International audienceDrawing from diplomatic sources, commercial treatises, and legal documents, this chapter describes the ransoming of captives as an important economic sector of the early modern Mediterranean. It argues that, far from being an economy of booty and plunder that obstructed commercial exchanges, corsairing in the Mediterranean sustained a constant trade in captives that crossed religious, legal, and political boundaries.The official function of corsairing was to damage the enemy’s economic activities. But in practice, corsairing also contributed to intensify contacts between Christian, Muslim, and Jewish merchants in the western Mediterranean
Historians of globalization have considered how the early phases of globalization brought about chan...
This article researches the ways in which seamen sailing to the Mediterranean on Dutch mercantile ve...
This chapter focuses on slavery in the Mediterranean region from the sixteenth to the nineteenth cen...
International audienceDrawing from diplomatic sources, commercial treatises, and legal documents, th...
This article analyzes the political economy of ransom—understood as the interaction between politica...
The piracy should not be evaluated only as a plundering activity. It should be considered as a polit...
This thesis has been written to illustrate the experience of commerce and some of the conditions und...
Die Arbeit beschreibt eine Nomenklatur zu den Begriffen Pirat, Korsar, Renegat, sowie anderen Begrif...
This dissertation examines the legal and administrative impact of piracy and amphibious slave-raidin...
International audienceThe political élite and the economic activity in Maghribian ports (XII-XV c.) ...
In the seventeenth-century western Mediterranean, the conflict between the Dutch Republic and North ...
Click on the DOI link to access the article (may not be free).Commercial conflict resolution in the ...
This paper demonstrates the presence of Heckscher-Ohlin type trade in bulk commodities in the early ...
The chapter analyzes, from a diachronic perspective, the role of trade with the Levant in the port i...
International audienceThe political élite and the economic activity in Maghribian ports (XII-XV c.) ...
Historians of globalization have considered how the early phases of globalization brought about chan...
This article researches the ways in which seamen sailing to the Mediterranean on Dutch mercantile ve...
This chapter focuses on slavery in the Mediterranean region from the sixteenth to the nineteenth cen...
International audienceDrawing from diplomatic sources, commercial treatises, and legal documents, th...
This article analyzes the political economy of ransom—understood as the interaction between politica...
The piracy should not be evaluated only as a plundering activity. It should be considered as a polit...
This thesis has been written to illustrate the experience of commerce and some of the conditions und...
Die Arbeit beschreibt eine Nomenklatur zu den Begriffen Pirat, Korsar, Renegat, sowie anderen Begrif...
This dissertation examines the legal and administrative impact of piracy and amphibious slave-raidin...
International audienceThe political élite and the economic activity in Maghribian ports (XII-XV c.) ...
In the seventeenth-century western Mediterranean, the conflict between the Dutch Republic and North ...
Click on the DOI link to access the article (may not be free).Commercial conflict resolution in the ...
This paper demonstrates the presence of Heckscher-Ohlin type trade in bulk commodities in the early ...
The chapter analyzes, from a diachronic perspective, the role of trade with the Levant in the port i...
International audienceThe political élite and the economic activity in Maghribian ports (XII-XV c.) ...
Historians of globalization have considered how the early phases of globalization brought about chan...
This article researches the ways in which seamen sailing to the Mediterranean on Dutch mercantile ve...
This chapter focuses on slavery in the Mediterranean region from the sixteenth to the nineteenth cen...