Travel Reference
In-Depth Information
19. Ellis, Eighteenth-Century Coffee-House Culture ; Pendergrast, Uncommon Grounds ; Hemming,
River of Trees.
20. Instituto Brasileiro do Café, O café no Brasil .
21. Reis, Portugueses e Brasileiros na Guiana Francesa ; Reis, Território do Amapá ; Cardoso,
Guiana Francesa.
22. Capistrano de Abreu . Chapters of Brazil's Colonial History .
23. Williams, “Brazil and French Guiana.”
24. Capistrano de Abreu, Chapters of Brazil's Colonial History.
25. Bruleaux et al., Deux siècles d'esclavage en Guyane Française ; Mam Lam Fouck, Guyane
Français ; Soublin, Cayenne 1809 .
26. Gomes, Terras de Cabo Norte; Reis, Portugueses e brasileiros na Guiana Francesa.
27. Eltis and Richardson, Extending the Frontiers ; Eltis and Richardson, Atlas of the Transatlantic
Slave Trade.
28. Funes, “Mocambos do Trombetas”; Gomes, “Safe Haven”; Gomes and de Queiroz, “Between
Frontiers and Limits.”
29. Funes, “Mocambos do Trombetas”; Gomes, “Entre fronteiras e limites”; Gomes, “Fronteiras e
mocambos;” Gomes, Terras do Cabo Norte ; Gomes,“Outras paisagens coloniais ; Cardoso, Economia
e sociedad .
30. The main Demerara uprising occurred in 1823, but there had been previous “troubles.” See da
Costa, Crowns of Glory, Tears of Blood .
31. See Stedman. Expedition to Surinam ; Naipaul, Loss of El Dorado ; da Costa, Crowns of Glory,
Tears of Blood .
32. Hoogbergen, Boni Maroon Wars in Suriname ; Rothschild, “Horrible Tragedy in the French At-
lantic.”
33. da Costa, Crowns of Glory, Tears of Blood .
34. Gomes, “Safe Haven.”
35. Debbasch, “Crime d'empoisonnement”; Prance, “Poisons and Narcotics of the Amazonian Indi-
ans”; Savage, “'Black Magic' and White Terror.” Poisoning by natives and slaves was emphasized in
the Inquisitional visits to Pará. See Lapa, Livro da visitação ; Stedman, Narrative of a Five Years Ex-
pedition ; Gomes, Terras do Cabo Norte ; Gomes, “Fronteiras e mocambos.”
36. Stedman, Narrative of a Five Years Expedition; Gomes, Nas terras do Cabo Norte ; Gomes,
“Fronteiras E Mocambos”.
37. Darrell Posey described ways that Kayapo Indians provided trekking foods, including planting in
tree falls, along pathways, and around old camps. It is likely that similar strategies were used by ma-
roons. See also Rival, Trekking through History ; Funes, “Nasci na Matas nuca tive Senhor.”
38. Guerreiro et al., “Genetical-Demographic Data”; Perna, Cardoso, and Guerreiro, “Duffy Blood
Group Genotypes.”
39. Kenneth Maxwell argues that the expulsion of Jesuits from the Amazon was in fact the “spark”
that resulted in the more general expulsion of religious orders from European politics as well as coloni-
al life. See Maxwell, “Spark.”
40. Mukerji, “Dominion, Demonstration and Domination”; Spary, “Of Nutmegs and Botanists.”
41. This family included Joseph, who traveled with de la Condamine and wrote the first definitive
monograph on quinine. Other siblings managed the Jardin du Roi, the national botanical garden. See
Plotkin, Boom, and Allison, “Ethnobotany of Aublet's Histoire des plantes .”
42. Spary, “Of Nutmegs and Botanists”; Touchet, Botanique et Colonisation.
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