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Jean-Charles de Baas

Jean-Charles de Baas-Castelmore, marquis de Baas (died 15 January 1677) was governor and lieutenant general of the French Antilles from 1669 to 1677. As a young man he became a soldier during the Franco-Spanish War (1635–59), and participated in the Fronde rebellion of 1648–53. King Louis XIV of France pardoned him for this, and he played an important role in the fighting in Italy. After being made governor general of the Antilles he transferred the administrative center from Saint Christopher Island (Saint Kitts) to the more strategically located and economically important Martinique. He had to deal with constant crises in supplies caused by the (often-ignored) ban on trading with the English and Dutch. He improved the administration, developed the defenses of Fort Royal, and helped fight off an attempted Dutch invasion in 1674.

Jean-Charles de Baas-Castelmore, marquis de Baas
Lieutenant general of the French Antilles
In office
4 February 1669 – 15 January 1677
Preceded byAntoine Lefèbvre de La Barre
Succeeded byGabriel de Jolinet (interim)
Charles de Courbon de Blénac
Personal details
Died15 January 1677
NationalityFrench

Family edit

Jean-Charles de Baas was born some time after 1612. His family came from Béarn in southwest France, but may have originated in the Netherlands. His grandfather was Pierre de Baas, jurat of the town of Nay in Béarn (now Pyrénées-Atlantiques), around 1567–68. His father Jean de Bas of Nay, co-seigneur of the "secular" abbey of Igon, married Judith de Laugar of Pau, from a family of councilors in the Navarre parlement, around 1610–12. Jean-Charles's older brother, Isaac de Baas, was a soldier who became sub-lieutenant of the King's musketeers. He resigned in 1658 in favour of d'Artagnan, prototype of a character in the historical romance The Three Musketeers by Alexandre Dumas.[1]

Military career edit

Jean-Charles de Baas was captain in the Regiment de Persan under his brother Isaac de Baas, who was major of the regiment. He joined in the Fronde rebellion (1648–53) and participated with his brother in abduction plots of César, Duke of Vendôme and Cardinal Mazarin. In September 1652 he helped defend the Château de Montrond in Cher when it was besieged by royal troops under the Philippe de Clérambault(fr), maréchal de Palluau. In Landes he participated under Colonel Balthazar in resistance to the followers of Mazarin. He became a captain of the guards of the Princess of Condé. He participated in the peace negotiations in Bègles.[2]

De Baas was amnestied after the Fronde and maintained his rank as maréchal des camps et armées du roi. During the Franco-Spanish War (1635–59) he took part in the Siege of Arras in 1654, then joined the Army of Italy. He was at the Siege of Pavia in 1655. On 8 November 1656 he was promoted to lieutenant general of the king's armies. He played a distinguished role in the war in Italy under the Francesco I d'Este, Duke of Modena, and then the Duke of Navailles(fr), until the war ended with the Treaty of the Pyrenees in November 1659. He was then made commander in chief of the French troops in Italy.[2]

Lieutenant-general of the Antilles edit

 
 
Barb-
ados
 
Dominica
 
Curaçao
 
Grenada
 
Guadeloupe
 
Martinique
 
St. Christophe
 
St. Vincent
 
Tobago
class=notpageimage|
Islands in the Lesser Antilles

Appointment edit

On 1 February 1667 de Baas was appointed the king's lieutenant-general American Islands and mainland (lieutenant général des Îles d'Amérique et de la Terre Ferme), to take effect after the recall of his predecessor Antoine Lefèbvre de La Barre on 19 September 1668.[2] He received the king's instructions for government of the Antilles by a letter of 16 September 1668 signed by the king's minister Jean-Baptiste Colbert .[2] The appointment was made despite the fact that he was Protestant.[3] De Baas arrived in Martinique with the squadron of Admiral Jean II d'Estrées, and registered his commission with the Sovereign Council of the island on 4 February 1669.[2]

Policies edit

The instructions given to de Baas by Colbert were to favour the interests of the French West India Company, to eliminate foreign trade from the islands, particularly Dutch trade, to populate the islands and develop agriculture and trade, to place the islands in a permanent state of defense, to conquer foreign islands and strongholds, and to enforce the laws and ordinances of the kingdom, always with tact and gentleness.[2] In the lead-up to the Franco-Dutch War of 1672–77 Colbert told de Baas it would greatly please Louis XIV if he could hamper the trade of the Dutch and drive them from their islands "if this were possible without encroaching directly on the treaties His Majesty has with them."[4]

During his administration de Baas did much to improve the efficiency of the colony's administration, including taxation. He developed the first version of a capitation tax based on the number of residents of a home, slaves included.[3] He continued the ban on lawyers in the islands, which lasted until 1710. He also banned militia officers from dispensing justice, although this continued in practice.[5]

De Baas had a low opinion of the Island Caribs and said they were "a people without faith and religion, who are more beasts than men..."[6] He doubted that missionaries could achieve anything with such people.[7] In early 1670 de Bass wrote that the Caribs wanted to fight the Dutch on Tobago. Colbert replied on 3 July 1670 that it would be useful to covertly assist the Caribs to prey upon Dutch commerce.[8] In 1674 de Baas asked for 200 soldiers to either annihilate the Caribs on Dominica or make them galley slaves. Colbert refused, saying de Baas must seek a reconciliation with them.[8] He was told that he should overawe the Caribs with French military power.[9] De Baas came to agree that the Caribs had to be impressed by gifts and "good treatments".[10]

Saint Christopher and Martinique edit

 
St Christophers. Fort Charles (English) is on the south coast of the west part. Basseterre (French), also on the south coast, is further east.
 
1656 map of Martinique, still divided between the French (west) and Caribs (east)

De Baas decided that Saint Christopher Island was less important, and certainly less strategic, than Martinique, and moved the seat of the lieutenant general to Saint-Pierre, Martinique.[3] Saint Christopher still had the largest French population in the Antilles, but the island was divided between the French and the English, which made expansion of the colony difficult. The French had both ends of the island, but the English had more land suitable for agriculture. After de Baas moved his headquarters to Martinique in 1669 the population and the level of sugar production on Saint Christopher slowly declined between 1671 and 1689.[11]

Since de Baas had little money, in 1674 the king gave him a house in Saint Pierre named Funds-Capot that had been confiscated from a Zeelander named Wassen.[2] In February 1674 de Baas wrote to Colbert of the colonists living on Martinique, "...one need not worry about them dying of starvation in the absence of French merchant vessels, Monseigneur; in every month of the year, the habitants have local foodstuffs available to them – peas of different kinds, manioc, yams, potatoes, as well as many delicious fruits. There is good water with which they make refreshing drinks;..."[12] In 1676 he began to develop the colonial settlement at the strategically important site of Fort Royal.[13]

For three years François Rolle de Laubière was local governor of Martinique under de Baas.[14] Laubière died in Fort-Royal, Martinique in February 1672.[15]Antoine André de Sainte-Marthe was then appointed local governor of Martinique.[16] He arrived in Saint Pierre on 28 December 1672.[17] De Baas was not at first enthusiastic about the idea of a governor who was a complete stranger to the colony.[17] However, in a letter to Colbert of 1 June 1673 he wrote that Sainte-Marthe had done his duty well, and was active and intelligent.[18]

Recurrent food crises edit

In 1669 de Baas responded to an order to block trade with foreigners in goods and slaves by saying that it would not be practical to do so, although he would order the policy registered in Martinique. He asked that even the nominal ban be lifted in the case of African slaves, since they were essential to economic development.[19] A royal ordinance of 10 June 1670 banned all trading between the French colonies in the Americas and foreign countries.[20] That year de Baas reported that owing to lack of supplies from France the colonists of Guadeloupe and Martinique often traded in Barbados.[21]

In another food crisis in 1672 de Baas wrote that if "slaves lacked [imported] beef, then planters would lack slaves, because those slaves with the strength would flee plantations or desert, and those without, such as women and children, would weaken further and die". He went on to say of the wooden fort being built at Cul de Sac Royal (later Fort Royal) that "the slaves who serve the workers, having only manioc flour, are deserting, and the workers who have no meat cannot or will not continue to work. I have suspended the work until French merchants bring meat to our islands."[22]

In his June 1673 letter to Colbert de Baas complained about the excessive prices of food sent from France. This inclined the people towards the Dutch, who had always treated them well.[18] Work on Fort Royal was suspended again in 1674 for lack of food.[22] In 1675 de Baas allowed an exemption to the ban on foreign trade in Martinique. He reported to France that due to shortage of food he had been forced to let four English vessels deliver supplies, and a few African slaves.[23] In 1676 he reported that he had confiscated an English vessel trading in Martinique, but did not say what cargo it was carrying.[24]

Franco-Dutch War (1672–77) edit

 
Dutch attack on Fort Royal (1674)

In the second half of 1672 de Baas learned of the outbreak of the Franco-Dutch War, and began to organize an expedition against the Dutch base on Curaçao.[25] He led the expedition against Curaçao early in 1673. The assault failed and on 18 March 1763 he ordered a retreat.[26] De Baas and Sainte-Marthe successfully repulsed the Dutch fleet of Admiral Michiel de Ruyter during the attempted Invasion of Martinique (1674).[3] The king ennobled Sainte-Marthe for his victory against the Dutch.[27] De Baas continued as governor and lieutenant general after the French West India Company was dissolved in 1674.[3]

On 17 December 1676 d'Estrées appeared before Cayenne, and the next day defeated the Dutch defenders. He then sailed north to Martinique, where de Baas raised several hundred men as reinforcements and gave information about the Dutch in Tobago. D'Estrées continued to Tobago, where he made an unsuccessful attack in the First Battle of Tobago in February–March 1677.[28]

De Baas was sick with dysentery for a long time.[2] He died on 15 January 1677.[27] Due to his religion he could not be buried in the cemetery but was buried on 16 January 1677 at his home, Fonds Capot, in what is now Bellefontaine.[29] During his retreat to Grenada D'Estrées heard of the death of de Baas. Charles de Courbon de Blénac was temporarily appointed his successor and returned to France with d'Estrées to have the appointment confirmed.[30]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Germain 2003, p. 3922.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h Germain 2003, p. 3923.
  3. ^ a b c d e Lampin.
  4. ^ Goslinga 2012, p. 45.
  5. ^ Boucher 2010, p. 202.
  6. ^ Petrovich 1998, p. 76.
  7. ^ Petrovich 1998, p. 82.
  8. ^ a b Petrovich 1998, p. 78.
  9. ^ Petrovich 1998, p. 79.
  10. ^ Petrovich 1998, p. 80.
  11. ^ Pritchard 2004, p. 49.
  12. ^ Mandelblatt 2007, p. 18.
  13. ^ Lampin (c).
  14. ^ Guët 1893, p. 138.
  15. ^ Mathout.
  16. ^ Roux.
  17. ^ a b Guët 1893, p. 146.
  18. ^ a b Guët 1893, p. 147.
  19. ^ O'Malley 2014, p. 153.
  20. ^ Guët 1893, p. 148.
  21. ^ O'Malley 2014, p. 154.
  22. ^ a b Henneton & Roper 2016, p. 259.
  23. ^ O'Malley 2014, p. 157.
  24. ^ O'Malley 2014, p. 156.
  25. ^ Marley 2010, p. 296.
  26. ^ Marley 2010, p. 223.
  27. ^ a b Guët 1893, p. 164.
  28. ^ Marley 2010, p. 130.
  29. ^ Sutour.
  30. ^ Marley 2010, p. 48.

Sources edit

  • Boucher, Philip P. (2010-12-29), France and the American Tropics to 1700: Tropics of Discontent?, JHU Press, ISBN 978-1-4214-0202-4, retrieved 2018-09-02
  • Germain, Jean-Christophe (September 2003), "de BAAS et de BATZ-CASTELMORE", Généalogie et Histoire de la Caraïbe (162), retrieved 2018-09-02
  • Goslinga, Cornelis C. (2012-12-06), A Short History of the Netherlands Antilles and Surinam, Springer Science & Business Media, ISBN 978-94-009-9289-4, retrieved 2018-09-02
  • Guët, Isidore (1893), Origines de la Martinique. Le colonel François de Collart et la Martinique de son temps; colonisation, sièges, révoltes et combats de 1625 à1720, Vannes: Lafolye, retrieved 2018-08-27
  • Henneton, Lauric; Roper, Louis (2016-04-21), Fear and the Shaping of Early American Societies, BRILL, ISBN 978-90-04-31474-0, retrieved 2018-09-02
  • Lampin, Didier, "Jean-Charles de Baas (inc, 1677)", La Martinique à la carte... (in French), retrieved 2018-09-02
  • Lampin (c), Didier, , La Martinique à la carte..., archived from the original on 2018-09-11, retrieved 2018-09-02
  • Mandelblatt, Bertie (1 March 2007), "A Transatlantic Commodity: Irish Salt Beef in the French Atlantic World", History Workshop Journal, 63 (1): 18–47, doi:10.1093/hwj/dbm028
  • Marley, David (2010), Pirates of the Americas, ABC-CLIO, ISBN 978-1-59884-201-2, retrieved 2018-09-02
  • Mathout, Gérard, "François Rolle", Geneanet (in French), retrieved 2018-08-28
  • O'Malley, Gregory E. (2014), Final Passages: The Intercolonial Slave Trade of British America, 1619–1807, UNC Press Books, ISBN 978-1-4696-1534-9, retrieved 2018-09-02
  • Petrovich, Alisa V. (Winter 1998), "Perception and Reality: Colbert's Native American Policy", Louisiana History: The Journal of the Louisiana Historical Association, 39 (1): 73–83, JSTOR 4233472
  • Pritchard, Pritchard, James S. (2004-01-22), In Search of Empire: The French in the Americas, 1670-1730, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-82742-3, retrieved 2018-09-02{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Roux, Sophie de, "Antoine André de SAINTE-MARTHE", Geneanet (in French), retrieved 2018-08-26
  • Sutour, Jean-Michel, Bellefontaine (in French), retrieved 2018-09-02

jean, charles, baas, castelmore, marquis, baas, died, january, 1677, governor, lieutenant, general, french, antilles, from, 1669, 1677, young, became, soldier, during, franco, spanish, 1635, participated, fronde, rebellion, 1648, king, louis, france, pardoned,. Jean Charles de Baas Castelmore marquis de Baas died 15 January 1677 was governor and lieutenant general of the French Antilles from 1669 to 1677 As a young man he became a soldier during the Franco Spanish War 1635 59 and participated in the Fronde rebellion of 1648 53 King Louis XIV of France pardoned him for this and he played an important role in the fighting in Italy After being made governor general of the Antilles he transferred the administrative center from Saint Christopher Island Saint Kitts to the more strategically located and economically important Martinique He had to deal with constant crises in supplies caused by the often ignored ban on trading with the English and Dutch He improved the administration developed the defenses of Fort Royal and helped fight off an attempted Dutch invasion in 1674 Jean Charles de Baas Castelmore marquis de BaasLieutenant general of the French AntillesIn office 4 February 1669 15 January 1677Preceded byAntoine Lefebvre de La BarreSucceeded byGabriel de Jolinet interim Charles de Courbon de BlenacPersonal detailsDied15 January 1677NationalityFrench Contents 1 Family 2 Military career 3 Lieutenant general of the Antilles 3 1 Appointment 3 2 Policies 3 3 Saint Christopher and Martinique 3 4 Recurrent food crises 3 5 Franco Dutch War 1672 77 4 Notes 5 SourcesFamily editJean Charles de Baas was born some time after 1612 His family came from Bearn in southwest France but may have originated in the Netherlands His grandfather was Pierre de Baas jurat of the town of Nay in Bearn now Pyrenees Atlantiques around 1567 68 His father Jean de Bas of Nay co seigneur of the secular abbey of Igon married Judith de Laugar of Pau from a family of councilors in the Navarre parlement around 1610 12 Jean Charles s older brother Isaac de Baas was a soldier who became sub lieutenant of the King s musketeers He resigned in 1658 in favour of d Artagnan prototype of a character in the historical romance The Three Musketeers by Alexandre Dumas 1 Military career editJean Charles de Baas was captain in the Regiment de Persan under his brother Isaac de Baas who was major of the regiment He joined in the Fronde rebellion 1648 53 and participated with his brother in abduction plots of Cesar Duke of Vendome and Cardinal Mazarin In September 1652 he helped defend the Chateau de Montrond in Cher when it was besieged by royal troops under the Philippe de Clerambault fr marechal de Palluau In Landes he participated under Colonel Balthazar in resistance to the followers of Mazarin He became a captain of the guards of the Princess of Conde He participated in the peace negotiations in Begles 2 De Baas was amnestied after the Fronde and maintained his rank as marechal des camps et armees du roi During the Franco Spanish War 1635 59 he took part in the Siege of Arras in 1654 then joined the Army of Italy He was at the Siege of Pavia in 1655 On 8 November 1656 he was promoted to lieutenant general of the king s armies He played a distinguished role in the war in Italy under the Francesco I d Este Duke of Modena and then the Duke of Navailles fr until the war ended with the Treaty of the Pyrenees in November 1659 He was then made commander in chief of the French troops in Italy 2 Lieutenant general of the Antilles edit nbsp nbsp Barb ados nbsp Dominica nbsp Curacao nbsp Grenada nbsp Guadeloupe nbsp Martinique nbsp St Christophe nbsp St Vincent nbsp Tobagoclass notpageimage Islands in the Lesser Antilles Appointment edit On 1 February 1667 de Baas was appointed the king s lieutenant general American Islands and mainland lieutenant general des Iles d Amerique et de la Terre Ferme to take effect after the recall of his predecessor Antoine Lefebvre de La Barre on 19 September 1668 2 He received the king s instructions for government of the Antilles by a letter of 16 September 1668 signed by the king s minister Jean Baptiste Colbert 2 The appointment was made despite the fact that he was Protestant 3 De Baas arrived in Martinique with the squadron of Admiral Jean II d Estrees and registered his commission with the Sovereign Council of the island on 4 February 1669 2 Policies edit The instructions given to de Baas by Colbert were to favour the interests of the French West India Company to eliminate foreign trade from the islands particularly Dutch trade to populate the islands and develop agriculture and trade to place the islands in a permanent state of defense to conquer foreign islands and strongholds and to enforce the laws and ordinances of the kingdom always with tact and gentleness 2 In the lead up to the Franco Dutch War of 1672 77 Colbert told de Baas it would greatly please Louis XIV if he could hamper the trade of the Dutch and drive them from their islands if this were possible without encroaching directly on the treaties His Majesty has with them 4 During his administration de Baas did much to improve the efficiency of the colony s administration including taxation He developed the first version of a capitation tax based on the number of residents of a home slaves included 3 He continued the ban on lawyers in the islands which lasted until 1710 He also banned militia officers from dispensing justice although this continued in practice 5 De Baas had a low opinion of the Island Caribs and said they were a people without faith and religion who are more beasts than men 6 He doubted that missionaries could achieve anything with such people 7 In early 1670 de Bass wrote that the Caribs wanted to fight the Dutch on Tobago Colbert replied on 3 July 1670 that it would be useful to covertly assist the Caribs to prey upon Dutch commerce 8 In 1674 de Baas asked for 200 soldiers to either annihilate the Caribs on Dominica or make them galley slaves Colbert refused saying de Baas must seek a reconciliation with them 8 He was told that he should overawe the Caribs with French military power 9 De Baas came to agree that the Caribs had to be impressed by gifts and good treatments 10 Saint Christopher and Martinique edit nbsp St Christophers Fort Charles English is on the south coast of the west part Basseterre French also on the south coast is further east nbsp 1656 map of Martinique still divided between the French west and Caribs east De Baas decided that Saint Christopher Island was less important and certainly less strategic than Martinique and moved the seat of the lieutenant general to Saint Pierre Martinique 3 Saint Christopher still had the largest French population in the Antilles but the island was divided between the French and the English which made expansion of the colony difficult The French had both ends of the island but the English had more land suitable for agriculture After de Baas moved his headquarters to Martinique in 1669 the population and the level of sugar production on Saint Christopher slowly declined between 1671 and 1689 11 Since de Baas had little money in 1674 the king gave him a house in Saint Pierre named Funds Capot that had been confiscated from a Zeelander named Wassen 2 In February 1674 de Baas wrote to Colbert of the colonists living on Martinique one need not worry about them dying of starvation in the absence of French merchant vessels Monseigneur in every month of the year the habitants have local foodstuffs available to them peas of different kinds manioc yams potatoes as well as many delicious fruits There is good water with which they make refreshing drinks 12 In 1676 he began to develop the colonial settlement at the strategically important site of Fort Royal 13 For three years Francois Rolle de Laubiere was local governor of Martinique under de Baas 14 Laubiere died in Fort Royal Martinique in February 1672 15 Antoine Andre de Sainte Marthe was then appointed local governor of Martinique 16 He arrived in Saint Pierre on 28 December 1672 17 De Baas was not at first enthusiastic about the idea of a governor who was a complete stranger to the colony 17 However in a letter to Colbert of 1 June 1673 he wrote that Sainte Marthe had done his duty well and was active and intelligent 18 Recurrent food crises edit In 1669 de Baas responded to an order to block trade with foreigners in goods and slaves by saying that it would not be practical to do so although he would order the policy registered in Martinique He asked that even the nominal ban be lifted in the case of African slaves since they were essential to economic development 19 A royal ordinance of 10 June 1670 banned all trading between the French colonies in the Americas and foreign countries 20 That year de Baas reported that owing to lack of supplies from France the colonists of Guadeloupe and Martinique often traded in Barbados 21 In another food crisis in 1672 de Baas wrote that if slaves lacked imported beef then planters would lack slaves because those slaves with the strength would flee plantations or desert and those without such as women and children would weaken further and die He went on to say of the wooden fort being built at Cul de Sac Royal later Fort Royal that the slaves who serve the workers having only manioc flour are deserting and the workers who have no meat cannot or will not continue to work I have suspended the work until French merchants bring meat to our islands 22 In his June 1673 letter to Colbert de Baas complained about the excessive prices of food sent from France This inclined the people towards the Dutch who had always treated them well 18 Work on Fort Royal was suspended again in 1674 for lack of food 22 In 1675 de Baas allowed an exemption to the ban on foreign trade in Martinique He reported to France that due to shortage of food he had been forced to let four English vessels deliver supplies and a few African slaves 23 In 1676 he reported that he had confiscated an English vessel trading in Martinique but did not say what cargo it was carrying 24 Franco Dutch War 1672 77 edit nbsp Dutch attack on Fort Royal 1674 In the second half of 1672 de Baas learned of the outbreak of the Franco Dutch War and began to organize an expedition against the Dutch base on Curacao 25 He led the expedition against Curacao early in 1673 The assault failed and on 18 March 1763 he ordered a retreat 26 De Baas and Sainte Marthe successfully repulsed the Dutch fleet of Admiral Michiel de Ruyter during the attempted Invasion of Martinique 1674 3 The king ennobled Sainte Marthe for his victory against the Dutch 27 De Baas continued as governor and lieutenant general after the French West India Company was dissolved in 1674 3 On 17 December 1676 d Estrees appeared before Cayenne and the next day defeated the Dutch defenders He then sailed north to Martinique where de Baas raised several hundred men as reinforcements and gave information about the Dutch in Tobago D Estrees continued to Tobago where he made an unsuccessful attack in the First Battle of Tobago in February March 1677 28 De Baas was sick with dysentery for a long time 2 He died on 15 January 1677 27 Due to his religion he could not be buried in the cemetery but was buried on 16 January 1677 at his home Fonds Capot in what is now Bellefontaine 29 During his retreat to Grenada D Estrees heard of the death of de Baas Charles de Courbon de Blenac was temporarily appointed his successor and returned to France with d Estrees to have the appointment confirmed 30 Notes edit Germain 2003 p 3922 a b c d e f g h Germain 2003 p 3923 a b c d e Lampin Goslinga 2012 p 45 Boucher 2010 p 202 Petrovich 1998 p 76 Petrovich 1998 p 82 a b Petrovich 1998 p 78 Petrovich 1998 p 79 Petrovich 1998 p 80 Pritchard 2004 p 49 Mandelblatt 2007 p 18 Lampin c Guet 1893 p 138 Mathout Roux a b Guet 1893 p 146 a b Guet 1893 p 147 O Malley 2014 p 153 Guet 1893 p 148 O Malley 2014 p 154 a b Henneton amp Roper 2016 p 259 O Malley 2014 p 157 O Malley 2014 p 156 Marley 2010 p 296 Marley 2010 p 223 a b Guet 1893 p 164 Marley 2010 p 130 Sutour Marley 2010 p 48 Sources editBoucher Philip P 2010 12 29 France and the American Tropics to 1700 Tropics of Discontent JHU Press ISBN 978 1 4214 0202 4 retrieved 2018 09 02 Germain Jean Christophe September 2003 de BAAS et de BATZ CASTELMORE Genealogie et Histoire de la Caraibe 162 retrieved 2018 09 02 Goslinga Cornelis C 2012 12 06 A Short History of the Netherlands Antilles and Surinam Springer Science amp Business Media ISBN 978 94 009 9289 4 retrieved 2018 09 02 Guet Isidore 1893 Origines de la Martinique Le colonel Francois de Collart et la Martinique de son temps colonisation sieges revoltes et combats de 1625 a1720 Vannes Lafolye retrieved 2018 08 27 Henneton Lauric Roper Louis 2016 04 21 Fear and the Shaping of Early American Societies BRILL ISBN 978 90 04 31474 0 retrieved 2018 09 02 Lampin Didier Jean Charles de Baas inc 1677 La Martinique a la carte in French retrieved 2018 09 02 Lampin c Didier Gouverneurs Generaux des Iles et Gouverneurs Particuliers de la Martinique La Martinique a la carte archived from the original on 2018 09 11 retrieved 2018 09 02 Mandelblatt Bertie 1 March 2007 A Transatlantic Commodity Irish Salt Beef in the French Atlantic World History Workshop Journal 63 1 18 47 doi 10 1093 hwj dbm028 Marley David 2010 Pirates of the Americas ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 59884 201 2 retrieved 2018 09 02 Mathout Gerard Francois Rolle Geneanet in French retrieved 2018 08 28 O Malley Gregory E 2014 Final Passages The Intercolonial Slave Trade of British America 1619 1807 UNC Press Books ISBN 978 1 4696 1534 9 retrieved 2018 09 02 Petrovich Alisa V Winter 1998 Perception and Reality Colbert s Native American Policy Louisiana History The Journal of the Louisiana Historical Association 39 1 73 83 JSTOR 4233472 Pritchard Pritchard James S 2004 01 22 In Search of Empire The French in the Americas 1670 1730 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 82742 3 retrieved 2018 09 02 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Roux Sophie de Antoine Andre de SAINTE MARTHE Geneanet in French retrieved 2018 08 26 Sutour Jean Michel Bellefontaine in French retrieved 2018 09 02 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jean Charles de Baas amp oldid 1170082799, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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