The Two Italies: Economic Relations Between the Norman Kingdom of Sicily and the Northern Communes

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Cambridge University Press, 24.11.2005 - 332 Seiten
This book is a study of the economic development of different areas of twelfth-century Italy whose commercial interests were closely inter related: the Norman Kingdom of Sicily, famed for the wealth of its rulers, and the maritime ports of Genoa, Pisa and Venice, which were actively extending their trading interests throughout the Mediterranean. On the basis of largely untapped sources in Genoa and other north Italian archives, this book seeks to explain how the north Italian merchants attempted to extend and to protect their interests in the kingdom of Sicily, by agreements with the Norman rulers or with those in Germany and Byzantium who aimed at the conquest of Sicily and southern Italy. Dr Abulafia argues that the kingdom was a major exporter of wheat and raw cotton, and that in the twelfth century the northern merchants gained a substantial hold over these exports. The Norman kings profited greatly from the opportunity to sell the produce of their realm, and in particular of their own estates, to an assured market; the lack of intensive industry in the kingdom left the northerners free to produce textiles out of southern fibres. Thus signs emerge of two Italies, an agrarian and pastoral south, against a north with incipient industrial activity, based partly on the commercial exploitation of the south.
 

Inhalt

The Sources
3
The Resources
31
The first phase of alliances 111654
59
The maritime alliance of 1156 and
85
Crisis and recovery 116279
123
An age of peaceful competition 117989
154
The last phase of alliances 118991
172
Quid plura? 11915
193
The structure of Genoese trade with
217
The structure of trade in the late Norman
255
Bibliography
285
Index
295
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