Elzevirian Republics, wise merchants, and new perspectives on Spain and Portugal in the seventeenth-century Dutch Republic
Samenvatting
Between 1625 and 1649, the Leiden publishing house Elzevir issued a series of thirty-five descriptions of all European, a selection of non-European, and three ancient states, that became known as the ‘Elzevirian Republics’. This essay focuses on two of these ‘Republics’, Johannes de Laet’s descriptions of Spain and Portugal. I argue that these books convey an attitude towards geopolitics that is best understood in the light of Caspar Barlaeus’s ideal of the ‘wise merchant’ (mercator sapiens) and the historical regent-merchant culture in seventeenth-century Amsterdam. The essay draws on recent scholarship in the history of knowledge, commerce, and the pre-history of objectivity.Downloads
Gepubliceerd
2013-05-29
Nummer
Sectie
Articles
Licentie
De auteurs hebben het auteursrecht op de artikelen behouden en deze verschijnen op het Openjournals.nl platform onder een Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License
Citeerhulp
Rauschenbach, S. (2013). Elzevirian Republics, wise merchants, and new perspectives on Spain and Portugal in the seventeenth-century Dutch Republic. De Zeventiende Eeuw, 29(1), 81-100. https://platform.openjournals.nl/de-zeventiende-eeuw/article/view/26785