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The Growth of the Antwerp Market and the European Economy - Fourteenth-Sixteenth Centuries

English · Paperback / Softback

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The economy of Antwerp in the fourteenth, fifteenth and sixteenth centuries had a very special dynamism. It underwent the processes of rise, expansion, maturity and decadence with peculiar intensity. It gave an impressive stimulus to the commercial currents, maritime and contin ental, which converged on the town. It inspired the appearance and growth of new institutions and intensified changes in the social and economic structure. It was the heart of commerce, industry and agricul ture for a large area and particularly of Brabant, Flanders and Zeeland. Moreover Antwerp's economy was an important, and sometimes even the principal, artery of the whole European economy. Antwerp's dynamism was not purely irrational : numerous factors, which a detailed analysis allowed us to ascertain, forced its economic development. The first was le recitatif du cycle to use Braudel's termino logy t. This was however no mere histoire evenementielle. We closely followed the rhythm and even crises of Antwerp's economy, but all these quantitative and qualitative data allowed a comprehensive insight into the interdecennial waves. This permitted a reasonably distant view of the data which made it more possible to observe a logical dynamic. Thus it was not in the first place our purpose to present in this first part a purely documentary report of historical facts. We were rather concerned with the analysis of the factors which determined or influenced the dynamics of the Antwerp market and the economy of the Low Countries.

List of contents

I. The interdecennial fluctuations of the Antwerp economy and their impact on Brabant and Flanders (1356-1619).- I: The real significance of the dominance of Flanders and the difficulties of monetary recovery (1356-1405).- II: The last flowering of the medieval economy (1406-1437).- III: The failure of the medieval economy and the slow emergence of modern conditions (1438-1477).- IV: Political chaos (1477-1492).- V: Antwerp's emergence as the metropolis of Western Europe (c. 1493-1520).- VI: The decisive years (1521-c. 1550).- VII: The slowing down of commercial expansion offset by industrial growth (c. 1551-1572).- VIII: Crisis in the Netherlands and the final phase of Antwerp's decline (1572-1587).- Epilogue: The slow but courageous recovery (1588-1619).- II. Secular trends and structural changes.- I: Agricultural trends in Brabant.- II: Trends in the trade of the Southern Netherlands and Europe.- III: Trends in financial development.- IV: Tendencies in industrial and social structure.- V: Typology of the crises and secular expansion.- VI: The significance of the price trends.- Conclusion.

Summary

The economy of Antwerp in the fourteenth, fifteenth and sixteenth centuries had a very special dynamism. It underwent the processes of rise, expansion, maturity and decadence with peculiar intensity. It gave an impressive stimulus to the commercial currents, maritime and contin ental, which converged on the town. It inspired the appearance and growth of new institutions and intensified changes in the social and economic structure. It was the heart of commerce, industry and agricul ture for a large area and particularly of Brabant, Flanders and Zeeland. Moreover Antwerp's economy was an important, and sometimes even the principal, artery of the whole European economy. Antwerp's dynamism was not purely irrational : numerous factors, which a detailed analysis allowed us to ascertain, forced its economic development. The first was le recitatif du cycle to use Braudel's termino logy t. This was however no mere histoire evenementielle. We closely followed the rhythm and even crises of Antwerp's economy, but all these quantitative and qualitative data allowed a comprehensive insight into the interdecennial waves. This permitted a reasonably distant view of the data which made it more possible to observe a logical dynamic. Thus it was not in the first place our purpose to present in this first part a purely documentary report of historical facts. We were rather concerned with the analysis of the factors which determined or influenced the dynamics of the Antwerp market and the economy of the Low Countries.

Product details

Authors H Van der Wee, H. Van der Wee, H. Van Der Wee
Publisher Springer Netherlands
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 17.10.2013
 
EAN 9789401537735
ISBN 978-94-0-153773-5
No. of pages 436
Dimensions 156 mm x 236 mm x 24 mm
Weight 697 g
Illustrations XI, 436 p. 6 illus.
Subjects Social sciences, law, business > Business > General, dictionaries

C, trade, Economic history, auseinandersetzen, Economics and Finance, Expansion;crisis;economy;growth;trade

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