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A Golden World: How the Americas Transformed Renaissance England

عالم ذهبي: كيف حولت الأمريكتان عصر النهضة في إنجلترا

Not Translated

From rumours of lost Amazonian cities of gold to the silver running through the mountains of Bolivia, hopes for dazzling wealth fuelled the imperial fantasies of the Tudors and Stuarts. But while stories of treasure ships and privateers like Walter Raleigh have become entrenched in national myths – what did Elizabethans actually know about Mexico, the Amazon rainforest, or the Chesapeake? How did Indigenous people and knowledge enter the art, fashion, and literature of Shakespeare’s time – and at what cost? _A Golden World_ illuminates how the Americas became a visible and material presence in English culture, through a range of unexpected objects: from tobacco leaves strewn in playhouses to a boy wearing a pearl earring. Award-winning historian Lauren Working presents an altogether new history of the ‘golden age’ of 16th century England, that considers the desire for power, land and resources in the first era of colonization, alongside the craft and labour of those in the Americas who contributed to the English Renaissance as we know it.

A Golden World: How the Americas Transformed Renaissance England

Bibliographic Data

Author
PublisherFaber & FaberWebsite
Publisher Addressmailbox@faber.co.uk
CountryBritain
Also In
Published2026
LanguageEnglish (EN)
Pages258 pages
Editionfirst
Dimensions14.53 x 2.34 x 21.67 cm
ISBN9780571393831
Translation
Not Translated
Keywords
Golden

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