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4 - Fevers Take Hold: From Recife to Kourou

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2012

J. R. McNeill
Affiliation:
Georgetown University, Washington DC
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Summary

From Canada to Chile, the Americas in the seventeenth century served as a playing field for the ambitions of several European statesmen and countless independent warrior-entrepreneurs. The great prizes were land, labor and, above all, Spanish silver from Mexico and Peru. On the high seas, Spanish treasure fleets attracted relentless attention from pirates and privateers. On land, the most appealing targets were rich lands suitable for plantations and strategic points from which to dominate trade or undertake piracy. Early in the seventeenth century, some of these targets were poorly defended and thinly populated. Even modest forces might hope to take them.

As long as there was no yellow fever and little or no malaria, the prospects for success in assaults in the Greater Caribbean were highly encouraging. The small island of St. Kitts changed hands seven times between English and French in the years before 1665. St. Kitts had good soils and held promise as a plantation island, so it was worth the trouble to take. Without much in the way of fortifications or population, St. Kitts could scarcely hold out against a force of a couple of hundred determined armed men. Slaves formed a potential fifth column on almost every island, inspiring efforts at conquest and sometimes helping them succeed.

This chapter presents brief stories of two early episodes, the Dutch at Recife in Brazil, 1624–1654, and the English on Jamaica, 1655–1660, in which invading armies achieved significant conquests in the absence of yellow fever.

Type
Chapter
Information
Mosquito Empires
Ecology and War in the Greater Caribbean, 1620–1914
, pp. 91 - 136
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2010

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