Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of illustrations
- List of maps
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: A culture of travel: words, institutions, and connections
- 1 “Accepting all comers”: a cross-cultural institution in late antiquity
- 2 The transition from Byzantium to the Dār al-Islām
- 3 Commerce, charity, community, and the funduq
- 4 Colonies before colonialism: western Christian trade and the evolution of the fondaco
- 5 Conquest and commercial space: the case of Iberia
- 6 Fondacos in Sicily, south Italy, and the Crusader states
- 7 Changing patterns of Muslim commercial space in the later middle ages
- 8 Christian commerce and the solidification of the fondaco system
- 9 The fondaco in Mediterranean Europe
- Conclusion A changing world: new peoples and institutions in the early modern Mediterranean
- Selected bibliography
- Index
9 - The fondaco in Mediterranean Europe
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 August 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of illustrations
- List of maps
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: A culture of travel: words, institutions, and connections
- 1 “Accepting all comers”: a cross-cultural institution in late antiquity
- 2 The transition from Byzantium to the Dār al-Islām
- 3 Commerce, charity, community, and the funduq
- 4 Colonies before colonialism: western Christian trade and the evolution of the fondaco
- 5 Conquest and commercial space: the case of Iberia
- 6 Fondacos in Sicily, south Italy, and the Crusader states
- 7 Changing patterns of Muslim commercial space in the later middle ages
- 8 Christian commerce and the solidification of the fondaco system
- 9 The fondaco in Mediterranean Europe
- Conclusion A changing world: new peoples and institutions in the early modern Mediterranean
- Selected bibliography
- Index
Summary
Felix Fabri, like many other German pilgrims, passed through Venice on his way both to and from the Holy Land. This city served as a natural gateway to the Adriatic and Mediterranean for travelers and traders coming south from cities of the German empire. Felix stayed in an inn (hospitium) during his time in the island city in the 1480s, but he remarked that “the German merchants have a house in Venice that is called a fonticum. It has many rooms and bedrooms in which merchants stay and store their goods. It is unbelievable how much merchandise is sent from this fonticum to Germany, and each year Venice levies more than twenty thousand ducats in taxes (pro telonio) on these exports.” It should not be surprising that Felix's description of the Venetian Fondaco dei Tedeschi (fonticum Almanorum) is reminiscent of his notes on the European fondacos that he observed in Alexandria. Certainly, the existence of this commercial and residential fondaco for German traders in Venice was no coincidence. Instead, as this chapter will demonstrate, it was just one example of the multiple ways in which the Islamic institution of the funduq/fondaco was integrated into medieval Christian urban life in Mediterranean Europe.
By the thirteenth century, cognate words such as fonticum and fondacho had found their way not only into Latin, but also into other southern European vernacular languages.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Housing the Stranger in the Mediterranean WorldLodging, Trade, and Travel in Late Antiquity and the Middle Ages, pp. 306 - 354Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2004