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Commercial agreements and social dynamics in medieval Genoa / Quentin van Doosselaere.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Cambridge, UK ; New York : Cambridge Univ. Press, ©2009.Description: 1 online resource (xvi, 262 pages) : illustrationsContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9780511517907
  • 0511517904
  • 0521897920
  • 9780521897921
  • 1107201969
  • 9781107201965
  • 1107404290
  • 9781107404298
  • 1282103857
  • 9781282103856
  • 9786612103858
  • 661210385X
  • 0511576420
  • 9780511576423
  • 0511515405
  • 9780511515408
  • 0511514360
  • 9780511514364
  • 0511516681
  • 9780511516689
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: Commercial agreements and social dynamics in medieval Genoa.DDC classification:
  • 382/.94518210902 22
LOC classification:
  • HF3590.G4 V36 2009eb
Online resources:
Contents:
From sword into capital -- Genoa at the dawn of the commercial expansion. The feudal commune ; Genoa and medieval trade to 1150 ; Linking two worlds -- Equity partnerships for heterogeneous ties. Commenda: a staple framework for occasional partners ; Januensis ergo mercator: the multivalent Genoese ; Network dynamics: from clientelism to corporatism -- Credit network for routinized merchants . Medieval credit instruments ; Credit network for regular traders ; Merchants -- Insurance ties for oligarchic cohesion. Genoese clans ; Third-party insurance ; Oligarchic families.
Summary: Commercial Agreements and Social Dynamics in Medieval Genoa is an empirical study of medieval long-distance trade agreements and the surrounding social dynamics that transformed the feudal organization of men-of-arms into the world of Renaissance merchants. Drawing on 20,000 notarial records, the book traces the commercial partnerships of thousands of people in Genoa from 1150 to 1435 and reports social activity on a scale that is unprecedented for such an early period of history. In combining a detailed historical reading with network modeling to analyze the change in the long-distance trade relationships, Quentin van Doosselaere challenges the prevailing western-centric view of development. He demonstrates that the history of the three main medieval economic frameworks that brought about European capitalism - equity, credit, and insurance - was not driven by strategic merchants' economic optimizations but rather by a change in partners' selections that reflected the dynamic of the social structure as a whole.
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Includes bibliographical references (pages 233-254) and index.

Print version record.

From sword into capital -- Genoa at the dawn of the commercial expansion. The feudal commune ; Genoa and medieval trade to 1150 ; Linking two worlds -- Equity partnerships for heterogeneous ties. Commenda: a staple framework for occasional partners ; Januensis ergo mercator: the multivalent Genoese ; Network dynamics: from clientelism to corporatism -- Credit network for routinized merchants . Medieval credit instruments ; Credit network for regular traders ; Merchants -- Insurance ties for oligarchic cohesion. Genoese clans ; Third-party insurance ; Oligarchic families.

Commercial Agreements and Social Dynamics in Medieval Genoa is an empirical study of medieval long-distance trade agreements and the surrounding social dynamics that transformed the feudal organization of men-of-arms into the world of Renaissance merchants. Drawing on 20,000 notarial records, the book traces the commercial partnerships of thousands of people in Genoa from 1150 to 1435 and reports social activity on a scale that is unprecedented for such an early period of history. In combining a detailed historical reading with network modeling to analyze the change in the long-distance trade relationships, Quentin van Doosselaere challenges the prevailing western-centric view of development. He demonstrates that the history of the three main medieval economic frameworks that brought about European capitalism - equity, credit, and insurance - was not driven by strategic merchants' economic optimizations but rather by a change in partners' selections that reflected the dynamic of the social structure as a whole.

English.

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