This article examines the issue of private investment in the seventeenth-century Dutch colony in Brazil. For the first time, new archival discoveries allow for a reconstruction of the size of private investment in the colony, as well as a breakdown into distinct investment activities. The article argues that private investment was an absolute necessity for the West India Company in the hope of making its colony successful, as it could not provide the required funds by itself. Private individuals claimed to have invested over eleven million guilders in the colony, nearly one-and-a-half times the WIC’s original capitalization. A number of case studies elaborate the overall figures presented and show that Dutch investors did indeed move into s...
This article presents a new perspective on the master-slave relationship in New Netherland in order ...
Dutch Brazil was lost in 1654. The 25th article of the Peace of The Hague in 1662/63 stipulated that...
English colonists from Barbados founded the sugar colony of Suriname in 1651, but they lost their ne...
This article studies the basic characteristics of the Brazilian sugar economy between 1560 and 1660,...
How profitable were foreign investments in plantation agriculture in the Netherlands Indies during t...
At the beginning of the eighteenth century, the county of Campos dos Goitacases became a major produ...
This paper examines the role of the New Christians within Portuguese mercantile organizations during...
The article analyzes the evolution of the Amsterdam capital market as a consequence of Dutch oversea...
The Dutch West India Company (WIC), founded in 1621, was, in the words of the States General, disban...
Summary This study, entitled 'The Narrowing Horizon of Dutch Traders', deals mainly with the develop...
In the second half of the eighteenth century, Dutch bankers channeled investors' funds to sugar and ...
The article analyses the information available in England about colonial Brazil. The first books abo...
In the XVIIIth century, Surinam had become a major subject of interest for Enlighted scholars as wel...
This article uses the career of Hendrik Oostwald Eksteen at the Cape between 1702 and 1741 to illust...
This article's principal source is a database of loans granted by the merchant Henry Lascelles (1690...
This article presents a new perspective on the master-slave relationship in New Netherland in order ...
Dutch Brazil was lost in 1654. The 25th article of the Peace of The Hague in 1662/63 stipulated that...
English colonists from Barbados founded the sugar colony of Suriname in 1651, but they lost their ne...
This article studies the basic characteristics of the Brazilian sugar economy between 1560 and 1660,...
How profitable were foreign investments in plantation agriculture in the Netherlands Indies during t...
At the beginning of the eighteenth century, the county of Campos dos Goitacases became a major produ...
This paper examines the role of the New Christians within Portuguese mercantile organizations during...
The article analyzes the evolution of the Amsterdam capital market as a consequence of Dutch oversea...
The Dutch West India Company (WIC), founded in 1621, was, in the words of the States General, disban...
Summary This study, entitled 'The Narrowing Horizon of Dutch Traders', deals mainly with the develop...
In the second half of the eighteenth century, Dutch bankers channeled investors' funds to sugar and ...
The article analyses the information available in England about colonial Brazil. The first books abo...
In the XVIIIth century, Surinam had become a major subject of interest for Enlighted scholars as wel...
This article uses the career of Hendrik Oostwald Eksteen at the Cape between 1702 and 1741 to illust...
This article's principal source is a database of loans granted by the merchant Henry Lascelles (1690...
This article presents a new perspective on the master-slave relationship in New Netherland in order ...
Dutch Brazil was lost in 1654. The 25th article of the Peace of The Hague in 1662/63 stipulated that...
English colonists from Barbados founded the sugar colony of Suriname in 1651, but they lost their ne...