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10 - Colonies as Mercantile Investments: The Luso-Brazilian Empire, 1500–1808

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 March 2010

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Summary

THEMATIC FOCUS

Within the context of the historical formation of commercial empires, our emphasis will focus on the Luso-Brazilian Empire. From this, we hope to be able to establish comparative relations with the other colonial empires at precisely those essential points that could give us an understanding of the global process. Obviously, the first chronological point will be the year 1500 – when Portuguese commercial and maritime expansion reached Brazil. The ending date will be 1808: the date the opening of ports broke the Portuguese monopoly on its Brazilian colony. In more restrictive terms, that is, in terms of a colony as a mercantile investment, the beginning date has to be delayed until the 1530's. This was the start of the first commercial agricultural activity in the colony: the sugar mill in Sāo Vicente. If one considers the topic of commercial empires from the perspective of the colonies, a 1750 date has meaning for the struggle for European hegemony, which England had by now wrested from Holland, and which figures largely in the definition of a new pattern of colonialism. But, for the colonial system in a broad sense, 1776 is a much more important date because it marks the rupture of the colonial compact, with the transformation of a former colony into an independent nation. The year 1810, when Spanish colonies rose in revolt during French intervention in Spain, has a similar meaning for Spanish America.

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The Political Economy of Merchant Empires
State Power and World Trade, 1350–1750
, pp. 360 - 420
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1991

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