Abstract

The Governor & Company of Merchants of England trading into the Levant Seas — usually referred to as the Levant Company, or increasingly in the eighteenth century as the Turkey Company — was founded by royal charter of 1581. Its powers in the eighteenth century were derived from fresh charters of 1606 and 1661, which gave to its members the sole right to trade between England and the Ottoman Empire. The Company was not itself a trading organisation; its members traded individually, as independent merchants, subjecting themselves to such restrictions as they might impose in their corporate capacity as the Levant Company. Other writers have examined in detail the anatomy and functioning of the Company’s constitution;1 here we are more concerned with the ways in which the existence of the Company affected the actual course of trade.KeywordsEighteenth CenturyProvincial OfficialEnglish TradeEnglish MerchantRoyal CharterThese keywords were added by machine and not by the authors. This process is experimental and the keywords may be updated as the learning algorithm improves.

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