In this first modern history of the Huguenots' New World experience, Jon Butler traces the Huguenot diaspora across late seventeenth-century Europe, explores the causes and character of their American emigration, and reveals the Huguenots' secular and religious assimilation in three remarkably different societies--Boston, New York, and South Carolina.
Read More
In this first modern history of the Huguenots' New World experience, Jon Butler traces the Huguenot diaspora across late seventeenth-century Europe, explores the causes and character of their American emigration, and reveals the Huguenots' secular and religious assimilation in three remarkably different societies--Boston, New York, and South Carolina.
Read Less
Choose your shipping method in Checkout. Costs may vary based on destination.
Seller's Description:
Fine in Very Good jacket. First edition. Octavo. viii, (6), 264pp. Green cloth. llustrated, portraits, tables. Fine in a very good edgeworn dustwrapper. "First major Continental refugee group to emigrate to Britain's American colonies, then disappeared as a separate people wherever they settled." Harvard Historical Monographs, Volume LXXII.