Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10174/28257

Title: Negócios, Sociedades e Companhias: o tempo do chá e da porcelana / Businesses, Partnerships and Chartered companies: The Time of Tea and Porcelain
Authors: Salvado, João Paulo
Miranda, Susana Münch
Keywords: Euro-Asian trade
tea
porcelain
partnerships
chartered companies
transnational business networks
China
Lisbon
Issue Date: 2019
Publisher: Santa Casa da Misericórdia de Lisboa / Museu de São Roque
Citation: Miranda, Susana Münch, Salvado, João Paulo, “Negócios, Sociedades e Companhias: o tempo do chá e da porcelana / Businesses, Partnerships and Chartered companies: The Time of Tea and Porcelain” in Um Rei e Três Imperadores: Portugal, a China e Macau no tempo de D. João V / One King and Three Emperors: Portugal, China and Macao in the Time of King João V, Lisboa, Santa Casa da Misericórdia de Lisboa - Museu de São Roque, 2019, pp. 66-84.
Abstract: During the eighteenth century, Euro-Asian maritime trade peaked, following an unprecedented surge in European demand for exotic goods. Cotton textiles, porcelain, tea and coffee experienced an increasing penetration in European households. The popularisation of tea also triggered a profound change in European material culture. The hot beverage was associated with the spread of less durable materials, like porcelain, and new objects that contributed to the emergence of new patterns of sociability and domesticity. While the big East India companies dominated most of the Euro-Asian trade, Portugal also engaged in it. Still little studied, this involvement aimed to supply both the main consumer market, the North-European market, and the domestic market, with its extension to the Brazilian market. We examine the circumstances that determined the alignment of interests between the Portuguese crown and the mercantile communities of Lisbon, which favoured the establishment of direct trade flows with China from Lisbon. Through licenses granted by King João V, from 1710 onwards, ships regularly set sail from Lisbon to Macau, Coromandel and Bengal, without needing to call at Goa. This trade was carried out by merchants organised in trading partnerships or chartered companies, but it also involved the participation of foreign investors. In this integration in transnational business networks, Lisbon and its mercantile agents responded to the growing European demand of Asian commodities.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10174/28257
ISBN: 978-989-8712-90-5
Type: bookPart
Appears in Collections:CIDEHUS - Publicações - Capítulos de Livros

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