Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures and tables
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Economic Aspects of Spanish Imperial Expansion, 1492–1550
- 3 Commodities and Resources During the Conquest Period
- 4 The Hapsburg Commercial System
- 5 Inter-Colonial Trade and the Hapsburg Commercial System
- 6 Foreign Penetration of the Ibero-American Economy in the Hapsburg Period
- 7 Economic Growth in Spanish America in the Hapsburg Period
- 8 Commercial and Economic Relations in the Early Bourbon Period, 1700–1765
- 9 ‘Free Trade’ and the Peninsular Economy
- 10 ‘Free Trade’ and the American Economy
- 11 Economic Relations Between Spain and America on the Eve of the Revolutions for Independence
- 12 Conclusion: Economic Grievances and Insurrection in Late Colonial Spanish America
- Appendix: Spanish Monarchs
- Glossary of Spanish Terms
- Bibliographical Essay
- Index
4 - The Hapsburg Commercial System
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures and tables
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Economic Aspects of Spanish Imperial Expansion, 1492–1550
- 3 Commodities and Resources During the Conquest Period
- 4 The Hapsburg Commercial System
- 5 Inter-Colonial Trade and the Hapsburg Commercial System
- 6 Foreign Penetration of the Ibero-American Economy in the Hapsburg Period
- 7 Economic Growth in Spanish America in the Hapsburg Period
- 8 Commercial and Economic Relations in the Early Bourbon Period, 1700–1765
- 9 ‘Free Trade’ and the Peninsular Economy
- 10 ‘Free Trade’ and the American Economy
- 11 Economic Relations Between Spain and America on the Eve of the Revolutions for Independence
- 12 Conclusion: Economic Grievances and Insurrection in Late Colonial Spanish America
- Appendix: Spanish Monarchs
- Glossary of Spanish Terms
- Bibliographical Essay
- Index
Summary
ORIGINS
Although historians continue to debate and differ over the perhaps insoluble issue of when the medieval world ended and modern history began, virtually all are agreed that the expansion of European trade beyond the Mediterranean and the North Atlantic—first with Portuguese expansion down the coast of Africa throughout the fifteenth century, and, from 1492, with the initiation of Spanish expansion in the Caribbean, into the American hemisphere—was crucial in the transition from an essentially inward-looking Europe to a truly global economy, albeit one which European powers would continue to dominate until the twentieth century. The dramatic expansion after 1500 of the lines of maritime and commercial communication—with both Spain and Portugal looking, at least in theory in the case of the former and in practice in that of the latter, beyond America and Africa to the fabulous Orient—also extended both the scope for the sources of international conflict to manifest themselves beyond Europe, and, increasingly in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, for the threats of war between European powers to be located, at least in part, beyond the geographical confines of the Old World. In so far as Portuguese trade with Brazil was concerned, the relatively low-value (in relation to volume) cargoes of dye-woods which began to flow to Europe in increasing quantities by the middle of the sixteenth century attracted few predators. Cargoes of sugar, too, were generally unattractive to intruders.
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- Publisher: Liverpool University PressPrint publication year: 1997