Britannia's Children
Emigration from England, Scotland, Wales and Ireland since 1600

Eric Richards

Twenty-five million emigrants left the British Isles in the four hundred years after 1600, mainly travelling to America or to parts of the British Empire around the world. This huge exodus, the greatest of any nation before the twentieth century, accounts for much of Britain's wider impact on the world, in terms of cultural, social and political attitudes, and notably in the legacy of the English language as the most widely used global lingua franca. Britannia's Children is the first account of emigration from the British Isles as a whole, including England, Scotland, Wales and Ireland (Ireland being part of the United Kingdom during the Great Famine and its classic age of emigration). Eric Richards traces the stages of this extraordinary movement from the days of Raleigh and the Mayflower to modern times, and shows the variety of motives that drove men and women to make the most momentous decisions of their lives. He also provides a mass of examples of individual cases, voyages, destinations and fates.

'What urged our travel was our country's weal;
And none will doubt but that our emigration
Has proved most useful to the British nation,'
-- George Barrington (b1755)

Eric Richards is Professor of history at Flinders University, Adelaide, Australia and author of The Highland Clearances

320 pages 16 illus. 1 March 2004
1 85285 441 3     £ 25