French Colonial Archaeology in the Southeast and Caribbean
"The French in the Western Hemisphere are best known from their activities in Canada and the Great Lakes. This book provides insights into their interactions with their English and Spanish rivals south of the border."—Charles Ewen, East Carolina University

"The first collection of broadly multiregional and multidisciplinary archaeological studies addressing the French colonial experience in the southern United States and the Caribbean. The contributions reveal the diverse ways in which French colonists, African slaves, and Native Americans adjusted to new colonial realities through studies of material culture, landscape, architecture, diet, and bioarchaeology. Important source material for all students of the American colonial period."—Kathleen Deagan, Florida Museum of Natural History 


This innovative collection of essays brings together archaeological research on French colonial sites from Maryland, South Carolina, the Gulf Coast and Lower Mississippi Valley, the Caribbean, and French Guiana to explore the nature of French colonization. Specific contributions explore foodways, ceramics, plantations, architecture, and colonial interactions with Africans and Native Americans, all with an eye to what makes the French colonial endeavor distinct from better-known British or Spanish experience.

Crosscutting the volume are such questions as, how are "French" sites different from those of other nationalities, what is the nature of French colonization, how can archaeology help identify particularly national histories in a given colonial setting, and how was French identity materialized and maintained in the New World?


Kenneth G. Kelly is professor of anthropology at the University of South Carolina, where he teaches historical archaeology and African archaeology. Meredith D. Hardy is an archaeologist with the National Park Service-Southeast Archeological Center.

 
1102299700
French Colonial Archaeology in the Southeast and Caribbean
"The French in the Western Hemisphere are best known from their activities in Canada and the Great Lakes. This book provides insights into their interactions with their English and Spanish rivals south of the border."—Charles Ewen, East Carolina University

"The first collection of broadly multiregional and multidisciplinary archaeological studies addressing the French colonial experience in the southern United States and the Caribbean. The contributions reveal the diverse ways in which French colonists, African slaves, and Native Americans adjusted to new colonial realities through studies of material culture, landscape, architecture, diet, and bioarchaeology. Important source material for all students of the American colonial period."—Kathleen Deagan, Florida Museum of Natural History 


This innovative collection of essays brings together archaeological research on French colonial sites from Maryland, South Carolina, the Gulf Coast and Lower Mississippi Valley, the Caribbean, and French Guiana to explore the nature of French colonization. Specific contributions explore foodways, ceramics, plantations, architecture, and colonial interactions with Africans and Native Americans, all with an eye to what makes the French colonial endeavor distinct from better-known British or Spanish experience.

Crosscutting the volume are such questions as, how are "French" sites different from those of other nationalities, what is the nature of French colonization, how can archaeology help identify particularly national histories in a given colonial setting, and how was French identity materialized and maintained in the New World?


Kenneth G. Kelly is professor of anthropology at the University of South Carolina, where he teaches historical archaeology and African archaeology. Meredith D. Hardy is an archaeologist with the National Park Service-Southeast Archeological Center.

 
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French Colonial Archaeology in the Southeast and Caribbean

French Colonial Archaeology in the Southeast and Caribbean

French Colonial Archaeology in the Southeast and Caribbean

French Colonial Archaeology in the Southeast and Caribbean

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Overview

"The French in the Western Hemisphere are best known from their activities in Canada and the Great Lakes. This book provides insights into their interactions with their English and Spanish rivals south of the border."—Charles Ewen, East Carolina University

"The first collection of broadly multiregional and multidisciplinary archaeological studies addressing the French colonial experience in the southern United States and the Caribbean. The contributions reveal the diverse ways in which French colonists, African slaves, and Native Americans adjusted to new colonial realities through studies of material culture, landscape, architecture, diet, and bioarchaeology. Important source material for all students of the American colonial period."—Kathleen Deagan, Florida Museum of Natural History 


This innovative collection of essays brings together archaeological research on French colonial sites from Maryland, South Carolina, the Gulf Coast and Lower Mississippi Valley, the Caribbean, and French Guiana to explore the nature of French colonization. Specific contributions explore foodways, ceramics, plantations, architecture, and colonial interactions with Africans and Native Americans, all with an eye to what makes the French colonial endeavor distinct from better-known British or Spanish experience.

Crosscutting the volume are such questions as, how are "French" sites different from those of other nationalities, what is the nature of French colonization, how can archaeology help identify particularly national histories in a given colonial setting, and how was French identity materialized and maintained in the New World?


Kenneth G. Kelly is professor of anthropology at the University of South Carolina, where he teaches historical archaeology and African archaeology. Meredith D. Hardy is an archaeologist with the National Park Service-Southeast Archeological Center.

 

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780813061450
Publisher: University Press of Florida
Publication date: 03/15/2015
Series: Florida Museum of Natural History: Ripley P. Bullen Series
Edition description: Reprint
Pages: 264
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 8.90(h) x 0.80(d)

About the Author

Kenneth G. Kelly is professor of anthropology at the University of South Carolina. Meredith D. Hardy is an archaeologist with the National Park Service–Southeast Archeological Center.

Table of Contents

List of Figures vii

List of Tables ix

1 Introduction Kenneth G. Kelly Meredith D. Hardy 1

2 French Protestants in South Carolina: The Archaeology of a European Ethnic Minority Ellen Shlasko 17

3 French Refugees and Slave Abuse in Frederick County, Maryland: Jean Payen de Boisneuf and the Vincendière Family at L'Hermitage Plantation Sara Rivers-Cofield 29

4 Commoditization of Persons, Places, and Things during Biloxi's Second Tenure as Capital of French Colonial Louisiana Barbara Thedy Hester 47

5 The Moran Site (22HR511): An Early-Eighteenth-Century French Colonial Cemetery in Nouveau Biloxi, Mississippi Marie Elaine Danforth 64

6 The Greatest Gathering: The Second French-Chickasaw War in the Mississippi Valley and the Potential for Archaeology Ann M. Early 81

7 Colonial and Creole Diets in Eighteenth-Century New Orleans Elizabeth M. Scott Shannon Lee Dawdy 97

8 Colonoware in Western Colonial Louisiana: Makers and Meaning David Morgan Kevin C. MacDonald 117

9 Living on the Edge: Foodways and Early Expressions of Creole Culture on the French Colonial Gulf Coast Frontier Meredith D. Hardy 152

10 La Vie Quotidienne: Historical Archaeological Approaches to the Plantation Era in Guadeloupe, French West Indies Kenneth G. Kelly 189

11 Archaeological Research at Habitation Loyola, French Guiana Allison Bain Réginald Auger Yannick Le Roux 206

12 Commentary John de Bry 225

List of Contributors 243

Index 245

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