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Merchants, companies and trade: Europe and Asia in the early modern era

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Studies in modern capitalismPublication details: Cambridge University Press 1999 New YorkDescription: xi, 330 p.: ill. Includes bibliographical references and indexISBN:
  • 9780521037471
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 382 M3
Summary: Written by well-known scholars, this book raises pertinent questions and takes up alternate perspectives on the growth and development of international trade between Europe and Asia, especially India, in the sixteenth to eighteenth centuries. Through a comparative and comprehensive study of merchant communities, markets and commodities the individual authors argue, contrary to conventional views, that Asian merchants were in no way inferior to Europeans in terms of their commercial operations and business acumen. The book emphasizes the continuing and growing importance of India's overland trade, even in the seventeenth to eighteenth centuries, traces the little-known world of Armenian merchants, the hitherto obscure, but voluminous, Indian trade with the Ottoman Empire, and by unearthing new evidence, demonstrates that the export activity of Asian merchants through the overland route from Bengal was higher, in fact, than the combined total of European exports. https://www.cambridge.org/in/academic/subjects/history/regional-history-after-1500/merchants-companies-and-trade-europe-and-asia-early-modern-era?format=PB&isbn=9780521037471
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Table of Contents:

Introduction Sushil Chaudhury and Michel Morineau
Part I. Asia Especially Around 1500: 1. Of what world system was pre-1500 'India' a part? Ravi Arvind Palat and Immanuel Wallerstein
2. Trade in the Indian Ocean at the dawn of the sixteenth century Genevieve Bouchon

Part II. Routes, Markets and Merchants: 3. The route through Quandahar: the significance of the overland trade from India to the West in the seventeenth century Niels Steensgaard
4. The Armenian merchant network: overall autonomy and local integration Michel Aghassian and Keram Kevonian
5. Commercial relations between India and the Ottoman Empire (late fifteenth to late eighteenth centuries) Gilles Veinstein
6. Eastern and Western merchants from the sixteenth to the eighteenth centuries Michel Morineau
7. The other 'species' world: specification of commodities and moneys, and the knowledge-base of commerce, 1500-1900

Part III. European Presence in Asia: 8. The Portuguese and the Dutch in Asian maritime trade: a comparative analysis Om Prakash
9. Competition or collaboration? Relations between the Dutch East India Company and Indian merchants around 1680 F. S. Gaastra
10. The French India Company and its trade in the eighteenth century Philippe Haudrere
11. Sweden and India in the eighteenth century: Sweden's difficulty in gaining access to a crowded market C. Koninckx
12. The ambition of the Austrian empire with reference to East India during the last quarter of the eighteenth century Helma Houtman de Smedt

Part IV. Implications of Trade: Asia and Europe: 13. The Indian challenge: sixteenth and eighteenth centuries Michel Morineau
14. The changing pattern of British trade in Indian textiles, 1701-1757 Dietmar Rothermund
15. French traders at the end of the eighteenth century Paul Butel
16. The Asian merchants and companies in Bengal's export trade circa mid-eighteenth century Sushil Chaudhury.

Written by well-known scholars, this book raises pertinent questions and takes up alternate perspectives on the growth and development of international trade between Europe and Asia, especially India, in the sixteenth to eighteenth centuries. Through a comparative and comprehensive study of merchant communities, markets and commodities the individual authors argue, contrary to conventional views, that Asian merchants were in no way inferior to Europeans in terms of their commercial operations and business acumen. The book emphasizes the continuing and growing importance of India's overland trade, even in the seventeenth to eighteenth centuries, traces the little-known world of Armenian merchants, the hitherto obscure, but voluminous, Indian trade with the Ottoman Empire, and by unearthing new evidence, demonstrates that the export activity of Asian merchants through the overland route from Bengal was higher, in fact, than the combined total of European exports.

https://www.cambridge.org/in/academic/subjects/history/regional-history-after-1500/merchants-companies-and-trade-europe-and-asia-early-modern-era?format=PB&isbn=9780521037471

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