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On Maritime Labour and Maritime Labour Markets in Germany, 1700-1900
- Edited by Richard Gorski, Hetty Berg, J. de Jong, W. Koetsenruijter
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- Book:
- Maritime Labour
- Published by:
- Amsterdam University Press
- Published online:
- 26 January 2021
- Print publication:
- 03 October 2008, pp 43-60
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- Chapter
- Export citation
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Summary
Introduction: The limits of pre-modern German seafaring
From the seventeenth to the nineteenth century the development of seafaring and hence of maritime labour markets in the German seafaring states was closely linked with the development of international law concerning the right to navigate the seas. This law – like any international law – was the outcome of power contests. If, from the sixteenth century onwards, German seafaring states were too weak to participate in this brokerage of power then they were nevertheless affected by the results. This article will focus on one of the reactions to changes in the Law of the Sea: the transition from custom to regulation in maritime labour and maritime labour markets.
In the later middle ages, German towns had formed the Hanse (or Hanseatic League) in order to further the interests of local merchants. They bought privileges in foreign countries and they organized the military potential to defend these interests. Already in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries the Hanse merchants had made use of convoys as well as of sea-blockades to safeguard their position. By these means they had been able to not only fend off ‘pirates’ but also any other attempt to encroach on their supremacy over the intermediate trade of Northern Europe. During the fourteenth and the fifteenth centuries the Hanse was able to uphold its dominance in the North and Baltic Seas, but this position became endangered as soon as the interests of their potential competitors came to be defended by ships carrying artillery and by the nuclei of modern navies. While the military power of the Hanseatic League was effective enough until the beginning of the sixteenth century, the towns were not in a position to meet the fiscal or organizational requirements of maritime warfare which became necessary when rising territorial powers put some of their means into the modernization of their military potential. Having lost its supremacy at sea, the League could no longer uphold its position ashore. Former privileges of the Hanse towns in their outposts were abolished or severely curtailed. This loss of maritime military power and the ensuing loss of many trading privileges was the beginning of the end of the League.
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