English Merchants in Seventeenth-Century Italy
This book shows how England's conquest of Mediterranean trade proved to be the first step in building its future economic and commercial hegemony, and how Italy lay at the heart of that process. In the seventeenth century the Mediterranean was the largest market for the colonial products which were exported by English merchants, as well as being a source of raw materials which were indispensable for the growing and increasingly aggressive domestic textile industry. The new free port of Livorno became the linchpin of English trade with the Mediterranean and, together with ports in southern Italy, formed part of a system which enabled the English merchant fleet to take control of the region's trade from the Italians. In her extensive use of English and Italian archival sources, the author looks well beyond Braudel's influential picture of a Spanish-dominated Mediterranean world. In doing so she demonstrates some of the causes of Italy's decline and its subsequent relegation as a dominant force in world trade.
- A new analysis of the way in which the 'British Empire' began to be established through Mediterranean trade
- Takes a different position from the established 'Spanish-dominated' Mediterranean characterised by the great historian Fernand Braudel
- Looks for the first time at trade in the area from an Italian rather than a British perspective
Product details
March 1998Hardback
9780521580311
220 pages
235 × 160 × 21 mm
0.49kg
24 tables
Available
Table of Contents
- List of tables
- Preface
- 1. Times and places
- 2. The ships
- 3. Routes and ports
- 4. Imported goods
- 5. Exported goods
- Conclusion.