{"title":"分享卡雷拉德印第亚斯的利润:十八世纪下半叶西班牙殖民贸易的参与者及其垄断行为","authors":"Arnaud Bartolomei","doi":"10.1017/tam.2023.96","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"\n The Carrera de Indias, considered as a set of circuits connecting Hispanic America to world markets, does not appear as a “monopoly” reserved solely for the Spanish merchants of Cadiz, but rather as a complex commercial system, structured into three autonomous segments, each of them dominated by a mercantile corporation, more or less formalized. In the central part, which linked the two shores of the Atlantic, the merchants registered in the Consulado of the Indies of Cadiz (cargadores) obviously dominated the market. However, these were in turn dominated by the merchants from the consulates of Mexico and Lima in the inland trade (comercio de tierra adentro), which linked the great American ports and fairs with the markets of the interior of the continent, and by the foreign merchants of Cadiz, structured into “nations,” in the exchanges that linked the Andalusian port with the rest of Europe and the world. Thus, the beneficiaries of the Spanish colonial trade in the second half of the eighteenth century were neither only cargadores, nor foreign “smugglers” enjoying the weakness of the Spanish empire as the historiography of the Carrera de Indias has traditionally postulated, but those three groups of traders.\n After highlighting this singular structure of colonial trade in the Spanish Atlantic, we will consider the different institutional and relational factors that could explain it. Obviously, it is because the different groups of actors involved in these exchanges had a specific social, relational, cultural, and institutional capital that they had a comparative advantage over their rivals in certain segments of the Carrera de Indias circuits, and that they were able to obtain the dominant position that we observe.","PeriodicalId":507356,"journal":{"name":"The Americas","volume":"103 3","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2024-01-09","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"The Sharing of the Profits of the Carrera de Indias: The Actors of the Hispanic Colonial Trade and Their Monopolistic Practices in the Second Half of the Eighteenth Century\",\"authors\":\"Arnaud Bartolomei\",\"doi\":\"10.1017/tam.2023.96\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"\\n The Carrera de Indias, considered as a set of circuits connecting Hispanic America to world markets, does not appear as a “monopoly” reserved solely for the Spanish merchants of Cadiz, but rather as a complex commercial system, structured into three autonomous segments, each of them dominated by a mercantile corporation, more or less formalized. In the central part, which linked the two shores of the Atlantic, the merchants registered in the Consulado of the Indies of Cadiz (cargadores) obviously dominated the market. However, these were in turn dominated by the merchants from the consulates of Mexico and Lima in the inland trade (comercio de tierra adentro), which linked the great American ports and fairs with the markets of the interior of the continent, and by the foreign merchants of Cadiz, structured into “nations,” in the exchanges that linked the Andalusian port with the rest of Europe and the world. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
卡雷拉-德印第亚斯被视为连接西语美洲与世界市场的一条线路,它并不是加的斯的西班牙商人独享的 "垄断",而是一个复杂的商业体系,分为三个独立的部分,每个部分都由一个或多或少正规化的商业公司主导。在连接大西洋两岸的中部,在加的斯印度领事馆注册的商人(cargadores)显然主导着市场。然而,在内陆贸易(comercio de tierra adentro)中,来自墨西哥和利马领事馆的商人又反过来控制了市场,内陆贸易将美洲的大港口和集市与大陆内陆市场联系在一起;在将安达卢西亚港口与欧洲和世界其他地区联系在一起的交易中,加的斯的外国商人(以 "国家 "为单位)又反过来控制了市场。因此,18 世纪下半叶西班牙殖民贸易的受益者既不像传统的卡雷拉德印第亚斯(Carrera de Indias)史料所推测的那样,仅仅是货主,也不只是利用西班牙帝国弱点的外国 "走私者",而是这三类商人。在强调西班牙大西洋殖民贸易的这一独特结构之后,我们将考虑可以解释这一结构的不同制度和关系因素。显然,正是因为参与这些交流的不同群体拥有特定的社会、关系、文化和制度资本,他们才在卡雷拉德印第亚斯环路的某些环节上比对手更有比较优势,才能够获得我们所看到的主导地位。
The Sharing of the Profits of the Carrera de Indias: The Actors of the Hispanic Colonial Trade and Their Monopolistic Practices in the Second Half of the Eighteenth Century
The Carrera de Indias, considered as a set of circuits connecting Hispanic America to world markets, does not appear as a “monopoly” reserved solely for the Spanish merchants of Cadiz, but rather as a complex commercial system, structured into three autonomous segments, each of them dominated by a mercantile corporation, more or less formalized. In the central part, which linked the two shores of the Atlantic, the merchants registered in the Consulado of the Indies of Cadiz (cargadores) obviously dominated the market. However, these were in turn dominated by the merchants from the consulates of Mexico and Lima in the inland trade (comercio de tierra adentro), which linked the great American ports and fairs with the markets of the interior of the continent, and by the foreign merchants of Cadiz, structured into “nations,” in the exchanges that linked the Andalusian port with the rest of Europe and the world. Thus, the beneficiaries of the Spanish colonial trade in the second half of the eighteenth century were neither only cargadores, nor foreign “smugglers” enjoying the weakness of the Spanish empire as the historiography of the Carrera de Indias has traditionally postulated, but those three groups of traders.
After highlighting this singular structure of colonial trade in the Spanish Atlantic, we will consider the different institutional and relational factors that could explain it. Obviously, it is because the different groups of actors involved in these exchanges had a specific social, relational, cultural, and institutional capital that they had a comparative advantage over their rivals in certain segments of the Carrera de Indias circuits, and that they were able to obtain the dominant position that we observe.