Christian Britain, Hutton, Ronald, ed., pp. 91105. Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke.Google Scholar
Holinshed, Raphaell. 1577. The Firste [Laste] Volume of the Chronicles of England, Scotlande, and Irelande Conteyning the Description and Chronicles of England, from the First Inhabiting unto the Conquest. John Hunne, London.Google Scholar
Hollis Hallett, Clara F. E. 2007. Butler’s History of the Bermudas: A Contemporary Account of Bermuda’s Earliest Government. Bermuda Maritime Museum Press, Old Royal Navy Dockyard, Bermuda.Google Scholar
Holme, Randle. 1688. The Academy of Armory, or a Storehouse of Armory and Blazon. Book III. n.p., Chester.Google Scholar
Holmes, M. R. 1951. The so-called “Bellarmine” mask on imported Rhenish stoneware. Antiquaries Journal 31:172179.Google Scholar
Holy Bible: Quatercentenary Edition, An Exact Reprint in Roman Type Page for Page, Line for Line, and Letter for Letter of the King James Version, Otherwise Known as the Authorized Version Published in the Year 1611. 2010. Oxford University Press, Oxford.Google Scholar
Hook, Moira and MacGregor, Arthur. 2003. England Under the Stuarts. Ashmolean Museum, Oxford.Google Scholar
Hope, Ronald. 1990. A New History of British Shipping. John Murray, London.Google Scholar
Hopkins, Terence K. and Wallerstein, Immanuel. 1977. Patterns of development of the modern world-system. Review 1:111145.Google Scholar
Hopkins, Terence K. and Wallerstein, Immanuel. 1986. Commodity chains in the world-economy prior to 1800. Review 10:157170.Google Scholar
Horning, Audrey. 2001. “Dwelling houses in the old Irish barbarous manner”: archaeological evidence for Gaelic architecture in an Ulster Plantation village. In Gaelic Ireland, c. 1250–c. 1650: Land, Lordship, and Settlement, Duffy, Patrick J., Edwards, David, and FitzPatrick, Elizabeth, eds., pp. 375396. Four Courts, Dublin.Google Scholar
Horning, Audrey. 2013. Ireland in the Virginia Sea: Colonialism in the British Atlantic. University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill.Google Scholar
Hoskins, W. G. 1953. The rebuilding of rural England, 1570–1640. Past and Present 4: 4459.Google Scholar
Hosmer, James Kendall, ed. 1908. Winthrop’s Journal, “History of New England”: 1630–1649. Charles Scribner’s Sons, New York.Google Scholar
Hothem, Lar. 1978. Early Amerind wood dugout discoveries in North America. Central States Archaeological Journal 25:130132.Google Scholar
Houghton, John. 1728 [1683]. Husbandry and Trade Improv’d, Vol. 4. Woodman and Lyon, London.Google Scholar
House of Commons. 1697. Petition of the Royal African Company. Journal 11:663.Google Scholar
Howes, Edmund. 1631. Annals, or Generall Chronicle of England. Richard Meighen, London.Google Scholar
Hudson, J. Paul. 1957. Daily life at Jamestown 300 years ago as revealed by recovered objects. In New Discoveries at Jamestown: Site of the First Successful English Settlement in America, (no ed.), pp. 1697. National Park Service, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Hudson, Ray. 2005. Economic Geographies. Sage, London.Google Scholar
Huey, Paul R. 1987 . Archaeological evidence of Dutch wooden cellars and perishable wooden structures at seventeenth and eighteenth century sites in the Upper Hudson Valley. In New World Dutch Studies: Dutch Arts and Culture in Colonial America, 1609–1776. Blackburn, Roderic H. and Kelley, Nancy A., eds., pp. 1335. Albany Institute of History and Art, Albany, NY.Google Scholar
Hughes, George Bernard. 1956. English, Scottish, and Irish Table Glass: From the Sixteenth Century to 1820. Bramhall House, New York.Google Scholar
Hughes, William. 1665. The Compleat Vineyard, Or, A Most Excellent Way for the Planting of Vines not Onely According to the German and French Way, But also Long Experimented in England. G. M., London.Google Scholar
Hull, Kathleen L., Douglass, John G., and York, Andrew L.. 2013. Recognizing ritual action and intent in communal mourning features on the southern California coast. American Antiquity 78:2447.Google Scholar
Hunwick, John O. 2003. Songhay: an interpretive introduction. In Timbuktu and the Songhay Empire: Al-Sa’dīs Ta’rīkh al-sūdān Down to 1613 and Other Contemporary Documents. Hunwick, John O., ed., pp. xxiilxv. Koninklijke Brill, Leiden.Google Scholar
Hurst, John G., Neal, David S., van Beuningen, H. J. E., and Clark, Ann. 1986. Pottery Produced and Traded in North-West Europe, 1350–1650. Museum Boymans-van Beuningen, Rotterdam.Google Scholar
Husband, Timothy. 1980. The Wild Man: Medieval Myth and Symbolism. Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.Google Scholar
Khaldûn, Ibn. 1967 [ca. 1379]. The Muqaddimah: An Introduction to History. Franz Rosenthal, trans., Dawood, N. J., ed., Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ.Google Scholar
Innis, Harold A. 1962. The Fur Trade in Canada: An Introduction to Canadian Economic History. Rev. ed. Yale University Press, New Haven, CT.Google Scholar
Irving, Sarah. 2006. “In a pure soil”: colonial anxieties in the work of Francis Bacon. History of European Ideas 32:249262.Google Scholar
Isenberg, Nancy. 2016. White Trash: The 400-Year Untold History of Class in America. Viking, New York.Google Scholar
Ives, Vernon A., ed. 1984. The Rich Papers: Letters from Bermuda, 1615–1646. University of Toronto Press, Toronto.Google Scholar
Jackson, Reg and Jackson, Philomena. 1985. Miles Casey: the earliest Bristol pipemaker? Society for Clay Pipe Research Newsletter 5:28.Google Scholar
Jackson, Reg, Buchill, Rod, Dungworth, David, and Mortimer, Catherine. 2005. Excavations on the site of Sir Abraham Elton’s glassworks, Cheese Lane, Bristol. Post-Medieval Archaeology 39: 92132.Google Scholar
Jackson, Peter and Thrift, Nigel. 1995. Geographies of consumption. In Acknowledging Consumption: A Review of New Studies, Miller, Daniel, ed., pp. 204237. Routledge, London.Google Scholar
Jacobson, Matthew Frye. 1998. Whiteness of a Different Color: European Immigrants and the Alchemy of Race. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA.Google Scholar
Jacomb, Thomas. 1668. Hooinh Egzainiomnh, Or, A Treatise of Holy Dedication, Both Personal and Domestick. Ralph Smith and Samuel Gellibrand, London.Google Scholar
James, I. 1604. A counterblaste to tobacco. R. B., London.Google Scholar
James, I. 1605. By the King: A Proclamation for Buildings, in and about London. Robert Barker, London.Google Scholar
James, I. 1607. Triplici nodo, Triplex Cuneus, Or An Apologie for the Oath of Allegiance, Against the Two Breves of Pope Paulus Quintus, and the Late Letter of Cardinal Bellarmine to G. Blackwell the Arch-Priest. Robert Barker, London.Google Scholar
James, I. 1608. By the King: A Proclamation for Buildings. Deputies of Robert Barker, London.Google Scholar
James, I. 1609. An Apologie for the Oath of Allegiance, First Set Forth Without a Name. Robert Barker, London.Google Scholar
James, I. 1611. By the King: A Proclamation for Buildings. Robert Barker, London.Google Scholar
James, I. 1615. By the King: A Proclamation Touching Glasses. Robert Barker, London.Google Scholar
James, I. 1616. A Remonstrance of the Most Gratious King James I of Great Brittane, France, and Ireland, Defender of the Faith, &c. For the Right of Kings, and the Independencie of their Crownes. Cantrell Legge, Cambridge.Google Scholar
James, I. 1618. By the King: A Proclamation Inhibiting All Persons after Bartholomew-tyde Next to Use the Tade of a Pedler or Pettie-Chapman, Unless they be Licenced According to a Course Lately Taken by Us in the Behalfe. Bonham Norton and John Bill, London.Google Scholar
James, I. 1619. An Abstract of Some Branches of His Maiesties Late Charter Granted to the Tobacco-Pipe Makers of Westminster; Declaring His Maiesties Pleasure Touching that Manufacture, and Also All Persons Whom it May Concerne. n.p., London.Google Scholar
James, I. 1620. By the King: A Proclamation Commanding Conformity to his Maiesties Pleasure, Expressed in his Late Charter to the Tobacco-Pipe-Makers. Robert Barker and John Bill, London.Google Scholar
James, I. 1622. By the King: A Proclamation for the Due Making and Sizing of Bricke. Bonham Norton and John Bill, London.Google Scholar
James, I. 1624. By the King: A Proclamation for Better Furnishing the Navy, and Shipping of the Realme, with Able and Skilfull [sic] Mariners. Bonham Norton and John Bill, London.Google Scholar
James, II. 1686. A Proclamation Inhibiting All Persons After the Four and Twentieth Day of June Next to Use the Trade of Pedlar or Petty Chapman, Unless They be Licensed According to the Course Lately Taken to Us in that Behalf James R. n.p., London.Google Scholar
James, Thomas, trans. 1598. A Commentary Upon the Canticle of Canticles, written First in Italian by Antonio Brucioli. R. F., London.Google Scholar
Janeway, James. 1671. Heaven on Earth: Or, The Best Friend in the Worst of Times. T. Milbourn, London.Google Scholar
Jankovič, Vladimir. 2000. Reading the Skies: A Cultural History of English Weather. University of Chicago Press, Chicago.Google Scholar
Jarvis, Michael J. 1995. “The fastest vessels in the world”: the origins and evolution of the Bermuda sloop, 1620–1800. Bermuda Journal of Archaeology and Maritime History 7:3150.Google Scholar
Jarvis, Michael J. 2002. Maritime masters and seafaring slaves in Bermuda, 1680–1783. William and Mary Quarterly 59:585622.Google Scholar
Jarvis, Michael J. 2010. In the Eye of All Trade: Bermuda, Bermudians, and the Maritime Atlantic World, 1680–1783. University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill.Google Scholar
, J. B. 1653. Anthropometamorphosis: Man Transform’d, Or, The Artificial Changling Historically Presented in the Mad and Cruell Gallantry, Foolish Bravery, Ridiculous Beauty, Filthy Finenesse, and Loathsome Loveliness of Most Nations, Fashioning and Altering Their Bodies from the Mould Intended by Nature. William Hunt, London.Google Scholar
Jeffries, Nigel, Featherby, Rupert, Wroe-Brown, Robin, Betts, Ian, Harrington, Sue, and Richardson, Beth. 2014. “Would I were in an alehouse in London!”: a finds assemblage sealed by the Great Fire from Rood Lane, City of London. Post-Medieval Archaeology 48: 261284.Google Scholar
Jelks, Edward B. 1958. Ceramics from Jamestown. In Archaeological Excavations at Jamestown, Colonial National Historical Park and Jamestown National Historic Site, Virginia, by Cotter, John L., pp. 201212. National Park Service, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Jennings, Francis. 1976. The Invasion of America: Indians, Colonialism, and the Cant of Conquest. W. W. Norton, New York.Google Scholar
Jevons, W. Stanley. 1865. The Coal Question: An Inquiry Concerning the Progress of the Nation, and the Probable Exhaustion of our Coal-Mines. Macmillan, London.Google Scholar
, J. H. 1647. A Modell of a Christian Society. Roger Daniel, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Johnson, Mary. 1983. What’s in a butter churn or a sadiron? some thoughts on using artifacts in social history. Public Historian 5(1): 6081.Google Scholar
Johnson, Matthew H. 1993. Housing Culture: Traditional Architecture in an English Landscape. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Johnson, Matthew H. 1996. An Archaeology of Capitalism. Blackwell, Oxford.Google Scholar
Johnson, Matthew H. 2005. On the particularism of English landscape archaeology. International Journal of Historical Archaeology 9: 111122.Google Scholar
Johnson, Matthew H. 2007. Ideas of Landscape. Blackwell, Malden, MA.Google Scholar
Johnson, Robert. 1609. Nova Britiannia: Offering Most Excellent Fruites by Planting in Virginia. Samuel Macham, London.Google Scholar
Jones, Andrew and MacGregor, Gavin, eds. 2002. Colouring the Past: The Significance of Colour in Archaeological Research. Berg, Oxford.Google Scholar
Jones, Evan. 2006. The Matthew of Bristol and the financiers of John Cabot’s 1497 voyage to North America. English Historical Review 121:778795.Google Scholar
Jones, S. R. H. 1991. Devaluation and the balance of payments in eleventh-century England: an exercise in dark age economics. Economic History Review 44:594607.Google Scholar
Jonson, Ben. 1631a. Bartholmew Fayre: A Comedie Acted in the Yeare 1614. Robert Allot, London.Google Scholar
Jonson, Ben. 1631b. The New Inne, Or, The Light Heart, A Comedy. Thomas Harper, London.Google Scholar
Jordan, Thomas. 1663. Tricks of Youth, or, The Walks of Islington and Hogsdon, With the Humours of Woodstreet-Compter. n.p., London.Google Scholar
Jörg, C. J. A. 1982. Porcelain and the Dutch China Trade. Martinus Nijhoff, The Hague.Google Scholar
Jörg, C. J. A. 1986. The Geldermalsen: History and Porcelain. Kemper, Groningen.Google Scholar
Joye, George. 1534. Jeremy the Prophet. n.p.Google Scholar
, J. R. 1809 [1615]. The trade’s increase. In The Harleian Miscellany: A Collection of Scarce, Curious, and Entertaining Pamphlets and Tracts, as Well in Manuscript as in Print, Volume IV. Park, Thomas, ed., pp. 212231. White, Murray, and Harding, London.Google Scholar
Kanth, Rajani Kannepalli. 2005. Against Eurocentrism: A Transcendent Critique of Modernist Science, Society, and Morals. Palgrave Macmillan, New York.Google Scholar
Kauffman, Stuart. 1995. At Home in the Universe: The Search for Laws of Self-Organization and Complexity. Oxford University Press, Oxford.Google Scholar
Kea, Ray A. 1982. Settlements, Trade, and Polities in the Seventeenth-Century Gold Coast. Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, MD.Google Scholar
Keeley, Lawrence H. and Cahen, Daniel. 1989. Early Neolithic forts and villages in NE Belgium: a preliminary report. Journal of Field Archaeology 16: 157176.Google Scholar
Keeley, Lawrence H., Fontana, Marisa, and Quick, Russell. 2007. Baffles and bastions: the universal features of fortifications. Journal of Archaeological Research 15:5595.Google Scholar
Keene, Edward 2002. Beyond the Anarchical Society: Grotius, Colonialism, and Order in World Politics. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Keener, Craig S. 1999. An ethnohistorical analysis of Iroquois assault tactics used against fortified settlements of the Northeast in the seventeenth century. Ethnohistory 46:777807.Google Scholar
Keith, George. 1691. The Presbyterian and Independent Visible Churches in New-England and Else-Where Brought to the Test and Examined According to the Doctrin [sic] of Holy Scriptures. Thomas Northcott, London.Google Scholar
Kelly, John M. 2011. Flint at the Fort: Investigating Raw Material Scarcity and Locations of Lithic Activity at Monhantic Fort. Master’s thesis, University of Massachusetts, Boston, Boston.Google Scholar
Kelly, Kenneth G. 1997. The archaeology of African-European interaction: investigating the social roles of trade, traders, and the use of space in the seventeenth- and eighteenth-century Hueda Kingdom, Republic of Bénin. World Archaeology 28:351369.Google Scholar
Kelly, Kenneth G. 2001. Change and continuity in coastal Bénin. In West Africa During the Atlantic Slave Trade: Archaeological Perspectives, DeCorse, Christopher R., ed., pp. 81100. Leicester University Press, London.Google Scholar
Kelly, Kenneth G. 2002. Indigenous responses to colonial encounters on the West African coast: Hueda and Dahomey from the seventeenth through nineteenth century. In The Archaeology of Colonialism, Lyons, Claire L. and Papadopoulos, John K., eds., pp. 96120. Getty Research Institute, Los Angeles.Google Scholar
Kelly, William, ed. 2003. Docwra’s Derry: A Narrative of Events in North-West Ulster, 1600–1604. Ulster Historical Foundation, Belfast.Google Scholar
Kelsall, A. F. 1974. The London house plan in the later 17th century. Post-Medieval Archaeology 8: 8091.Google Scholar
Kelso, William M. 1984. Kingsmill Plantations, 1619–1800: Archaeology of Country Life in Colonial Virginia. Academic, Orlando.Google Scholar
Kelso, William M. 2006. Jamestown: The Buried Truth. University of Virginia Press, Charlottesville.Google Scholar
Kelso, William M. and Chappell, Edward A.. 1974. Excavation of a seventeenth-century pottery kiln at Glebe Harbor, Westmoreland County, Virginia. Historical Archaeology 8:5363.Google Scholar
Kennedy, Geoff. 2008. Diggers, Levellers, and Agrarian Capitalism: Radical Political Thought in Seventeenth-Century England. Rowman and Littlefield, Lanham, MD.Google Scholar
Kent, Barry C. 1983. More on gunflints. Historical Archaeology 17(2):2740.Google Scholar
Kenyon, John R. 2003. Kidwelly Castle, Carmarthenshire: the reinterpretation of a monument. In The Medieval Castle in Ireland and Wales: Essays in Honor of Jeremy Knight, Kenyon, John R. and O’Conor, Kieran, eds., pp. 176193. Four Courts Press, Dublin.Google Scholar
Kerridge, Eric. 1955. The returns of the Inquisitions of Depopulation. English Historical Review 70: 212228.Google Scholar
Kerrigan, Paul M. 1995. Castles and Fortifications in Ireland, 1485–1945. Collins, Cork.Google Scholar
Kerr-Richie, Jeffrey R. 2013. Slave revolt across borders. Journal of African Diaspora Archaeology and Heritage 2: 6592.Google Scholar
Killigrew, Thomas. 1664. Comedies and Tragedies Written by Thomas Killigrew. Henry Herringman, London.Google Scholar
Killock, Douglas, Meddens, Frank, Armitage, Philip, Egan, Geoff, Gaimster, David, Jarrett, Chris, Keys, Lynne, Phillpotts, Chris, Sabel, Ken, Tyson, Rachel, and Willmott, Hugh. 2005. Pottery as plunder: a 17th-century maritime site in Limehouse, London. Post-Medieval Archaeology 39: 191.Google Scholar
Kinietz, W. Vernon. 1965. The Indians of the Western Great Lakes, 1615–1760. University of Michigan Press, Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
King, Julia A. 1996. The Patuxent Point site. In Living and Dying on the 17th-Century Patuxent Frontier, King, Julia A. and Ubelaker, Douglas H., eds., pp. 1546. Maryland Historical Trust Press, Crownsville.Google Scholar
Kirtley, Bacil F. 1964. Unknown hominids and New World legends. Western Folklore 23:7790.Google Scholar
Kittredge, George Lyman. 1956. Witchcraft in Old and New England. Russell and Russell, New York.Google Scholar
Kiyaga-Mulindwa, D. 1980. The “Akan” problem. Current Anthropology 21:503506.Google Scholar
Klein, Herbert S. 1972. The Portuguese slave trade from Angola in the eighteenth century. Journal of Economic History 32:894918.Google Scholar
Klingelhofer, Eric. 1992. The Renaissance fortifications at Dunboy Castle, 1602: a report on the 1989 excavations. Journal of the Cork Historical and Archaeological Society 97:8596.Google Scholar
Klingelhofer, Eric. 2010. Castles and Colonists: An Archaeology of Elizabethan Ireland. Manchester University Press, Manchester.Google Scholar
Klingelhofer, Eric. ed. 2013. A Glorious Empire: Archaeology and the Tudor-Stuart Atlantic World, Essays in Honor of Ivor Noël Hume. Oxbow, Oxford.Google Scholar
Klingelhofer, Eric, Collins, Tracy, Lane, Sheila, McCarthy, Margaret, McCutcheon, Clare, McCutcheon, Sarah, Moran, Jo, and Tierney, John. 2005. Edmund Spenser at Kilcolman Castle: the archeological evidence. Post-Medieval Archaeology 39:133154.Google Scholar
Knappett, Carl. 2011. An Archaeology of Interaction: Network Perspectives on Material Culture and Society. Oxford University Press, Oxford.Google Scholar
Knappett, Carl, ed. 2013. Network Analysis in Archaeology: New Approaches to Regional Interaction. Oxford University Press, Oxford.Google Scholar
Korieh, Chima J. 2006. African ethnicity as mirage? Historicizing the essence of the Igbo in Africa and the Atlantic Diaspora. Dialectical Anthropology 30:91118.Google Scholar
Kovacs, Gabriella, Madella, Marco, Godino, Ivan Briz i, and Berzsenyi, B., eds. 2013. The Archaeology of Household. Oxbow, Oxford.Google Scholar
Kupperman, Karen Ordahl. 1982. The puzzle of the American climate in the early colonial period. American Historical Review 87:12621289.Google Scholar
Kupperman, Karen Ordahl. 1984. Fear of hot climates in the Anglo-American colonial experience. William and Mary Quarterly 41:213240.Google Scholar
Kupperman, Karen Ordahl. 1988. Errand to the Indies: puritan colonization from Providence Island through the Western Design. William and Mary Quarterly 45:7099.Google Scholar
Kupperman, Karen Ordahl. 1993. Providence Island, 1630–1641: The Other Puritan Colony. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Kupperman, Karen Ordahl. 2012. The Atlantic in World History. Oxford University Press, Oxford.Google Scholar
Kupperman, Karen Ordahl. 2015. Before 1607. William and Mary Quarterly 72:324.Google Scholar
Lacey, Brian. 1980. Rescue archaeology in Londonderry, Ireland. Archaeology 33(4):5254.Google Scholar
Lacey, Brian. 1981. Two seventeenth-century houses at Linenhall Street, Londonderry. Ulster Folklife 27:5762.Google Scholar
Lacey, Brian. 1990. Siege City: The Story of Derry and Londonderry. Blackstaff, Belfast.Google Scholar
Lacey, Brian. 1999. Discover Derry. O’Brien, Dublin.Google Scholar
Lacher, Hannes. 2006. Beyond Globalization: Capitalism, Territoriality, and the International Relations of Modernity. Routledge, London.Google Scholar
Lambropoulos, Vassilis. 1993 . The Rise of Eurocentrism: Anatomy of Interpretation. Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ.Google Scholar
Landers, Jane. 1990. Gracia Real de Santa Teresa de Mose: a free Black town in Spanish colonial Florida. American Historical Review 95: 930.Google Scholar
Landes, David. 1998. The Wealth and Poverty of Nations: Why Some Are So Rich and Some So Poor. Norton, New York.Google Scholar
Langdon, John and Masschaele, James. 2006. Commercial activity and population growth in Medieval England. Past and Present 190:3581.Google Scholar
Las Casas, Bartolomé de. 1583. The Spanish Colonie, Or, Briefe Chronicle of the Acts and Gestes of the Spaniardes in the West Indies, Called the Newe World, for the Space of XL Yeeres. M. M. S., trans. William Brome, London.Google Scholar
Las Casas, Bartolomé de. 1656. The Tears of the Indians: Being an Historical and True Account of the Cruel Massacres and Slaughters of Above Twenty Millions of Innocent People Committed by the Spaniards in the Islands of Hispaniola, Cuba, Jamaica, &c. as Also in the Continent of Mexico, Peru, & Other Places of the West Indies, to the Total Destruction of those Countries. John Phillips, trans. J. C., London.Google Scholar
Latham, Robert and Matthews, William, eds. 1972. The Diary of Samuel Pepys, Volume 6. University of California Press, Berkeley.Google Scholar
La Tocnaye, Jacques Louis de Bouqrenet de. 1917. A Frenchman’s Walk Through Ireland, 1796–7. John Stevenson, trans. McCaw, Stevenson, and Orr, Belfast.Google Scholar
Lavery, Brian. 1988. The Colonial Merchantman, Susan Constant, 1605. Naval Institute, Annapolis, MD.Google Scholar
Law, Robin. 1991. The Slave Coast of West Africa, 1550–1750: The Impact of the Atlantic Slave Trade on an African Society. Clarendon, Oxford.Google Scholar
Law, Robin. ed. 1997. The English in West Africa, 1681–1683: The Local Correspondence of the Royal African Company of England, 1681–1699, Part 1. Oxford University Press, Oxford.Google Scholar
Law, Robin. ed. 2001. The English in West Africa, 1685–1688: The Local Correspondence of the Royal African Company of England, 1681–1699, Part 2. Oxford University Press, Oxford.Google Scholar
Law, Robin. ed. 2006. The English in West Africa, 1691–1699: The Local Correspondence of the Royal African Company of England, 1681–1699, Part 3. Oxford University Press, Oxford.Google Scholar
Law, Robin. 2007. The Komenda Wars, 1694–1700: a revised narrative. History in Africa 34:133168.Google Scholar
Law, Robin. 2008. The Akani War of 1693–6. Transactions of the Historical Society of Ghana 11:89111.Google Scholar
Lawrence, A. W. 1963. Trade Castles and Forts of West Africa. Jonathan Cape, London.Google Scholar
Lawson, William. 1631. A New Orchard and Garden, Or the Best Way for Planting, Grafting, and To Make any Ground Good, for a Rich Orchard. Nicholas Okes, London.Google Scholar
Leamon, James S. 1977. Historians in the woods: historical archaeology at the Clarke and Lake Site, Arrowsic, Maine. In New England Historical Archaeology: The Dublin Seminar for New England Folklife Annual Proceedings 1977, Benes, Peter, ed., pp. 1623. Boston University, Boston.Google Scholar
Leask, Harold G. 1951. Irish Castles and Castellated Houses. Dundalgan, Dundalk.Google Scholar
Leask, Harold G. 1961. Early seventeenth-century houses in Ireland. In Studies in Building History: Essays in Recognition of the Work of B. H. St. J. O’Neil. Jope, E. M., ed., pp. 243250. Odhams, London.Google Scholar
Lefebvre, Henri. 1979. Space: social product and use value. In Critical Sociology: European Perspectives, Freiberg, J. W., ed., pp. 285295. John Wiley, New York.Google Scholar
Lefebvre, Henri. 1982. The Sociology of Marx. Norbert Guterman, trans. Columbia University Press, New York.Google Scholar
Lefebvre, Henri. 1991. The Production of Space. Donald Nicholson-Smith, trans. Blackwell, Oxford.Google Scholar
Lefebvre, Henri. 2004. Rhythmanalysis: Space, Time, and Everyday Life. Continuum, London.Google Scholar
Lefroy, J. Henry. 1882. The Historye of the Bermudaes or Summer Islands. Hakluyt Society, London.Google Scholar
Le Loyer, Pierre. 1605. A Treatise of Specters or Strange Sights, Visions, and Apparitions Appearing Sensibly unto Men. Val S., London.Google Scholar
Le Muet, Pierre. 1670. The Art of Fair Building: Represented in the Figures of Several Uprights of Houses, with their Ground-plots, Fitting for Persons of Several Qualities. Robert Pricke, trans. n.p., London.Google Scholar
Leo, John [Leo Africanus]. 1600. A Geographical Historie of Africa, Written in Arabicke and Italian by John Leo, a More Borne in Granada and Brought Up in Barbarie. John Pory, trans. George Bishop, London.Google Scholar
Lankester, E. Ray. 1880. Degeneration: A Chapter in Darwinism. Macmillan, London.Google Scholar
Lenton, Francis. 1640. A Piece of the World, Painted in Proper Colours. John Raworth, London.Google Scholar
Lesser, Alexander. 1961. Social fields and the evolution of society. Southwestern Journal of Anthropology 17: 4048.Google Scholar
Lewis, J. F. 1886. Text Book of Fortification and Military Engineering for Use at the Royal Military Academy, Woolwich, Part II. Her Majesty’s Stationery Office, London.Google Scholar
Lewis, J. F. 1893. Text Book of Fortification and Military Engineering, Part II. Her Majesty’s Stationery Office, London.Google Scholar
Ley, John. 1646. Light for Smoke, or, A Cleare and Distinct Reply by John Ley. J. L., London.Google Scholar
Ligon, Richard. 1657. A True & Exact History of the Island of Barbados. Humphrey Moseley, London.Google Scholar
Linebaugh, Peter and Rediker, Marcus. 2000. The Many-Headed Hydra: Sailors, Slaves, Commoners, and the Hidden History of the Revolutionary Atlantic. Beacon, Boston.Google Scholar
Lippman, Walter. 1917. In defense of the Atlantic World. The New Republic. 10(120): 5961.Google Scholar
Lithgow, William. 1632. The Totall Discourse, of the Rare Adventures and Painefull Peregrinations of Long Nineteene Yeares Travayles from Scotland to the Most Famous Kingdomes in Europe, Asia and Affrica [sic]. Nicholas Okes, London.Google Scholar
Lithgow, William. 1643. The Present Surveigh of London and Englands State. J. O., London.Google Scholar
Lithgow, William. 1645. A True Experimental and Exact Relation Upon that Famous and Renowned Siege of New Castle. Robert Bryson, Edinburgh.Google Scholar
Lloyd, Geoffrey E. R., ed. 1983. Hippocratic Writings. J. Chadwick and W. N. Mann, trans., Penguin, London.Google Scholar
Locke, John. 1690. Two Treatises of Government in the Former, the False Principles and Foundation of Sir Robert Filmer and His Followers are Detected and Overthrown, the Latter is an Essay Concerning the True Original, Extent, and End of Civil Government. Awnsham Churchill, London.Google Scholar
Lodziak, Conrad. 1995. Manipulating Needs: Capitalism and Culture. Pluto, London.Google Scholar
Lodziak, Conrad. 2000. On explaining consumption. Capital and Class 72:111133.Google Scholar
Loftfield, Thomas C. 2001. Creolization in seventeenth-century Barbados: two case studies. In Island Lives: Historical Archaeologies of the Caribbean, Farnsworth, Paul, ed., pp. 207233. University of Alabama Press, Tuscaloosa.Google Scholar
Lopes, Duarte. 1597. A Reporte of the Kingdome of Congo, A Region of Africa, and of the Countries that Border Rounde about the Same. Abraham Hartwell, trans. John Wolfe, London.Google Scholar
Loren, Diana DiPaolo. 2008. In Contact: Bodies and Spaces in the Sixteenth- and Seventeenth-Century Eastern Woodlands. AltaMira, Lanham, MD.Google Scholar
Loren, Diana DiPaolo. 2010. The Archaeology of Clothing and Bodily Adornment in Colonial America. University Press of Florida, Gainesville.Google Scholar
Lorenzen, Janet A. 2012: Going green: the process of lifestyle change. Sociological Forum 27:94116.Google Scholar
Lorimer, Joyce, ed., 1989. English and Irish Settlement on the River Amazon, 1550–1646. Hakluyt Society, London.Google Scholar
Berger, Louis (and Associates). 1989. The Compton Site, circa 1651–1684. Cultural Resources Group, East Orange, NJ.Google Scholar
Lovejoy, Paul E. 1978. The role of the Wangara in the economic transformation of the central Sudan in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. Journal of African History 19:173193.Google Scholar
Lowenthal, David and Prince, Hugh C.. 1964. The English landscape. Geographical Review 54: 309346.Google Scholar
Lubar, Steven and Kingery, W. David, eds. 1993. History from Things: Essays on Material Culture. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Lucas, A. T. 1956. Wattle and straw mat doors in Ireland. Arctica: Studia Ethnographica Upsalienia 11:1635.Google Scholar
Lucas, A. T. 1970. Notes on the history of turf as fuel in Ireland to 1700 A.D. Ulster Folklife 15/16:172202.Google Scholar
Lucas, A. T. 1972. Irish ploughing practices. Tools and Tillage 2:5262.Google Scholar
Lucas, A. T. 1982. Contributions to the study of the Irish house: smokehole and chimney. In Gold Under the Furze: Presented by Caoimhín Ó Danachair. Gailey, Alan and hÓgáin, Dáithí Ó, ed., pp. 5066. Glendale, Dublin.Google Scholar
Lucas, Gavin and Regan, Roderick. 2003. The changing vernacular: archaeological excavations at Temple End, High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire. Post-Medieval Archaeology 37: 165206.Google Scholar
Luccketti, Nicholas M. 2010. Nansemond Pallizado and Virginia palisade fortifications. In First Forts: Essays on the Archaeology of Proto-Colonial Fortification, Klingelhofer, Eric, ed., pp. 85104. Brill, Leiden.Google Scholar
Luckenbach, Al. 1995. Providence, 1649: The History and Archaeology of Anne Arundel County Maryland’s First European Settlement. Maryland State Archives, Annapolis.Google Scholar
Luckenbach, Al. 2002. The seventeenth-century “Lloyd plate” from the Broadneck Site in Maryland. In Ceramics in America 2002, Hunter, Robert, ed., pp. 205206. Chipstone Foundation, Milwaukee, Wis.Google Scholar
Luckenbach, Al. 2004. The Swan Cove kiln: Chesapeake tobacco pipe production, circa 1650–1669. In Ceramics in America 2004, Hunter, Robert, ed., pp. 114. Chipstone Foundation, Milwaukee, WI.Google Scholar
Luckenbach, Al and Cox, Jane. 2002. Tobacco-pipe manufacturing in early Maryland: the Swan Cove site (ca. 1650–1669). In The Clay Tobacco Pipe in Anne Arundel County, Maryland (1650–1730), Luckenbach, Al, Cox, C. Jane, and Kille, John, pp. 4663. Anne Arundel County Trust for Preservation, Annapolis, MD.Google Scholar
Luckenbach, Al and Kille, John E.. 2011. Ceramic treasures in seventeenth-century trash: a 1660s cellar deposit. In Ceramics in America, 2001, Hunter, Robert, ed., pp. 139149. Chipstone Foundation, Milwaukee, WI.Google Scholar
Luckenbach, Al and Kiser, Taft. 2006. Seventeenth-century tobacco pipe manufacturing in the Chesapeake region: a preliminary delineation of makers and their styles. In Ceramics in America 2006, Hunter, Robert, ed., pp. 161177. Chipstone Foundation, Milwaukee, WI.Google Scholar
Ludlum, David M. 1963. Early American Hurricanes, 1492–1870. American Meteorological Society, Boston.Google Scholar
Luedtke, Barbara E. 1998. Worked ballast flint at Aptucxet. Northeast Historical Archaeology 27:3350.Google Scholar
Luedtke, Barbara E. 1999. What makes a good gunflint? Archaeology of Eastern North America 27:7179.Google Scholar
Lyons, Claire L. and Papadopoulos, John K., eds. 2002. The Archaeology of Colonialism. Getty Research Institute, Los Angeles.Google Scholar
Lyttleton, James. 2013. The Jacobean Plantations in Seventeenth-Century Offaly: An Archaeology of a Changing World. Four Courts, Dublin.Google Scholar
McAfee, Patrick. 1997. Irish Stone Walls: History, Building, Conservation. O’Brien, Dublin.Google Scholar
McBride, Kevin A. 1984. Prehistory of the Lower Connecticut River Valley. Doctoral dissertation, University of Connecticut, Storrs.Google Scholar
McBride, Kevin A. 1990. The historical archaeology of the Mashantucket Pequots, 1637–1900. In The Pequots of Southern New England: The Fall and Rise of an American Indian Nation, Hauptman, Laurence M. and Wherry, James D., eds., pp. 96116. University of Oklahoma Press, Norman.Google Scholar
McBride, Kevin A. 2006. Monhantic Fort: the Pequot in King Philip’s War. In Native Forts of the Long Island Sound Area, Stone, Gaynell, ed., pp. 323336. Suffolk County Archaeological Association and Nassau County Archaeological Committee, Stony Brook, NY.Google Scholar
McBride, Kevin, Naumec, David, Bissonnette, Ashley, Fellman, Noah, Pasteryak, Laurie, and Veninger, Jacqueline. 2012. Battle of Mistick Fort Documentation Plan. National Park Service, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
M’Cartney, William. 1798. The Treatise of Cicero, De Officiis; or, His Essay on Moral Duty. Bell and Bradfute, William Creech, Elphinston Balfour, Alexander Guthrie, John Fairbairn, and Archibald Constable, Edinburgh.Google Scholar
McCorry, Maureen and Harper, David A. T.. 1984. A preliminary multivariate analysis of everted rim pottery from Ulster. Journal of Irish Archaeology 2:5963.Google Scholar
McCracken, Grant. 1988. Culture and Consumption: New Approaches to the Symbolic Character of Consumer Goods and Activities. Indiana University Press, Bloomington.Google Scholar
McCracken, Grant. 2005. Culture and Consumption II: Markets, Meaning, and Brand Management. Indiana University Press, Bloomington.Google Scholar
MacDonald, Arthur. 1908. Moral stigmata of degeneration. The Monist 18:111123.Google Scholar
McGarva, Andrew. 2000. Country Pottery: The Traditional Earthenware of Britain. A. and C. Black, London.Google Scholar
MacGregor, Neil. 2012. Shakespeare’s Restless World: Portrait of an Era. Penguin, New York.Google Scholar
McKendrick, Neil, Brewer, John, and Plumb, J. H.. 1982. The Birth of Consumer Society: The Commercialization of Eighteenth-Century England. Indiana University Press, Bloomington.Google Scholar
McKenny, Kevin. 2005. The Laggan Army in Ireland, 1640–1685: The Landed Interests, Political Ideologies, and Military Campaigns of the North-West Ulster Settlers. Four Courts, Dublin.Google Scholar
McKillop, Heather. 2005. Finds in Belize document Late Classic Maya salt making and canoe transport. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 102:56305634.Google Scholar
McLearen, Douglas C., Mouer, L. Daniel, Boyd, Donna M., Owsley, Douglas W., and Compton, Bertita E.. 1993. Jordan’s Journey II: A Preliminary Report on the 1992 Excavations at Archaeological Sites 44PG302, 44PG303, and 44PG315. Archaeological Research Center, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond.Google Scholar
McLearen, Douglas C., Mouer, L. Daniel, Kiser, R. Taft, Binns, Beverly J., and Egghart, Christopher P.. 1994. Jordan’s Journey III: A Preliminary Report on the 1992–93 Excavations at Archaeological Site 44PG307. Archaeological Research Center, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond.Google Scholar
McLelland, Jane B. 1988. Changing his image: Diderot, Vernet, and the old dressing gown. Diderot Studies 23:129141.Google Scholar
Macmillan, Ken. 2010. The Bermuda Company, the Privy Council, and the wreck of the San Antonio, 1621–23. Itinerario 34:4564.Google Scholar
McNeill, Tom. 1997. Castles in Ireland: Feudal Power in the Gaelic World. Routledge, London.Google Scholar
McNeill, William H. 2000. Information and transportation nets in world history. In World System History: The Social Science of Long-Term Change, Denemark, Robert A., Friedman, Jonathan, Gills, Barry K., and Modelski, George, eds., pp. 201215. Routledge, London.Google Scholar
McShane, Angela. 2009. Subjects and objects: material expressions of love and loyalty in seventeenth-century England. Journal of British Studies 48: 871886.Google Scholar
McSweeney, Kendra. 2004. The dugout canoe trade in Central America’s Mosquitia: approaching rural livelihoods through systems of exchange. Annals of the Association of American Geographers 94:638661.Google Scholar
Macfarlane, Alan. 1989. The Culture of Capitalism. Blackwell, Oxford.Google Scholar
Machiavelli, Niccolò. 1882 [1522]. The Historical, Political, and Diplomatic Writings of Niccolo Machiavelli. Christian E. Detmold, trans. James R. Osgood, Boston.Google Scholar
Machiavelli, Niccolò. 2003 [1513]. The Prince. Rufus Goodwin, trans. Dante University Press, Wellesley, MA.Google Scholar
Machiavelli, Niccolò. 2006 [1674]. The Art of War. Henry Neville, trans., Dover, Mineola, NY.Google Scholar
Machin, R. 1977. The Great Rebuilding: a reassessment. Past and Present 77: 3356.Google Scholar
MacLysaght, Edward. 1939. Irish Life in the Seventeenth Century: After Cromwell. Longmans, Green, London.Google Scholar
MacManus, Megan. 1984. Coarse ware. In Ireland’s Traditional Crafts. Shaw-Smith, David, ed., pp. 186190. Thames and Hudson, London.Google Scholar
Mahan, D. H. 1846. A Treatise on Field Fortification. Wiley and Putnam, New York.Google Scholar
Maldonado, Enrique Ruiz. 1973. Bartholomew de la Casas, Samuel Purchas, and colonialism. New Blackfriars 54:512518.Google Scholar
Malinowski, Bronislaw. 1944. A Scientific Theory of Culture and Other Essays. University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill.Google Scholar
Mallory, J. P. and McNeill, T. E.. 1991. The Archaeology of Ulster from Colonization to Plantation. Institute of Irish Studies, Queen’s University, Belfast.Google Scholar
Maltby, William S. 1971. The Black Legend in England: The Development of Anti-Spanish Sentiment, 1558–1660. Duke University Press, Durham, NC.Google Scholar
Mander, Jerry and Goldsmith, Edward, eds. 1996. The Case Against the Global Economy and for a Turn to the Local. Sierra Club, San Francisco.Google Scholar
Manley, Thomas. 1672. The Clerks Guide, Leading Into Three Parts. John Streater, Henry Twyford, and E. Flesher, London.Google Scholar
Manning, Brian 1999. The Far Left in the English Revolution, 1640 to 1660. Bookmarks, London.Google Scholar
Mansell, Robert. 1641. The True State of the Businesse of Glasse of All Kindes, As It Now Standeth Both in the Price of Glasse and Materials, How Sold These Fifteen Years Last Past, and How Formerly, The Price of Materials as They are Now Bought, and What Hath Been Formerly Paid, with a Report of the Condition of All Kindes of Glasses. n.p.Google Scholar
Manton, Thomas. 1693. A Fourth Volume, Containing One Hundred and Fifty Sermons on Several Texts of Scripture. J. D., London.Google Scholar
Manwaring, Henry. 1644. The Sea-Mans Dictionary: Or, An Exposition and Demonstration of All the Parts and Things Belonging to a Shippe: Together with an Explanation of All the Termes and Phrases Used in the Practique of Navigation. G. M., London.Google Scholar
Margey, Annaleigh. 2009. Representing plantation landscapes: the mapping of Ulster, c. 1560–1640. In Plantation Ireland: Settlement and Material Culture, c. 1550-c. 1700. Lyttleton, James and Rynne, Colin, eds., pp. 140164. Four Courts, Dublin.Google Scholar
Markell, Ann B. 1990. Manufacturing Identity: Material Culture and Social Change in Seventeenth Century Virginia. Doctoral dissertation, University of California, Berkeley.Google Scholar
Markell, Ann B. 1994. Solid statements: architecture, manufacturing, and social change in seventeenth-century Virginia. In Historical Archaeology of the Chesapeake, Shackel, Paul A. and Little, Barbara J., eds., pp. 5164. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Marken, Mitchell W. 1994. Pottery from Spanish Shipwrecks, 1500–1800. University Press of Florida, Gainesville.Google Scholar
Markham, Gervase. 1608. The Dumbe Knight: A Historicall Comedy, Acted Sundry Times by the Children of His Majesties Revels. Nicholas Okes, London.Google Scholar
Markham, Gervase. 1613. The English Husbandman. T. S., London.Google Scholar
Markham, Gervase. 1614a. The Second Booke of the English Husbandman. T. S., London.Google Scholar
Markham, Gervase. 1614b. Cheape and Good Husbandry for the Well-Ordering of All Beasts and Fowles, and for the Generall Cure of their Diseases. T. S., London.Google Scholar
Markham, Gervase. 1629. Markhams Faithfull Farrier. T. Cotes and R. Cotes, London.Google Scholar
Markham, Gervase. 1631a. Country Contentments, Or, The Husbandmans Recreations. 4th ed. Nicholas Okes, London.Google Scholar
Markham, Gervase. 1631b. A Way to Get Wealth: Containing the Sixe Principall Vocations or Callings in Which Everie Good Husband or House-wife May Lawfully Imploy Themselves. Nicholas Okes, London.Google Scholar
Markham, Gervase. 1631c. The English House-wife, Containing the Inward and Outward Vertues Which Ought to be in a Compleate Woman. Nicholas Okes, London.Google Scholar
Marmion, Anthony. 1856. The Ancient and Modern History of the Maritime Ports of Ireland. 2nd ed., W. H. Cox, London.Google Scholar
Marsh, A. 1682. The Ten Pleasures of Marriage, Relating All the Delights and Contentments that are Mask’d Under the Bands of Matrimony. n.p., London.Google Scholar
Marshack, Alexander. 1981. On Paleolithic ochre and the early uses of color and symbol. Current Anthropology 22:188191.Google Scholar
Martin, Ann Smart. 2001. Magical, mythical, practical, and sublime: the meanings and uses of ceramics in America. In Ceramics in America, 2001, Hunter, Robert, ed., pp. 2946. Chipstone Foundation, Milwaukee, WI.Google Scholar
Martin, Ann Smart. 2010. Buying into the World of Goods: Early Consumers in Backcountry Virginia. Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, MD.Google Scholar
Martin, Colin. 2001. De-particularizing the particular: approaches to the investigation of well-documented post-medieval shipwrecks. World Archaeology 32:383399.Google Scholar
Martin, Deborah G. 2003. “Place-framing” as place-making: constituting a neighborhood for organizing and activism. Annals of the Association of American Geographers 93: 730750.Google Scholar
Martin, F. X. 1994. The Normans: arrival and settlement (1169-c. 1300). In The Course of Irish History, rev. ed., Martin, F. X., ed., pp. 123143. Roberts Rinehart, Niwot, CO.Google Scholar
Martin, Felix. 2015. Money, The Unauthorized Biography: From Coinage to Cryptocurrencies. Vintage, New York.Google Scholar
Martin, John. 1982. Enclosure and the Inquisitions of 1607: an examination of Dr. Kerridge’s article “The returns of the Inquisitions of Depopulation.” Agricultural History Review 30: 4148.Google Scholar
Marvell, Andrew. 1681. Miscellaneous Poems. Robert Boulter, London.Google Scholar
Marx, Karl. 1964 [1844]. Economic and Philosophic Manuscripts of 1844. Martin Milligan, trans. International, New York.Google Scholar
Marx, Karl. 1967 [1887]. Capital: A Critique of Political Economy. International, New York.Google Scholar
Marx, Karl. 1970 [1859]. A Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy. Dobb, Maurice, ed. International, New York.Google Scholar
Marx, Karl and Engels, Frederick. 1970 [1846]. The German Ideology, Part One. Arthur, C. J., ed. International, New York.Google Scholar
Maser, Edward A. 1985. The European imitators and their wares. In Blue and White: Chinese Porcelain and Its Impact on the Western World, Carswell, John, ed., pp. 3742. University of Chicago Press, Chicago.Google Scholar
Maslow, A. H. 1943. A theory of human motivation. Psychological Review 50: 370396.Google Scholar
Maslow, A. H. 1954. The instinctoid nature of basic needs. Journal of Personality 22:326347.Google Scholar
Massachusetts. 1713. Acts and Laws Passed by the Great and General Court or Assembly of Her Majesties Province of Massachusetts-Bay in New-England, Begun and Held at Boston Upon Wednesday the Twenty-Seventh of May 1713. Bartholomew Green, Boston.Google Scholar
Mather, Cotton. 1689. Memorable Provinces Relating to Witchcrafts and Possessions: A Faithful Account of Many Wonderful and Surprising Things that Have Befallen Several Bewitched and Possessed Persons in New-England. R. P., Boston.Google Scholar
Mather, Cotton. 1690. The Principles of the Protestant Religion Maintained and Churches of New-England. Richard Pierce, Boston.Google Scholar
Mather, Cotton. 1691. Late Memorable Providences Relating to Witchcrafts and Possessions. Thomas Parkhurst, London.Google Scholar
Mather, Increase. 1679. A Call from Heaven to the Present and Succeeding Generations. John Foster, Boston.Google Scholar
Mather, Increase. 1684. An Essay for the Recording of Illustrious Providences: Wherein an Account is Given of Many Remarkable and Very Memorable Events, Which Have Hapned [sic] This Last Age, Especially in New-England. Samuel Green, Boston.Google Scholar
Mathews, Maurice. 1897 [1671]. Maurice Mathews to Lord Ashley. Collections of the South Carolina Historical Society, Volume 5, pp. 332336. South Carolina Historical Society, Charleston.Google Scholar
Maxwell, James. 1612. Queene Elizabeths Looking-Glasse of Grace and Glory. n.p.Google Scholar
Mayes, Philip. 1968. A 17th-century kiln site at Potterspury, Northamptonshire. Post-Medieval Archaeology 2:5582.Google Scholar
Meager, Leonard. 1697. The Mystery of Husbandry, Or, Arable, Pasture and Wood-Land Improved. W. Onley, London.Google Scholar
Mellor, Maureen. 1997. Pots and People that have Shaped the Heritage of Medieval and Later England. Ashmolean Museum, Oxford.Google Scholar
Melton, Nigel and Scott, Keith. 1999. Polesworth: a north Warwickshire country pottery. Post-Medieval Archaeology 33: 94126.Google Scholar
Meenan, Rosanne. 2004. Pottery. In Excavation of a Post-Medieval Settlement at Rough Point, Killybegs, County Donegal by Coyne, Frank, and Collins, Tracy, pp. 5362. Ægis Archaeology, Limerick.Google Scholar
Meenan, Rosanne. 2007. Post-medieval pottery in Ireland. In The Post-Medieval Archaeology of Ireland, 1550–1850, Horning, Audrey, Baoill, Ruairí Ó, Donnelly, Colm, and Logue, Paul, eds., pp. 393404. Wordwell, Bray.Google Scholar
Meenan, Rosanne, McCorry, Maureen, McCutcheon, Clare, and Papazian, Cliona. 2004. Pottery of the late medieval and post-medieval periods. In Archaeological Investigations in Galway City, 1987–1998, FitzPatrick, Elizabeth, O’Brien, Madeline, and Walsh, Paul, eds., pp. 376404. Wordwell, Bray.Google Scholar
Meier, Albrecht. 1589. Certaine Briefe, and Speciall Instructions for Gentlemen, Merchants, Students, Souldiers, Mariners, &c Employed in Services Abrode, Or Anie Way Occasioned to Converse in the Kingdomes, and Governementes of Forren Princes. John Woolfe, London.Google Scholar
Menard, Russell R. 2007. Plantation empire: how sugar and tobacco planters built their industries and raised an empire. Agricultural History 81:309332.Google Scholar
Mercer, Eric. 1975. English Vernacular Houses: A Study of Traditional Farmhouses and Cottages. Her Majesty’s Stationery Office, London.Google Scholar
Meredith, Jezz, Anderson, Sue, Egan, Geoff, Higgins, David, and Pattison, Paul. 2008. Excavation at Landguard Fort: an investigation of the 17th-century defences. Post-Medieval Archaeology 42: 229275.Google Scholar
Merrifield, Ralph. 1954. The use of Bellarmines as witch-bottles. Guildhall Miscellany 3:315.Google Scholar
Merrifield, Ralph. 1955. Witch bottles and magical jugs. Folklore 66:195207.Google Scholar
Merrifield, Ralph. 1987. The Archaeology of Ritual and Magic. New Amsterdam, New York.Google Scholar
Metz, John, Jones, Jennifer, Pickett, Dwayne, and Muraca, David. 1998. “Upon the Palisado” and Other Stories of Place from Bruton Heights. Dietz Press, Richmond, VA.Google Scholar
Miles, Robert. 1989. Racism. Routledge, London.Google Scholar
Miller, Henry M. 1994. The Country’s House site: an archaeological study of a seventeenth-century domestic landscape. In Historical Archaeology of the Chesapeake, Shackel, Paul A. and Little, Barbara J., eds., pp. 6583. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Miller, Henry M. 2004/2005. The archaeology of colonial encounters along Chesapeake Bay: an overview. Revista de Arqueología Americana 23:231290.Google Scholar
Miller, Henry M. 2016a. Forts of St. Mary’s. www.hsmcdigshistory.org/pdf/Forts.pdfGoogle Scholar
Miller, Henry M. 2016b. St. John’s Site. www.hsmcdigshistory.org/pdf/St-Johns.pdfGoogle Scholar
Mitchell, Frank and Ryan, Michael. 1997. Reading the Irish Landscape. Town House, Dublin.Google Scholar
Milton, John. 1644. Areopagitica: A Speech of Mr. John Milton for the Liberty of Unlicenc’d Printing, to the Parliament of England. n.p., London.Google Scholar
Mobley, Gregory. 1997. The Wild Man in the Bible and the ancient Near East. Journal of Biblical Literature 116:217–233.Google Scholar
Molesworth, William, ed. 1840. The English Works of Thomas Hobbes of Malmesbury, Volume VI. John Bohn, London.Google Scholar
Mollenaer, Symon. 1613. The Great Victory Which God Hath Given Unto Eight Holland Shippes in Their Passage Toward the East Indies: Against 17 Great Spanish Shippes on the First of Aprill, 1613. George Eld, London.Google Scholar
Monroe, J. Cameron. 2007a. Continuity, revolution or evolution on the Slave Coast of West Africa? royal architecture and political order in precolonial Dahomey. Journal of African History 48:349373.Google Scholar
Monroe, J. Cameron. 2007b. Dahomey and the Atlantic slave trade: archaeology and political order on the Bight of Benin. In Archaeology of Atlantic Africa and the African Diaspora, Ogundiran, Akinwumi and Falola, Toyin, eds., pp. 100121. Indiana University Press, Bloomington.Google Scholar
Monroe, J. Cameron. 2010. Power by design: architecture and politics in precolonial Dahomey. Journal of Social Archaeology 10:367397.Google Scholar
Monroe, J. Cameron. 2011. In the belly of Dan: space, history, and power in precolonial Dahomey. Current Anthropology 52:769798.Google Scholar
Monroe, J. Cameron. 2012. Building the state in Dahomey: power and landscape on the Bight of Benin. In Power and Landscape in Atlantic West Africa: Archaeological Perspectives, Monroe, J. Cameron and Ogundiran, Akinwumi, eds., pp. 191221. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Monroe, J. Cameron and Mallios, Seth. 2004. A seventeenth-century colonial cottage industry: new evidence and a dating formula for colono tobacco pipes in the Chesapeake. Historical Archaeology 38(2):6882.Google Scholar
Montaño, John Patrick. 2011. The Roots of English Colonialism in Ireland. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Moore, David D. and Malcom, Corey. 2008. Seventeenth-century vehicle of the Middle Passage: archaeological and historical investigations on the Henrietta Marie shipwreck site. International Journal of Historical Archaeology 12:2038.Google Scholar
Moore, Jonas. 1681. A New Geography with Maps to Each Country, and Tables of Longitude and Latitude. Robert Scott, London.Google Scholar
Morden, Robert. 1688. Geography Rectified. Robert Morden and Thomas Cockerill, London.Google Scholar
More, Thomas. 1965 [1516]. Utopia. Peter K. Marshall, trans. Washington Square, New York.Google Scholar
Morley, Henry, ed. 1884. Table Talk of Samuel Taylor Coleridge and The Rime of the Ancient Mariner, Christabel, &c. George Routledge and Sons, London.Google Scholar
Morison, Samuel Eliot, ed. 1970. Of Plymouth Plantation, 1620–1647 by William Bradford, Sometime Governor Thereof. Alfred A. Knopf, New York.Google Scholar
Morris, Elaine L., Read, Robert, James, S. Elizabeth, Machling, Tessa, Williams, David F., and Wilson, Brent. 1999. “… the old stone fortt [sic] at Newcastle…”: the redoubt, Nevis, eastern Caribbean. Post-Medieval Archaeology 33:194221.Google Scholar
Morriss, Richard K. 2000. The Archaeology of Buildings. Tempus, Stroud.Google Scholar
Moryson, Fynes. 1617. An Itinerary Written by Fynes Moryson Gent. First in the Latine Tongue, and then Translated by Him into English. John Beale, London.Google Scholar
Moryson, Fynes. 1967 [1617]. Shakespeare’s Europe: A Survey of the Conditions of Europe at the End of the 16th Century, Being Unpublished Chapters of Fynes Moryson’s Itinerary (1617). 2nd ed. Benjamin Blom, New York.Google Scholar
Moser, Jason D., Luckenbach, Al, Marsh, Sherri M., and Ware, Donna. 2003. Impermanent architecture in a less permanent town: the mid-seventeenth-century architecture of Providence, Maryland. Perspectives in Vernacular Architecture 9:197214.Google Scholar
Mouer, L. Daniel. 1993. Chesapeake creoles: the creation of folk culture in colonial Virginia. In The Archaeology of 17th-Century Virginia, Reinhart, Theodore R. and Pogue, Dennis J., eds., pp. 105166. Dietz Press, Richmond, VA.Google Scholar
Mouer, L. Daniel and McLearen, Douglas C.. 1991. Summary of “Jordan’s Journey”: An Interim Report on the Excavation of a Protohistoric Indian and Early 17th-Century Colonial Occupation in Prince George County, Virginia. Virginia Commonwealth University Archaeological Research Center, Richmond. <www.chesapeakearchaeology.org/SiteSummaries/JordansJourneySummary.cfm>Google Scholar
Mouer, L. Daniel, McLearen, Douglas C., Kiser, R. Taft, Egghart, Christopher P., Binns, Beverly J., and Magoon, Dane T.. 1992. Jordan’s Journey: A Preliminary Report on Archaeology at Site 44Pg302, Prince George County, Virginia, 1990–1991. Virginia Commonwealth University Archaeological Research Center, Richmond.Google Scholar
Mouer, L. Daniel, Hodges, Mary Ellen N., Potter, Stephen R., Renaud, Susan L. Henry, Hume, Ivor Noël, Pogue, Dennis J., McCartney, Martha W., and Davidson, Thomas E.. 1999. Colonoware pottery, Chesapeake pipes, and “uncritical assumptions.” In “I, too, am America”: Archaeological Studies of African-American Life, Singleton, Theresa A., ed., pp. 83115. University Press of Virginia, Charlottesville.Google Scholar
Moxon, Joseph. 1693. Mechanick Exercises: Or, the Doctrine of Handy-Works. 2nd ed., J. Moxon, London.Google Scholar
Mudge, Jean McClure. 1985. Hispanic blue-and-white faience in the Chinese style. In Blue and White: Chinese Porcelain and Its Impact on the Western World, Carswell, John, ed., pp. 4354. University of Chicago Press, Chicago.Google Scholar
Mudge, Jean McClure. 2000. Chinese Export Porcelain in North America. Riverside, New York.Google Scholar
Mukasa-Mugerwa, E. 1981. The Camel (Camelus Dromedarius): A Bibliographical Review. International Livestock Centre for Africa, Addis Ababa.Google Scholar
Muller, John. 1746. A Treatise containing the Elementary Part of Fortification, Regular and Irregular. J. Nourse, London.Google Scholar
Mun, Thomas. 1621. A Discourse of Trade, From England unto the East-Indies. Corrected and amended ed. Nicholas Okes, London.Google Scholar
Mun, Thomas. 1664. England’s Treasure by Forraign Trade, Or, The Ballance of Our Forraign Trade is the Rule of Our Treasure. J. G., London.Google Scholar
Munday, Anthony. 1601. The Death of Robert, Earle of Huntington Otherwise Called Robin Hood of Merrie Sherwodde. William Leake, London.Google Scholar
Murphy, Frank, ed. 1987. The Bog Irish: Who They Were and How They Lived. Penguin Australia, Ringwood.Google Scholar
Murray, Robert H. ed., 1912. The Journal of John Stevens Containing a Brief Account of the War in Ireland, 1689–1691. Clarendon, Oxford.Google Scholar
Muys, John. 1686. A Rational Practice of Chyrurgery, or Chyrurigical Observations Resolved According to the Solid Fundamentals of True Philosophy. Samuel Crouch, London.Google Scholar
Mylander, Jennifer. 2009. Early modern “how-to” books: impractical manuals and the construction of Englishness in the Atlantic World. Journal for Early Modern Cultural Studies 9:123146.Google Scholar
Myriell, Thomas. 1623. The Christians Comport: In a Sermon Appointed for the Crosse, but Preached in S. Pauls Church on Candlemas Day, 1623. G. P., London.Google Scholar
N. N. 1641. A Little True Forraine Newes. Nathanael Butter, London.Google Scholar
Naismith, Rory. 2005. Islamic coins from early Medieval England. Numismatic Chronicle 165:193222.Google Scholar
Nash, R. C. 1985. Irish Atlantic trade in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. William and Mary Quarterly 42: 329356.Google Scholar
Neal, Larry and Williamson, Jeffrey J., eds. 2014. The Cambridge History of Capitalism, Volume I: The Rise of Capitalism, From Ancient Origins to 1848. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Neely, Paula. 2010. 400-year-old personalized pipes found at Jamestown: Indian-English designs may bear earliest known printing in English America. National Geographic News <http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2010/11/101129-jamestown-personalized-pipes-virginia-history-colonial-america/>; accessed August 2016.;+accessed+August+2016.>Google Scholar
Neeson, Eoin. 1997. Woodland in history and culture. In Nature in Ireland: A Scientific and Cultural History, Foster, John Wilson, ed., pp. 133156. Lilliput, Dublin.Google Scholar
Neill, Edward D. 1869. History of the Virginia Company of London, with Letters to and from the First Colony Never Before Printed. Joel Munsell, Albany, NY.Google Scholar
Neiman, Fraser Duff. 1990. An Evolutionary Approach to Archaeological Inference: Aspects of Architectural Variation in the 17th-Century Chesapeake. PhD dissertation, Yale University, New Haven, CT.Google Scholar
Neiman, Fraser Duff. 1993. Temporal patterning in house plans from the 17th-century Chesapeake. In The Archaeology of 17th-Century Virginia, Reinhart, Theodore J. and Pogue, Dennis J., eds., pp. 251283. Dietz Press, Richmond, VA.Google Scholar
Nelson, Arthur. 2001. The Tudor Navy, 1485–1603: The Ships, Men, and Organisation. Conway Maritime Press, London.Google Scholar
Ness, Christopher. 1684. A Spiritual Legacy Being a Pattern of Piety for all Young Persons Practice in a Faithful Relation of the Holy Life and Happy Death of Mr. John Draper. Christopher Ness, n.p.Google Scholar
Newell, Margaret Ellen. 2015. Brethren by Nature: New England Indians, Colonists, and the Origins of American Slavery. Cornell University Press, Ithaca, NY.Google Scholar
Newman, Richard, Cranstone, David, and Howard-Davis, Christine. 2001. The Historical Archaeology of Britain, c. 1540–1900. Sutton, Thrupp.Google Scholar
Newman, Simon P. 2013. A New World of Labor: The Development of Plantation Slavery in the British Atlantic. University of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia.Google Scholar
Newton, Arthur Percival. 1914. The Colonising Activities of the English Puritans: The Last Phase of the Elizabethan Struggle with Spain. Yale University Press, New Haven, CT.Google Scholar
Nicholls, Kenneth. 2001. Woodland cover in pre-modern Ireland. In Gaelic Ireland, c. 1250-c. 1650: Land, Lordship, and Settlement, Duffy, Patrick J., Edwards, David, and FitzPatrick, Elizabeth, eds., pp. 181206. Four Courts, Dublin.Google Scholar
Nicholls, K. W. 2003. Gaelic and Gaelicized Ireland in the Middle Ages. Lilliput, Dublin.Google Scholar
Nightingale, Pamela. 2000. Knights and merchants: trade, politics, and the gentry in late Medieval England. Past and Present 169:3662.Google Scholar
Nixon, Douglas. 1999. A late seventeenth-century planter’s house at Ferryland, Newfoundland. Avalon Chronicles 4:5795.Google Scholar
, N. N. 1641. A Little True Forraine Newes. Nathaniel Butler, London.Google Scholar
Noble, John, ed. 1904. Records of the Court of Assistants of the Colony of the Massachusetts Bay, 1630–1692. County of Suffolk, Boston.Google Scholar
Noël Hume, Ivor. 1958. German stoneware Bellarmines: an introduction. Antiques 74(5):439441.Google Scholar
Noël Hume, Ivor. 1962. Excavations at Rosewell in Gloucester County, Virginia, 1957–1959. Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Noël Hume, Ivor. 1972. A Guide to Artifacts of Colonial America. Alfred A. Knopf, New York.Google Scholar
Noël Hume, Ivor. 1983. Martin’s Hundred: The Discovery of a Lost Colonial Virginia Settlement. Dell, New York.Google Scholar
Noël Hume, Ivor. 2001. If These Pots Could Talk: Collecting 2,000 Years of British Household Pottery. Chipstone Foundation, Milwaukee, WI.Google Scholar
Norden, John. 1607. The Surueyors Dialogue. Simon Stafford, London.Google Scholar
Norman, Neil L. 2009a. Hueda (Whydah) country and town: archaeological perspectives on the rise and collapse of an African Atlantic kingdom. International Journal of African Historical Studies 42:387410.Google Scholar
Norman, Neil L. 2009b. Powerful pots, humbling holes, and regional ritual processes: towards an archaeology of Hueda Vodun, ca. 1650–1727. African Archaeological Review 26:187218.Google Scholar
Norman, Neil L. 2010. Feasts in motion: archaeological views of parades, ancestral pageants, and socio-political process in the Hueda Kingdom, 1650–1727 AD. Journal of World Prehistory 23:239254.Google Scholar
Norman, Neil L. 2012. From the shadow of an Atlantic citadel: an archaeology of the Huedan countryside. In Power and Landscape in Atlantic West Africa: Archaeological Perspectives, Monroe, J. Cameron and Ogundiran, Akinwumi, eds., pp. 142166.Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Norman, Neil L. and Kelly, Kenneth G.. 2004. Landscape politics: the Serpent Ditch and the rainbow in West Africa. American Anthropologist 106: 98110.Google Scholar
Norton, Joe. 2004. Clay pipes. In Archaeological Investigations in Galway City, 1987–1998, FitzPatrick, Elizabeth, O’Brien, Madeline, and Walsh, Paul, eds., pp. 427447. Wordwell, Bray.Google Scholar
Norton, Joe and Lane, Sheila. 2007. Clay tobacco-pipes in Ireland, c. 1600–1850. In The Post-Medieval Archaeology of Ireland, 1550–1850, Horning, Audrey, Baoill, Ruairí Ó, Donnelly, Colm, and Logue, Paul, eds., pp. 435452. Wordwell, Bray.Google Scholar
Nowak, Leszek. 1983. Property and Power: Towards a Non-Marxian Historical Materialism. D. Reidel, Dordrecht, Netherlands.Google Scholar
Ó Cadhla, Stiofán. 2007. Civilizing Ireland, Ordnance Survey 1824–1842: Ethnography, Cartography, Translation. Irish Academic Press, Dublin.Google Scholar
Ochonu, Moses E. 2015. The Wangara trading network in precolonial West Africa: an early example of Africans investing in Africa. In Africans Investing in Africa: Understanding Business and Trade, Sector by Sector, McNamee, Terence, Pearson, Mark, and Boer, Wiebe, eds., pp. 927. Palgrave Macmillan, London.Google Scholar
O’Conor, Kieran Denis. 1998. The Archaeology of Medieval Rural Settlement in Ireland. Royal Irish Academy, Dublin.Google Scholar
Ó Dálaigh, Brian, ed. 1998. The Stranger’s Gaze: Travels in County Clare, 1534–1950. Clasp, Ennis.Google Scholar
Ó Danachair, Caoimhín. 1970. The use of the spade in Ireland. In The Spade in Northern and Atlantic Europe, Gailey, Alan and Fenton, Alexander, eds., pp. 4956. Institute of Irish Studies, Queen’s University, Belfast.Google Scholar
Ó Danachair, Caoimhín. 1977–1979. Irish tower houses and their regional distribution. Béaloideas 45–47:158163.Google Scholar
O’Dowd, Mary. 1991. Power, Politics, and Land: Early Modern Sligo, 1568–1688. Queen’s University Belfast, Belfast.Google Scholar
Ofosu-Mensah, Ababio Emmanuel. 2010. Traditional gold mining in Adanse. Nordic Journal of African Studies 19: 124147.Google Scholar
Ogborn, Miles. 2008. Global Lives: Britain and the World, 1550–1800. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Ogilby, John. 1670. Africa: Being an Accurate Description of the Regions of Ægypt, Barbary, Lybia, and Billedulgerid. Thomas Johnson, London.Google Scholar
Ogilby, John. 1673. Queries in Order to the Description of Britannia. White-Fryers, London.Google Scholar
Ogundiran, Akinwumi and Falola, Toyin. 2007. Pathways in the archaeology of transatlantic Africa. In Archaeology of Atlantic Africa and the African Diaspora, Ogundiran, Akinwumi and Falola, Toyin, eds., pp. 345. Indiana University Press, Bloomington.Google Scholar
Oka, Rahul and Kuijt, Ian. 2014. Greed is bad, neutral, and good: a historical perspective on excessive accumulation and consumption. Economic Anthropology 1:3048.Google Scholar
Oka, Rahul and Kusimba, Chapurukha M.. 2008. The archaeology of trading systems, part I: towards a new trade synthesis. Journal of Archaeological Research 16:339395.Google Scholar
Ollard, Richard. 2001. Man of War: Sir Robert Holmes and the Restoration Navy. Phoenix, London.Google Scholar
Ollman, Bertell. 1971. Alienation: Marx’s Conception of Man in Capitalist Society. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Ollman, Bertell. 1993. Dialectical Investigations. Routledge, New York.Google Scholar
Ollman, Bertell. 2003. Dance of the Dialectic: Steps in Marx’s Method. University of Illinois Press, Urbana.Google Scholar
Omi, Michael and Winant, Howard. 1983. By the rivers of Babylon: race in the United States. Socialist Review 13:3165.Google Scholar
Omi, Michael and Winant, Howard. 1986. Racial Formation in the United States from the 1960s to the 1980s. Routledge and Kegan Paul, New York.Google Scholar
O’Neil, B. H. St. J. 1960. Castles and Cannon: A Study of Early Artillery Fortifications in England. Clarendon, Oxford.Google Scholar
O’Neill, Timothy P. 1977. Life and Tradition in Rural Ireland. J. M. Dent, London.Google Scholar
Opitz, Rachel S., Ryzewski, Krysta, Cherry, John F., and Molony, Brenna. 2015. Using airborne LiDAR survey to explore historic-era archaeological landscapes of Montserrat in the eastern Caribbean. Journal of Field Archaeology 40:523541.Google Scholar
Orser, Charles E., Jr. 1994. Toward a global historical archaeology: an example from Brazil. Historical Archaeology 28(1):118.Google Scholar
Orser, Charles E., 1996. A Historical Archaeology of the Modern World. Plenum Press, New York.Google Scholar
Orser, Charles E., 1998. Archaeology of the African diaspora. Annual Review of Anthropology 27: 6382.Google Scholar
Orser, Charles E., 2004a. The archaeologies of recent history: post-medieval, historical, and modern-world. In The Blackwell Companion to Archaeology, Bintliff, J., ed., pp. 272290. Blackwell, Oxford.Google Scholar
Orser, Charles E., 2004b. Race and Practice in Archaeological Interpretation. University of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia.Google Scholar
Orser, Charles E., 2006. The people’s pottery: Irish coarse earthenware and their cultural significance. In Unearthing Hidden Ireland: Historical Archaeology at Ballykilcline, County Roscommon, Orser, Charles E., Jr., ed., pp. 7296. Wordwell, Bray.Google Scholar
Orser, Charles E., 2007a. Estate landscapes and the cult of the ruin: a lesson of spatial transformation in rural Ireland. In Estate Landscapes: Design, Improvement and Power in the Post-Medieval Landscape, Finch, Jonathan and Giles, Kate, eds., pp. 77-93. Boydell and Brewer, Suffolk.Google Scholar
Orser, Charles E., 2007c. The Archaeology of Race and Racialization in Historic America. University Press of Florida, Gainesville.Google Scholar
Orser, Charles E., 2009a. The dialectics of scale in the historical archaeology of the modern world. In Horning, Audrey and Palmer, Marilyn, eds. Sharing Tracks or Crossing Paths: The Future of Historical Archaeology in Great Britain and Ireland, pp. 718. Boydell and Brewer, Woodbridge.Google Scholar
Orser, Charles E., 2009b. World-systems theory, networks, and modern-world archaeology. In International Handbook of Historical Archaeology, Majewski, Terry and Gaimster, David, eds., pp. 253268. Springer, New York.Google Scholar
Orser, Charles E., 2010. Twenty-first century historical archaeology. Journal of Archaeological Research 18: 111150.Google Scholar
Orser, Charles E., 2012. An archaeology of Eurocentrism. American Antiquity 77: 737755.Google Scholar
Orser, Charles E., 2014. A Primer on Modern-World Archaeology. Eliot Werner, Clinton Corners, New York.Google Scholar
Orser, Charles E., 2017. Historical Archaeology. 3rd ed. Routledge, London.Google Scholar
Outlaw, Alain Charles. 1990. Governor’s Land: Archaeology of Early Seventeenth-Century Virginia Settlements. University Press of Virginia, Charlottesville.Google Scholar
Outlaw, Merry Abbitt. 2002. Scratched in clay: seventeenth-century North Devon slipware at Jamestown, Virginia. Ceramics in America 2002, Hunter, Robert, ed., pp. 1738. Chipstone Foundation, Milwaukee, WI.Google Scholar
Owen, William. 1897 [1670]. William Owen to Lord Ashley. Collections of the South Carolina Historical Society, Volume 5, pp. 196202. South Carolina Historical Society, Charleston.Google Scholar
Page, William, ed., 1907. The Victoria History of the County of Oxford, Volume Two. Archibald Constable, London.Google Scholar
Page, Samuel. 1637. The Broken Heart: Or, Davids Penance Fully Exprest in Holy Meditations Upon the 51 Psalme. Thomas Harper, London.Google Scholar
Palmer, Elihu. 1823. Principles of Nature: Or, A Development of the Moral Causes of Happiness and Misery Among the Human Species. R. Carille, London.Google Scholar
Palmer, Roger, Earl of Castlemaine. 1681. The Earl of Castlemain’s Manifesto. n.p.Google Scholar
Paques, Viviana and Turner, Thomas. 1954. The Bambara. Presses Universitaires de France, Paris.Google Scholar
Pargellis, Stanley and Butler, Ruth Lapham, eds. 1944. Daniell Ellffryth’s guide to the Caribbean, 1631. William and Mary Quarterly 1:273316.Google Scholar
Parker, Bradley J. and Foster, Catherine P., eds. 2012. New Perspectives on Household Archaeology. Eisenbrauns, Winona Lake, IN.Google Scholar
Parkinson, John. 1640. Theatrum Botanicum: The Theater of Plants. Thomas Cotes, London.Google Scholar
Parkinson, William A. and Duffy, Paul R.. 2007. Fortifications and enclosures in European prehistory: a cross-cultural perspective. Journal of Archaeological Research 15: 97141.Google Scholar
Parliament, English. 1652. An Act for Impresing of Seamen. John Field, London.Google Scholar
Pastoor, Charles and Johnson, Galen K.. 2007. Historical Dictionary of the Puritans. Scarecrow, Lanham, MD.Google Scholar
Paterson, Alistair G. 2011. Considering colonialism and capitalism in Australian historical archaeology: two case studies of culture contact from the pastoral domain. In The Archaeology of Capitalism in Colonial Contexts, Croucher, Sarah K. and Weiss, Lindsay, eds., pp. 243268. Springer, New York.Google Scholar
Patrick, Simon. 1670. An Appendix to the Third Part of the Friendly Debate, Being a Letter of the Conformist to the Non-Conformist. H. Eversden, London.Google Scholar
Patrick, Vanessa E. 1983. Partitioning the Landscape: The Fence in Eighteenth-Century Virginia. Colonial Williamsburg Foundation, Williamsburg, VA.Google Scholar
Patterson, Nerys Thomas. 1994. Cattle-Lords and Clansmen: The Social Structure of Early Ireland. University of Notre Dame Press, Notre Dame, IN.Google Scholar
Pauketat, Timothy R., ed. 2015. The Oxford Handbook of North American Archaeology. Oxford University Press, Oxford.Google Scholar
Pearce, Jacqueline. 2007. An assemblage of 17th-century pottery from Bombay Wharf, Rotherhithe, London SE16. Post-Medieval Archaeology 41:8099.Google Scholar
Pearce, Jacqueline. 2014. Ten key ceramic finds from London’s archaeological collections. In Ceramics in America 2014, Hunter, Robert, ed., pp. 1940. Chipstone Foundation, Milwaukee, WI.Google Scholar
Pechey, John. 1694. The London Dispensatory, Reduced to the Practice of the London Physicians Wherein are Contain’d the Medicines, both Galenical and Chymical, that are now in Use. F. Collins, London.Google Scholar
Pechey, John. 1697. A General Treatise of the Diseases of Infants and Children, &c. n.p.Google Scholar
Peck, Linda Levy. 2005. Consuming Splendor: Society and Culture in Seventeenth-Century England. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Pecoraro, Luke Joseph. 2015. “Mr. Gookin Out of Ireland, Wholly Upon His Owne Adventure”: An Archaeological Study of Intercolonial and Transatlantic Connections in the Seventeenth Century. Doctoral dissertation, Boston University, Boston.Google Scholar
Pendery, Steven R. 1986. Merchants and artisans in colonial Charlestown, Massachusetts. Archaeology 39(3):6465, 7677.Google Scholar
Pendery, Steven R. 1992. Consumer behavior in colonial Charlestown, Massachusetts, 1630–1760. Historical Archaeology 26(3):5772.Google Scholar
Pendery, Steven R. 1999. Portuguese tin-glazed earthenware in seventeenth-century New England: a preliminary study. Historical Archaeology 33(4):5877.Google Scholar
Peet, Richard. 2005. From Eurocentrism to Americentrism. Antipode 37: 936943.Google Scholar
Penrose, Boies. 1962. Tudor and Early Stuart Voyaging. Folger Shakespeare Library, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Pierce, Thomas. 1686. The Law and Equity of the Gospel, Or, The Goodness of Our Lord as a Legislator. S. Roycroft, London.Google Scholar
Penn, William. 1685. A Further Account of the Province of Pennsylvania and Its Improvements. n.p.Google Scholar
Penn, William. 1686. Information and Direction to Such Persons as are Inclined to America, More Especially Those Related to the Province of Pennsylvania. n.p.Google Scholar
Pennell, Sara. 1998. “Pots and pans history”: the material culture of the kitchen in early modern England. Journal of Design History 11: 201216.Google Scholar
Pennell, Sara. 1999. Consumption and consumerism in early modern England. Historical Journal 42: 549564.Google Scholar
Pennick, Nigel. 1996. Celtic Sacred Landscapes. Thames and Hudson, London.Google Scholar
Pepys, Samuel. 1905 [1660–1669]. The Diary of Samuel Pepys. G. Gregory Smith, intro. Macmillan, London.Google Scholar
Perley, Sidney. 1891. Historic Storms of New England. Salem Press, Salem, MA.Google Scholar
Peterson, Charles E. 1956. Houses for New Albion, 1650. Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians 15:2.Google Scholar
Petto, Samuel. 1654. The Voice of the Spirit, Or, An Essay Towards a Discoverie of the Witnessings of the Spirit by Opening and Answering These Following Weighty Queries. Livewell Chapman, London.Google Scholar
Petty, William. 1672. The Political Economy of Ireland With the Establishment for that Kingdom When the Late Duke of Ormond was Lord Lieutenant. D. Brown and W. Rogers, London.Google Scholar
Pestana, Carla Gardina. 2004. The English Atlantic in an Age of Revolution, 1640–1661. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA.Google Scholar
Pestana, Carla Gardina. 2009. Religion. In The British Atlantic World, 1500–1800, 2nd ed., Armitage, David and Braddick, Michael J., eds., pp. 7191. Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke.Google Scholar
Pezzarossi, Guido. 2015. A spectral haunting of society: longue durèe archaeologies of capitalism and antimarkets in colonial Guatemala. In Historical Archaeologies of Capitalism, 2nd ed. Leone, Mark P. and Knauf, Jocelyn E., eds., pp. 345373. Springer, New York.Google Scholar
Phillips, Edward. 1658. The New World of English Words, Or, A General Dictionary. E. Tyler, London.Google Scholar
Phillips, Gervase. 1999. Longbow and hackbut: weapons technology and technology transfer in Early Modern England. Technology and Culture 40: 576593.Google Scholar
Phillips, Thomas. 1969 [1732]. Voyage of the Hannibal, 1693–1694. In Documents Illustrative of the History of the Slave Trade to America, Donnan, Elizabeth, ed., pp. 392410. Octagon, New York.Google Scholar
Pietschmann, Horst. 2002. Introduction: Atlantic history—history between European history and global history. In Atlantic History: History of the Atlantic System, 1580–1830, Pietschmann, Horst, ed., pp. 1154. Vandenhoeck and Ruprecht, Göttingen.Google Scholar
Plantagenet, Beauchamp. 1650. A Description of the Province of New Albion. James Moxon, London.Google Scholar
Plot, Robert. 1686. The Natural History of Stafford-Shire. At the theater, Oxford.Google Scholar
Pogue, Dennis J. 1990. King’s Reach and 17th-Century Plantation Life. Maryland Historical and Cultural Publications, Annapolis.Google Scholar
Pogue, Dennis J. 1997. Culture Change Along the Tobacco Coast. Doctoral dissertation, American University, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Pogue, Dennis J. 1998. Spatial analysis of the King’s Reach Plantation homelot, ca. 1690–1715. Historical Archaeology 22(2):4056.Google Scholar
Pollexfen, John. 1697. Discourse of Trade, Corn, and Paper Credit, And of Ways and Means to Gain and Retain Riches. Brabazon Aylmer, London.Google Scholar
Pomeranz, Kenneth. 2000. The Great Divergence: China, Europe, and the Making of the Modern World Economy. Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ.Google Scholar
Poole, Matthew. 1685. Annotations Upon the Holy Bible. Thomas Parkhurst, Dorman Newman, Jonathan Robinson, Brabazon Ailmer, and Thomas Cockeril, London.Google Scholar
Pooley, Ernest. 1947. The Guilds of the City of London. Collins, London.Google Scholar
Pope, Peter E. 2013. Preface: archaeologies of permanence and transience in new-found lands. In Exploring Atlantic Transitions: Archaeologies of Transience and Permanence in New Found Lands, Pope, Peter E. and Lewis-Simpson, Shannon, eds., pp. xviixix. Boydell, Woodbridge.Google Scholar
Pope, Peter E. and Lewis-Simpson, Shannon, eds. 2013. Exploring Atlantic Transitions: Archaeologies of Transience and Permanence in New Found Lands. Boydell, Woodbridge.Google Scholar
Posnansky, Merrick. 1973. Aspects of early West African trade. World Archaeology 5:149162.Google Scholar
Posnansky, Merrick. 1984. Toward an archaeology of the Black Diaspora. Journal of Black Studies 15:195205.Google Scholar
Posnansky, Merrick and DeCorse, Christopher R.. 1986. Historical archaeology in Sub-Saharan Africa: a review. Historical Archaeology 20 (1):114.Google Scholar
Posnansky, Merrick and Dantzig, Albert Van. 1976. Fort Ruychaver rediscovered. Sankofa 2:718.Google Scholar
Potter, Stephen Robert. 1982. An Analysis of Chicacoan Settlement Patterns. Doctoral dissertation, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.Google Scholar
Potter, Stephen R. and Waselkov, Gregory A.. 1994. Whereby we shall enjoy their cultivated places. In Historical Archaeology of the Chesapeake, Shackel, Paul A. and Little, Barbara J., eds., pp. 2333. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Potts, Thomas. 1613. The Wonderful Discoverie of Witches in the Countie of Lancaster, With the Arraignment and Triall of Nineteene Notorious Witches, at the Assizes and General Gaole Deliverie, Holden at the Castle of Lancaster, Upon Munday [sic] the Seventeenth of August Last, 1612. n.p., LondonGoogle Scholar
Pred, Allan. 1985. The social becomes the spatial, the spatial becomes the social: enclosures, social change, and the becoming of places in Skåne. In Social Relations and Spatial Structures, Gregory, Derek and Urry, John, eds., pp. 337365. St. Martin’s, New York.Google Scholar
Preston, Henry. 1673. Brief Directions. For True-Spelling: Being an Abbreviat of the Most Usefull Rules, Conducible to the Promoting that Excellent Knowledge of Writing True English. J. R., London.Google Scholar
Prior, Nick. 2001. A different field of vision: gentlemen and players in Edinburgh, 1826–1851. Sociological Review 49(S1):142163.Google Scholar
Pritchard, R. E. 2008. Captain John Smith and His Brave Adventures. Haus, London.Google Scholar
Pritchard, William. 1682. Pritchard Mayor. Martis vicesimo primo die Novembr’ 1682. Samuel Roycroft, London.Google Scholar
Pryor, Sylvia and Blockley, Kevin. 1978. A 17th-century kiln site at Woolwich. Post-Medieval Archaeology 12:3085.Google Scholar
Purchas, Samuel. 1625. Purchas His Pilgrimes in Five Books. William Stansby, London.Google Scholar
Purdy, John. 1812. Memoir, Descriptive and Explanatory, to Accompany the New Chart of the Atlantic Ocean. R. H. Laurie, London.Google Scholar
Putnam, Lara. 2006. To study the fragments/whole: microhistory and the Atlantic World. Journal of Social History 39: 615630.Google Scholar
Quiney, Anthony. 1990. The Traditional Buildings of England. Thames and Hudson, London.Google Scholar
Quinn, David Beers. 1966. The Elizabethans and the Irish. Cornell University Press, Ithaca, NY.Google Scholar
Quinn, David Beers. 1976. Renaissance influences in English colonization: the Prothero Lecture. Transactions of the Royal Historical Society 26:7393.Google Scholar
Rabasa, Jose. 1993. Inventing America: Spanish Historiography and the Formation of Eurocentrism. University of Oklahoma Press, Norman.Google Scholar
Rackham, Bernard. 1925. Verzelini and his followers. Burlington Magazine for Connoisseurs 47: 182183, 187.Google Scholar
Radcliffe-Brown, A. R. 1940. On social structure. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland 70: 112.Google Scholar
Ralegh [Rawleigh/Raleigh], Walter. 1596. The Discoverie of the Large, Rich, and Bewtiful Empire of Guiana, with a Relation of the Great and Golden City of Manoa (which the Spaniards call El Dorado), and the Provinces of Emeria, Arromaia, Amapaia, and Other Countries, with their Rivers, Adjoyning. Robert Robinson, London.Google Scholar
Ralegh [Rawleigh/Raleigh], Walter. 1614. The Historie of the World in Five Books. Walter Burre, London.Google Scholar
Ralegh [Rawleigh/Raleigh], Walter. 1650. Excellent Observations and Notes Concerning the Royall Navy and Sea-Service. T. W., London.Google Scholar
Ramachandraiah, C. 1995. Colonialism and geography. Economic and Political Weekly 30:25232524.Google Scholar
Ramey, Lynn T. 2014. Black Legacies: Race and the European Middle Ages. University Press of Florida, Gainesville.Google Scholar
Rapoport, Amos. 1969. House Form and Culture. Prentice-Hall, Englewood Cliffs, NJ.Google Scholar
Ray, John. 1678. The Ornithology of Francis Willughby of Middleton in the County of Warwick Esq. Fellow of the Royal Society, in Three Books. A. C., London.Google Scholar
Rediker, Marcus. 2007. The Slave Ship: A Human History. Viking, New York.Google Scholar
Reeve, L. J. 1989. Charles I and the Road to Personal Rule. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Reeves-Smyth, Terence. 1997. Demesnes. In Atlas of the Irish Rural Landscape, Aalen, F. H. A., Whelan, Kevin, and Stout, Matthew, eds., pp.197205. Cork University Press, Cork.Google Scholar
Rejwan, Nissim. 1967. The two Israels: a study in Europeocentrism. Judaism 16:97108.Google Scholar
Rennell, James. 1832. An Investigation of the Currents of the Atlantic Ocean and of Those Which Prevail Between the Indian Ocean and the Atlantic. J. G. and F. Rivington, London.Google Scholar
Rich, Barnabee. 1614. The Honestie of This Age, Prooving by Good Circumstance that the World Was Never Honest Till Now. T. A., London.Google Scholar
Rich, Barnabee. 1616. My Ladies Looking Glasse. Thomas Adams, London.Google Scholar
Rich, Robert [Earl of Warwick]. 1648. A Declaration of the Earle of Warwick, Lord High Admirall of England. John Wright, London.Google Scholar
Richardson, David. 2009. Cultures in exchange: Atlantic Africa in the eve of the slave trade. Transactions of the Royal Historical Society 19:151179.Google Scholar
Richberg, Donald. 1928. Mutualism. Proceedings of the Academy of Political Science 13:185194.Google Scholar
Riddell, Edwin, ed. 1976. Lives of the Stuart Age, 1603–1714. Harper and Row, New York.Google Scholar
Rimer, Graeme, House, Herbert G., Smithurst, Peter, Wilkinson, Philip, and Henry, Christopher. 2014. Firearms: An Illustrated History, Dorling Kindersley, New York.Google Scholar
Riordan, Timothy B., Hurry, Silas D., Cavallo, Katerine, and Cofield, Sara Rivers. 2015. Archaeological Excavations of the Print House Building, Slave Quarter Site (18ST1-14), St. Mary’s City, Maryland. Historic St. Mary’s City, MD.Google Scholar
Ritzer, George. 2003. The globalization of nothing. SAIS Review 23:189200.Google Scholar
Ritzer, George. 2007. The Globalization of Nothing 2. Pine Forge Press, Thousand Oaks, CA.Google Scholar
Robbins, Richard H. 2013. Global Problems and the Culture of Capitalism. 6th ed. Pearson, Englewood Cliffs, NJ.Google Scholar
Robinson, Gregory and Goodison, Robin R.. 1936. Sarah versus Susan. William and Mary Quarterly 16:515521.Google Scholar
Robinson, Paul, Kelley, Marc A., and Rubertone, Patricia E.. 1985. Preliminary biocultural interpretations from a seventeenth-century Narragansett Indian cemetery in Rhode Island. In Cultures in Contact: The European Impact on Native Cultural Institutions in Eastern North America, A.D. 1000–1800, Fitzhugh, William E., ed., pp. 107130. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Robotham, John. 1647. The Preciousness of Christ unto Beleevers, Or, A Treatise Wherein the Absolute Necessity, the Transcendent Excellency, the Supereminent Graces, the Beauty, Rarity and Usefulnesse of Christ is Opened and Applyed. M. Symmons, London.Google Scholar
Roche, Nessa. 2007. The manufacture and use of glass in post-medieval Ireland. In The Post-Medieval Archaeology of Ireland, 1550–1850, Horning, Audrey, Baoill, Ruairí Ó, Donnelly, Colm, and Logue, Paul, eds., pp. 405420. Wordwell, Bray.Google Scholar
Roche, Nessa and Dunlevy, Mairéad. 2004. Post-medieval glassware. In Archaeological Investigations in Galway City, 1987–1998, FitzPatrick, Elizabeth, O’Brien, Madeline, and Walsh, Paul, eds., pp. 405426. Wordwell, Bray.Google Scholar
Roediger, David R. 1991. The Wages of Whiteness: Race and the Making of the American Working Class. Verso, London.Google Scholar
Roediger, David R. 2005. Working Toward Whiteness: How America’s Immigrants Became White, The Strange Journey from Ellis Island to the Suburbs. Basic, New York.Google Scholar
Rogers, Richard. 1603. Seven Treatises, Containing Such Direction as is Gathered Out of the Holie Scriptures, Leading and Guiding to True Happines [sic] Both in This Life and in the Life to Come and May be Called the Practise of Christianitie. Felix Kyngston, London.Google Scholar
Role, Raymond E. 1997. Le Mura: Lucca’s fortified enceinte. Fort 25: 83110.Google Scholar
Rorke, Martin. 2006. English and Scottish overseas trade, 1300–1600. Economic History Review 59:265288.Google Scholar
Rosenberg, Justin. 2005. Globalization theory: a post mortem. International Politics 42:274.Google Scholar
Rosier, James. 1605. A True Relation of the Most Prosperous Voyage Made This Present Yeere 1605, by Captaine George Waymouth in the Discovery of the Land of Virginia. George Bishop, London.Google Scholar
Ross, Eric. 2011. A historical geography of the Trans-Saharan Trade. In The Trans-Saharan Book Trade: Manuscript Culture, Arabic Literacy, and Intellectual History in Muslim Africa, Krätli, Graziano and Lydon, Ghislaine, eds., pp. 134. Koninklijke Brill, Leiden.Google Scholar
Ross, Robert. 2008. Clothing: A Global History, Or, The Imperialist’s New Clothes. Polity, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Rothwell, Harry, ed. 1996. English Historical Documents, Volume III, c. 1189–1327. Routledge, London.Google Scholar
Roundtree, Helen C. and Turner, E. Randoph III. 2002. Before and After Jamestown: Virginia’s Powhatans and Their Predecessors. University Press of Florida, Gainesville.Google Scholar
Rowlands, Michael. 1998. The archaeology of colonialism. In Social Transformations in Archaeology: Global and Local Perspectives, Kristiansen, Kristian and Rowlands, Michael, eds., pp. 318323. Routledge, London.Google Scholar
, R. T. 1670. Tenants Law: A Treatise of Great Use for Tenants and Farmers of all Kinds, and All Other Persons Whatsoever. T. M., London.Google Scholar
Rubertone, Patricia E. 2001. Grave Undertakings: An Archaeology of Roger Williams and the Narragansett Indians. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Rubertone, Patricia E. ed. 2008. Archaeologies of Placemaking: Monuments, Memories, and Engagement in Native North America. Left Coast Press, Walnut Creek, CA.Google Scholar
Ruddock, Alwyn A. 1966. John Day of Bristol and the English voyages across the Atlantic before 1497. Geographical Journal 132:225233.Google Scholar
Rugemer, Edward B. 2013. The development of mastery and race in the comprehensive slave codes of the Greater Caribbean during the seventeenth century. William and Mary Quarterly 70:429458.Google Scholar
Rutton, William Loftie. 1895. Sandgate Castle. Archaeologia Cantiana 21:244259.Google Scholar
Ryan, Pauline M. 1976. Color symbolism in Hausa literature. Journal of Anthropological Research 32:141160.Google Scholar
Ryzewski, Krysta and McAtackney, Laura. 2015. Historic and contemporary Irish identity on Montserrat, the “Emerald Isle of the Caribbean.” In Caribbean Irish Connections, O’Callaghan, Evelyn, Donnell, Alison, and McGarrity, Maria, eds., University of the West Indies Press, Barbados, pp. 119139.Google Scholar
Sachs, Ignacy. 1976. The Discovery of the Third World. Michael Fineberg, trans. MIT Press, Cambridge, MA.Google Scholar
Saint-Amand, Pierre and Gage, Jennifer Curtiss. 2009. Diderot’s dressing gown: the philosopher in the cabinet. Diderot Studies 31:7181.Google Scholar
St. George, Robert Blair. 1990. Bawns and beliefs: architecture, commerce, and conversion in early New England. Winterthur Portfolio 25:241287.Google Scholar
Salmon, William. 1694. Pharmacopœia Batenana, or, Bate’s Dispensatory. S. Smith and B. Walford, London.Google Scholar
Salwen, Bert. 1978. Indians of southern New England and Long Island: early period. In Handbook of North American Indians: Northeast, Trigger, Bruce G., ed., pp. 160176. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Samford, Patricia. 1996. The archaeology of African-American slavery and material culture. William and Mary Quarterly 53:87114.Google Scholar
Samford, Patricia. 2007. Subfloor Pits and the Archaeology of Slavery in Colonial Virginia. University of Alabama Press, Tuscaloosa.Google Scholar
Samuel, Marochitanus. 1648. The Blessed Jew of Marocco: Or, A Blackmoor Made White. Thomas Broad, York.Google Scholar
Sassatelli, Roberta. 2007. Consumer Culture: History, Theory, and Politics. Sage, Los Angeles.Google Scholar
Saunders, A. C. 1982. A Social History of Black Slaves and Freedmen in Portugal, 1441–1555. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Saunders, Andrew. 2004. Fortress Builder: Bernard de Gomme, Charles II’s Military Engineer. University of Exeter Press, Exeter.Google Scholar
Sayyid, S. 2003. A Fundamental Fear: Eurocentrism and the Emergence of lslamism. 2nd ed. Zed, London.Google Scholar
Scammell, G. V. 1981. The World Encompassed: The First European Maritime Empires, c. 800–1650. Methuen, London.Google Scholar
Scammell, G. V. 1999. British merchant shipbuilding, c. 1500–1750. International Journal of Maritime History 11:2752.Google Scholar
Scavizzi, Giuseppe. 1970. Maiolica, Delft, and Faïence. Hamlyn, London.Google Scholar
Schaefer, Richard G. 1998. A Typology of Seventeenth-Century Dutch Ceramics and Its Implications for American Historical Archaeology. British Archaeological Reports, Oxford.Google Scholar
Schaff, David S. 1933. Cardinal Bellarmine: now Saint and Doctor of the Church. Church History 2:4155.Google Scholar
Schlegel, John P. ed. 1977. Towards a Re-Definition of Development: Essays and Discussion on the Nature of Development in an International Perspective. Pergamon, Oxford.Google Scholar
Schlereth, Thomas J. 1985. Material culture research and historical explanation. Public Historian 7: 2136.Google Scholar
Schofield, John, Pearce, Jacqueline, Betts, Ian, Dyson, Tony, and Egan, Geoff. 2009. Thomas Sloane’s buildings near Billingsgate, London, 1640–66. Post-Medieval Archaeology 43: 282341.Google Scholar
Schomurgk, Robert H. 1848. Introduction. In The Discovery of the Large, Rich, and Beautiful Empire of Guiana, with a Relation of the Great and Golden City of Manoa (which the Spaniards call El Dorado), etc. Performed in the Year 1595 by Sir W. Ralegh, Knt. Schomurgk, Robert H., ed., pp. xiiilxxv. Hakluyt, London.Google Scholar
Schuyler, Robert L. 1988. Archaeological remains, documents, and anthropology: a call for a new culture history. Historical Archaeology 22(1): 3642.Google Scholar
Scot, Reginald. 1584. The Discovery of Witchcraft Wherein the Lewde Dealing of Witches and Witchmongers is Notably Detected. Henry Denham, London.Google Scholar
Scot, Reginald. 1665. The Discovery of Witchcraft: Proving that the Compacts and Contracts of Witches with Devils and All Infernal Spirits or Familiars are but Erroneous Novelties and Imaginary Conceptions. Andrew Clark, London.Google Scholar
Scott, Mary Augusta, ed. 1908. The Essays of Francis Bacon. Charles Scribner’s Sons, New York.Google Scholar
Scott, Rebecca J. 2000. Small-scale dynamics of large-scale processes. American Historical Review 105: 472479.Google Scholar
Seeman, Erik R. 2010. Review of Atlantic History: A Critical Appraisal. Greene, Jack P. and Morgan, Philip D., eds. Journal of World History 21: 329332.Google Scholar
Semmens, Jason. 2000. The usage of witch-bottles and apotropaic charms in Cornwall. Old Cornwall 12(6):2530.Google Scholar
Sevilla-Buitrago, Alvaro. 2015. Capitalist formations of enclosure: space and the extinction of the commons. Antipode 47:9991020.Google Scholar
Seymour, Robert. 1735. A Survey of the Cities of London and Westminster, Borough of Southwark and Parts Adjacent, Volume II. J. Read, London.Google Scholar
Shackel, Paul A. 1993. Personal Discipline and Material Culture: An Archaeology of Annapolis, Maryland, 1695–1870. University of Tennessee Press, Knoxville.Google Scholar
Shadwell, Thomas. 1673. Epsom-Wells: A Comedy Acted at the Duke’s Theatre. J. M., London.Google Scholar
Shadwell, Thomas. 1689. Bury-Fair: A Comedy, as it is Acted by His Majesty’s Servants. James Knapton, London.Google Scholar
Shammas, Carole. 2005. Introduction. In The Creation of the British Atlantic World, Mancke, Elizabeth and Shammas, Carole, eds., pp. 116. Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD.Google Scholar
Shammas, Carole. 2008. The Pre-Industrial Consumer in England and America. 2nd ed. Figueroa Press, Los Angeles.Google Scholar
Shanklin, Eugenia. 1998. The profession of the color blind: sociocultural anthropology and racism in the 21st century. American Anthropologist 100:669679.Google Scholar
Sharpe, Geoffrey R. 2011. Traditional Buildings of the English Countryside: An Illustrated Guide. I.B Tauris, London.Google Scholar
Sharpe, James. 2013. Witchcraft in Early Modern England. Routledge, London.Google Scholar
Sharpham, Edward. 1607. The Fleire. F. B., London.Google Scholar
Sharrock, Robert. 1659. The History of the Propagation & Improvement of Vegetable by the Concurrence of Art and Nature. A. Lichfield, Oxford.Google Scholar
Shaw, Jenny. 2013. Everyday Life in the Early English Caribbean: Irish, Africans, and the Construction of Difference. University of Georgia Press, Athens.Google Scholar
Sherman, Sandra. 2003. Printed communities: domestic management texts in the eighteenth century. Journal for Early Modern Cultural Studies 3:3667.Google Scholar
Sheumaker, Helen and Wajda, Shirley Teresa, eds. 2008. Material Culture in America: Understanding Everyday Life. ABC Clio, Santa Barbara, CA.Google Scholar
Shorleyker, Richard. 1630. The Armes of the Tobachonists. Richar Shorleyker, London.Google Scholar
Shower, John. 1699. Some Account of the Holy Life and Death of Mr. Henry Gearing, Late Citizen of London: Who Departed This Life January the 4th 1693–4. Aged 61. John Lawrence, London.Google Scholar
Shumway, Rebecca. 2011. The Fante and the Transatlantic Slave Trade. University of Rochester Press, Rochester, New York.Google Scholar
Sidney, Philip. 1622. The Countesse of Pembokes Arcadia. 6th ed. Mathew Lownes, London.Google Scholar
Sikes, Kathryn 2008. Stars as social space? Contextualizing 17th-century Chesapeake star-motif pipes. Post-Medieval Archaeology 42:75103.Google Scholar
Sikes, Wirt. 1878. Dutch faience. Harper’s New Monthly Magazine 57:1529.Google Scholar
Silliman, Stephen W. 2009. Change and continuity, practice and memory: Native American persistence in colonial New England. American Antiquity 74:211230.Google Scholar
Silver, Larry. 1983. Forest primeval: Albrecht Altdorfer and the German wilderness landscape. Simiolus: Netherlands Quarterly for the History of Art 13:443.Google Scholar
Simmel, Georg. 1978. The Philosophy of Money. Bottomore, Tom and Frisby, David, eds., Routledge and Kegan Paul, London.Google Scholar
Simms, Katharine. 2001. Native sources for Gaelic settlement: the house poems. In Gaelic Ireland, c. 1250-c. 1650: Land, Lordship, and Settlement Duffy, Patrick J., Edwards, David, and FitzPatrick, Elizabeth, eds., pp. 246267. Four Courts, Dublin.Google Scholar
Sklair, L. 2002. Globalization: Capitalism and Its Alternatives. 3rd ed. Oxford University Press, Oxford.Google Scholar
Smith, Adam. 1761. The Theory of Moral Sentiments. 2nd ed. A. Millar, London.Google Scholar
Smith, Adam. 1999 [1776]. The Wealth of Nations, Book IV. Penguin, London.Google Scholar
Smith, Brian S. 1974. A Cotswold quarrying agreement. Post-Medieval Archaeology 8:101103.Google Scholar
Smith, Carlyle S. 1950. The Archaeology of Coastal New York. Anthropological Papers, Volume 43, Part 2. American Museum of Natural History, New York.Google Scholar
Smith, Carlyle S. 1954. A note on Fort Massapaeg. American Antiquity 20:6768.Google Scholar
Smith, George. 1779. An Universal Military Dictionary: A Copious Explanation of the Technical Terms &c. Used in the Equipment, Machinery, Movements, and Military Operations of an Army. J. Millan, London.Google Scholar
Smith, Henry A. M. 1908. Charleston: the original plan and the earliest settlers. South Carolina Historical and Genealogical Magazine 9:1227.Google Scholar
Smith, Jeffrey Chipps. 1983. Nuremberg: A Renaissance City, 1500–1618. University of Texas Press, Austin.Google Scholar
Smith, John. 1624. The Generall Historie of Virginia, New-England, and the Summer Islands: With the Names of the Adventurers, Planters, and Governours from their First Beginning An: 1584 to this Present 1624. J. D. and J. H., London.Google Scholar
Smith, John. 1626. An Accidence or The Path-Way to Experience Necessary for All Young Sea-Men, or Those that are Desirous to Goe to Sea, Briefly Shewing the Phrases, Offices, and Words of Command, Belonging to the Building, Ridging, and Sayling, a Man of Warre; and How to Manage a Fight at Sea. Nicholas Okes, London.Google Scholar
Linda Tuhiwai, Smith. 1999. Decolonizing Methodologies: Research and Indigenous Peoples. Zed, London.Google Scholar
Smith, Robert. 1970. The canoe in West African history. Journal of African History 11:515533.Google Scholar
Smyth, William J. 2000. Ireland a colony: settlement implications of the revolution in military-administrative, urban, and ecclesiastical structure, c. 1550 to c. 1730. In A History of Settlement in Ireland, Barry, Terry, ed., pp. 158186. Routledge, London.Google Scholar
Snow, Dean R. 1980. The Archaeology of New England. Academic, New York.Google Scholar
Soja, Edward W. 1980. The socio-spatial dialectic. Annals of the Association of American Geographers 70:207225.Google Scholar
Soja, Edward W. 1989. Postmodern Geographies: The Reassertion of Space in Critical Social Theory. Verso, London.Google Scholar
Solecki, Ralph S. 1950. The archaeological position of Fort Corchaug, L.I. and Its Relation to Contemporary Forts. Bulletin of the Archaeological Society of Connecticut 24:340.Google Scholar
Solecki, Ralph S. 1994. Indian forts of the mid-17th century in the southern New England-New York coastal area. Northeast Historical Archaeology 21–22:6478.Google Scholar
Solecki, Ralph S. 2006a. Epilogue to historic Fort Corchaug. In Native Forts of the Long Island Sound Area, Stone, Gaynell, ed., pp. 3585. Suffolk County Archaeological Association and Nassau County Archaeological Committee, Stony Brook, New York.Google Scholar
Solecki, Ralph S. 2006b. The archaeology of Fort Neck and vicinity, Massapequa, Long Island, New York. In Native Forts of the Long Island Sound Area, Stone, Gaynell, ed., pp. 143224. Suffolk County Archaeological Association and Nassau County Archaeological Committee, Stony Brook, New York.Google Scholar
Solon, L. M. 1886. The Art of the Old English Potter. D. Appleton, New York.Google Scholar
Sorbiere, M. 1698. A Journey to London, in the Year 1698. William King, trans. A. Baldwin, London.Google Scholar
South, Stanley. 1971. Excavating the fortified area of the 1670 site of Charles Towne, South Carolina. Conference on Historic Site Archaeology Papers 1969 4: 3760.Google Scholar
Spectre, Peter H. and Larkin, David. 1992. A Goodly Ship: The Building of the Susan Constant. Houghton Mifflin, Boston.Google Scholar
Speed, John. 1627. England, Wales, Scotland and Ireland Described and Abridged with ye Historic Relation of Things Worthy Memory from a Farr Larger Voulume done by Iohn Speed. J. Dawson, London.Google Scholar
Spenser, Edmund. 1978 [1596]. The Faerie Queene. Thomas P. Roche, Jr., ed. Penguin, London.Google Scholar
Spenser, Edmund. 1997 [1633]. A View of the State of Ireland. Hadfield, Andrew and Maley, Willy, eds. Blackwell, Oxford.Google Scholar
Spiers, Sam. 2012. The Eguafo polity: between the traders and raiders. In Power and Landscape in Atlantic West Africa: Archaeological Perspectives, Monroe, J. Cameron and Ogundiran, Akinwumi, eds., pp. 115141. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Spufford, Margaret. 1984. The Great Reclothing of Rural England: Petty Chapmen and Their Wares in the Seventeenth Century. Hambledon Continuum, London.Google Scholar
Spufford, Margaret. 1994. The pedlar, the historian, and the folklorist: seventeenth century communications. Folklore 105:1324.Google Scholar
Squier, E. G. 1850. Aboriginal Monuments of the State of New-York. Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Stacy, Carl C., Miller, Henry M., and Froede, Richard C.. 1990. Surface analysis of a musket shot dated between 1645 and 1655 found in St. Mary’s City, Maryland. Journal of Forensic Sciences 35:753761.Google Scholar
Stafford, Thomas. 1633. Pacata Hibernia: Ireland Appeased and Reduced. Robert Milbourne, London.Google Scholar
Stahl, Ann Brower. 2001. Historical process and the impact of the Atlantic trade on Banda, Ghana, c. 1800–1920. In West Africa During the Atlantic Slave Trade: Archaeological Perspectives, DeCorse, Christopher R., ed., pp. 3858. Leicester University Press, London.Google Scholar
Stahl, Ann Brower. 2004. Making history in Banda: reflections on the construction of Africa’s past. Historical Archaeology 38(1):5065.Google Scholar
Stahl, Ann Brower. 2007. Entangled lives: the archaeology of daily life in the Gold Coast hinterlands, AD 1400–1900. In Archaeology of Atlantic Africa and the African Diaspora, Ogundiran, Akinwumi and Falola, Toyin, eds., pp. 4976. Indiana University Press, Bloomington.Google Scholar
Standish, Arthur. 1611. The Commons Complaint. William Stansby, London.Google Scholar
Standish, Arthur. 1613. New Directions of Experience to the Commons Complaint. n.p.Google Scholar
Staten Generaal [United Provinces of the Netherlands]. 1621. Orders and Articles Granted by the High and Mighte Lords of the States General of the United Provinces, Concerning the Erecting of a West India Company. n.p.Google Scholar
Steane, Mary Ann. 2004. Building in the climate of the New World: a cultural or environmental response? Traditional Dwellings and Settlements Review 15:4960.Google Scholar
Stephenson, Charles. 2008. “Servant to the King for His Fortifications”: Paul Ive and The Practice of Fortification. P. and G. Military Publishers, Doncaster.Google Scholar
Stevens, Fay. 2008. Elemental interplay: the production, circulation, and deposition of Bronze Age metalwork in Britain and Ireland. World Archaeology 40:238252.Google Scholar
Stoddart, Eleanor. 2000. Seventeenth-century tin-glazed earthenware from Ferryland. Avalon Chronicles 5:4999.Google Scholar
Stoller, Paul. 1989. Fusion of the World: An Ethnography of Possession among the Songhay of Niger. University of Chicago Press, Chicago.Google Scholar
Stone, Garry Wheeler. 1990. St. Maries Citty: corporate artifact. Maryland Archaeology 26(1/2):418.Google Scholar
Stone, Gaynell. 2005. Fort Corchaug and Fort Massapeag. In Encyclopedia of New York State, Eisenstadt, Peter R. and Moss, Laura-Eve, eds., p. 586. Syracuse University Press, Syracuse, NY.Google Scholar
Stopp, F. J. 1970. Henry the Younger of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel: wild men and werewolf in religious polemics, 1538–1544. Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 33:200234.Google Scholar
Strachey, William. 1849. The Historie of Travaile into Virginia Britannia. Hakluyt Society, London.Google Scholar
Straube, Beverly. 2001. European ceramics in the New World: the Jamestown example. In Ceramics in America 2001, Hunter, Robert, ed., pp. 4771. Chipstone Foundation, Milwaukee, WI.Google Scholar
Strong, H. W. 1891. The potteries of North Devon. Report and Transactions of the Devonshire Association for the Advancement of Science, Literature, and Art 23:389393.Google Scholar
Stubbs, John Delano. 1992. Underground Harvard: The Archaeology of College Life. Doctoral dissertation, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA.Google Scholar
Sutcliffe, Mathew. 1592. An Answere to a Certaine Libel Supplicatorie, Or Rather Diffamatory and also to Certaine Calumnious Articles and Interrogatories. Christopher Barker, London.Google Scholar
Swartz, Clarence Lee. 1927. What Is Mutualism? Vanguard, New York.Google Scholar
Sweeney, Kevin M. 1989. Using tax lists to detect biases in probate inventories. In Early American Probate Inventories: The Dublin Seminar for New England Folklife Annual Proceedings 1987, Benes, Peter, ed., pp. 3240. Boston University, Boston.Google Scholar
Sweetman, David. 1995. Irish Castles and Fortified Houses. Country House, Dublin.Google Scholar
Sweezy, Paul M. and Dobb, Maurice. 1950. The transition from feudalism to capitalism. Science and Society 14:134167.Google Scholar
Symonds, Samuel. 1865 [1637]. Letter to John Winthrop, Jr. Collections of the Massachusetts Historical Society, Volume 7, Fourth Series, pp. 118121. Massachusetts Historical Society, Boston.Google Scholar
Tanner, John. 1659. The Hidden Treasures of the Art of Physick Fully Discovered in Four Books. George Sawbridge, London.Google Scholar
Tarlow, Sarah. 2007. The Archaeology of Improvement in Britain, 1750–1850. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Tay, Louis and Diener, Ed. 2011. Needs and subjective well-being around the world. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 101:354365.Google Scholar
Taylor, Charlotte C. 2006. The history and archaeology of Fort Ninigret, a 17th-century Eastern Niantic site in Charlestown, RI. In Native Forts of the Long Island Sound Area, Stone, Gaynell, ed., pp. 277286. Suffolk County Archaeological Association and Nassau County Archaeological Committee, Stony Brook, NY.Google Scholar
Taylor, Robert. 1974. Town houses in Taunton, 1500–1700. Post-Medieval Archaeology 8:6379.Google Scholar
Telfer, Alison, Blackmore, Lyn, Jackson, Caroline, Pearce, Jacqui, Whittingham, Lucy, and Willmott, Hugh. 2006. Rich refuse: a rare find of late 17th-century and mid-18th-century glass and tin-glazed wares from an excavation at the National Gallery, London. Post-Medieval Archaeology 40: 191–213.Google Scholar
Temple, John. 1646. The Irish Rebellion, Or, An History of the Beginnings and First Progresse of the Generall Rebellion Raised Within the Kingdom of Ireland, Upon the Three and Twentieth Day of October, in the Year 1641. R. White, London.Google Scholar
Tenison, Thomas, comp. 1840. Cardinal Bellarmine’s Notes of the Church Examined and Refured. Samuel Holdsworth, London.Google Scholar
, T. H. 1691. An Account of Several New Inventions and Improvements Now Necessary for England. James Atwood, London.Google Scholar
Thayer, Henry O. ed. 1892. The Sagadahoc Colony, Comprising the Relation of a Voyage into New England. Gorges Society, Portland, ME.Google Scholar
Thirsk, Joan. 1967a. The farming regions of England. In The Agrarian History of England and Wales, Volume IV: 1500–1640, Thirsk, Joan, ed., pp. 1112. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Thirsk, Joan. 1967b. Farming techniques. In The Agrarian History of England and Wales, Volume IV: 1500–1640, Thirsk, Joan, ed., pp. 161199. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Thirsk, Joan and Cooper, J. P., eds. 1972. Seventeenth-Century Economic Documents. Clarendon, Oxford.Google Scholar
Thomas, Keith. 1991. Religion and the Decline of Magic: Studies in Popular Beliefs in Sixteenth- and Seventeenth-Century England. Penguin, London.Google Scholar
Thompson, Alan, Grew, Francis, and Schofield, John. 1984. Excavations at Aldgate, 1974. Post-Medieval Archaeology 18:1148.Google Scholar
Thornton, John K. 1977. Demography and history in the Kingdom of Kongo, 1550–1750. Journal of African History 18:507530.Google Scholar
Thornton, John K. 1988. The art of war in Angola, 1575–1680. Comparative Studies in Society and History 30:360378.Google Scholar
Thornton, John K. 1992. Africa and Africans in the Making of the Atlantic World, 1400–1680. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Thornton, John K. 2001. The origins and early history of the Kingdom of Kongo, c. 1350–1550. International Journal of African Historical Studies 34:89120.Google Scholar
Thornton, John K. 2012. A Cultural History of the Atlantic World, 1250–1820. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Thorpe, W. A. 1927. English and Irish Glass. Medici Society, London.Google Scholar
Thomas, Nicholas. 1991. Entangled Objects: Exchange, Material Culture, and Colonialism in the Pacific. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA.Google Scholar
Tillotson, John. 1698. Several Discourses viz. Proving Jesus to be the Messias. Richard Chiswell, London.Google Scholar
Tomlins, T. E. 1810. The Law Dictionary, Defining and Interpreting the Terms or Words of Art, and Explaining the Rise, Progress, and Present State of the English Law. C. and R. Baldwin, London.Google Scholar
Tomlinson, Roy. 1997. Blanket bogs. In Atlas of the Irish Rural Landscape, Aalen, F. H. A., Whelan, Kevin, and Stout, Matthew, eds., pp.117121. Cork University Press, Cork.Google Scholar
Torshell, Samuel. 1644. A Helpe to Christian Fellowship, Or, A Discourse Tending to the Advancement and Spirituall Improvement of Holy Societie. G. M., London.Google Scholar
Toy, Sidney. 2006. A History of Fortification from 3000 BC to AD 1700. Pen and Sword, Barnsley.Google Scholar
Toynbee, Henry. 1866. Further observations on the temperature, specific gravity, &c. of the seas between England and India. Proceedings of the Royal Geographical Society of London 10: 338342.Google Scholar
, T. P. 1655. The Clerks Vade Mecum, Or, a Choice Collection of Modern Presidents, According to the Best Forms Extant and Such as Have not Formerly been Printed. T. M., London.Google Scholar
Trapp, John. 1654. A Commentary, or Exposition upon the XII Minor Prophets. n.p.Google Scholar
Trautman, Patricia. 1989. Dress in seventeenth-century Cambridge, Massachusetts: an inventory-based reconstruction. In Early American Probate Inventories: The Dublin Seminar for New England Folklife Annual Proceedings 1987, Benes, Peter, ed., pp. 5163. Boston University, Boston.Google Scholar
Trigge, Francis. 1604. The Humble Petition of Two Sisters the Church and Common-wealth: For the Restoring of their Ancient Commons and Liberties, which Late Inclosure with Depopulation, Uncharitably hath Taken Away: Containing Seuen Reasons as Euidences for the Same. F. Kingston, London.Google Scholar
Trosse, George. 1692. The Lords Day Vindicated: Or the First Day of the Week, The Christian Sabbath. Samuel Clement, London.Google Scholar
Tuck, James A. and Gaulton, Barry C.. 2013. Lord Baltimore’s mansion: the evolution of a 17th-century manor. In A Glorious Empire: Archaeology and the Tudor-Stuart Atlantic World, Essays in Honor of Ivor Noël Hume, Klingelhofer, Eric, ed., pp. 4152. Oxbow, Oxford.Google Scholar
Turner, E. Randolph. 1985. Socio-political organization within the Powhatan chiefdom and the effects of European contact, AD 1607–1646. In Cultures in Contact: The European Impact on Native Cultural Institutions in Eastern North America, AD 1000–1800, Fitzhugh, William W., ed., pp. 193224. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Turner, James. 1979. Landscape and the “Art Prospective” in England, 1584–1660. Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 42: 290293.Google Scholar
Tyacke, Sarah. 1980. English charting of the River Amazon, c. 1595–c. 1630. Imago Mundi 32:7389.Google Scholar
Tyler, Kieron and Willmott, Hugh. 2005. John Baker’s Late 17th-Century Glasshouse at Vauxhall. Museum of London Archaeological Service, London.Google Scholar
Tyler, Kieron, Gaiger-Smith, Alan, Goffin, Richenda, Heard, Kieron, Kilburn, Richard, Smith, Terence Paul, and Stepheson, Roy. 1999. The production of tin-glazed ware on the north bank of the Thames: excavations at the site of the Hermitage Pothouse, Wapping. Post-Medieval Archaeology 33: 127163.Google Scholar
Tyler, Kieron, Egan, Geoff, Goodburn, Damian, Gray, Lisa, Nailer, Alison, and Stephenson, Roy. 2001. The excavation of an Elizabethan/Stuart waterfront site on the north bank of the River Thames at Victoria Wharf, Narrow Street, Limehouse, London E14. Post-Medieval Archaeology 35: 5395.Google Scholar
Underhill, John. 1638. Newes from America, Or, A New and Experimentall Discoverie of New England, Containing a True Relation of Their War-like Proceedings These Two Years Last Past, with a Figure of the Indian Fort, or Palizado. J. D., London.Google Scholar
Unwin, George. 1904. Industrial Organization in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries. Clarendon, Oxford.Google Scholar
Upton, Dell. 1980. Early Vernacular Architecture in Southeastern Virginia. Doctoral dissertation, Brown University, Providence, RI.Google Scholar
Upton, Dell. 1982. Vernacular architecture in eighteenth-century Virginia. Winterthur Portfolio 17(2/3):95119.Google Scholar
van Dam, Jan Daniël. 2004. Delffse Porceleyne: Dutch Delftware, 1620–1850. Waanders, Amsterdam.Google Scholar
Van Dantzig, Albert and Priddy, Barbara. A Short History of the Forts and Castles of Ghana. Ghana Museum, Accra.Google Scholar
van der Donck, Adriaen. 2008 [1655]. A Description of New Netherland. Gehring, Charles T. and Starna, William A., eds., Diederik Willem Goedhuys, trans. University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln.Google Scholar
van der Pijl-Ketel, Christine, ed. 1982. The Ceramic Load of the “Witte Leeuw” (1613). Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam.Google Scholar
Van Duinen, Jared. 2007. Prosopography and the Providence Island Company: the nature of Puritan opposition in 1630s England. In Prosopography Approaches and Applications: A Handbook, Benedicta Keats-Rohan, Katherine Stephanie, ed., pp. 527541. Oxford University Linacre College Unit for Prosopographical Research, Oxford.Google Scholar
Vansina, Jan. 1963. The foundation of the Kingdom of Kongo. Journal of African History 4:355374.Google Scholar
Vansina, Jan. 1966. Kingdoms of the Savanna: A History of Central African States until European Occupation. University of Wisconsin Press, Madison.Google Scholar
Van Tienhoven, Cornelis. 1856. Information respecting land in New Netherland. In Documents Relative to the Colonial History of the State of New-York, O’Callaghan, E. B., ed., pp. 365371. Weed, Parsons, Albany, NY.Google Scholar
Vauban, Sébastien Le Prestre de. 1691. The New Method of Fortification, As Practiced by Monsieur de Vauban, Engineer General of France. Abel Swall, London.Google Scholar
Villarica, Hans. 2011. Maslow 2.0: a new and improved recipe for happiness. Atlantic <http://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2011/08/maslow-20-a-new-and-improved-recipe-for-happiness/243486/> accessed July 2016.+accessed+July+2016.>Google Scholar
Vince, Alan and Peacey, Allan. 2006. Pipemakers and their workshops: the use of geochemical analysis in the study of the clay tobacco pipe industry. In Between Dirt and Discussion: Methods, Methodology, and Interpretation in Historical Archaeology, Archer, Steven N. and Bartoy, Kevin M., eds., pp. 1131.Google Scholar
Vincent, Philip. 1637. A True Relation of the Late Battell Fought in New England Between the English and the Salvages [sic]: With the Present State of Things There. M. P., London.Google Scholar
Vines, Richard. 1656. Sermons Preached upon Several Publike and Eminent Occasions. Abel Roper, London.Google Scholar
Virginia Company. 1609. Offer of Stock in the Virginia Company. n.p., London.Google Scholar
Vose, Ruth Hurst. 1994. Excavations at the 17th-century glasshouse at Haughton Green, Denton, near Manchester. Post-Medieval Archaeology 28: 171.Google Scholar
Wacquant, Loïc J. D. 1992. Toward a social praxeology: the structure and logic of Bourdieu’s sociology. In Bourdieu, Pierre and Wacquant, Loïc J. D., An Invitation to Reflexive Sociology, pp. 159. University of Chicago Press, Chicago.Google Scholar
Wakefield, Edward Gibbon. 1849. A View of the Art of Colonization. John W. Parker, London.Google Scholar
Walker, Iain C. 1971a. The Bristol Clay Tobacco-Pipe Industry. City Museum, Bristol.Google Scholar
Walker, Iain C. 1971b. The manufacture of Dutch clay tobacco-pipes. Northeast Historical Archaeology 1:517.Google Scholar
Walker, Iain C. 1977. Clay Tobacco Pipes, With Particular Reference to the Bristol Industry. National Historic Parks and Sites Branch, Parks Canada, Ottawa.Google Scholar
Walker, Rob. 2008. Buying In: What We Buy and Who We Are. Random House, New York.Google Scholar
Wallace, Alfred R. 1880. Degeneration. Science 1(6):63.Google Scholar
Wallerstein, Immanuel. 1976. A world-system perspective on the social sciences. British Journal of Sociology 27:343352.Google Scholar
Wallerstein, Immanuel. 2000. The Essential Wallerstein. New Press, New York.Google Scholar
Wallerstein, Immanuel. 2004. World-Systems Analysis: An Introduction. Duke University Press, Durham, NC.Google Scholar
Wallerstein, Immanuel and Smith, Joan. 1992. Households as an institution of the world-economy. In Creating and Transforming Households: The Constraints of the World-Economy, Smith, Joan and Wallerstein, Immanuel, eds., pp. 323. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Wallis, Richard. 1677. London’s Armory Accuratly [sic] Delineated in a Graphical Display of All the Arms Cressts Supportes Mantles & Mottos of Every Distinct Company and Coporate Societie in the Honourable City of London. Richard Wallis, London.Google Scholar
Walsh, Correa Moylan. 1901. The Measurement of General Exchange-Value. Macmillan, New York.Google Scholar
Walsh, Gerry. 2004. Merchants Road (E400/E915): Excavation. In Archaeological Investigations in Galway City, 1987–1998, FitzPatrick, Elizabeth, O’Brien, Madeline, and Walsh, Paul, eds., pp. 1530. Wordwell, Bray.Google Scholar
Walton, Steven A. 2010. State building through building for the state: foreign and domestic expertise in Tudor fortification. Osiris 25:6684.Google Scholar
Ward, Edward. 1699. A Trip to New-England, with a Character of the Country and People, both English and Indians. n.p., London.Google Scholar
Ward, Robert. 1639. Anima’dversions of Warre; or, A Militarie Magazine of the Truest Rules, and Ablest Instructions, for the Managing of Warre. John Dawson, London.Google Scholar
Ward, Samuel. 1622. Woe to Drunkards: A Sermon. A. Math, London.Google Scholar
Warner, George Townsend. 1901. Landmarks in English Industrial History. 2nd ed. Blackie and Son, London.Google Scholar
Waselkov, Gregory A. 1982. Shellfish Gathering and Shell Midden Archaeology. Doctoral dissertation, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.Google Scholar
Waterman, D. M. 1961. Some Irish seventeeth-century houses and their architectural ancestry. In Studies in Building History: Essays in Recognition of the Work of B. H. St. J. O’Neil, Jope, E. M., ed., pp. 251274. Odhams, London.Google Scholar
Watkins, C. Malcolm. 1960. North Devon Pottery and Its Export to America in the 17th Century. Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Watson, Thomas. 1678. The Fight of Faith Crowned: Or, A Sermon Preached at the Funeral of that Eminently Holy Man Mr. Henry Stubs. Joseph Collier, London.Google Scholar
Watts, Gordon Payne, Jr. 2014. Shipwrecked: Bermuda’s Maritime Heritage. National Museum of Bermuda Press, Old Royal Naval Dockyard, Bermuda.Google Scholar
Weadick, Sharon. 2009. How popular were fortified houses in Irish castle building history? a look at their numbers in the archaeological record and distribution patterns. In Plantation Ireland: Settlement and Material Culture, c. 1550-c. 1700. Lyttleton, James and Rynne, Colin, eds., pp. 6185. Four Courts, Dublin.Google Scholar
Wear, Andrew. 2008. Place, health, and disease: the Airs, Waters, Places tradition in early modern England and North America. Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies 38:443465.Google Scholar
Weatherill, Lorna. 1986. The Growth of the Pottery Industry in England, 1660–1815. Garland, New York.Google Scholar
Weatherill, Lorna. 1971a. The Pottery Trade and North Staffordshire, 1660–1760. Augustus M. Kelley, New York.Google Scholar
Weatherill, Lorna. 1971b. The attempts to make pottery and clay tobacco pipes at Whitehaven. Post-Medieval Archaeology 5:165171.Google Scholar
Weatherill, Lorna. 1996. Consumer Behaviour and Material Culture in Britain, 1660–1760. 2nd ed. Routledge, London.Google Scholar
Weatherill, Lorna and Edwards, Rhoda. 1971. Pottery making in London and Whitehaven in the late seventeenth century. Post-Medieval Archaeology 5:160165.Google Scholar
Webster, Jane. 1995. Sanctuaries and sacred places. In The Celtic World, Green, Miranda J., ed., pp. 445464. Routledge, London.Google Scholar
Webster, Jane. 2015. “Success to the Dobson”: commemoration artefacts depecting 18th-century British slave ships. Post-Medieval Archaeology 49:7298.Google Scholar
Wedgwood, C. V. 1969. The King’s Peace, 1637–1641. Collier, New York.Google Scholar
Weiss, Richard. 1970. Racism in the era of industrialization. In The Great Fear: Race in the Mind of America, Nash, Gary B. and Weiss, Richard, eds., pp. 121143. Holt, Rinehart and Winston, New York.Google Scholar
Weld, Isaac. 1832. Statistical Survey of the County of Roscommon, Drawn Up Under the Direction of the Royal Dublin Society. R. Graisberry, Dublin.Google Scholar
Wells, John. 1668. The Practical Sabbatarian: Or, Sabbath-Holiness Crowned with Superlative Happiness. n.p., London.Google Scholar
Wells, Peter S. 1995. Trade and exchange. In The Celtic World, Green, Miranda J., ed., pp. 230243. Routledge, London.Google Scholar
Wesley, John. 1823. A Survey of the Wisdom of God in the Creation: Or, a Compendium of Natural Philosophy, Volume II. 3rd ed. N. Bangs and T. Mason, New York.Google Scholar
Wesley, Samuel [A Schollar]. 1685. Maggots: Or, Poems on Several Subjects, Never Before Handled. John Dunton, London.Google Scholar
Westropp, M. S. D. 1921. Irish Glass: An Account of Glass-Making in Ireland from the XVIth Century to the Present Day. J. B. Lippincott, London.Google Scholar
Westropp, M. S. D. 1935. General Guide to the Art Collections: Pottery and Porcelain, Irish Pottery and Porcelain. The Stationery Office, Dublin.Google Scholar
Wheeler, Ryan J., Miller, James J., McGee, Ray M., Ruhl, Donna, Swann, Brenda, and Memory, Melissa. 2003. Archaic period canoes from Newmans Lake, Florida. American Antiquity 68:533551.Google Scholar
Whitaker, Alexander. 1613. Good Newes from Virginia Sent to the Counsell and Company of Virginia Resident in England. Felix Kyngston, London.Google Scholar
Whitaker, William. 1585. An Answere to a Certaine Booke written by Maister William Rainolds, Student of Divinitie in the English Colledge at Rhemes. Thomas Chard, London.Google Scholar
White, Fiona. 1999. An Assemblage of Post-Medieval Local Wares from Merchants Road, Galway. Master’s thesis, National University of Ireland, Galway.Google Scholar
White, Harriet. 2012. The problem of provenancing English post-medieval slipwares: a chemical and petrographic approach. Post-Medieval Archaeology 46:5669.Google Scholar
White, Hayden. 1972. The forms of wildness: archaeology of an idea. In The Wild Man Within: An Image in Western Thought from the Renaissance to Romanticism. Dudley, Edward and Novak, Maximillian E., eds., pp. 338. University of Pittsburgh Press, Pittsburgh.Google Scholar
Whitehall. 1897 [1669]. Warrant to the Commissioners of Ordnance. Collections of the South Carolina Historical Society, Volume 5, p. 93. South Carolina Historical Society, Charleston.Google Scholar
Whittingham, William. 1561. The Bible and Holy Scriptures Conteyned in the Olde and Newe Testement. n.p., Geneva.Google Scholar
Whittingham, William. 1603. The Bible. Robert Barker, London.Google Scholar
Whittock, Trevor. 1968. A Reading of the Canterbury Tales. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Wilcoxen, Charlotte. 1985. Household artifacts of New Netherland, from its archaeological and documentary records. New Netherland Studies 84:120128.Google Scholar
Wilcoxen, Charlotte. 1987. Dutch Trade and Ceramics in America in the Seventeenth Century. Albany Institute of History and Art, Albany, NY.Google Scholar
Wilcoxen, Charlotte. 1992. The Dutch “tulip plate” and its Chinese Prototype. American Ceramic Circle Journal 8: 724.Google Scholar
Wilcoxen, Charlotte. 1999. Seventeenth-century Portuguese faiança and its presence in colonial America. Northeast Historical Archaeology 28:120.Google Scholar
Wilkins, John. 1668. An Essay Towards a Real Character, and a Philosophical Language. Samuel Gellibrand and John Martyn, London.Google Scholar
Wilks, Ivor. 1962. A medieval trade-route from the Niger to the Gulf of Guinea. Journal of African History 3:337341.Google Scholar
Wilks, Ivor. 1982a. Wangara, Akan, and Portuguese in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries: 1. the matter of Bitu. Journal of African History 23:333349.Google Scholar
Wilks, Ivor. 1982b. Wangara, Akan, and Portuguese in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries: 2. the struggle for trade. Journal of African History 23:463472.Google Scholar
William, III. 1689. A Proclamation Requiring the Discovery and Bringing in of Arms Lately Imbezled. Charles Bill and Thomas Newcomb, London.Google Scholar
Williams, Edward. 1650. Virginia: More Especially the South Part Thereof, Richly and Truly Valued. T. H., London.Google Scholar
Williams, Lorraine E. 1972. Ft. Shantok and Ft. Corchaug: A Comparative Study of Seventeenth-Century Culture Contact in the Long Island Sound Area. Doctoral dissertation, New York University, New York.Google Scholar
Williams, Roger. 1643. A Key into the Language of America, Or, An Help to the Language of the Native in that Part of America, called New-England. Gregory Dexter, London.Google Scholar
Williams, Roger. 1645. Christenings Make Not Christians, Or, A Briefe Discourse Concerning that Name Heathen, Commonly Given to the Indians. Jane Coe, London.Google Scholar
Williams, Roger. 1652. The Bloody Tenent Yet More Bloody. Giles Calvert, London.Google Scholar
Williams, Roger. 1676. George Fox Digg’d Out of His Burrowes, Or, An Offer of Disputation on Fourteen Proposals Made This Last Summer 1672 (so cal’d) unto G. Fox, Then Present on Rhode-Island in New England. John Foster, Boston.Google Scholar
Williamson, James Alexander. 1923. English Colonies in Guiana and on the Amazon, 1604–1668. Clarendon, Oxford.Google Scholar
Williamson, Margaret Holmes. 2003. Powhatan Lords of Life and Death: Command and Consent in Seventeenth-Century Virginia. University of Nebraska, Lincoln.Google Scholar
Willmott, Hugh. 2001. A group of 17th-century glass goblets with restored stems: considering the archaeology of repair. Post-Medieval Archaeology 35: 96105.Google Scholar
Willis, Thomas. 1685. The London Practice of Physick, or, The Whole Practical Part of Physick Contained in the Works of Dr. Willis. Thomas Basset, London.Google Scholar
Wilson, Carter A. 1996. Racism: From Slavery to Advanced Capitalism. Sage, Thousand Oaks, CA.Google Scholar
Wilson, Stephen. 2004. The Magical Universe: Everyday Ritual and Magic in Pre-Modern Europe. Hambledon and London, London.Google Scholar
Winfield, Rif. 2009. British Warships in the Age of Sail, 1603–1714: Design, Construction, Careers, and Fates. Seaforth, Barnsley.Google Scholar
Wingood, Allan J. 1982. Sea Venture: an interim report on an early 17th century shipwreck lost in 1609. International Journal of Nautical Archaeology and Underwater Exploration 11:333347.Google Scholar
Wingood, Allan J. 1986. Sea Venture, second interim report, part 2: the artefacts. International Journal of Nautical Archaeology and Underwater Exploration 15:149159.Google Scholar
Winstanley, Jerrard [Gerrard]. 1652. The Law of Freedom in a Platform. J. M., London.Google Scholar
Withington, Robert. 1918. English Pageantry: An Historical Outline, Volume I. Harvard University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Wolf, Eric. 1982. Europe and the People Without History. University of California Press, Berkeley.Google Scholar
Wolley, Hannah. 1670. The Queen-Like Closet, or, Rich Cabinet Stored with all Manner of Rare Receipts for Preserving, Candying, & Cookery Very Pleasant and Beneficial to all Ingenious Persons of the Female Sex. R. Lowndes, London.Google Scholar
Wood, Ellen Meiksins. 1995. Democracy Against Capitalism: Renewing Historical Materialism. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Wood, Ellen Meiksins. 2002. The Origin of Capitalism: A Longer View. Verso, London.Google Scholar
Wood, Ellen Meiksins and Wood, Neal. 1997. A Trumpet of Sedition: Political Theory and the Rise of Capitalism, 1509–1688. New York University Press, New York.Google Scholar
Wood, Neal. 1984. John Locke and Agrarian Capitalism. University of California Press, Berkeley.Google Scholar
Wood, W. Raymond. 1967. An archaeological appraisal of early European settlements in the Senegambia. Journal of African History 8:3964.Google Scholar
Woodward, Hobson. 2009. A Brave Vessel: The True Tale of the Castaways Who Rescued Jamestown and Inspired Shakespeare’s The Tempest. Viking, New York.Google Scholar
Worlidge, John. 1675. Systema Agriculturae: The Mystery of Husbandry Discovered Treating of the Several New and Most Advantagious Ways of Tilling, Planting, Sowing, Manuring, Ordering, Improving of All Sorts of Gardens, Orchards, Meadows, Pastures, Corn-Lands, Woods & Coppices. J. C., London.Google Scholar
Worlidge, John. 1688. Systema Horti-Culturae, Or, The Arts of Gardening in Three Books. Thomas Dring, London.Google Scholar
Worshipful Company of Tobacco Pipe Makers and Tobacco Blenders. 2015. <www.tobaccolivery.co.uk/about-us/our-history.html> accessed November 2015.+accessed+November+2015.>Google Scholar
Worshipful Company of Shipwrights. 1612. Charter. T. Dawson, London.Google Scholar
Wright, I. A., ed. 1932. Documents Concerning English Voyages to the Spanish Main, 1569–1580. Hakluyt Society, London.Google Scholar
Wright, Louis B., ed. 1964. A Voyage to Virginia in 1609: Two Narratives, Strachey’s “True Reportory” and Jourdain’s Discovery of the Bermudas. University Press of Virginia, Charlottesville.Google Scholar
Wright, Peter. 1975. Astrology and science in seventeenth-century England. Social Studies of Science 5:399422.Google Scholar
Wrightson, Keith. 1986. The social order of early-modern England: three approaches. In The World We Have Gained: Histories of Population and Social Structure, Bonfield, Lloyd, Smith, Richard, and Wrightson, Keith, eds., pp. 177202. Blackwell, Oxford.Google Scholar
Wrightson, Keith. 2000. Earthly Necessities: Economic Lives in Early Modern Britain. Yale University Press, New Haven, CT.Google Scholar
Wrightson, Keith. 2003, English Society, 1580–1680. Routledge, London.Google Scholar
Wrigley, E. A. 2010. Energy and the English Industrial Revolution. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Wrigley, E. A. and Schofield, R. S.. 1989. The Population History of England, 1541–1871: A Reconstruction. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Wurst, LouAnn and Mrozowski, Stephen A.. 2014. Toward an archaeology of the future. International Journal of Historical Archaeology 18:210223.Google Scholar
Yelling, J. A. 1977. Common Field and Enclosure in England, 1450–1850. Macmillan, London.Google Scholar
York, Richard and Mancus, Philip. 2009. Critical human ecology: Historical materialism and natural laws. Sociological Theory 27:122149.Google Scholar
Zetzel, James E. G., ed. 1999. Cicero: On the Commonwealth and On the Laws. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure [email protected] 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
  • Charles E. Orser, Jr., Vanderbilt University, Tennessee
  • Book: An Archaeology of the English Atlantic World, 1600 – 1700
  • Online publication: 21 June 2018
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781316418116.010
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
  • Charles E. Orser, Jr., Vanderbilt University, Tennessee
  • Book: An Archaeology of the English Atlantic World, 1600 – 1700
  • Online publication: 21 June 2018
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781316418116.010
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
  • Charles E. Orser, Jr., Vanderbilt University, Tennessee
  • Book: An Archaeology of the English Atlantic World, 1600 – 1700
  • Online publication: 21 June 2018
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781316418116.010
Available formats
×