Prisoner, Sailor, Settler, Soldier: The Many Lives of a Migrant in the Brazilian Empire

by Princeton Institute for International & Regional Studies

Forum/Panel Discussion

Tue, Feb 25, 2025

12 PM – 1:20 PM EST (GMT-5)

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Through the life story of a sailor, merchant, former prisoner and soldier, this presentation explores the Brazilian postcolonial empire’s experiments in settlement and domestic colonization during the Age of Revolutions. Johann Heinrich Lembke’s journey — from incarceration in the German territory of Mecklenburg-Schwerin, to his conscription into the Brazilian armed forces, to his eventual desertion — offers a unique entry point into the socio-political mechanisms of empire-building in the New World. Drawing on records from German, British, Portuguese, and Brazilian archives, this study traces Lembke’s trajectory within broader processes of territorial expansion, settler-military strategies and normative pluralities that shaped imperial governance. It illuminates the porous continuum between penal, military and settler colonization projects, illustrating how such systems functioned as overlapping mechanisms of governance and control. Methodologically, a ‘game of scales’ links the European and South American contexts, as this research uncovers the experimental nature of Brazil’s border policies and challenges binary representations of settlers in the Global South. Lembke’s case thus becomes a window into Brazil’s imperial formation, revealing how ordinary actors navigated the ambiguities of empire-building.

Miqueias Mugge is academic research manager in the Brazil LAB who studies the political economy of war, slavery, migrations, and empire-building in Latin America, with a focus on Brazil’s southern frontiers. Mugge is currently working on a book manuscript tracing the life and work of the nineteenth-century global traveler, physician, diplomat, and empire-builder Georg Anton von Schaeffer.

The discussant is Ada Ferrer, Dayton-Stockton Professor of History, Princeton University.

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