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El. knyga: Global Commerce in the Age of Enlightenment: Theories, Practices, and Institutions in the Eighteenth Century

(University of Lisbon, Portugal)
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Combining contextual, institutional, and global perspectives, this book evaluates the impact of international trade on eighteenth-century economic thought. It meticulously delineates how economic ideas and institutions flowed between North and South Europe and across the Indian and Atlantic Oceans during the Age of Enlightenment.

Global Commerce in the Age of Enlightenment

carefully explores contemporary debates about economic institutions, which were a crucial element in the race for controlling international trade. Eighteenth-century thinkers devoted much attention to the relative merits of existing institutions, such as free ports, grasped the dangers of economic dependence, and appraised emerging conceptions of property rights. The author draws on an impressive range of sources, including pamphlets and travel accounts, and work from lesser-known figures such as Pierre Poivre and Ange Goudar.

This volume will be valuable reading for advanced students and researchers of the history of economic thought, economic history, political economy, the history of ideas, and global history.



Combining contextual, institutional and global perspectives, this book evaluates the impact of international trade on eighteenth-century economic thought. It meticulously delineates how economic ideas and institutions flowed between North and South Europe and across the Indian and Atlantic Oceans during the Age of Enlightenment.

Introduction: On global commerce: topoi, utopias, and the existential
production of knowledge. Part I: The granary of the universe Travelogues,
observations, evidence, and a global history of property.
1. Pierre Poivre: A
microglobal life.
2. Eighteenth-century travel accounts: Platforms for
economic observations.
3. Feudal Laws: Liberties for a few.
4. An empirical
turn: Evidence and the attack on the economists.
Chapter
5. Property rights:
A global history. Part II: A universal warehouse of workforce
Re-industrialisation, delocalisation, de-urbanisation, and the propagation of
economic maxims.
6. Ange Goudar: Does the republic of economists need
transgressive authors?.
7. The will to know: The praxis of economic maxims.
8. The will to write: North and South Europe in transnational perspective.
9.
Industrys geometry and geography.
10. Materialising ideas: A chamber of
Agriculture. Part III: A universal intercourse of traffic as is desired
Free ports, fairs, and institutional evolution in a global perspective.
11.
Free ports: the idol of all economists.
12. Lasting and unlasting markets:
From Medieval fairs to free ports.
13. Institutional diversity: Free ports,
the Navigation Act, and the Drawback system.
14. A Mediterranean silk road:
Venice, Genoa, and Piedmont.
15. Tyre and Carthage: Failed projects and new
glocal fairs. Conclusion. Bibliography.
J. Bohorquez is a researcher at the Instituto de Ciencias Sociais, University of Lisbon, Portugal. He was a fellow at the Freiburg Institute for Advanced Studies and the Weatherhead Center for International Affairs at Harvard University.