A Companion to Venetian History, 1400-1797
258 luciano pezzolo significant, with the exception of the one caused by the plague of 1630. Venice’s stability is even more mar ...
the venetian economy 259 vessels provided efficient services between the various Levantine cities, just as the English and Dutch ...
260 luciano pezzolo It is useful to consider the benefits Venice enjoyed in the eastern Medi- terranean compared to its competit ...
the venetian economy 261 cost.”10 The component of defense represented a fundamental element in maritime trade. Thus, uncertaint ...
262 luciano pezzolo force on a regular basis in order to protect the economic interests of their merchants. Another response to ...
the venetian economy 263 might gather more than 20,000 ducats to rent a galley. As to the number of active ships, the peak was r ...
264 luciano pezzolo Trade between Growth and Change Despite the lack of quantitative data, most scholars claim that in the 15th ...
the venetian economy 265 Mediterranean by a group of fearsome competitors, primarily the French, Dutch, and English. The consist ...
266 luciano pezzolo decline for the following pages, let us for the moment simply stress that the structure of European imports ...
the venetian economy 267 The 16th century witnessed a change in the social profile of the pro- tagonists of Venetian long-distan ...
268 luciano pezzolo was an increasing belief that agriculture could constitute an even nobler activity than commerce.31 That doe ...
the venetian economy 269 patricians and the economic choices that were developed in the 17th and 18th centuries. Public Finance ...
270 luciano pezzolo Renaissance Venice was one of the most developed financial markets in Europe, and even in the public sector ...
the venetian economy 271 Because of these continuous financial difficulties, the need emerged to make regular recourse to direct ...
272 luciano pezzolo of the Republic. In addition to the Depositi in zecca, there were forced loans on guilds and ecclesiastical ...
the venetian economy 273 goods, the products of goldsmiths, books and prints, and, naturally, ships were the principal categorie ...
2 74 luciano pezzolo long been sold in those regions. The deterioration of relations between Florence and the Sublime Porte, int ...
the venetian economy 275 analysis of the merely quantitative data, then, is insufficient in explaining the success and eventual ...
276 luciano pezzolo The 15th and 16th centuries witnessed the growth of the Venetian manu- facturing sector, likely at a rather ...
the venetian economy 277 Italian states. To these reasons were added the aggressive mercantilist policy of the northern European ...
«
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
»
Free download pdf