European University Institute Library

Commanders of Dutch East India ships in the eighteenth century, Jaap R. Bruijn ; translated by R.L. Robson-McKillop and Prof. R.W. Unger

Label
Commanders of Dutch East India ships in the eighteenth century, Jaap R. Bruijn ; translated by R.L. Robson-McKillop and Prof. R.W. Unger
Language
eng
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Commanders of Dutch East India ships in the eighteenth century
Medium
electronic resource
Nature of contents
dictionaries
Oclc number
801782048
Responsibility statement
Jaap R. Bruijn ; translated by R.L. Robson-McKillop and Prof. R.W. Unger
Series statement
Cambridge Social Sciences eBooks
Summary
'An original and evocative window onto the lives of men who bridged the two worlds of eighteenth century Europe and the Far East.' Professor Nicholas Rodger. This book represents a major contribution to our knowledge and understanding of the East Indian maritime world of the European trading companies. The Dutch East India Company, which ruled large and important parts of what is now Indonesia, and which controlled the highly lucrative trade from the Dutch East Indies to Europe, much of it a monopoly trade in pepper and other spices, was in this period larger and better established than its British counterpart. The book reconstructs and explores the careers of the highly important and influential commanders of the Dutch East Indiamen, the ships which plied the trade routes between the East Indies and the Netherlands. It covers the company's system of examinations, how mates and masters acquired their navigational knowledge, how they lived their lives at sea and on land, and how, making use of the enormous opportunities for private trade, they were able to make substantial fortunes and climb the social ladder. The book contains a wealth of material on the social history of the commanders and those around them, both at home and at sea.--, Provided by publisher
Content
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