THE RHINE EXODUS OF 1816/1817 WITHIN THE DEVELOPING GERMAN ATLANTIC WORLD.

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  • Author(s): BOYD, JAMES
  • Source:
    Historical Journal. Mar2016, Vol. 59 Issue 1, p99-123. 25p.
  • Additional Information
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    • Abstract:
      This article examines the exodus down the Rhine in 1816 and 1817 of tens of thousands of German migrants, who attempted to reach the United States after the Napoleonic Wars. It establishes the episode as an important link between the mass-migration periods of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, which saw more Germans land in North America than any other European group. The article focuses on the active commercial, logistical, social, and religious networks, produced in the eighteenth century, which made the exodus possible, and how it in turn changed future migration patterns. This integrates the exodus into an evolving German Atlantic movement, where previous historiography has treated it as an isolated episode, produced by extraordinary post-war conditions. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
    • Abstract:
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