2021
DOI: 10.1080/0144039x.2020.1860465
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Slave-based coffee in the eighteenth century and the role of the Dutch in global commodity chains

Abstract: This article discusses the development of eighteenth century commodity chain of coffee which was largely based on slavery. It highlights the role of the Dutch in this chain and in the intra-European trade. This study shows how the market for coffee was being expanded over the course of less than a century. It shows how consumption reached a mass scale and spread to inland regions on the European continent, notably to German regions along the Rhine river. The article aims to emphasise how this dynamic of market… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…506–507). Coffee prices declined as competition from the French colonies increased (Combrink 2021). Further, the financial crisis of 1772/3 in London and Amsterdam likely reduced the availability of credit when a number of prominent Amsterdam merchant-banks, such as Clifford and Sons and Pels and Sons, failed.…”
Section: Collapse Of the Plantation Credit Market 1770–1773mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…506–507). Coffee prices declined as competition from the French colonies increased (Combrink 2021). Further, the financial crisis of 1772/3 in London and Amsterdam likely reduced the availability of credit when a number of prominent Amsterdam merchant-banks, such as Clifford and Sons and Pels and Sons, failed.…”
Section: Collapse Of the Plantation Credit Market 1770–1773mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Between 1750 and 1790, Suriname coffee supplied only half of the Dutch consumer market, and the rest had to be imported from other colonial zones (Voort 1973: 90; van Stipriaan 1993: 25; Klooster and Oostindie 2018: table 16, 94). Moreover, Amsterdam was one of the two gateway ports for the growing consumption of coffee in the Baltic and German markets, Hamburg being the other (Combrink 2021).…”
Section: The Coffee Crisis Of the 1770s And Its Distinctive Outcomesmentioning
confidence: 99%