Introduction: a tale of three cities; 1. A topographical perspective; 2. Political dynamics and dilemmas; 3. Discord; 4. Merchants and republicans; 5. Virtuous commerce; 6. Virtue bankrupt; Conclusion.
This book analyzes the ways in which Amsterdam, Antwerp and Hamburg developed dual identities as 'communities of commerce' and republics.
Mary Lindemann is Professor of History and Chair of the Department of History at the University of Miami. She is the author of four books and of numerous articles. She has also been the recipient of several major grants and awards, among them the John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship and fellowships from the National Endowment for the Humanities; the National Library of Medicine, National Institutes of Health; the Netherlands Institute for Advanced Study in the Social Sciences and the Humanities; the Flemish Institute for Advanced Study; and the Shelby Cullom Davis Center, Princeton University, New Jersey.
'The Merchant Republics expands outward from the most prominent
North German commercial center, Hamburg, and presents it alongside
Antwerp in the Southern Netherlands and Amsterdam in the Dutch
Republic as part of an innovative and comparative study of three
leading European commercial centers. Comparative history of this
kind is a very difficult genre to produce, but Mary Lindemann has
succeeded to a remarkable extent. This book is far more than three
parallel studies within one book. By acknowledging the real
contrasts between Amsterdam, Antwerp, and Hamburg, Lindemann is
able to make some effective and revealing comparisons, located in
the context of each city's earlier evolution, and to highlight the
real similarities. Lindemann is one of the most distinctive voices
currently writing about the 'long eighteenth century', and her
latest book will add to her already high reputation.' Hamish Scott,
University of Glasgow
'The Merchant Republics places Antwerp, Amsterdam, and Hamburg in
the wider context of the great northwest European port cities. Mary
Lindemann's focus on the theme of the merchant republic delivers a
highly original examination of ideas about republicanism and
commerce, a comparative analysis of the political management of the
three cities, a study of the self-image of the mercantile classes
in each case, and an account of the way in which those groups
actually did business in practice. In each respect Lindemann's book
breaks new ground for there has never been a work that has explored
these topics. The Merchant Republics is a tour de force, a hugely
impressive piece of original scholarship that will be of lasting
significance.' Joachim Whaley, University of Cambridge
'Mary Lindemann's new book gives a lot to think about. The Merchant
Republics is not an ordinary comparative history of three leading
commercial cities in early modern Europe. To be sure, it offers a
lavish, up-to-date overview of the historiography on the economic,
political, and social structures and fortunes of Antwerp,
Amsterdam, and Hamburg, and it clearly and subtly explains their
differences and similarities. It does all of this, but at the same
time, it strives to do much more. Lindemann's underlying aim is to
show that the notion 'merchant republic' can serve as a useful
concept to understand political cultures in early modern Europe.'
Karel Davids, Reviews and Critical Commentary
(councilforeuropeanstudies.org/critcom)
'This book takes us right to the heart of three early modern
cities. Mary Lindemann successfully evokes the lives of merchants
and bankers in Amsterdam, Antwerp, and Hamburg with her
multifarious and multifaceted stories, revealing fascinating facts
and details of urban life and strife.' The American Historical
Review
'Although not an economic history in the strictest sense, the book
challenges a classic economic interpretation of the rise and fall
of European commercial centers through its strong focus on
perception and identity. Lindemann has written a history of the
positioning of commerce in urban self-fashioning and political
functioning. It is based on a rich consultation of secondary
literature, showing Lindemann's excellent command of the
historiography about the Netherlands, Belgium, and Germany …' Tijl
Vanneste, Journal of Interdisciplinary History
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