Marseille’s wealthy merchants were strongly opposed to the influence of the French monarchy, which saw the port’s commerce with the Ottoman Empire as central to the enrichment of the state. In her analysis of the period from 1660 to the plague of 1720, Takeda shows how the Crown co-opted the city’s traditions of civic virtue to extend its own power.
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https://www.psbooks.co.uk/between-crown-and-commerce513315Between Crown and Commercehttps://www.psbooks.co.uk/media/catalog/product/5/1/513315_86df402e3d991a7bcdacede18088af82.jpg4.999.99GBPInStock/History/Categories/General History/History/Non-Fiction/Categories/Politics, Philosophy & Economics/Non-Fiction/Highlights/Sale/History Sale/Sale/Academic Sale/Sale/Academic/Historical periods/ModernMarseille’s wealthy merchants were strongly opposed to the influence of the French monarchy, which saw the port’s commerce with the Ottoman Empire as central to the enrichment of the state. In her analysis of the period from 1660 to the plague of 1720, Takeda shows how the Crown co-opted the city’s traditions of civic virtue to extend its own power.Hardback00add-to-cartrrp_info:£50.50productId:53647bic_code:HBJD, HBLL, KCZHBJD, HBLL, KCZ£50.50Junko Thérèse TakedaAcademicJohns Hopkins UPHardbackEconomic historyEuropean