ABSTRACT

In March 1757 – early in the Seven Years’ War – a British privateer intercepted an Irish ship, the Two Sisters of Dublin, as it returned home from Bordeaux with a cargo of wine and French luxury goods. Amongst the cargo seized were 125 letters from members of the Irish expatriate community, which were to lay undisturbed in the British archives for the next 250 years.

Re-discovered in 2011 by Dr. Truxes, this cache of (mostly unopened) letters provides a colorful, intimate, and revealing glimpse into the lives of ordinary people caught up in momentous events.

Taking this correspondence (published by the British Academy in 2013) as a shared starting point, the ten essays in this volume are not so much "about" the Bordeaux–Dublin letters themselves, but rather reflect upon themes, perspectives, and questions embedded within the mail of ordinary men, women, and children cut off from home by war. The volume’s introduction situates these essays within a broad Atlantic context, allowing the succeeding chapters to explore a range of topics at the cutting edge of early-modern British and Irish historical scholarship, including women in the early-modern world, the consequences of war across all classes in society, the eighteenth-century penal laws and their impact, and Irish expatriate communities on the European continent. Leavening these broad themes with the personal snapshots of life provided by the Bordeaux-Dublin letters, this edited collection enlarges, complicates, and challenges our understanding of the mid-eighteenth-century Atlantic world.

chapter |31 pages

Introduction

A connected Irish world

chapter 1|19 pages

The Irish colony in Bordeaux, 1757

A representative sample of Irish communities abroad?

chapter 2|19 pages

The Boyds in Bordeaux and Dublin

chapter 3|23 pages

“Precarious and dangerous times” 1

Ireland and France and the spectre of invasion, 1690–1760

chapter 4|15 pages

Seven sisters?

The seaport cities of mid-eighteenth-century Ireland

chapter 5|20 pages

Prize-taking

Its role in maritime strategy and ultimate success in the Seven Years’ War

chapter 8|16 pages

Between lines

Language, intimacy, and voyeurism during global war

chapter 9|14 pages

“It is with pleasure I lay hold of evry occasion of wrightin” 1

Female domestic servants, The Bordeaux–Dublin Letters, and the epistolary novel