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Levant Company

The Levant Company was an English chartered company formed in 1592. Elizabeth I of England approved its initial charter on 11 September 1592 when the Venice Company (1583) and the Turkey Company (1581) merged, because their charters had expired, as she was eager to maintain trade and political alliances with the Ottoman Empire.[1] Its initial charter was good for seven years and was granted to Edward Osborne, Richard Staper, Thomas Smith and William Garrard with the purpose of regulating English trade with the Ottoman Empire and the Levant. The company remained in continuous existence until being superseded in 1825. A member of the company was known as a Turkey Merchant.[2][3]

Levant Company
Coat of arms of the Levant Company
Company typePublic chartered
IndustryInternational trade
PredecessorVenice Company
Turkey Company
Founded11 September 1592[1]
FounderSir Edward Osborne
Defunct19 May 1825
FateDissolved by the Dissolution of Levant Company Act 1825 (c. 33 6 Geo. 4); consular establishments taken over by the Board of Trade
HeadquartersLondon, England
Aleppo, Ottoman Syria
Number of locations
Various across Europe and Near East
Area served
Eastern Mediterranean
ProductsRum and spices; cloth: cottons and woollens, kerseys, indigo, gall, camlet; tin, pewter, maroquin, soda ash.
ServicesTrade and commerce
Total assetsMerchant shipping
Total equityJoint-stock capital company
OwnerGovernment of England (until 1 May 1707)
Government of Great Britain (1 May 1707–31 December 1800)
Government of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland (since 1 January 1801)
Number of employees
6,000
ParentEnglish/British Crown
DivisionsTurkish, Levantine, Venetian littoral

History edit

The origins of the Levant Company lay in the Italian trade with Constantinople, and the wars against the Turks in Hungary, although a parallel was routed to Morocco and the Barbary Coast on a similar trade winds as early as 1413.[4] The collapse of the Venetian empire, high tariffs, and the ousting of the Genoese from Scio (Chios)[5] had left a vacuum that was filled by a few intrepid adventurers in their own cog vessels with endeavour to reopen trade with the East on their own accounts.[6] Following a decline in trade with the Levant over a number of decades, several London merchants petitioned Queen Elizabeth I in 1580 for a charter to guarantee exclusivity when trading in that region.[7] In 1580 a treaty was signed between England and the Ottoman Empire, giving English merchants trading rights similar to those enjoyed by French merchants. In 1582, William Harborne, an English merchant who had carried out most of the treaty negotiations in Constantinople to French protestations, made himself permanent envoy. But by 1586 Harborne was appointed 'Her Majesty's ambassador' to the Ottoman Empire, with all his expenses (including gifts given to the Sultan and his court) to be paid by the Levant Company.[8]

When the charters of the Venice Company and the Turkey Company expired, both companies were merged into the Levant Company in 1592 after Queen Elizabeth I approved its charter as part of her diplomacy with the Ottoman Empire.[1]

The company had no colonial aspirations, but rather established "factories" (trading centers) in already-established commercial centers, such as the Levant Factory in Aleppo, as well as Constantinople, Alexandria and Smyrna. Throughout the company's history, Aleppo functioned as the central hub for the entire Middle East operations. By 1588, the Levant Company had been converted to a regulated monopoly on an established trade route, from its initial character as a joint-stock company. The prime movers in the conversion were Sir Edward Osborne and Richard Staper.

In January 1592, a new charter was granted and by 1595 its character as a regulated company had become clear.[9] In the early days of the company there were threats not just from Barbary pirates but also from Spain during the 1585 to 1604 war. In that conflict however the company with its heavily armed ships managed to repel the Spanish galleys intent on capturing the cargo in a number of pitched naval battles, in 1586, 1590, 1591 and 1600[10] The company as a result surrendered some of their ships to the English Crown and were used during the Spanish Armada campaign proving their worth.

James I (1603–25) renewed and confirmed the company's charter in 1606, adding new privileges.[11] However he engaged in a verbal anti-Turk crusade and neglected direct relations with the Turks. The government did not interfere with trade, which expanded. Especially profitable was the arms trade as the Porte modernised and re-equipped its forces. Of growing importance was textile exports. Between 1609 and 1619, the export of cloth to the Turks increased from 46% to 79% of total cloth exports. The business was highly lucrative. Piracy continued to be a threat. Despite the anti-Ottoman rhetoric of the king, commercial relations with the Turks expanded. The king's finances were increasingly based on the revenues derived from this trade, and English diplomacy was complicated by this trade. For example, James refused to provide financial support to Poland for its war against the Turks.[12]

During the English Civil War (1642–1651), some innovations were made in the government of the company, allowing many people to become members who were not qualified by the charters of Elizabeth and James, or who did not conform to the regulations prescribed. Charles II, upon his restoration, endeavored to set the company upon its original basis; to which end, he gave them a charter, containing not only a confirmation of their old one, but also several new articles of reformation.[citation needed]

Organisation in 1661 edit

By the charter of King Charles II in 1661, the company was erected into a body politic, capable of making laws, under the title of the Company of Merchants of England trading to the Seas of the Levant. The number of members was not limited, but averaged about 300. The principal qualification required was that the candidate be a wholesale merchant, either by family, or by serving an apprenticeship of seven years. Those under 25 years of age paid 25 pounds at their admission; those above, twice as much. Each made an oath, at his entrance, not to send any merchandise to the Levant, except on his own account; and not to consign them to any but the company's agents, or factors. The company governed itself by a plurality of voices.[13]

The company had a court, or board at London, composed of a governor, sub-governor, and twelve directors, or assistants; who were all actually to live in London, or the suburbs. They also had a deputy-governor, in every city and port where there were any members of the company. This assembly at London sent out the vessels, regulated the tariff for the price at which the European merchandise sent to the Levant were to be sold; and for the quality of those returned. It raised taxes on merchandise, to defray impositions, and the common expense of the company; presented the ambassador, which the King was to keep at the port; elected two consuls for Smyrna and Constantinople, etc. As the post of ambassador to the Sublime Porte became increasingly important, the Crown had to assume control of the appointment.

One of the best regulations of the company was not to leave the consuls, or even the ambassador, to fix the impositions on the vessels for defraying the common expenses—something that was fatal to the companies of most other nations—but to allow a pension to the ambassador and consuls, and even to the chief officers—including the chancellor, secretary, chaplain, interpreters, and janissaries—so that there was no pretence for their raising any sum at all on the merchants or merchandises. It was true that the ambassador and consul might act alone on these occasions, but the pensions being offered to them on condition of declining them, they chose not to act.

 
Portrait in Turkish costume of Turkey merchant Francis Levett (1700–1764), chief representative of the Levant Company at Constantinople, 1737–1750

In extraordinary cases, the consuls, and even ambassador himself, had recourse to two deputies of the company, residing in the Levant, or if the affair be very important, assemble the whole nation. Here were regulated the presents to be given, the voyages to be made, and every thing to be deliberated; and on the resolutions here taken, the deputies appointed the treasurer to furnish the required funds. The ordinary commerce of this company employed from 20 to 25 vessels, of between 25 and 30 pieces of cannon.

The merchandises exported there were limited in quality and range, suggesting an imbalance of trade; they included traditional cloths, especially shortcloth and kerseys, tin, pewter, lead, black pepper, re-exported cochineal, black rabbit skins and a great deal of American silver, which the English took up at Cadiz. The more valuable returns were in raw silk, cotton wool and yarn, currants and raisins, nutmeg, black pepper, indigo, galls, camlets, wool and cotton cloth, the soft leathers called maroquins, soda ash for making glass and soap, and several gums and medicinal drugs. Velvet, carpets, and silk were bought by the traders.[14]

The commerce of the company to Smyrna, Constantinople, and İskenderun, was much less considerable than that of the East India Company; but was, more advantageous to England, because it took off much more of the English products than the other, which was chiefly carried on in money. The places reserved for the commerce of this company included all the states of Venice, in the Gulf of Venice; the state of Ragusa; all the states of the "Grand Signior" (the Ottoman Sultan), and the ports of the Levant and Mediterranean Basin; excepting Cartagena, Alicante, Barcelona, Valencia, Marseilles, Toulon, Genoa, Livorno (Leghorn), Civitavecchia, Palermo, Messina, Malta, Majorca, Menorca, and Corsica; and other places on the coasts of France, Spain, and Italy.[15]

Levantine shipping edit

Ships owned by the Levant Company from 1581 to 1640:[16]

  • Alathia
  • Alcede
  • Alice and Thomas
  • Alice Thomas
  • Aleppo Merchant
  • Angel
  • Anne Frane
  • Ascension
  • Bark Burre
  • Barque Reynolds
  • Centurion
  • Charity
  • Cherubim
  • Christ
  • Clement
  • Cock
  • Concord
  • Consent
  • Cosklett
  • Darling
  • Delight
  • Desire
  • Diamond
  • Dragon
  • Eagle
  • Edward Bonaventure
  • Elizabeth and Dorcas
  • Elizabeth Cocken
  • Elizabeth Stoaks
  • Elnathan
  • Emanuel
  • Experience
  • Freeman
  • George Bonaventure
  • Gift of God
  • Golden Noble
  • Grayhound
  • Great Phoenix
  • Great Suzanne
  • Greenfield
  • Guest
  • Gyllyon
  • Harry
  • Harry Bonaventure
  • Hector
  • Hercules
  • Husband
  • Industry
  • The Jane
  • Jesus
  • Jewel
  • Job
  • John
  • John Francis
  • Jollian
  • Jonas
  • Lanavit
  • Lewis
  • Little George
  • London
  • Margaret
  • Margaret Bonaventure
  • Marget and John
  • Marigold
  • Mary
  • Mary Anne
  • Mary Coust
  • Mary Martin
  • Mary Rose
  • Mayflower
  • Merchant Bonaventure
  • Mignon
  • Paragon
  • Peregrine
  • Phoenix
  • Primrose
  • Prosperous
  • Providence
  • Rainbow
  • Rebecca
  • Recovery
  • Red Lion
  • Report
  • Resolution
  • Roebuck
  • Royal Defence
  • Royal Exchange
  • Royal Merchant
  • Saker
  • Salamander
  • Salutation
  • Samaritan
  • Sampson
  • Samuel
  • Saphire
  • Scipio
  • Society
  • Solomon
  • Suzanne
  • Suzanne Parnell
  • Swallow
  • Teagre
  • Thomas and William
  • Thomas Bonaventure
  • Thomasine
  • Toby of Harwich
  • Trinity
  • Trinity Bear
  • Triumph
  • Unicorn
  • White Hind
  • William and John
  • William and Ralph
  • William and Thomas
  • William Fortune

Governors edit

The British government took over the Company in 1821 until its dissolution in 1825.

The ambassadors at Constantinople edit

Consuls edit

At Smyrna edit

  • 1611–1624 William Markham
  • 1624–1630 William Salter
  • 1630–1633 Lawrence Green
  • 1633–1634 James Higgins
  • 1634–1635 John Freeman
  • 1635–1638 Edward Bernard
  • 1638–1643 Edward Stringer
  • 1644–1649 John Wilde
  • 1649–1657 Spencer Bretton
  • 1659–1660 William Prideaux
  • 1660–1661 Richard Baker
  • 1661–1667 William Cave
  • 1667–1677 Paul Rycaut
  • 1677–1703 William Raye
  • 1703–1716 William Sherrard
  • 1716–1722 John Cooke
  • 1722–1723 George Boddington
  • 1733–1741 Francis Williams
  • 1741–1742 Thomas Carleton
  • 1742–1762 Samuel Crawley
  • 1762–1794 Anthony Hayes
  • 1794–1825 Francis Werry

At Aleppo edit

  • 1580–1586 William Barrett
  • 1586–1586 James Toverson
  • 1586–1586 John Eldred
  • 1592–1594 Michael Locke
  • 1596 George Dorrington (acting vice-consul)
  • 1596–1596 Thomas Sandys
  • 1596–1597 Ralph Fitch
  • 1597–1597 Richard Colthurst
  • vacant
  • 1606 James Hawarde (acting vice-consul)
  • 1606–1610 Paul Pindar
  • 1610–1616 Bartholomew Haggatt
  • 1616–1621 Libby Chapman
  • 1621–1627 Edward Kirkham
  • 1627–1630 Thomas Potton
  • 1630–1638 John Wandesford
  • 1638–1649 Edward Bernard
  • 1649–1659 Henry Riley
  • 1659–1672 Benjamin Lannoy
  • 1672–1686 Gamaliel Nightingale
  • 1686–1689 Thomas Metcalfe
  • 1689–1701 Henry Hastings
  • 1701–1706 George Brandon
  • 1707–1715 William Pilkington
  • 1716–1726 John Purnell
  • 1727–1740 Nevil Coke
  • 1740–1745 Nathaniel Micklethwait
  • 1745–1751 Arthur Pollard
  • 1751–1758 Alexander Drummond
  • 1758–1758 Francis Browne
  • 1759–1766 William Kinloch
  • 1766–1768 Henry Preston
  • 1768–1770 William Clark
  • 1770–1772 Charles Smith (pro-consul)
  • 1770–1783 John Abbott
  • 1783–1784 David Hays (pro-consul)
  • 1784–1786 Charles Smith (pro-consul)
  • 1786–1791 Michael de Vezin (pro-consul)
  • factory closed 1791–1803
  • 1803–1825 John Barker

Shipping numbers: Turkey and the Levant edit

 
Coat of arms of the Levant Company
Year Outward Ships Inward Ships
1800 6 14
1801 10 7
1802 18 19
1803 9 27
1804 1 13
1805 6 16
1806 1 18
1814 18 44
1815 13 44
1816 18 26
1817 21 45
1818 29 87
1819 40 53
1820 50 90
1821 31 53
1822 34 53
1823 40 87
1824 122 138
1825 95 167
1826 79 109
1827 61 101
1828 45 93
1829 74 73
1830 95 95

Chaplains edit

Decline edit

Dissolution of Levant Company Act 1825
Act of Parliament
 
Citation6 Geo. 4. c. 33
Dates
Royal assent10 June 1825

Membership began declining in the early eighteenth century. In its decline the company was looked upon as an abuse, a drain on the resources of Britain. The company's purview was thrown open to free trade in 1754, but continued its activities until dissolution in 1825.

The name of the bird called 'turkey' came from the Turkey merchants.[17][18]

Turkish opium was bought by the Levant Company.[19][20]

The Levant Company encompassed American merchants before 1811 who bought Turkish opium. These merchants would sell the opium to the Chinese, beginning in 1806. Among these American Turkey merchants were members of the famous Astor family.[21][22]

Heraldry edit

 
Flag of the Levant Company

The arms of the Levant Company were: Azure, on a sea in base proper, a ship with three masts in full sail or, between two rocks of the second, all the sails, pennants, and ensigns argent, each charged with a cross gules, a chief engrailed of the third, in base a seahorse proper. * The crest was: On a wreath of the colours, a demi seahorse saliant.

  • The supporters were: Two seahorses.
  • The Latin motto was: Deo reip et amicis.[23]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c Kenneth R. Andrews (1964), Elizabethan Privateering 1583–1603, Cambridge University Press
  2. ^ Mather, James (May 2011). "The Turkey Merchants". History Today. 61 (5).
  3. ^ Searight, Sarah (June 1966). "The Turkey Merchants: Life in the Levant Company". History Today. 16 (6).
  4. ^ Rymer, Foedera, viii, p. 732; Wood, p.
  5. ^ http://www.levantineheritage.com/testi56.htm, "On 14 April 1566 a fleet of 80 galleys, commanded by Piyale Paşa arrive in the port of Chios and succeeds to occupy without a fight"
  6. ^ privateer merchant ships recorded as setting out from England included, Anne (1446), Katherine Sturmy (1457), (Lipson, Economic, I, p. 505); Antony (1478), Mary de Toowre (1482), (Power and Postan, p. 45.); Jesus of Lübeck (1552), Mary Gonson (1552), Williamson, (Maritime Entreprise, p. 223)
  7. ^ The London Port Books from the 1560s and 1570s do not record any shipments by English merchants to or from the Levant, when Venice filled the role of intermediary and Antwerp retained its position as entrepôt. (Willan 1955:400ff.)
  8. ^ Michael Strachan, "The life and Adventures of Thomas Coryate", OUP, 1962.
  9. ^ Willan 1955:405–07.
  10. ^ Corbett, Julian S (1900). The Successors of Drake (1596–1603). Longmans. p. 297.
  11. ^ Anderson, Adam (1764). An Historical and Chronological Deduction of the Origin of Commerce. Vol. 1. p. 468.
  12. ^ Eysturlid, 1993
  13. ^ Mortimer Epstein, The early history of the Levant Company (1908) pp. 67–99 online.
  14. ^ "Turkey-merchant". Fine Dictionary. Chambers's Twentieth Century Dictionary.
  15. ^ Despina Vlami, Trading with the Ottomans: The Levant Company in the Middle East (Bloomsbury Publishing, 2014).
  16. ^ The Early History of The Levant Company, M. Epstein, M.A., Ph.D., London, George Rutledge & Sons, 1908
  17. ^ "How Turkey Got Its Name". Now I Know. 23 November 2010.
  18. ^ Forsyth, Mark (27 November 2013). "The Turkey's Turkey Connection". The New York Times.
  19. ^ "Opium Throughout History: The Opium Kings". PBS. 1998.
  20. ^ M. Kienholz (2008). Opium Traders and Their Worlds – Volume One: A Revisionist Exposé of the World's Greatest Opium Traders. iUniverse. ISBN 978-0-595-91078-6.
  21. ^ Clifford Putney; Paul T. Burlin (2012). The Role of the American Board in the World: Bicentennial Reflections on the Organization's Missionary Work, 1810–2010. Wipf and Stock Publishers. pp. 30–31. ISBN 978-1-61097-640-4.
  22. ^ Smith, Van (21 October 2014). "Baltimore's narcotic history dates back to the 19th-century shipping-driven boom, quietly aided by bringing Turkish opium to China". Baltimore City Paper.
  23. ^ As recorded in Fox-Davies, Arthur Charles (1915). The Book of Public Arms. T. C. & E. C. Jack. p. 436.

References edit

Manuscripts edit

  • Fawkener, W (19 October 1790). Add MSS Memorandum (ff. 80–97): from the Office of the Committee of the Privy Council for trade) to the Dukes of Leeds on the Turkey Company trade.
  • Harley MSS, 306 Standing Ordinances of the Levant Company (ff. 72–74) c. 1590
  • Lansdowne MSS. 60 Petition of the Turkey and Venice Merchants to be incorporated into one body (f.8) c. 1590–91
  • MSS Bodleian Library Folio 665, (i List of the Membership of The Levant Company, 1701 (ff. 97–98)
  • British Museum, 1718. Paragraphs of Some Letters to Prove the Reasonablness of The Levant Company 's late order to carry on their trade by general ships, Bodleian Pamphlets, Folio 666, ff. 288–89.
  • 1718–1719, The Case of The Levant Company, British Museum. 351–356, 6(40)
  • 1825, Proceedings of The Levant Company respecting the Surrender of their Charters, BM6/6259

Sources edit

  • Calendar of State Papers, Venetian 1581–1591
  • Calendar of State Papers, Domestic 1547–1580
  • Bent, J. T. (October 1890). "The English in The Levant Company". English Historical Review. 5.
  • Epstein, M. (1908). The Early History of the Levant Company. London; New York: George Routledge & Sons; Dutton. Retrieved 23 October 2017. Covers the years of the periodic charterers, 1581–1605 and the permanent charter to 1640.
  • Eysturlid, Lee W. (Winter 1993). "Where Everything is Weighed in the Scales of Material Interest: Anglo-Turkish Trade, Picary, and Diplomacy in the Mediterranean during the Jacobean Period". Journal of European Economic History. 22 (3).
  • Lans-Poole, S. (1833). The Life of Stratford Canning. Vol. 2 vols. London.
  • Mather, James (2009). Pashas: Traders and Travellers in the Islamic World. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0300170917.
  • Rosedale, H.G. (1904). Queen Elizabeth and The Levant Company. London: Henry Frowde. Retrieved 23 October 2017.
  • Paget, Sir Arthur (1896). Diplomatic Correspondence and Other Correspondence. Vol. 2 vols. London: Heinemann.
  • Wood, Alfred C. (1935). A History of the Levant Company. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Retrieved 23 October 2017.

Further reading edit

  • Bent, James Theodore (1893). Early Voyages and Travels in the Levant: I. The Diary of Master Thomas Dallam, 1599–1600. II. Extracts from the Diaries of Dr. John Covel, 1670–1679. With Some Account of the Levant Company of Turkey Merchants. B. Franklin.
  • Brotton, Jerry (2016). This Orient Isle: Elizabethan England and the Islamic World. London: Allen Lane. ISBN 978-0241004029.
  • Thomas Dallam; John Covel; James Theodore Bent (1893). Works Issued by the Hakluyt Society. The Society.
  • Thomas Dallam (2013). Early Voyages And Travels In The Levant. Read Books Limited. ISBN 978-1-4474-8322-9.
  • Laidlaw, Christine (2010). The British in the Levant: Trade and Perceptions of the Ottoman Empire in the Eighteenth Century. Library of Ottoman Studies. I.B. Tauris & Co Ltd. ISBN 978-1848853355.
  • Paterson, James (2003). "Levant Company". Literature of Travel and Exploration. London: Fitzroy Dearborn. ISBN 1579584241.
  • G. A. Russell (1994). The 'Arabick' Interest of the Natural Philosophers in Seventeenth-Century England. Brill. ISBN 90-04-09888-7.

External links edit

levant, company, english, chartered, company, formed, 1592, elizabeth, england, approved, initial, charter, september, 1592, when, venice, company, 1583, turkey, company, 1581, merged, because, their, charters, expired, eager, maintain, trade, political, allia. The Levant Company was an English chartered company formed in 1592 Elizabeth I of England approved its initial charter on 11 September 1592 when the Venice Company 1583 and the Turkey Company 1581 merged because their charters had expired as she was eager to maintain trade and political alliances with the Ottoman Empire 1 Its initial charter was good for seven years and was granted to Edward Osborne Richard Staper Thomas Smith and William Garrard with the purpose of regulating English trade with the Ottoman Empire and the Levant The company remained in continuous existence until being superseded in 1825 A member of the company was known as a Turkey Merchant 2 3 Levant CompanyCoat of arms of the Levant CompanyCompany typePublic charteredIndustryInternational tradePredecessorVenice CompanyTurkey CompanyFounded11 September 1592 1 FounderSir Edward OsborneDefunct19 May 1825FateDissolved by the Dissolution of Levant Company Act 1825 c 33 6 Geo 4 consular establishments taken over by the Board of TradeHeadquartersLondon EnglandAleppo Ottoman SyriaNumber of locationsVarious across Europe and Near EastArea servedEastern MediterraneanProductsRum and spices cloth cottons and woollens kerseys indigo gall camlet tin pewter maroquin soda ash ServicesTrade and commerceTotal assetsMerchant shippingTotal equityJoint stock capital companyOwnerGovernment of England until 1 May 1707 Government of Great Britain 1 May 1707 31 December 1800 Government of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland since 1 January 1801 Number of employees6 000ParentEnglish British CrownDivisionsTurkish Levantine Venetian littoral Contents 1 History 2 Organisation in 1661 2 1 Levantine shipping 3 Governors 4 The ambassadors at Constantinople 5 Consuls 5 1 At Smyrna 5 2 At Aleppo 5 3 Shipping numbers Turkey and the Levant 6 Chaplains 7 Decline 8 Heraldry 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 11 1 Manuscripts 11 2 Sources 12 Further reading 13 External linksHistory editThe origins of the Levant Company lay in the Italian trade with Constantinople and the wars against the Turks in Hungary although a parallel was routed to Morocco and the Barbary Coast on a similar trade winds as early as 1413 4 The collapse of the Venetian empire high tariffs and the ousting of the Genoese from Scio Chios 5 had left a vacuum that was filled by a few intrepid adventurers in their own cog vessels with endeavour to reopen trade with the East on their own accounts 6 Following a decline in trade with the Levant over a number of decades several London merchants petitioned Queen Elizabeth I in 1580 for a charter to guarantee exclusivity when trading in that region 7 In 1580 a treaty was signed between England and the Ottoman Empire giving English merchants trading rights similar to those enjoyed by French merchants In 1582 William Harborne an English merchant who had carried out most of the treaty negotiations in Constantinople to French protestations made himself permanent envoy But by 1586 Harborne was appointed Her Majesty s ambassador to the Ottoman Empire with all his expenses including gifts given to the Sultan and his court to be paid by the Levant Company 8 When the charters of the Venice Company and the Turkey Company expired both companies were merged into the Levant Company in 1592 after Queen Elizabeth I approved its charter as part of her diplomacy with the Ottoman Empire 1 The company had no colonial aspirations but rather established factories trading centers in already established commercial centers such as the Levant Factory in Aleppo as well as Constantinople Alexandria and Smyrna Throughout the company s history Aleppo functioned as the central hub for the entire Middle East operations By 1588 the Levant Company had been converted to a regulated monopoly on an established trade route from its initial character as a joint stock company The prime movers in the conversion were Sir Edward Osborne and Richard Staper In January 1592 a new charter was granted and by 1595 its character as a regulated company had become clear 9 In the early days of the company there were threats not just from Barbary pirates but also from Spain during the 1585 to 1604 war In that conflict however the company with its heavily armed ships managed to repel the Spanish galleys intent on capturing the cargo in a number of pitched naval battles in 1586 1590 1591 and 1600 10 The company as a result surrendered some of their ships to the English Crown and were used during the Spanish Armada campaign proving their worth James I 1603 25 renewed and confirmed the company s charter in 1606 adding new privileges 11 However he engaged in a verbal anti Turk crusade and neglected direct relations with the Turks The government did not interfere with trade which expanded Especially profitable was the arms trade as the Porte modernised and re equipped its forces Of growing importance was textile exports Between 1609 and 1619 the export of cloth to the Turks increased from 46 to 79 of total cloth exports The business was highly lucrative Piracy continued to be a threat Despite the anti Ottoman rhetoric of the king commercial relations with the Turks expanded The king s finances were increasingly based on the revenues derived from this trade and English diplomacy was complicated by this trade For example James refused to provide financial support to Poland for its war against the Turks 12 During the English Civil War 1642 1651 some innovations were made in the government of the company allowing many people to become members who were not qualified by the charters of Elizabeth and James or who did not conform to the regulations prescribed Charles II upon his restoration endeavored to set the company upon its original basis to which end he gave them a charter containing not only a confirmation of their old one but also several new articles of reformation citation needed Organisation in 1661 editBy the charter of King Charles II in 1661 the company was erected into a body politic capable of making laws under the title of the Company of Merchants of England trading to the Seas of the Levant The number of members was not limited but averaged about 300 The principal qualification required was that the candidate be a wholesale merchant either by family or by serving an apprenticeship of seven years Those under 25 years of age paid 25 pounds at their admission those above twice as much Each made an oath at his entrance not to send any merchandise to the Levant except on his own account and not to consign them to any but the company s agents or factors The company governed itself by a plurality of voices 13 The company had a court or board at London composed of a governor sub governor and twelve directors or assistants who were all actually to live in London or the suburbs They also had a deputy governor in every city and port where there were any members of the company This assembly at London sent out the vessels regulated the tariff for the price at which the European merchandise sent to the Levant were to be sold and for the quality of those returned It raised taxes on merchandise to defray impositions and the common expense of the company presented the ambassador which the King was to keep at the port elected two consuls for Smyrna and Constantinople etc As the post of ambassador to the Sublime Porte became increasingly important the Crown had to assume control of the appointment One of the best regulations of the company was not to leave the consuls or even the ambassador to fix the impositions on the vessels for defraying the common expenses something that was fatal to the companies of most other nations but to allow a pension to the ambassador and consuls and even to the chief officers including the chancellor secretary chaplain interpreters and janissaries so that there was no pretence for their raising any sum at all on the merchants or merchandises It was true that the ambassador and consul might act alone on these occasions but the pensions being offered to them on condition of declining them they chose not to act nbsp Portrait in Turkish costume of Turkey merchant Francis Levett 1700 1764 chief representative of the Levant Company at Constantinople 1737 1750In extraordinary cases the consuls and even ambassador himself had recourse to two deputies of the company residing in the Levant or if the affair be very important assemble the whole nation Here were regulated the presents to be given the voyages to be made and every thing to be deliberated and on the resolutions here taken the deputies appointed the treasurer to furnish the required funds The ordinary commerce of this company employed from 20 to 25 vessels of between 25 and 30 pieces of cannon The merchandises exported there were limited in quality and range suggesting an imbalance of trade they included traditional cloths especially shortcloth and kerseys tin pewter lead black pepper re exported cochineal black rabbit skins and a great deal of American silver which the English took up at Cadiz The more valuable returns were in raw silk cotton wool and yarn currants and raisins nutmeg black pepper indigo galls camlets wool and cotton cloth the soft leathers called maroquins soda ash for making glass and soap and several gums and medicinal drugs Velvet carpets and silk were bought by the traders 14 The commerce of the company to Smyrna Constantinople and Iskenderun was much less considerable than that of the East India Company but was more advantageous to England because it took off much more of the English products than the other which was chiefly carried on in money The places reserved for the commerce of this company included all the states of Venice in the Gulf of Venice the state of Ragusa all the states of the Grand Signior the Ottoman Sultan and the ports of the Levant and Mediterranean Basin excepting Cartagena Alicante Barcelona Valencia Marseilles Toulon Genoa Livorno Leghorn Civitavecchia Palermo Messina Malta Majorca Menorca and Corsica and other places on the coasts of France Spain and Italy 15 Levantine shipping edit Ships owned by the Levant Company from 1581 to 1640 16 Alathia Alcede Alice and Thomas Alice Thomas Aleppo Merchant Angel Anne Frane Ascension Bark Burre Barque Reynolds Centurion Charity Cherubim Christ Clement Cock Concord Consent Cosklett Darling Delight Desire Diamond Dragon Eagle Edward Bonaventure Elizabeth and Dorcas Elizabeth Cocken Elizabeth Stoaks Elnathan Emanuel Experience Freeman George Bonaventure Gift of God Golden Noble Grayhound Great Phoenix Great Suzanne Greenfield Guest Gyllyon Harry Harry Bonaventure Hector Hercules Husband Industry The Jane Jesus Jewel Job John John Francis Jollian Jonas Lanavit Lewis Little George London Margaret Margaret Bonaventure Marget and John Marigold Mary Mary Anne Mary Coust Mary Martin Mary Rose Mayflower Merchant Bonaventure Mignon Paragon Peregrine Phoenix Primrose Prosperous Providence Rainbow Rebecca Recovery Red Lion Report Resolution Roebuck Royal Defence Royal Exchange Royal Merchant Saker Salamander Salutation Samaritan Sampson Samuel Saphire Scipio Society Solomon Suzanne Suzanne Parnell Swallow Teagre Thomas and William Thomas Bonaventure Thomasine Toby of Harwich Trinity Trinity Bear Triumph Unicorn White Hind William and John William and Ralph William and Thomas William FortuneGovernors edit1581 1592 Sir Edward Osborne nominated in first amp second charters 1592 1592 Richard Staper 1600 1600 Sir Thomas Smith nominated in third charter 1605 1623 Sir Thomas Lowe nominated in fourth charter 1623 1634 Sir Hugh Hammersley 1634 1643 Sir Henry Garraway 1643 1653 Isaac Penington 1654 1672 Sir Andrew Riccard 1672 1673 John Jolliffe 1673 1695 The Earl of Berkeley 1696 1709 Sir William Trumbull 1710 1718 The Lord Onslow 1718 1735 The Earl of Carnavon 1736 1766 The Earl De La Warr 1766 1772 The Earl of Shaftsbury 1772 1776 The Earl of Radnor 1776 1792 The Earl of Guilford 1792 1799 The Duke of Leeds 1799 1821 The Lord Grenville The British government took over the Company in 1821 until its dissolution in 1825 The ambassadors at Constantinople edit1582 1588 William Harborne 1588 1597 Edward Barton 1597 1607 Henry Lello 1606 1611 Sir Thomas Glover 1611 1620 Paul Pindar 1619 1621 Sir John Eyre or Ayres 1621 1622 John Chapman agent 1621 1628 Sir Thomas Roe 1627 1638 Sir Peter Wyche 1633 1647 Sir Sackville Crowe 1647 1661 Sir Thomas Bendysh Richard Salway never sent out Richard Lawrence agent only 1668 1672 Heneage Finch Earl of Winchilsea 1668 1672 Sir Daniel Harvey 1672 1681 Sir John Finch 1680 1687 James Lord Chandos 1684 1686 Sir William Soames 1686 1691 Sir William Trumbull 1690 1691 Sir William Hussey Thomas Coke charge d affaires only 1691 1692 William Harbord 1692 1702 William Lord Paget Sir James Rushout 1st Baronet nominated only George Berkeley 1st Earl of Berkeley nominated only 1700 1717 Sir Robert Sutton 1716 1718 Edward Wortley Montagu 1717 1730 Abraham Stanyan 1729 1736 George Hay 8th Earl of Kinnoull 1735 1746 Sir Everard Fawkener Stanhope Aspinwall charge d affaires only 1746 1762 James Porter 1761 1765 Henry Grenville William Kinloch charge d affaires only 1765 1775 John Murray Anthony Hayes Charge d affaires only 1775 1794 Sir Robert Ainslie 1794 1795 Robert Liston Spencer Smith Charge d affaires Francis James Jackson never took up appointment 1799 1803 Thomas Bruce 7th Earl of Elgin Alexander Straton Charge d affaires 1803 1804 William Drummond 1804 1807 Charles Arbuthnot 1809 1810 Robert Adair 1810 1812 Stratford Canning Minister Plenipotentiary 1812 1820 Robert Liston 1820 1824 Percy Clinton 6th Viscount Strangford Consuls editAt Smyrna edit 1611 1624 William Markham 1624 1630 William Salter 1630 1633 Lawrence Green 1633 1634 James Higgins 1634 1635 John Freeman 1635 1638 Edward Bernard 1638 1643 Edward Stringer 1644 1649 John Wilde 1649 1657 Spencer Bretton 1659 1660 William Prideaux 1660 1661 Richard Baker 1661 1667 William Cave 1667 1677 Paul Rycaut 1677 1703 William Raye 1703 1716 William Sherrard 1716 1722 John Cooke 1722 1723 George Boddington 1733 1741 Francis Williams 1741 1742 Thomas Carleton 1742 1762 Samuel Crawley 1762 1794 Anthony Hayes 1794 1825 Francis Werry At Aleppo edit 1580 1586 William Barrett 1586 1586 James Toverson 1586 1586 John Eldred 1592 1594 Michael Locke 1596 George Dorrington acting vice consul 1596 1596 Thomas Sandys 1596 1597 Ralph Fitch 1597 1597 Richard Colthurst vacant 1606 James Hawarde acting vice consul 1606 1610 Paul Pindar 1610 1616 Bartholomew Haggatt 1616 1621 Libby Chapman 1621 1627 Edward Kirkham 1627 1630 Thomas Potton 1630 1638 John Wandesford 1638 1649 Edward Bernard 1649 1659 Henry Riley 1659 1672 Benjamin Lannoy 1672 1686 Gamaliel Nightingale 1686 1689 Thomas Metcalfe 1689 1701 Henry Hastings 1701 1706 George Brandon 1707 1715 William Pilkington 1716 1726 John Purnell 1727 1740 Nevil Coke 1740 1745 Nathaniel Micklethwait 1745 1751 Arthur Pollard 1751 1758 Alexander Drummond 1758 1758 Francis Browne 1759 1766 William Kinloch 1766 1768 Henry Preston 1768 1770 William Clark 1770 1772 Charles Smith pro consul 1770 1783 John Abbott 1783 1784 David Hays pro consul 1784 1786 Charles Smith pro consul 1786 1791 Michael de Vezin pro consul factory closed 1791 1803 1803 1825 John Barker Shipping numbers Turkey and the Levant edit nbsp Coat of arms of the Levant CompanyYear Outward Ships Inward Ships1800 6 141801 10 71802 18 191803 9 271804 1 131805 6 161806 1 181814 18 441815 13 441816 18 261817 21 451818 29 871819 40 531820 50 901821 31 531822 34 531823 40 871824 122 1381825 95 1671826 79 1091827 61 1011828 45 931829 74 731830 95 95Chaplains editMain article List of chaplains of the Levant CompanyDecline editDissolution of Levant Company Act 1825Act of Parliament nbsp Parliament of the United KingdomCitation6 Geo 4 c 33DatesRoyal assent10 June 1825See also Old China Trade and History of opium in China Membership began declining in the early eighteenth century In its decline the company was looked upon as an abuse a drain on the resources of Britain The company s purview was thrown open to free trade in 1754 but continued its activities until dissolution in 1825 The name of the bird called turkey came from the Turkey merchants 17 18 Turkish opium was bought by the Levant Company 19 20 The Levant Company encompassed American merchants before 1811 who bought Turkish opium These merchants would sell the opium to the Chinese beginning in 1806 Among these American Turkey merchants were members of the famous Astor family 21 22 Heraldry edit nbsp Flag of the Levant CompanyThe arms of the Levant Company were Azure on a sea in base proper a ship with three masts in full sail or between two rocks of the second all the sails pennants and ensigns argent each charged with a cross gules a chief engrailed of the third in base a seahorse proper The crest was On a wreath of the colours a demi seahorse saliant The supporters were Two seahorses The Latin motto was Deo reip et amicis 23 See also editChartered companies British foreign policy in the Middle EastNotes edit a b c Kenneth R Andrews 1964 Elizabethan Privateering 1583 1603 Cambridge University Press Mather James May 2011 The Turkey Merchants History Today 61 5 Searight Sarah June 1966 The Turkey Merchants Life in the Levant Company History Today 16 6 Rymer Foedera viii p 732 Wood p http www levantineheritage com testi56 htm On 14 April 1566 a fleet of 80 galleys commanded by Piyale Pasa arrive in the port of Chios and succeeds to occupy without a fight privateer merchant ships recorded as setting out from England included Anne 1446 Katherine Sturmy 1457 Lipson Economic I p 505 Antony 1478 Mary de Toowre 1482 Power and Postan p 45 Jesus of Lubeck 1552 Mary Gonson 1552 Williamson Maritime Entreprise p 223 The London Port Books from the 1560s and 1570s do not record any shipments by English merchants to or from the Levant when Venice filled the role of intermediary and Antwerp retained its position as entrepot Willan 1955 400ff Michael Strachan The life and Adventures of Thomas Coryate OUP 1962 Willan 1955 405 07 Corbett Julian S 1900 The Successors of Drake 1596 1603 Longmans p 297 Anderson Adam 1764 An Historical and Chronological Deduction of the Origin of Commerce Vol 1 p 468 Eysturlid 1993 Mortimer Epstein The early history of the Levant Company 1908 pp 67 99 online Turkey merchant Fine Dictionary Chambers s Twentieth Century Dictionary Despina Vlami Trading with the Ottomans The Levant Company in the Middle East Bloomsbury Publishing 2014 The Early History of The Levant Company M Epstein M A Ph D London George Rutledge amp Sons 1908 How Turkey Got Its Name Now I Know 23 November 2010 Forsyth Mark 27 November 2013 The Turkey s Turkey Connection The New York Times Opium Throughout History The Opium Kings PBS 1998 M Kienholz 2008 Opium Traders and Their Worlds Volume One A Revisionist Expose of the World s Greatest Opium Traders iUniverse ISBN 978 0 595 91078 6 Clifford Putney Paul T Burlin 2012 The Role of the American Board in the World Bicentennial Reflections on the Organization s Missionary Work 1810 2010 Wipf and Stock Publishers pp 30 31 ISBN 978 1 61097 640 4 Smith Van 21 October 2014 Baltimore s narcotic history dates back to the 19th century shipping driven boom quietly aided by bringing Turkish opium to China Baltimore City Paper As recorded in Fox Davies Arthur Charles 1915 The Book of Public Arms T C amp E C Jack p 436 References editManuscripts edit Fawkener W 19 October 1790 Add MSS Memorandum ff 80 97 from the Office of the Committee of the Privy Council for trade to the Dukes of Leeds on the Turkey Company trade Harley MSS 306 Standing Ordinances of the Levant Company ff 72 74 c 1590 Lansdowne MSS 60 Petition of the Turkey and Venice Merchants to be incorporated into one body f 8 c 1590 91 MSS Bodleian Library Folio 665 i List of the Membership of The Levant Company 1701 ff 97 98 British Museum 1718 Paragraphs of Some Letters to Prove the Reasonablness of The Levant Company s late order to carry on their trade by general ships Bodleian Pamphlets Folio 666 ff 288 89 1718 1719 The Case of The Levant Company British Museum 351 356 6 40 1825 Proceedings of The Levant Company respecting the Surrender of their Charters BM6 6259Sources edit Calendar of State Papers Venetian 1581 1591 Calendar of State Papers Domestic 1547 1580 Bent J T October 1890 The English in The Levant Company English Historical Review 5 Epstein M 1908 The Early History of the Levant Company London New York George Routledge amp Sons Dutton Retrieved 23 October 2017 Covers the years of the periodic charterers 1581 1605 and the permanent charter to 1640 Eysturlid Lee W Winter 1993 Where Everything is Weighed in the Scales of Material Interest Anglo Turkish Trade Picary and Diplomacy in the Mediterranean during the Jacobean Period Journal of European Economic History 22 3 Lans Poole S 1833 The Life of Stratford Canning Vol 2 vols London Mather James 2009 Pashas Traders and Travellers in the Islamic World Yale University Press ISBN 978 0300170917 Rosedale H G 1904 Queen Elizabeth and The Levant Company London Henry Frowde Retrieved 23 October 2017 Paget Sir Arthur 1896 Diplomatic Correspondence and Other Correspondence Vol 2 vols London Heinemann Wood Alfred C 1935 A History of the Levant Company Oxford Oxford University Press Retrieved 23 October 2017 Further reading editBent James Theodore 1893 Early Voyages and Travels in the Levant I The Diary of Master Thomas Dallam 1599 1600 II Extracts from the Diaries of Dr John Covel 1670 1679 With Some Account of the Levant Company of Turkey Merchants B Franklin Brotton Jerry 2016 This Orient Isle Elizabethan England and the Islamic World London Allen Lane ISBN 978 0241004029 Thomas Dallam John Covel James Theodore Bent 1893 Works Issued by the Hakluyt Society The Society Thomas Dallam 2013 Early Voyages And Travels In The Levant Read Books Limited ISBN 978 1 4474 8322 9 Laidlaw Christine 2010 The British in the Levant Trade and Perceptions of the Ottoman Empire in the Eighteenth Century Library of Ottoman Studies I B Tauris amp Co Ltd ISBN 978 1848853355 Paterson James 2003 Levant Company Literature of Travel and Exploration London Fitzroy Dearborn ISBN 1579584241 G A Russell 1994 The Arabick Interest of the Natural Philosophers in Seventeenth Century England Brill ISBN 90 04 09888 7 External links edit nbsp Look up Turkey merchant in Wiktionary the free dictionary http www aim25 ac uk cgi bin vcdf detail coll id 18428 amp inst id 118 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Levant Company amp oldid 1198172594, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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