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The economy of ransoming in the early modern Mediterranean
Kaiser, W.; Calafat, G. (2014). The economy of ransoming in the early modern Mediterranean, in: Trivellato, F. et al. Religion and trade: cross-cultural exchanges in world history, 1000-1900. pp. 108-130. https://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199379187.003.0004
In: Trivellato, F.; Halevi, L.; Antunes, C. (Ed.) (2014). Religion and trade: Cross-cultural exchanges in world history, 1000-1900. Oxford University Press: Oxford. ISBN 978-0199379194. 288 pp. https://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199379187.001.0001

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Author keywords
    corsairing, captivity, ransoming, Christians, Muslims, Jews, western Mediterranean, early modern

Auteurs  Top 
  • Kaiser, W.
  • Calafat, G.

Abstract
    Drawing from diplomatic sources, commercial treatises, and legal documents, this chapter describes the ransoming of captives as an important economic sector of the early modern Mediterranean. It argues that, far from being an economy of booty and plunder that obstructed commercial exchanges, corsairing in the Mediterranean sustained a constant trade in captives that crossed religious, legal, and political boundaries. The official function of corsairing was to damage the enemy’s economic activities. But in practice, corsairing also contributed to intensify contacts between Christian, Muslim, and Jewish merchants in the western Mediterranean.

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