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- Convenors:
-
Joana Sequeira
(CHAM-UNL, CITCEM-UP)
Flávio Miranda (IEM-UNL, CITCEM-UP)
- Location:
- Sala 38, Piso 0
- Sessions:
- Friday 19 July, -
Time zone: Europe/Lisbon
Short Abstract:
The aim of this panel is to address how the changes caused by the overseas expansion were understood by European traders, and what was the effect of those transformations in their commercial activities and economic relationship in global perspective roughly from 1450 to 1550.
Long Abstract:
In 1459, Afonso V of Portugal (1438-81) commissioned a world map made by the Venetian geographer Fra Mauro, which would depict some of the newly found lands and beyond. The Portuguese were exploring unchartered territory, adding new markets and commodities to the European commercial system, and radically changing the perception that fifteenth-century European princes, cartographers, and merchants had of their world. The voyages of exploration would influence politics, trade, and economic networks, but also culture, art, and architecture.
The aim of this panel is to address how the changes caused by the overseas expansion were understood by European traders, and what was the effect of those transformations in their commercial activities and economic relationship in global perspective roughly from 1450 to 1550.
Speakers are asked to challenge models and explanations found in conventional national economic histories by considering cross-cultural approaches that explore how the overseas expansion provoked changes in trade and traders; merchant communities and institutional relationship; products, markets, and commercial systems; socioeconomic and cultural life.
Accepted papers:
Session 1 Friday 19 July, 2013, -Paper short abstract:
The impact of early modern empire on European markets can be assessed by the integration of market prices across political boundaries. The pepper prices in London and Antwerp were linked by a web of market and political institutions. After 1450 these institutions included the growing Portuguese Empire.
Paper long abstract:
The early modern pepper markets in northwestern Europe were a product of the interaction of markets and empires, merchants and kings. By 1455, the growing Portuguese Empire entered the pepper market by supplying West African malaguetta pepper from their new colonial outposts and in 1501 expanded by supplying Indian pepper to Antwerp.
The impact of the Portuguese Empire on European markets can be assessed by the integration of market prices across political boundaries. The pepper prices in London and Antwerp were linked to each other by a web of market institutions. After 1501 the growing Portuguese Empire in India (Estado da Índia) rapidly expanded as a source of Europe's pepper. This challenged and for a time displaced the existing Venetian dominance of the European pepper market.
The paper investigates the role of technology and institutions in the changing balance of Portuguese and Venetian pepper supply to Europe. Venice and Portugal varied considerably in their sailing technology and their trading institutions. These differences will be examined to assess the changing balance of the pepper trade and the impact on pepper prices in London and Antwerp.
Paper short abstract:
The impact of Asian textiles in the Portuguese manufactures, in the consumption standards, and in the shifts of taste will be explored. It will focus in the research of textile trade and develop an updated state of the art on the volume and type of traded goods between Asia and Portugal.
Paper long abstract:
Despite the increasing interest that textiles have recently aroused,
studies on the Portuguese global expansion and Asian trade have not
yet developed an autonomous analysis of these goods. Economic
historians have not performed any better, although the importance of
textiles in the intra- and trans-continental system of transactions of
the 'Carreira da India' between Goa and Lisbon is well documented both
by written testimonies and the remaining material goods.
It is therefore essential to investigate the quantity and typology of
the negotiated load, commercial rules, and the amount of income and
losses obtained in this commerce. Nevertheless, it is also important
to understand the meaning of this trade in a broader context, and,
especially, to assess the impact of Asian textiles on the cultural and
artistic level.
This paper explores the impact of textile trade in the Portuguese
manufactures, in the consumption standards, and in the shifts of Asian
and Portuguese (European) taste. It will focus on the specific
problems involved in the investigation of textile trade and develop an
updated state of the art on the volume and type of traded goods
between Asia and Portugal in the early modern period. This approach
aims to contribute to a better understanding of the Portuguese role on
early globalization, and to throw light on Portugal's contribution in
the acquisition and distribution of Asian textile commodities across
Europe during the 16th and 17th centuries before England and Holland
set up large trading companies.
Paper short abstract:
In the fifteenth century, Portugal emerged as a key player in European trade, abandoning its secondary position as a commercial kingdom. This paper will analyse how Portugal changed Europe’s late medieval economy by interconnecting European and African commercial systems.
Paper long abstract:
In the fifteenth century, Portugal emerged as a key player in European trade, abandoning its secondary position as a commercial kingdom. Lisbon progressively became one of the most important economic gateways of Western Europe, attracting merchants from the Baltic, North Sea, Atlantic and Mediterranean markets. By interconnecting European and African commercial systems, Portugal became a game-changer in Europe's late medieval economy.
This paper will address the following issues: What was the effect of the overseas expansion in Portugal's maritime trade? How did the Portuguese interlink European and African markets? What was the role of the Portuguese in this process of Euro-African commercial exchange? And how did foreign merchants adapt to the overseas expansion? How were the European economic systems affected by the emergence of Atlantic trade?