ECU Libraries Catalog

War, capital, and the Dutch state (1588-1795) / by Pepijn Brandon.

Author/creator Brandon, Pepijn
Format Electronic and Book
Publication InfoLeiden ; Boston : Brill, [2015]
Descriptionxiii, 447 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm.
Supplemental Content Full text available from Ebook Central - Academic Complete
Subject(s)
Series Historical materialism book series, 1570-1522 ; volume 101
Contents INTRODUCTION. Dutch war-making and state-making : three solutions to a riddle -- Typologies of the early modern state form -- The Dutch cycle of accumulation -- The federal-brokerage state and its "historic bloc" -- Content and structure of the book -- PART 1. THE MAKING OF THE FEDERAL-BROKERAGE STATE. 1.1. The Dutch Revolt and the establishment of the state -- 1.2. Types of brokerage 1. Merchant warriors -- 1.3. Types of brokerage 2. Merchants as administrators -- 1.4. Types of brokerage 3. Financial intermediaries in troop payments -- 1.5. Political and ideological foundations of the federal-brokerage state -- Conclusions -- PART 2. MERCHANT COMPANIES, NAVAL POWER, AND TRADE PROTECTION. 2.1. The naval revolution and the challenge to Dutch trade -- 2.2. A unified state company for colonial trade? -- 2.3. The VOC and the navy from symbiosis to division of labour -- 2.4. The WIC between private trade and state protection -- 2.5. European commercial directorates as protection lobbies -- 2.6. Protection costs and merchant interests -- Conclusions -- PART 3. PRODUCTION, SUPPLY, AND LABOUR RELATIONS AT THE NAVAL SHIPYARDS. 3.1. Capitalist rationality, accounting, and the naval revolution -- 3.2. Personal networks and market practices -- 3.3. Different products, different systems of supply : victuals, wood, smaller supplies -- 3.4. Naval shipyards as centres of production -- 3.5. Shipyards and their workforce -- 3.6. Admiralty boards and the labour market -- 3.7. Combination, coordination, and control -- 3.8. Of time, theft, and chips -- 3.9. Neptune's trident and Athena's gifts -- Conclusions -- PART 4. TROOP PAYMENTS, MILITARY SOLICITING, AND THE WORLD OF FINANCE. 4.1. From disorder to regulation -- 4.2. A golden age of military soliciting -- 4.3. Two careers in military finance -- 4.4. The daily affairs of a financial middleman -- 4.5. Networks of credit and influence -- 4.6. Military soliciting in the age of financialisation -- Conclusions -- PART 5. THE STRUCTURAL CRISIS OF THE FEDERAL-BROKERAGE STATE. 5.1. The rise and limits of reform agendas -- 5.2. Warring companies and the debate over free trade -- 5.3. Admiralty boards at the centre of the storm -- 5.4. From citizens' militias to the Batavian Legion -- 5.5. The afterlife of the federal-brokerage state -- Conclusions -- CONCLUSION. -- Annex 1. Holland members of the Amsterdam Admiralty Board -- Sources -- Annex 2. Zeeland members of the Zeeland Admiralty Board -- Sources -- Annex 3. Income and expenditure of the Amsterdam Admiralty : steps from figures in "borderel" to reconstruction .
Bibliography noteIncludes bibliographical references (pages 387-427) and index.
Access restrictionAvailable only to authorized users.
Technical detailsMode of access: World Wide Web
Genre/formElectronic books.
LCCN 2015026742
ISBN9789004228146 (hardcover : alkaline paper)

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