The Global Refuge
Huguenots in an Age of Empire
Owen Stanwood
Reviews and Awards
"The style is detailed and lively, and although academic, is fully readable for any non-academic reader. It is full of vivid portraits of interesting characters, and detailed explanations of why various schemes came to nought or (in a few cases) prospered. All in all, it is an excellent addition to the Huguenot library." -- Huguenot Times
"The story of the forced exile of Protestants from France in the seventeenth century has usually been presented as a tragedy. In this lively and fascinating study, Owen Stanwood does not play down the tribulations faced by the exiles, but also emphasizes the possibilities that opened up for them as they founded new communities on several continents and became key players in the construction of the British and Dutch overseas empires. This first comprehensive study of the Huguenot global diaspora will be of great interest to readers of early modern European and global history." -- David A. Bell, Princeton University
"Driven from their homeland by Louis XIV's ferocious persecution, French Protestants scattered across Europe and around the Atlantic World, seeking their fortunes in the service of the British and Dutch empires. Like no historian before him, Owen Stanwood captures the full sweep of this remarkable diaspora in a compelling, highly readable narrative." -- Allan Greer, author of Mohawk Saint: Catherine Tekakwitha and the Jesuits
"Owen Stanwood's fresh look at refugee Huguenots shows how they leveraged their assets -- eagerness to advance their religion in an age of strong confessional identities, access to authorities in a hierarchical society, willingness to relocate far afield in a time of European expansion -- to carve out places where they could survive and prosper. By establishing their role in developing other people's empires, Stanwood moves displaced Huguenots to the center of early-modern politics and -- by implication -- of future historical studies." -- Carolyn Chappell Lougee, Stanford University
"As refugee crises overwhelm twenty-first century nations, Owen Stanwood's The Global Refuge offers a wholly new global history of early modern Europe's first world-circling refugee crisis, the expulsion of 150,000 Protestants -- Huguenots -- from France in the 1680s. Scattering into Europe's Protestant nations, the New World, and even Africa, Huguenots found themselves welcomed and derided, valued but often resented. The Global Refuge is the first major international history of the Huguenot exile, and its vivid prose and deep, encyclopedic research compel attention amidst our own, often tragic, refugee crises." -- Jon Butler, Yale University
"This book offers the first global history of the Huguenot diaspora, explaining how and why these refugees became such ubiquitous characters in the history of imperialism." -- Reformation Research Consortium (RefoRC)