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Material Type: | Internet resource |
---|---|
Document Type: | Book, Internet Resource |
All Authors / Contributors: |
Francesca Trivellato; Leor Halevi; Cátia Antunes |
ISBN: | 9780199379187 0199379181 9780199379194 019937919X |
OCLC Number: | 894768666 |
Description: | Seiten cm |
Contents: | Introduction, Francesca Trivellato ; 1. Religion and Cross-Cultural Trade: A Framework for Interdisciplinary Inquiry, Leor Halevi ; 2. The Blessings of Exchange in the Making of the Early English Atlantic, David Harris Sacks ; 3. Trading with the Muslim World: Religious Limits and Proscriptions in the Portuguese Empire (c. 1480-1570), Giuseppe Marcocci ; 4. The Economy of Ransoming in the Mediterranean: A Form of Cross-Cultural Trade between Europe and the Maghreb (Seventeenth and Eighteenth Century), Wolfgang Kaiser and Guillaume Calafat ; 5. Reflections on Reciprocity: A Late Medieval Islamic Perspective on Christian-Muslim Commitment to Captive Exchange, Kathryn A. Miller ; 6. Cross-Cultural Business Cooperation in the Dutch Trading World, 1580-1776: A View from the Amsterdam Notarial Contracts, Catia Antunes ; 7. Trade across Religious and Confessional Boundaries in Early Modern France, Silvia Marzagalli ; 8. Coins and Commerce: Monetization and Cross-Cultural Collaboration in the Western Indian Ocean (Eleventh to Thirteenth Centuries), Roxani Eleni Margariti ; 9. Crossing the Great Water: The Hajj and Commerce from Pre-Modern Southeast Asia, Eric Tagliacozzo ; 10. African Meanings and European-African Discourse: Iconography and Semantics in Seventeenth-Century Salt Cellars from Serra Leoa, Peter Mark |
Responsibility: | edited by Francesca Trivellato, Leor Halevi, and Catia Antunes. |
Reviews
Publisher Synopsis
This is an important addition to the growing literature on long-distance trade and interactions in the early modern world and deserves a wide audience. Its comprehensive coverage and rigour result in a highly recommended volume for specialists on European expansion and cross-cultural exchanges. * Mariana P. Candido, European History Quarterly * This collective volume is a gift. Thanks to the plurality of its approach and vision, to the variety of themes it gathers together, and to the numerous regions and periods it covers, it is a must for anyone interested in this area of study - also because it urges the reader to consider how a global history of the intersection of religion and economics in pre-modern commerce is both possible and necessary ... I highly recommend to all scholars and librariesinterested in the state of the art in this field. * Cornel Zwierlein, Mediterranean Historical Review * Read more...

