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The Rise of Commercial Empires David Ormrod (University of Kent, Canterbury)

The Rise of Commercial Empires By David Ormrod (University of Kent, Canterbury)

The Rise of Commercial Empires by David Ormrod (University of Kent, Canterbury)


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Summary

The Rise of Commercial Empires is a work of major importance for the economic history of both Europe and North America. It is an analysis of a crucial transformation in the history of trade, as London became the centre of a new kind of world economy.

The Rise of Commercial Empires Summary

The Rise of Commercial Empires: England and the Netherlands in the Age of Mercantilism, 1650-1770 by David Ormrod (University of Kent, Canterbury)

In early modern Europe, and particularly in the Netherlands, commercial empires were held together as much by cities as by unified nation states. David Ormrod here takes a regional economy as his preferred unit of analysis, the North Sea economy: an interlocking network of trades shaped by public and private interests, and the matrix within which Anglo-Dutch competition, borrowing and collaboration took shape. He shows how England's increasingly coherent mercantilist objectives undermined Dutch commercial hegemony, in ways which contributed to the restructuring of the North Sea staplemarket system. The commercial revolution has rightly been identified with product diversification and the expansion of long-distance trading, but the reorganization of England's nearby European trades was equally important, providing the foundation for eighteenth-century commercial growth and facilitating the expansion of the Atlantic economy. With the Anglo-Scottish union of 1707, the last piece of a national British entrepot system was put into place.

The Rise of Commercial Empires Reviews

'... this book is a thought-provoking interpretation of the rise of the English/British commercial empire, placed firmly in the context of recent theories of economic development ...' History
'... a very detailed analysis ...' Reviews in History
'Ormrod has produced a very detailed analysis on the basis of years of scholarship; the British and Dutch economies have been compared time and again but never in as much depth as in this study.' Institute of Historical Research

About David Ormrod (University of Kent, Canterbury)

David Ormrod is Lecturer in Economic and Social History at the University of Kent at Canterbury, and a leading authority on British and Dutch commercial history in the early modern period.

Table of Contents

List of maps and illustrations; List of figures; List of tables; Preface and acknowledgements; List of abbreviations; 1. National economies and the history of the market; Part I. England, Holland and the Commercial Revolution: 2. Dutch trade hegemony and English competition, 1650-1700; 3. English commercial expansion and the Dutch staplemarket, 1700-1770; Part II. English Trade with the Dutch Staplemarket: 4. Rivalry, crisis and reorganisation in the woollen export trade; 5. Import substitution and European linen imports; 6. The Dutch staplemarket and the growth of English re-exports; 7. England, Holland and the international grain trade; 8. The coal trade and energy resources; Part III. Dutch Decline and English Expansion: 9. The shipping industry and the impact of war; 10. Protectionism and Dutch economic decline; 11. Conclusion. Commercial growth and the divergence of England; Appendixes; Bibliography; Index.

Additional information

NPB9780521048644
9780521048644
0521048648
The Rise of Commercial Empires: England and the Netherlands in the Age of Mercantilism, 1650-1770 by David Ormrod (University of Kent, Canterbury)
New
Paperback
Cambridge University Press
2008-01-03
420
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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