Trading places : the Netherlandish merchants in early modern Venice

Bibliographic Information

Trading places : the Netherlandish merchants in early modern Venice

by Maartje van Gelder

(Library of economic history / general editors, Peer Vries, Regina Grafe, v. 1)

Brill, 2009

Available at  / 9 libraries

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Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Trading Places is winner of the triennial Historical Research Award of Italy Studies (2012). This book deals with the Netherlandish merchant community in sixteenth- and seventeenth-century Venice. It examines the merchants' commercial activities, their social and communal relations, as well as their interaction with the Venetian state, which was accustomed to protect its own trade. The Netherlandish merchants in Venice, as part of an extensive international trading network, were ideally placed to connect Mediterranean and Atlantic commerce. They quickly became the most important group of foreign merchants in the city at a time of rapid economic changes. Drawing on a wide variety of primary sources, this book shows how these immigrant traders used their strong commercial position to secure a place in Venice. It demonstrates how the changing balance of international commerce affected early modern Venetian society.

Table of Contents

Introduction - A reversal of fortunes - The decline of Venice and the rise of Amsterdam - Merchant communities - Approach and sources Chapter 1. Venice - Entering the city - The inhabitants of Venice - The Venetian state - Declining Venetian commerce - Immigrant traders in Venice: Germans, Ottomans, and Jews Chapter 2. Unlocking the Venetian market: changing trade relations in the 1590s - Early trade relations between Venice and the Low Countries - In desperate need of cereals - Importing Baltic grain into Venice Chapter 3. Combining the new with the old: Netherlandish-Venetian trade after the 1590s - The case of Cornelis Jansen - Expanding commercial contacts - Amsterdam-Mediterranean trade in 1646-1647 - Continuing overland trade Chapter 4. The community of Netherlandish merchants in Venice - The number of Netherlandish merchants in Venice - The provenance of the Netherlandish merchants - Forging family ties, economic partnerships, and bonds of friendship - Religious differences? Chapter 5. Individual and collective strategies - Becoming Venetian citizens - Petitions and privileges - Banquets and charity - Ambassadors and consuls Chapter 6. At home in early modern Venice - Finding a home - A wealthy lifestyle - Venetian relations - Entering the Venetian patriciate Conclusion Bibliography Index

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