Past Workshops
2026 Workshop Program
Atlantic Exchanges Workshop, 2026
Commerce and Merchants in the Age of Atlantic
Workshop Program
All sessions will take place at the Omohundro Institute, 427 Scotland Street, Williamsburg, Virginia 23185. All times noted below are Eastern Time.
Friday, March 6, 2026
8:45 am – Welcome and Opening Remarks
9:00 am – Panel 1
A Bahia no Atlântico: Buscando Redes Mercantis Trans-Imperiais (c. 1580–1730)
Thiago Krause (Wayne State University)
O purgatório dos comissários: o grupo mercantil de Luanda e o comércio de escravos (século XVIII)
Maximiliano Menz (Unifesp)
Discussant: Carlos Gabriel Guimarães (UFF)
10:30 am – Coffee Break
11:00 am – Panel 2
Negociantes no Brasil: Atuação política e econômica dos homens de negócios na Corte Joanina (1808–1821)
Carlos Gabriel Guimarães (UFF); Claudia Maria das Graças Chaves (UFOP)
Capitales esclavistas, almacenes azucareros y circuitos comerciales en Cuba (1790–1860)
David Domínguez (Cátedra UNESCO de Esclavitudes y Afrodescendencia / Universitat Jaume I, España)
Discussant: Vítor Izeksohn (UFRJ/UFJF)
12:30 – 1:30 pm – Lunch
1:30 pm – Panel 3
Anglo-Iberian Partnership and the Role of the Royal Company of the Philippines in Rio de la Plata during the 1780s–1800s
Mica Miralles Bianconi (William & Mary)
Entre el Estado y el mercado: el Banco de Buenos Aires y la emisión monetaria (1822–1826)
Yolanda Blasco Martel (Universitat de Barcelona); Martín Wasserman (CONICET-UBA); Tomás Viera (CONICET-UBA)
Discussant: Miquéias Mugge
3:00 pm – Coffee Break
3:30 pm – Panel 4
Primeros pasos para comerciar en la vida independiente. Tomás Murphy: agente comercial mexicano en Francia, 1822–1830
Gabriela Sofía González Mireles (CIESAS, México)
Liberalismo gaditano y apertura comercial en Yucatán (1812-1824). Un enfoque glocal
Luis Ángel Mezeta Canul
Discussant: Fabrício Prado
Saturday, March 7, 2026
9:30 am – Panel 5
Intrusos funcionales y circuitos económicos: la península italiana en la articulación del sistema monárquico hispánico durante el siglo XVIII
Catia Brilli (Universitá de Inunbria, Italia)
The Protected Enemy: Joseph Compton, a British merchant on the Isthmus of Panama during the War of Jenkins’ Ear, 1739–1748
Sebastián Gómez (Universidad de Antioquia)
“Fomenting and Maintaining the English”: The Mosquito Foundation to the Atlantic Logwood Trade
Sydney Sweat-Montoya (William & Mary)
Discussant: Oren Okovat (Yale University)
11:45 am – Closing Remarks
Atlantic Exchanges Workshop
Atlantic Exchanges is a scholarly workshop series designed to foster sustained dialogue among historians working on the Atlantic World, with a particular emphasis on interregional connections linking the Americas, Africa, and Europe. The central aim of the workshop is to bring together scholars whose research spans different regions, empires, and historiographical traditions in order to highlight interconnections, similarities, and contrasts across the Atlantic space, and to examine how historical processes unfolding in one region shaped developments elsewhere—both across the ocean and within continental interiors.
The workshop is grounded in an understanding of the Atlantic not as a collection of isolated imperial or national histories, but as a dynamic, interconnected arena shaped by circulation, mobility, negotiation, and conflict. It seeks to advance historical knowledge through dialogue among scholars working on trans-imperial, trans-cultural, trans-local, inter-ethnic, and borderland dynamics, encouraging comparative perspectives and methodological exchange. By placing different case studies and regional experiences in conversation, Atlantic Exchanges emphasizes processes such as commercial integration, non-state-sanctioned practices, cultural brokerage, and the social worlds that emerged from sustained contact across imperial boundaries.
Special importance is placed on three major zones of transimperial and cross-cultural interaction within the Atlantic World: the Greater Caribbean, West Africa, and the broader Río de la Plata region in the South Atlantic, as well as their respective hinterlands. These regions serve as key laboratories for examining how commerce, migration, political change, and imperial reform intersected over the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, producing distinctive yet interconnected historical trajectories.
The workshop brings together scholars from different institutions and countries, and at different stages of their academic careers. A defining feature of Atlantic Exchanges is its commitment to incorporating the work of graduate students alongside that of established scholars, fostering mentorship, intellectual exchange, and the development of new research agendas within an international scholarly community.
The first edition of Atlantic Exchanges focuses on Commerce and Merchants in the Iberian Atlantic during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. This thematic emphasis highlights the central role of merchants, commercial agents, and trading networks in shaping imperial economies, political transformations, and cross-cultural encounters during a period marked by reform, revolution, and the reconfiguration of Atlantic empires. The papers presented in this inaugural workshop will be published as a collective volume in Brazil by Editora HUCITEC, ensuring that the conversations initiated in the workshop reach a broader international audience and contribute to ongoing debates in Atlantic and global history.
For more information, please contact Professor Fabrício Prado, Associate Professor of History, William & Mary; Editor in Chief, Atlantic History, Oxford Bibliographies Online; Assistant Editor, The Americas: A Quarterly Review of Latin American History; author of Edge of Empire: Atlantic Networks and Revolution in Bourbon Rio de la Plata (UNC Press). You can contact him at fpprado [at] wm.edu.
