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ALIEN SEAMEN IN THE BRITISH NAVY, BRITISH LAW, AND THE BRITISH STATE, c. 1793 – c. 1815
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 October 2018
Abstract
During the ‘long eighteenth century’, several thousands of sailors born outside British territories served in the Royal Navy. This phenomenon, and the peculiarities of their employment compared to that of British seamen, remain largely unstudied. This paper aims to show that, as far as disabilities or privileges were concerned, official legislation only played a very small part in making alien seamen's experiences in the navy distinct from those of their British colleagues. More broadly, this article argues that, whilst transnationalism can be overemphasized, there are specific contexts and groups of people for which the power of the state falters when it comes to obstructing movement, and indeed it is forced, for its very survival, to act strategically against the barrier to circulation that frontiers normally constitute. In similar circumstances, the origins of the individuals concerned, intended as official labels that states normally use to classify them, control them, and claim or disclaim ownership over them, can become all but meaningless. Thus, naval sailors, as useful state servants, can be an excellent case-study to understand the category of legal ‘foreignness’ as it developed in modern nation-states, and the tensions inherent to it.
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Footnotes
I would like to thank Dr Renaud Morieux, my supervisor, and the two anonymous reviewers for detailed and precious feedback on earlier drafts of this article, and the editor of the Historical Journal Professor Emma Griffin for her assistance through the publication process. Dr Gareth Atkins, Cameron Holloway, and audiences at the Cambridge Faculty of History and Social History Society Conference also offered many helpful comments and suggestions. My Ph.D. research, of which this article is part, is jointly funded by Robinson College, Cambridge, and the Arts and Humanities Research Council, through a Lewis-AHRC Studentship.
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42 12 Car. II c. 18.
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76 22 Geo. II c. 33 § xii, xiv.
77 39 & 40 Geo. III c. 100 § v.
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101 Fahrmeir, Citizens and aliens, pp. 71, 84–6, 92; Statt, Foreigners and Englishmen, pp. 34–7. For some figures, see Beerbühl, ‘British nationality policy’, pp. 58–66.
102 6 Ann. c. 37 § xx.
103 13 Geo. II c. 3 § ii.
104 See n. 40.
105 20 Geo. III c. 20 § iii; Parry, British nationality law, pp. 90–1.
106 ‘A proposed bill to prevent aliens, for a limited time, from becoming naturalized, or being made or becoming denizens; except in certain cases’ (June 1818), 19th Century House of Commons Sessional Papers, i, p. 579, House of Commons Parliamentary Papers Online http://gateway.proquest.com/openurl?url_ver=Z39.88-2004&res_dat=xri:hcpp&rft_dat=xri:hcpp:rec:1818-005403.
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108 34 Geo. III c. 68 § vii; 42 Geo. III c. 61 § viii.
109 Cockburn, Nationality, pp. 29–34.
110 34 Geo. III c. 68 § viii.
111 Journals of the House of Lords, beginning anno tricesimo quarto Georgii Tertii, 1794, xl, 94a, 112b, 115b, 118b, 120a, 216a, 219a, 244a. For drafts of amendments, concerning other portions of the bill, see British Mariners Bill – Amendments and Clauses, 3 Apr. 1794, London, Parliamentary Archives, Records of the House of Lords: main papers, HL/PO/JO/10/7/965.
112 Lars Jansby, 8 Mar. 1808, TNA, law officers’ opinions, 1805–8, ADM 7/307/61, fo. 2.
113 Ibid., fos. 2–4.
114 Ibid., fo. 3.
115 Ibid., fo. 1.
116 Wm Schroeder, 6 Feb. 1810, TNA, law officers’ opinions, 1809–10, ADM 7/308/27.
117 Ibid., fos. 2, 5.
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120 Harper, English Navigation Laws, p. 389.
121 Cerutti, Étrangers, pp. 17–20, 63–9, 292–9.
122 House of Commons, 18 Feb. 1813, Hansard, 1st series, 24, cols. 630–2, 634–7.
123 Zimmerman, Impressment, pp. 21–9, 81–4; Cockburn, Nationality, pp. 70–8.
124 Cockburn, Nationality, p. 54.
125 For the subsequent history of contradictions inherent to naturalization and indelible allegiance, see Fahrmeir, Citizens and aliens, pp. 46–51, 63–4, 86, 91–3.
126 Ibid., p. 238.
127 Ibid., p. 93; Statt, Foreigners and Englishmen, pp. 186–92.
128 No officer named Camillo Corri ever passed the examination for lieutenant. See Pappalardo, Bruno, Royal Navy lieutenants’ passing certificates (1691–1902) (2 vols., Kew, 2001)Google Scholar.
129 On these, see Morieux, ‘Diplomacy’.
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