The War of 1812 was a very expensive conflict for the United States. In 1813, three foreign-born investors, among them David Parish from Hamburg, Germany, saved the US government from bankruptcy by providing a sixteen-million dollar loan. This article focuses on the reasons why Parish – who strongly opposed the war – agreed to take a major share in the loan. At the same time, it examines the ways in which the Hamburg merchant tried to sell a large share of his US government bonds in Great Britain – America’s wartime enemy. Parish’s actions make it obvious that he promoted the idea of a supranational mercantile community that was not bound by patriotic considerations even during war times. Consequently, it was the British merchant banker Ale...
How does one package and sell confidence in the stability of a nation riven by civil strife? This wa...
How does sovereign debt emerge? In the early nineteenth century, intermediaries' market power and pr...
The purpose of this (poster and ) paper is to discuss how Britain unknowingly created a disruptive i...
A key prong of American strategy during the War of 1812 was to enlist the aid of privateers – privat...
The article traces a hitherto-neglected form of political obligation, one that resulted from nationa...
In the Revolutionary War, the Americans had no means to combat the naval supremacy of the British Ro...
This article examines the reality of corruption among contractors in North America during the French...
This article assess the general effectiveness of privateers (as understood by their contemporaries) ...
A historical outlook on the events surrounding the Barney v. Smith Case. The Article discusses the ...
This article focuses on the principal actors who undertook the financial intermediation of the Greek...
The close of the First World War signalled a proliferation of newly established nation-states across...
By nature, wars appear hostile to commerce, bringing disruption to international relations and to ev...
This paper analyses the increase in United States maritime trade during the French wars (1793-1815)....
This article considers the delicate circumstances arising from the outbreak of the Great War and exi...
Ireland’s Old English merchants, and especially those of the Pale, provided the English crown with v...
How does one package and sell confidence in the stability of a nation riven by civil strife? This wa...
How does sovereign debt emerge? In the early nineteenth century, intermediaries' market power and pr...
The purpose of this (poster and ) paper is to discuss how Britain unknowingly created a disruptive i...
A key prong of American strategy during the War of 1812 was to enlist the aid of privateers – privat...
The article traces a hitherto-neglected form of political obligation, one that resulted from nationa...
In the Revolutionary War, the Americans had no means to combat the naval supremacy of the British Ro...
This article examines the reality of corruption among contractors in North America during the French...
This article assess the general effectiveness of privateers (as understood by their contemporaries) ...
A historical outlook on the events surrounding the Barney v. Smith Case. The Article discusses the ...
This article focuses on the principal actors who undertook the financial intermediation of the Greek...
The close of the First World War signalled a proliferation of newly established nation-states across...
By nature, wars appear hostile to commerce, bringing disruption to international relations and to ev...
This paper analyses the increase in United States maritime trade during the French wars (1793-1815)....
This article considers the delicate circumstances arising from the outbreak of the Great War and exi...
Ireland’s Old English merchants, and especially those of the Pale, provided the English crown with v...
How does one package and sell confidence in the stability of a nation riven by civil strife? This wa...
How does sovereign debt emerge? In the early nineteenth century, intermediaries' market power and pr...
The purpose of this (poster and ) paper is to discuss how Britain unknowingly created a disruptive i...