ABSTRACT

The Global Atlantic provides a concise, lively overview of the complex and diverse history of the greater Atlantic region from 1400 to 1900. During this period, the lands around the Atlantic basin – Europe, Africa, and the Americas – became deeply interconnected in networks of trade, cultural exchange, and geopolitics that reshaped these regions and the world beyond. In this accessible and engaging text, Christoph Strobel integrates the Atlantic into world history, showing that the Atlantic oceanic system was always interlinked with the rest of globe.

From the Mediterranean origins of slave-worked sugar plantations to the Chinese demand for silver from American mines, The Global Atlantic discusses key examples of these connections with clarity, enabling students to understand how existing ideas and incentives shaped the emerging Global Atlantic, and how these Atlantic systems in turn created the world we live in today.

chapter |9 pages

Introduction

Currents of the Global Atlantic

part I|38 pages

Trans-Regional Interactions before 1492 and the Roots of the Global Atlantic

part |105 pages

Navigating the Global Atlantic, 1400–1800

chapter |10 pages

Conclusion

The Decline of the Global Atlantic and a New Order of Things