2017
DOI: 10.1111/ehr.12428
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Pieces of eight, pieces of eight: seamen's earnings and the venture economy of early modern seafaring†

Abstract: Historians have generally argued that between the medieval period and the eighteenth century seafarers transformed from collaborative adventurers with a share in their vessel to the first international wage‐earning proletariat. This interpretation has drawn upon relatively limited statistical analysis of mariners’ wages, and underestimates the variety of seafarers’ remuneration and economic activities besides wages themselves. This article undertakes a more sustained analysis of seventeenth‐century wage data d… Show more

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Cited by 11 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…A municipal official who was present when seafarers were mustered and discharged, the so-called water bailiff ( waterschout) , was responsible for performing this task. The archival sources demonstrate that this official supported a lively credit market for seafarers (Van Bochove 2014; Van Bochove, Van Lottum and Mourits 2016; Blakemore 2017). 9…”
Section: IImentioning
confidence: 98%
“…A municipal official who was present when seafarers were mustered and discharged, the so-called water bailiff ( waterschout) , was responsible for performing this task. The archival sources demonstrate that this official supported a lively credit market for seafarers (Van Bochove 2014; Van Bochove, Van Lottum and Mourits 2016; Blakemore 2017). 9…”
Section: IImentioning
confidence: 98%
“…30 Richard Blakemore, writing about England, and Tijl Vanneste, on the Low Countries, convincingly demonstrate the complexity of seamen's remuneration throughout the seventeenth century and point out how the variety of payment options was not only at the root of frequent litigation, but also allowed for some small-scale entrepreneurship to develop even among the lower ranks of seafarers. 31 Studies of maritime history, in its traditional incarnation, always assumed a substantive homogeneity of maritime legislation and legal customs, as the operational nature of life and work at sea was seen as a unifying factor above and beyond national differences. Recent scholarship in both maritime and commercial legal history is demolishing such assumptions, and the results of my projects confirm these findings.…”
Section: Wage Litigation and Risk Managementmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the next group of variables, we will touch upon the issue of cost, but the two variables in this group serve as indicators of the attractiveness of the labor market in the destination countries. In our analysis we use level of labor productivity in the maritime sector as a proxy for maritime wages, which unfortunately are very scarce for this period (Blakemore 2017;Van Royen et al 1997). Labor productivity has been shown to have increased substantially during early modern times, in many cases outstripping productivity growth in other sectors (Lucassen and Unger 2011).…”
Section: Explanatory Variablesmentioning
confidence: 99%