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The growth of Nordic shipping, Scandinavian fleets, their construction, crews and ports

from LA RÉUSSITE PAR LA MER:La reussite par la mer des territoires et des communautés littorales

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 May 2017

Leos Müller
Affiliation:
Stockholm University, Sweden
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Summary

ABSTRACT. This article presents the path and strategy for commercial success and influence of the two split maritime kingdoms of Denmark and Sweden, which had the 4th and 5th largest international fleets at the end of the 18th century. They were able to exploit the need for transportation at a time when international maritime exchanges exploded by imposing neutrality and implementing a policy of promoting and building their own fleets to allow them to cover the web of maritime routes.

RÉSUMÉ. Cet article présente la trajectoire et la stratégie de réussite et de rayonnement commercial des deux royaumes éclatés à caractère maritime du Danemark et de Suède qui accèdent à la 4e et à la 5e place du classement des flottes mondiales à la fin du XVIIIe siècle. Ils ont su exploiter la demande de transport dans un contexte d'explosion des échanges maritimes internationaux en imposant leur statut de royaumes neutres et en mettant en place une politique de promotion et de construction de leurs propres flottes, leur permettant ainsi de couvrir les réseaux de routes maritimes.

The three centuries preceding the 19th-century industrialization are characterized by great growth in long-distance trade. This expansion of trade would not have been possible without a specific European “invention”—an early modern sailing ship, which made truly global trade possible. While it is impossible to deny the overall expansion of shipping between 1500 and 1800, historians do not agree on the factors of the expansion. Was there a transport revolution in shipping, a productivity growth and decline in transport costs, or were the causes of the trade growth primarily related to shifts in supply and demand in Eurasia? If there is a measurable productivity growth in shipping, is it an outcome of institutional innovation, as e.g. Douglass C. North stated, or is the technical development (hull design, rigging, sheathing, navigation skills, etc.) the key? As many historians pointed out, there is little evidence in measurable decline in transport costs and total productivity of shipping before the 19th century, i.e. before the breakthrough of steam and steel. Studying the role of Scandinavian fleets in the period 1500–1800 provides an enlightening illustration of how merchant fleets expanded without a significant change in shipping techniques and what role the institutional framework, transport demand and international situation played.

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Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2017

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