By recovering a largely forgotten English Renaissance mindset that
regarded sovereignty and Providence as being fundamentally
entwined, Alexander Haskell reconnects concepts historians had
before treated as separate categories and argues that the first
English planters in Virginia operated within a deeply providential
age rather than an era of early modern entrepreneurialism. These
men did not merely settle Virginia; they and their London-based
sponsors saw this first successful English venture in America as an
exercise in divinely inspired and approved commonwealth creation.
When the realities of Virginia complicated this humanist ideal,
growing disillusionment and contention marked debates over the
colony.
Rather than just "selling" colonization to the realm, proponents
instead needed to overcome profound and recurring doubts about
whether God wanted English rule to cross the Atlantic and the
process by which it was to happen. By contextualizing these debates
within a late Renaissance phase in England, Haskell links
increasing religious skepticism to the rise of decidedly secular
conceptions of state power. Haskell offers a radical revision of
accepted narratives of early modern state formation, locating it as
an outcome, rather than as an antecedent, of colonial endeavor.