Description
Global Trade in the Premodern World offers an authoritative and expansive history of exchange and interaction across Eurasia from the prehistoric origins of trade to the integration of large parts of this world-system by the fifteenth century CE.
The book tackles questions that are critical to our understanding of premodern globalization. How did global trade in the premodern world take shape? Who did the trading and what motivated them? Which commodities were traded and how did different goods influence how trading networks functioned? How did geography change how and where people carried goods? How did states and communities seek to control the practice of commerce? And finally, what was the impact of trade on political structures and in the relationship between different states, empires, and communities?
Drawing on the fruits of research in history, anthropology, and archaeology, as well as primary sources produced by authors from Africa, Asia and Europe, Global Trade in the Premodern World is a book of remarkable scope written engagingly and accessibly with scholars, students, and non-specialists in mind.
About the Author
Richard L. Smith was Emeritus Professor of History at Ferrum College, Virginia. His teaching and research were driven by wide-ranging interests in trade across Afro-Eurasia, especially in the first millennium AD. Smith's publications include Premodern Trade in World History (2008) and numerous chapters and articles.
Edmond Smith is Professor of Economic Cultures at The University of Manchester, UK. Their research and teaching explore the cultural and institutional origins of globalization across the second millennium AD. Smith has published numerous articles, chapters, and books, including the prize-winning monograph Merchants (2021).
Book Information
ISBN 9780367512231
Author Richard L. Smith
Format Paperback
Page Count 220
Imprint Routledge
Publisher Taylor & Francis Ltd