Book ID: CBB336671042

Swansea Copper: A Global History (2020)

unapi

Evans, Chris (Author)
Miskell, Louise (Author)


Johns Hopkins University Press


Publication Date: 2020
Physical Details: 243
Language: English

Eighteenth-century Swansea, Wales, was to copper what nineteenth-century Manchester was to cotton or twentieth-century Detroit to the automobile. Beginning around 1700, Swansea became the place where a revolutionary new method of smelting copper, later christened the Welsh Process, flourished. Using mineral coal as a source of energy, Swansea's smelters were able to produce copper in volumes that were quite unthinkable in the old, established smelting centers of central Europe and Scandinavia. After some tentative first steps, the Swansea district became a smelting center of European, then global, importance. Between the 1770s and the 1840s, the Swansea district routinely produced one-third of the world's smelted copper, sometimes more.In Swansea Copper, Chris Evans and Louise Miskell trace the history of copper making in Britain from the late seventeenth century, when the Welsh Process transformed Britain's copper industry, to the 1890s, when Swansea's reign as the dominant player in the world copper trade entered an absolute decline. Moving backward and forward in time, Evans and Miskell begin by examining the place of copper in baroque Europe, surveying the productive landscape into which Swansea Copper erupted and detailing the means by which it did so. They explain how Swansea copper achieved global dominance in the years between the Seven Years' War and Waterloo, explore new commercial regulations that allowed the importation to Britain of copper ore from around the world, and connect the rise of the copper trade to the rise of the transatlantic slave trade. They also examine the competing rise of the post–Civil War US copper industry.Whereas many contributions to global history focus on high-end consumer goods—Chinese ceramics, Indian cottons, and the like—Swansea Copper examines a producer good, a metal that played a key role in supporting new technologies of the industrial age, like steam power and electricity. Deftly showing how deeply mineral history is ingrained in the history of the modern world, Evans and Miskell present new research not just on Swansea itself but on the places its copper industry affected: mining towns in Cuba, Chile, southern Africa, and South Australia. This insightful book will be of interest to anyone concerned with the historical roots of globalization and the Industrial Revolution as a global phenomenon.

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Reviewed By

Review Espen Storli (202) Review of "Swansea Copper: A Global History". Business History Review (pp. 432-434). unapi

Review Gianenrico Bernasconi (January 2022) Review of "Swansea Copper: A Global History". Technology and Culture (pp. 255-257). unapi

Citation URI
https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB336671042/

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Authors & Contributors
Friedrich Frhr. Waitz von Eschen
Solar, Peter M.
Oliver Dunn
Wakelin, Peter
Zahedieh, Nuala
Saunders, Olivia
Journals
Economic History Review
The Journal of Transport History
Ziran Kexueshi Yanjiu (Studies in the History of Natural Sciences)
Technikgeschichte: Beiträge zur Geschichte der Technik und Industrie
Rittenhouse: Journal of the American Scientific Instrument Enterprise
Journal of Global History
Publishers
Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Wales
Canal and River Trust
L'Harmattan
Indiana University Press
Carnegie Publishing
Bloomsbury Academic
Concepts
Industrial revolution
Copper and copper industry
Smelting
Metallurgy
Great Britain, colonies
Mines and mining
People
Zumbe, Carl
Thompson, Robert Means
Woodcroft, Bennet
Keir, James
Hybinette, Noak Victor
Gualdi, Federico
Time Periods
19th century
18th century
17th century
Edo period (Japan, 1603-1868)
Prehistory
20th century, early
Places
Great Britain
Wales
United States
England
Germany
Middle and Near East
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