Dr Craig Lambert: Who was William Fowler? Sir John Hawkins, Sir William Garrard, and Queen Elizabeth: Spain, England, and Atlantic Slave Trade in the Sixteenth Century

Saturday 29 April, 3 - 4pm, OS.0.19, Mabb Lovell court lecture room, Old Sessions House

In January 1569 the remnants of an English slaving voyage limped into Mount's Bay. Its commander was Sir John Hawkins, often characterised as 'England's First Slave Trader'. Some months prior to January 1569 Hawkins had fought a naval engagement with Spanish ships at San Juan de Ulúa, a fight that resulted in the loss of several of Hawkins’s vessels and valuable cargo, including a consignment of enslaved Africans. On his return home Hawkins, hoping for compensation, sued the Spanish crown for the goods, ships, and slaves he lost. One of the key witnesses brought before the High Court of the Admiralty to support Hawkins was William Fowler. Yet, who Fowler was, and his links with Hawkins and other backers of the voyage, has remained a mystery. This talk seeks to reconstruct English involvement in the Atlantic slave trade in the sixteenth century and establish the identity of William Fowler by analysing the interconnected 'maritime world' of Europe in this period.

Craig Lambert is Associate Professor in Maritime History at the University of Southampton. His three key research areas are late medieval naval operations and logistics, medieval and Tudor maritime communities, and late medieval and Tudor merchant shipping. Currently, he is engaged in two funded projects, the larger being a one million pound grant from the AHRC to investigate ‘English Merchant Shipping, Maritime Communities, and Trade from the Spanish Armada to the Seven Years War, c.1588–c.1765’.

Tickets

Tickets are £10 per event. If you are booking 10 or more tickets of any given type (e.g. 10 tickets to one lecture, or 1 ticket to 10 lectures) within a single transaction, then a discount of £2 per ticket will be applied at the checkout, and you will only pay £8 per ticket.

Student discounts

There are a limited number of £2 student tickets available for each talk; these are not available for the tours. To access this discount, please use discount code TUDORSTUD23 when prompted. Please note that student ID must be presented with student tickets on the door of the events.

Dates and times

This event finished on 29 April 2023.


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