Contact us on (02) 8445 2300
For all customer service and order enquiries

Woodslane Online Catalogues

9780826368751 Academic Inspection Copy

Armed Frontier

Warfare and Military Culture in the Texas-Northeastern Mexico Borderlands,1686-1845
Description
Author
Biography
Reviews
Google
Preview
Armed Frontier is a deeply researched and yet accessible history of border skirmishes from mid-colonial times to the first Texas secession. The history of warfare and armed organization during the colonial period and early nineteenth century in southern Texas and northeastern Mexico remains largely untold. Previous studies either cover the influence of warfare tangentially or ignore its importance. This study explores the topic through an examination of the inhabitants of four settlements: San Antonio and Laredo in Texas, as well as Lampazos and Bustamante in northeastern Mexico. All four of those settlements had Hispanic, Mesoamerican, and Native American elements that intermingled, adapted, and evolved over several centuries, creating a distinctive society in which armed service and military culture played a central role in social organization. This work uses multiple archival records, many previously unknown, from Mexico, Texas, and Spain. It places the local and micro historical aspects of borderlands military culture into the broader context of the Spanish Empire, Mexican nationalism, and the Atlantic World. Armed Frontier focuses on how military organization and methods of warfare in these regions were influenced by the heritage of medieval Iberian martial traditions. It provides a different analysis of borderland societies through several historical periods including the Reconquista, the conquest of Mexico, the colonial period, the wars of independence, the Mexican Republic, and the age of federalism and centralism, all against the backdrop of a burgeoning geopolitical rivalry with the United States. The themes covered in the book illustrate the complexities of borderlands societies through a linear analysis of local sources, inserted in a broad geopolitical context and accessible to a wide audience.
Luis Alberto Garcia-Garcia is a professor of history at the Universidad de Monterrey, Mexico.
"This exploration of Spanish and Mexican military practices is based on meticulous archival research and on generations of US and Mexican scholarship. It is a significant book for readers in frontier studies on both sides of the border." - Sean F. McEnroe, author of A Troubled Marriage: Indigenous Elites of the Colonial Americas
Google Preview content