scholarly journals Change and Adaptation in Maritime History: The North Atlantic Fleets in the Nineteenth Century.

1986 ◽  
Vol 39 (3) ◽  
pp. 494
Author(s):  
V. C. Burton ◽  
Lewis R. Fischer ◽  
Gerald E. Panting
1987 ◽  
Vol 40 (2) ◽  
pp. 327
Author(s):  
V. C. Burton ◽  
Lewis R. Fischer ◽  
Gerald E. Panting

Author(s):  
Torsten Feys

Why do we need another study on European mass migration to the United States during the long nineteenth century at a time when many historians are encouraging a shift away from an Atlantic and modern focus that has long dominated the sub-discipline?1 The answer is that we need such a study because one recurring question remains unanswered: how did the migrant trade evolve with the introduction of steamships and influence the relocation of approximately thirty-five million people across the North Atlantic during the long nineteenth century? More than half a century ago, Maldwyn Jones, Frank Thistlewaite and Rolf Engelsing drew attention to the fact that transatlantic migration was determined by trade routes....


1985 ◽  
Vol 17 (2) ◽  
pp. 371-396 ◽  
Author(s):  
Susan Berglund

The activities of the mercantile houses operating in the import–export trade are of primary importance in tracing and analyzing the nature of economic growth in nineteenth-century Latin America. As a necessary corollary to their trade activities, many houses were also involved in shipping and served as conduits for financial transactions of all types, collecting, receiving and remitting funds as well as making local investments, advances and loans. Mercantile houses thus served as the commercial– financial bridgehead between the new republics and the North Atlantic world. Naturally, not all mercantile houses participated in these activities to the same degree, and a distinction should be noted between agents for houses and partners.


This volume collects eight essays that all attempt to answer two key concerns: did markets for seafarers exist in the age of sail; and, if so, were these markets efficient? The question was initially approach by Charles Kindleberger, who claims a market is efficient if it permits free access for employer and employee, is supply and demand match balance so that wages increase, and that labour must command the same price across the market. The first four focus on the broadly defined early-modern period, and all agree on the existence of the markets but are divided over whether or not they are efficient. The second section asks the same questions of the nineteenth century, and receives similar answers. All of the essays take issue with the definition and application of the term ‘efficiency’ when approaching their conclusions. Each author is considered an expert within their field, and all base their research on the North Atlantic.


The Holocene ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 16 (7) ◽  
pp. 949-965 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. Roland Gehrels ◽  
William A. Marshall ◽  
Maria J. Gehrels ◽  
Gudrún Larsen ◽  
Jason R. Kirby ◽  
...  

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