14534.pdf

With the development of research in economic history, historians are now testing the hypothesis that maritime networks and port cities contributed to the phenomenon of European integration. This essay applies a holistic approach to discuss how the city of Lisbon, located outside the privileged setti...

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Language:English
Published: Firenze University Press 2022
Online Access:https://books.fupress.com/doi/capitoli/978-88-6453-857-0_21
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spelling oapen-20.500.12657-559992022-06-02T03:20:39Z Chapter ‘A Port of Two Seas.’ Lisbon and European Maritime Networks in the Fifteenth Century Sequeira, Joana Miranda, Flávio economic history lisbon portugal commercial networks 14th century With the development of research in economic history, historians are now testing the hypothesis that maritime networks and port cities contributed to the phenomenon of European integration. This essay applies a holistic approach to discuss how the city of Lisbon, located outside the privileged setting of multi-cultural interactions that was the Mediterranean Sea, became appealing to merchants from far and wide in late-medieval Europe. To do so, it examines a whole array of commercial, normative, fiscal, royal and judicial sources from European archives to discuss if it is possible to observe this phenomenon of European integration in fifteenth-century Lisbon. 2022-06-01T12:10:29Z 2022-06-01T12:10:29Z 2019 chapter ONIX_20220601_9788864538570_182 2704-5668 9788864538570 https://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/55999 eng Atti delle «Settimane di Studi» e altri Convegni application/pdf Attribution 4.0 International 14534.pdf https://books.fupress.com/doi/capitoli/978-88-6453-857-0_21 Firenze University Press 10.36253/978-88-6453-857-0.18 10.36253/978-88-6453-857-0.18 bf65d21a-78e5-4ba2-983a-dbfa90962870 9788864538570 50 15 Florence open access
institution OAPEN
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language English
description With the development of research in economic history, historians are now testing the hypothesis that maritime networks and port cities contributed to the phenomenon of European integration. This essay applies a holistic approach to discuss how the city of Lisbon, located outside the privileged setting of multi-cultural interactions that was the Mediterranean Sea, became appealing to merchants from far and wide in late-medieval Europe. To do so, it examines a whole array of commercial, normative, fiscal, royal and judicial sources from European archives to discuss if it is possible to observe this phenomenon of European integration in fifteenth-century Lisbon.
title 14534.pdf
spellingShingle 14534.pdf
title_short 14534.pdf
title_full 14534.pdf
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title_full_unstemmed 14534.pdf
title_sort 14534.pdf
publisher Firenze University Press
publishDate 2022
url https://books.fupress.com/doi/capitoli/978-88-6453-857-0_21
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