Available Formats
Portuguese and Amsterdam Sephardic Merchants in the Tobacco Trade: Tierra Firme and Hispaniola in the Early Seventeenth Century
By (Author) Yda Schreuder
Anthem Press
Anthem Press
17th January 2023
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
European history
History of the Americas
382.4137109492352
Hardback
168
Width 153mm, Height 229mm, Spine 26mm
454g
The book surveys the role of Portuguese and Sephardic merchants in the contraband tobacco trade in the late sixteenth- and early seventeenth-century Atlantic world. Itoffers a historical-geographic perspective linking Amsterdam as an emerging staple market to a network of merchants of the Portuguese Nation, examining the illicit trade in the context of rivalry between Spain and the Dutch Republic during the Eighty Years War.
In the seventeenth century, Amsterdam became one of the worlds chief tobacco markets. Yda Schreuder reveals the key role played in this development by Portuguese Jews. These recent immigrants, who collaborated with fellow merchants in the Iberian Peninsula, obtained much of their tobacco through smuggling in Spanish America Wim Klooster, Robert H. and Virginia N. Scotland Endowed Chair in History andInternational Relations, Department of History, Clark University, USA.
Little-known materials from the Engel Sluiter collection at the UC BerkeleyBancroft Library allowed Yda Schreuder to shed new light on the early seventeenth-century development and expansion of the tobacco trade from Tierra Firme and Hispaniola. Schreuder, a leading expert on Sephardic trading networks in the early modern Atlantic, presented withPortugueseandAmsterdams Sephardic Merchantsinthe Tobacco Trade in the Early Seventeenth Century a fascinating studyon the widespread web of contraband, smuggling, bribery, and fraud in whichthe trade in the Devils Weed flourished Professor Jeroen DeWulf, BerkeleyResearch University ofCalifornia,USA.
This thorough account traces the deep involvement of Portuguese people and Sephardic Jews in the transatlantic tobacco trade. Schreuder closely follows the entangled ties that brought together diverse groups in illicit trade. The result was the rise of tobacco as a global commodity. Through her clear analysis of the existing sources, Schreuder lays the groundwork for subsequent studies on this important topic Melissa Morris, Assistant Professor of History, University of Wyoming, USA.
Yda Schreuder is Professor Emerita of Geography at the University of Delaware and Research Associate at the Hagley Museum and Library, USA. She previously published a monograph on Amsterdams Sephardic merchants and the Atlantic sugar trade in the seventeenth century.