Date: 2011
Type: Book
Global trade and commercial networks : eighteenth-century diamond merchants
London, Pickering & Chatto Publishers, 2011, Perspectives in Economic and Social History
VANNESTE, Tijl, Global trade and commercial networks : eighteenth-century diamond merchants, London, Pickering & Chatto Publishers, 2011, Perspectives in Economic and Social History
- https://hdl.handle.net/1814/19234
Retrieved from Cadmus, EUI Research Repository
At the heart of this study on cross-cultural trade lies a concrete case-study of a network of diamond merchants operating in the early eighteenth century. Trust was an important element within this cross-cultural network and a significant factor in its success. This trust was formed, over time, by the exchange of correspondence, allowing commercial friendships and a system of reciprocity to emerge. Such trusted exchange also allowed a system of credit – used for almost all trading agreements as well as becoming important in itself – to develop. Most of the merchants examined in this study belonged to a group of outsiders: an English Catholic in Antwerp, Sephardic and Ashkenazi Jews in London and Amsterdam, and French Huguenots in Lisbon, to name a few. Traditionally, such diasporas have been seen as key to the development of a globalized economy. Vanneste argues that whilst this is generally correct, it is nonetheless hard to reconcile the idea of such intricate, trusted relationships with people who were detached from their surrounding societies. He suggests that these diasporas must be embedded in the social environment of the host society in a more profound way than previously assumed, and that such cohesion allowed the development of trusted trading networks and an early modern globalization.
Table of Contents:
-- Introduction -- 1. Models for Trade and Globalization -- 2. A Short Hisotry of the Diamond Trade -- 3. A Cross-Cultural Diamond Trade Network -- 4. Competition from an Ashkenazi Kinship Network -- 5. The Embeddedness of Merchants in State and Society -- 6. Trade, Global History and Human Agency -- Conclusion
Cadmus permanent link: https://hdl.handle.net/1814/19234
ISBN: 9781848930872; 9781848930889
Publisher: Pickering & Chatto
Version: Published version of EUI PhD thesis, 2009
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