Networks

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Abstract

The chapter explores how trading companies relied on global networks to ply their trade and secure the position far from British shores. The companies constituted a very fertile and durable global space for exchange and dissemination of commodities, information and ideas over large distances. To successfully do this, the forming and strengthening of networks with other numerous agents, companies, and English trading companies with knowledge of long distance extra-European trade became increasingly important. Between 1550–1750 new connections were formed to answer the changing political and commercial realities globally and domestically. England developed from a peripheral power in Europe to a country at the centre of a global commercial imperial web. Corporate interests spanned from America and the Caribbean to South-East Asia and from Russia to southern Africa. The early modern corporations were created by networks and would come to facilitate a space globally where new networks were formed and, in time, strengthen the corporations.
OriginalsprogEngelsk
TitelThe Corporation as a Protagonist in Global History, c. 1550-1750
RedaktørerWilliam A. Pettigrew, David Veevers
Antal sider20
UdgivelsesstedLeiden, Netherlands
ForlagBrill
Publikationsdato10 dec. 2018
Sider96-115
Kapitel3
ISBN (Elektronisk)978-90-04-38785-0
DOI
StatusUdgivet - 10 dec. 2018
Udgivet eksterntJa
NavnGlobal Economic History Series
Vol/bind16
ISSN1872-5155

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