Trading company
A trading company ( ital. Compagnia ) was a company whose purpose was the long-distance trade with foreign countries. Trading companies were often given special privileges .
Occurrence
An important prerequisite for founding such a trading company was the existence of a port and suitable ships . Important trading companies were for example the Hanseatic League in Northern Germany , the British East India Company , the Emden East Asian Trading Company and the Dutch East India Company . The trading companies were also instrumental in the conquest of the overseas colonies and in the slave trade . This applies particularly to those in the Netherlands , France and Great Britain .
history
Trading companies had existed in Italy since the 14th century. These operated in the Levant . The Italian states with the most important trading companies at this time included Pisa , Genoa , Venice and Florence . The heyday of the trading companies was mainly in the age of mercantilism . At the beginning of the 16th century, the Republic of Venice dominated the Mediterranean and, thanks to its connections to the Middle East, it dominated trade, in particular the sea route to India , the Levant and the Indian Ocean . This enabled Venice to control products from the Far East and thereby control the European economy. Nevertheless, Antwerp managed to become a bonded warehouse for the pepper imported from Portugal.
In the course of the development of America by Spain and Portugal in the 16th and 17th centuries, the other European states also began to expand their colonial areas and to develop them economically. Trade between the mother countries and the colonies was often controlled by a company called the India Company . At that time, the term “India” largely referred to all newly discovered regions that could be reached either via the east route ( India trade ) or the west route (west India).
In the 1570s the northern countries of Europe grew stronger and Venice's trade faded into the background. In the course of this development, Spain began trading gold from the new colonies in America, but was also unable to counteract an economic decline towards the end of the 16th century. Towards the end of the 16th century the Netherlands began to take an interest in India. Cornelis de Houtman set sail with four ships in 1592; this was the beginning of Dutch trade, which was unparalleled in Europe, despite the largely unsuccessful expedition.
List of trading companies (selection)
This list shows some trading companies with the year of establishment (the abbreviation in brackets):
- German states and German empire
- 1682 Brandenburg-African Company (BAC)
- 1752 Emder East Asian trading company
- 1772 Maritime Trading Company
- 1882 New Guinea company
- 1884 German East African Society (DOAG)
- 1885 German-West African Society
- 1887 Jaluit Society (JG)
- 1891 Astrolabe-Compagnie
- English and British crowns
- 1407 Company of Merchant Adventurers
- 1555 Muscovy Company
- 1600 British East India Company (EIC)
- 1605 Levant Company , merger of Turkey Company and Venice Company .
- 1606 Plymouth Company
- 1606 London Company
- 1618 Company of Adventurers of London trading in Gynney and Bynney
- 1631 Company of Merchants Trading to Guinea
- 1660 Royal African Company (RAC)
- 1711 South Sea Company
- 1792 Sierra Leone Company
- 1825 New Zealand Company
- 1835 South Australian Company
- 1847 Eastern Archipelago Company
- 1881 North Borneo Chartered Company (BNBCC)
- 1886 Royal Niger Company
- 1888 Imperial British East Africa Company (IBEA)
- 1889 British South Africa Company (BSAC or BSACO)
- Netherlands
- 1602 Dutch East India Company (VOC)
- 1621 Dutch West India Company (WIC)
- France
- 1627 Compagnie de la Nouvelle France
- 1664 French East India Company
- 1664 French West India Company
- 1717 Mississippi Company
- Portugal
- 1482 Company of Guinea (Companhia da Guiné)
- 1628 Portuguese East India Company
- 1649 General Association of the Brazilian Trade
- 1891 Mozambique Society
- Russia
- Scandinavia
- 1616 Danish East India Company
- 1671 Danish West India Company
- 1731 Swedish East India Company
- 1786 Swedish West India Company
- Spain
- 1728 Guipuzcoan Company of Caracas (Real Compañia Guipuzcoana de Caracas)
- 1755 Real Compañía de Comercio de Barcelona a Indias
- Austria
- 1719 Oriental Company
- 1722 Ostend Company
- North America
- 1670 Hudson's Bay Company (HBC)
- 1808 American Fur Company
- 1823 Rocky Mountain Fur Company
- Mixed
- 1783 North West Company , merger with Hudson's Bay Company in 1821
See also
Web links
- Meyer Konversationslexikon from 1905
- Newspaper articles about trading companies in the press kit of the 20th century of the ZBW - Leibniz Information Center for Economics .
Individual evidence
- ↑ Fernand Braudel : La Dynamique du capitalisme. Arthaud, Paris 1985, ISBN 2-7003-0501-9 .
- ↑ Fernand Braudel: Civilization matérielle, économie et capitalisme XVe - XVIIe. Volume 3: Le Temps du monde (= Le Livre de Poche. 413). Armand Colin, Paris 1993, ISBN 2-253-06457-2 , p. 254.