University of Chicago Press
The Asian Trade Revolution
About this book
In this work Neils Steensgaard combines an analytical economic approach with detailed historic scholarship to provide an imaginitive and important analysis of a central incident in modern world history. The event is the breaking of the Portuguese monopoly on Asian trade in the seventeenth century by English and Dutch mercantile interests. This change the author demonstrates, was not simply the triumph of the new powers over the old. Rather, the Dutch--English victory heralded a structural change in international trade: the triumph of entrepreneurial capitalism over the older economic mode of the "peddler-merchant."
Professor Steensgaard's study is divided into two major parts. The first examines the economic and political structure of the seventeenth century institutions in the Near East, Portugal, England, and the Netherlands. The author demonstrates that the rise to preeminence of the English and Dutch East India Companies over the Portuguese "State of India" was the result of the superior economic and bureaucratic organization of the former. The eclipse of Portuguese power in general, the author argues, is best understood as an institutional failure–an inability to adapt to changing patterns and demands of economic life.
The second part of Professor Steensgaard's study provides a detailed historical account of an important event in the fall of the Portuguese trading empire–the loss of the city of Hormuz in 1622. Hormuz, located at a strategic point at the entrance of the Persian Gulf, was a central port city on the Asian trade route. It fell to an English and Persian force. The author demonstrates why this event exemplifies the Portuguese institutional weaknesses that are discussed in the first part of the book.
Topics
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Frontmatter
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Contents
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Tables
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Maps
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Diagram
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Preface
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Introduction
9 - Part I. The Fall of Hormuz, a Comparative Study
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Introduction
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Chapter I. The Peddling Trade
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Chapter II. The Redistributive Enterprizes
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Chapter III. The Companies
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Chapter IV. The Fall of Hormuz
154 - Part II. The Loss of Hormuz. People and Events
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Introduction
209 -
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Chapter V. The Dream of a Great Alliance
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Chapter VI. Hormuz is the Question
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Chapter VII. The Loss of Hormuz
305 - Part III. After Hormuz
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Chapter VIII. The Losers
345 -
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Chapter IX. The Attempt at Redirection of the Silk Trade
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Chapter X. Instead of Hormuz
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Conclusion
412 -
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Appendix. Currency and Weights
415 -
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Manuscript Sources
424 -
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Printed Sources and Modern Works
426 -
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Index
435