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Naval History of Gibraltar

Rock and Oak: A new naval history of Gibraltar, 1779-1830 Scott Daly

Abstract


Gibraltar’s historiography has traditionally placed great importance on its capability

as a ‘fortress’. Besieged fourteen times in its history, and visibly brimming with

fortifications to modern observers, military terminology has consequently

dominated approaches to its history. But as a territory almost entirely surrounded

by water, the Royal Navy - Britain’s traditional ‘safeguard’ - played an integral role

in securing ‘the Rock’ as a British possession.


Intersecting the naval, Gibraltarian and imperial historiographical fields, this thesis

aims to challenge the dominant conceptualisation of Gibraltar as an insular,

strategic fortress dominated by its military garrison. Methodologically incorporating

the new cultural and social approaches to naval history, employed by historians

such as Timothy Jenks and Margarette Lincoln, it builds upon previous histories by

engaging more closely with the lived experience of its inhabitants. Gibraltar’s

involvement in the success of Trafalgar is well appreciated, but the navy’s activities

impacted its population much more regularly and in ways more complex than has

been recognised within Gibraltarian historiography.


Moreover, it also assesses how Gibraltar was more broadly viewed by Britons

through a consultation of various forms of literary and visual culture. The ‘Great

Siege’ of 1779-83 through to the end of the Napoleonic era is a crucial period in the

historiographies of the ‘Rock’ and the ‘wooden walls’ of the Royal Navy that were

so integral to constructions of British identity. Jenks argued that ‘naval symbols’

were increasingly important in British political culture during this period. This thesis

contends that the acceptance and understanding of Gibraltar’s status as a ‘naval

symbol’ was crucial to its conceptualisation as a British possession in the post-

Napoleonic era


https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/469020/1/ScottDalyPHDROCK_OAK2022final.pdf



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