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Wikipedia

Merchant

A merchant is a person who trades in commodities produced by other people, especially one who trades with foreign countries. Historically, a merchant is anyone who is involved in business or trade. Merchants have operated for as long as industry, commerce, and trade have existed. In 16th-century Europe, two different terms for merchants emerged: meerseniers referred to local traders (such as bakers and grocers) and koopman (Dutch: koopman) referred to merchants who operated on a global stage, importing and exporting goods over vast distances and offering added-value services such as credit and finance.

Merchants from Holland and the Middle East trading.

The status of the merchant has varied during different periods of history and among different societies. In modern times, the term merchant has occasionally been used to refer to a businessperson or someone undertaking activities (commercial or industrial) for the purpose of generating profit, cash flow, sales, and revenue using a combination of human, financial, intellectual and physical capital with a view to fueling economic development and growth.

A scale or balance is often used to symbolise a merchant

Merchants have been known for as long as humans have engaged in trade and commerce. Merchants and merchant networks operated in ancient Babylonia and Assyria, China, Egypt, Greece, India, Persia, Phoenicia, and Rome. During the European medieval period, a rapid expansion in trade and commerce led to the rise of a wealthy and powerful merchant class. The European age of discovery opened up new trading routes and gave European consumers access to a much broader range of goods. From the 1600s, goods began to travel much further distances as they found their way into geographically dispersed market-places. Following the opening of Asia to European trade and the discovery of the New World, merchants imported goods over very long distances: calico cloth from India, porcelain, silk and tea from China, spices from India and South-East Asia and tobacco, sugar, rum and coffee from the New World. By the eighteenth century, a new type of manufacturer-merchant had started to emerge and modern business practices were becoming evident.

Etymology and usage

 
Costumes of merchants from Brabant and Antwerp, engraving by Abraham de Bruyn, 1577

The English term, merchant comes from the Middle English, marchant, which is derived from Anglo-Norman marchaunt, which itself originated from the Vulgar Latin mercatant or mercatans, formed from present participle of mercatare ('to trade, to traffic or to deal in').[1] The term refers to any type of reseller, but can also be used with a specific qualifier to suggest a person who deals in a given characteristic such as speed merchant, which refer to someone who enjoys fast driving; noise merchant, which refers to a group of musical performers;[2] and dream merchant, which refers to someone who peddles idealistic visionary scenarios.

Elizabeth Honig has argued that concepts relating to the role of a merchant began to change in the mid-16th century. The Dutch term, koopman, became rather more fluid during the 16th century when Antwerp was the most global market town in Europe. Two different terms, for a merchant, began to be used, meerseniers referred to local merchants including bakers, grocers, sellers of dairy products and stall-holders, while the alternate term, koopman, referred to those who traded in goods or credit on a large scale. This distinction was necessary to separate the daily trade that the general population understood from the rising ranks of traders who took up their places on a world stage and were seen as quite distant from everyday experience.[3]

Types of merchant

Broadly, merchants can be classified into two categories:

  • A wholesale merchant operates in the chain between the producer and retail merchant, typically dealing in large quantities of goods.[4] In other words, a wholesaler does not sell directly to end-users. Some wholesale merchants only organize the movement of goods rather than move the goods themselves.
  • A retail merchant or retailer sells merchandise to end-users or consumers (including businesses), usually in small quantities. A shop-keeper is an example of a retail merchant.

However, the term 'merchant' is often used in a variety of specialised contexts such as in merchant banker, merchant navy or merchant services.

History

Merchants in antiquity

 
Phoenician trade route map

Merchants have existed as long as humans have conducted business, trade or commerce.[5][6][7][8][9][10] A merchant class operated in many pre-modern societies. Open-air, public markets, where merchants and traders congregated, functioned in ancient Babylonia and Assyria, China, Egypt, Greece, India, Persia, Phoenicia and Rome. These markets typically occupied a place in the town's centre. Surrounding the market, skilled artisans, such as metal-workers and leather workers, occupied premises in alley ways that led to the open market-place. These artisans may have sold wares directly from their premises, but also prepared goods for sale on market days.[11][need quotation to verify] In ancient Greece markets operated within the agora (open space), and in ancient Rome in the forum. Rome's forums included the Forum Romanum, the Forum Boarium and Trajan's Forum. The Forum Boarium, one of a series of fora venalia or food markets, originated, as its name suggests, as a cattle market.[12] Trajan's Forum was a vast expanse, comprising multiple buildings with shops on four levels. The Roman forum was arguably the earliest example of a permanent retail shop-front.[13]

In antiquity, exchange involved direct selling through permanent or semi-permanent retail premises such as stall-holders at market places or shop-keepers selling from their own premises or through door-to-door direct sales via merchants or peddlers.[citation needed] The nature of direct selling centred around transactional exchange, where the goods were on open display, allowing buyers to evaluate quality directly through visual inspection. Relationships between merchant and consumer were minimal[14] often playing into public concerns about the quality of produce.[15]

 
Phoenician merchants traded across the entire Mediterranean region

The Phoenicians became well known amongst contemporaries as "traders in purple" – a reference to their monopoly over the purple dye extracted from the murex shell.[16] The Phoenicians plied their ships across the Mediterranean, becoming a major trading power by the 9th century BCE. Phoenician merchant traders imported and exported wood, textiles, glass and produce such as wine, oil, dried fruit and nuts. Their trading necessitated a network of colonies along the Mediterranean coast, stretching from modern-day Crete through to Tangiers (in present-day Morocco) and northward to Sardinia.[17] The Phoenicians not only traded in tangible goods, but were also instrumental in transporting the trappings of culture. The Phoenicians' extensive trade networks necessitated considerable book-keeping and correspondence. In around 1500 BCE, the Phoenicians developed a script which was much easier to learn than the pictographic systems used in ancient Egypt and Mesopotamia. Phoenician traders and merchants were largely responsible for spreading their alphabet around the region.[18] Phoenician inscriptions have been found in archaeological sites at a number of former Phoenician cities and colonies around the Mediterranean, such as Byblos (in present-day Lebanon) and Carthage in North Africa.[19]

 
Wall painting from Pompeii depicting every day activities at a market-place
 
Mosaic showing garum container, from the house of Umbricius Scaurus of Pompeii. The inscription which reads "G(ari) F(los) SCO(mbri) SCAURI EX OFFI(CI)NA SCAURI" has been translated as "The flower of garum, made of the mackerel, a product of Scaurus, from the shop of Scaurus"

The social status of the merchant class varied across cultures; ranging from high status (the members even eventually achieving titles such as that of Merchant Prince or Nabob) to low status, as in China, Greece and Roman cultures, owing to the presumed distastefulness of profiting from "mere" trade rather than from labor or the labor of others as in agriculture and craftsmanship.[20] The Romans defined merchants or traders in a very narrow sense. Merchants were those who bought and sold goods, while landowners who sold their own produce were not classed as merchants. Being a landowner was a "respectable" occupation. On the other hand, the Romans did not consider the activities of merchants "respectable".[21] In the ancient cities of the Middle East, where the bazaar was the city's focal point and heartbeat, merchants who worked in bazaar enjoyed high social status and formed part of local elites.[22] In Medieval Western Europe, the Christian church, which closely associated merchants' activities with the sin of usury, criticised the merchant class, strongly influencing attitudes towards them.[23]

In Greco-Roman society, merchants typically did not have high social status, though they may have enjoyed great wealth.[24] Umbricius Scauras, for example, was a manufacturer and trader of garum in Pompeii, circa 35 C.E. His villa, situated in one of the wealthier districts of Pompeii, was very large and ornately decorated in a show of substantial personal wealth. Mosaic patterns in the floor of his atrium were decorated with images of amphorae bearing his personal brand and inscribed with quality claims. One of the inscriptions on the mosaic amphora reads "G(ari) F(los) SCO[m]/ SCAURI/ EX OFFI[ci]/NA SCAU/RI" which translates as "The flower of garum, made of the mackerel, a product of Scaurus, from the shop of Scaurus". Scaurus' fish sauce had a reputation for very high quality across the Mediterranean; its fame travelled as far away as modern southern France.[25] Other notable Roman merchants included: Marcus Julius Alexander (16 – 44 CE), Sergius Orata (fl. c. 95 BCE) and Annius Plocamus (1st century CE).[citation needed]

In the Roman world, local merchants served the needs of the wealthier landowners. While the local peasantry, who were generally poor, relied on open-air market places to buy and sell produce and wares, major producers such as the great estates were sufficiently attractive for merchants to call directly at their farm-gates. The very wealthy landowners managed their own distribution, which may have involved exporting.[26] Markets were also important centres of social life, and merchants helped to spread news and gossip.[27]

The nature of export markets in antiquity is well documented in ancient sources and in archaeological case-studies. Both Greek and Roman merchants engaged in long-distance trade. A Chinese text records that a Roman merchant named Lun reached southern China in 226 CE. Archaeologists have recovered Roman objects dating from the period 27 BCE to 37 CE from excavation sites as far afield as the Kushan and Indus ports. The Romans sold purple and yellow dyes, brass and iron; they acquired incense, balsam, expensive liquid myrrh and spices from the Near East and India, fine silk from China[28] and fine white marble destined for the Roman wholesale market from Arabia.[29] For Roman consumers, the purchase of goods from the East was a symbol of social prestige.[30]

Merchants in the medieval period

 
Marco Polo was among the earliest European merchants to travel to the Orient, helping to open it up to trade in the 13th century

Medieval England and Europe witnessed a rapid expansion in trade and the rise of a wealthy and powerful merchant class. Blintiff has investigated the early Medieval networks of market towns and suggests that by the 12th century there was an upsurge in the number of market towns and the emergence of merchant circuits as traders bulked up surpluses from smaller regional, different day markets and resold them at the larger centralised market towns. Peddlers or itinerant merchants filled any gaps in the distribution system.[31] From the 11th century, the Crusades helped to open up new trade routes in the Near East, while the adventurer and merchant, Marco Polo stimulated interest in the far East in the 13th century. Medieval merchants began to trade in exotic goods imported from distant shores including spices, wine, food, furs, fine cloth (notably silk), glass, jewellery and many other luxury goods. Market towns began to spread across the landscape during the medieval period.[citation needed]

Merchant guilds began to form during the Medieval period. A fraternity formed by the merchants of Tiel in Gelderland (in present-day Netherlands) in 1020 is believed to be the first example of a guild. The term, guild was first used for gilda mercatoria and referred to body of merchants operating out of St. Omer, France in the 11th century. Similarly, London's Hanse was formed in the 12th century.[32] These guilds controlled the way that trade was to be conducted and codified rules governing the conditions of trade. Rules established by merchant guilds were often incorporated into the charters granted to market towns. In the early 12th century, a confederation of merchant guilds, formed out the German cities of Lübeck and Hamburg, known as "The Hanseatic League" came to dominate trade around the Baltic Sea. By the 13th and 14th centuries, merchant guilds had sufficient resources to have erected guild halls in many major market towns.[33]

 
Mediterranean port with Turkish merchants by Adriaen van der Kabel, 1682

During the thirteenth century, European businesses became more permanent and were able to maintain sedentary merchants and a system of agents. Merchants specialised in financing, organisation and transport while agents were domiciled overseas and acted on behalf of a principal. These arrangements first appeared on the route from Italy to the Levant, but by the end of the thirteenth century merchant colonies could be found from Paris, London, Bruges, Seville, Barcelona and Montpellier. Over time these partnerships became more commonplace and led to the development of large trading companies. These developments also triggered innovations such as double-entry book-keeping, commercial accountancy, international banking including access to lines of credit, marine insurance and commercial courier services. These developments are sometimes known as the commercial revolution.[34]

Luca Clerici has made a detailed study of Vicenza's food market during the sixteenth century. He found that there were many different types of merchants operating out of the markets. For example, in the dairy trade, cheese and butter was sold by the members of two craft guilds (i.e., cheesemongers who were shopkeepers) and that of the so-called ‘resellers’ (hucksters selling a wide range of foodstuffs), and by other sellers who were not enrolled in any guild. Cheesemongers’ shops were situated at the town hall and were very lucrative. Resellers and direct sellers increased the number of sellers, thus increasing competition, to the benefit of consumers. Direct sellers, who brought produce from the surrounding countryside, sold their wares through the central market place and priced their goods at considerably lower rates than cheesemongers.[35]

 
A merchant making up the account by Katsushika Hokusai.

From 1300 through to the 1800s a large number of European chartered and merchant companies were established to exploit international trading opportunities. The Company of Merchant Adventurers of London, chartered in 1407, controlled most of the fine cloth imports[36] while the Hanseatic League controlled most of the trade in the Baltic Sea. A detailed study of European trade between the thirteenth and fifteenth century demonstrates that the European age of discovery acted as a major driver of change. In 1600, goods travelled relatively short distances: grain 5–10 miles; cattle 40–70 miles; wool and wollen cloth 20–40 miles. However, in the years following the opening up of Asia and the discovery of the New World, goods were imported from very long distances: calico cloth from India, porcelain, silk and tea from China, spices from India and South-East Asia and tobacco, sugar, rum and coffee from the New World.[37]

In Mesoamerica, a tiered system of traders developed independently. The local markets, where people purchased their daily needs were known as tianguis while pochteca referred to long-distance, professional merchants traders who obtained rare goods and luxury items desired by the nobility. This trading system supported various levels of pochteca – from very high status merchants through to minor traders who acted as a type of peddler to fill in gaps in the distribution system.[38] The Spanish conquerors commented on the impressive nature of the local and regional markets in the 15th century. The Mexica (Aztec) market of Tlatelolco was the largest in all the Americas and said to be superior to those in Europe.[39]

In much of Renaissance Europe and even after, merchant trade remained seen as a lowly profession and it was often subject to legal discrimination or restrictions, although in a few areas its status began to improve.[40][41][42][43][44][45]

Merchants in the modern era

The modern era is generally understood to refer to period that started with the rise of consumer culture in seventeenth- and eighteenth-century Europe.[46][need quotation to verify] As standards of living improved in the 17th century, consumers from a broad range of social backgrounds began to purchase goods that were in excess of basic necessities. An emergent middle class or bourgeoisie stimulated demand for luxury goods, and the act of shopping came to be seen as a pleasurable pastime or form of entertainment.[47]

 
Merchants engaged in international trade began to develop a more outward-looking mindset

As Britain continued colonial expansion, large commercial organisations came to provide a market for more sophisticated information about trading conditions in foreign lands. Daniel Defoe (c. 1660–1731), a London merchant, published information on trade and economic resources of England, Scotland and India.[48][49] Defoe was a prolific pamphleteer. His many publications include titles devoted to trade, including: Trade of Britain Stated (1707); Trade of Scotland with France (1713); The Trade to India Critically and Calmly Considered (1720) and A Plan of the English Commerce (1731); all pamphlets that became highly popular with contemporary merchants and business houses.[50]

Armenians operated as a prominent trade nation during the 17th century. They stood out in international trade due to their vast network – mostly built by Armenian migrants spread across Eurasia. Armenians had established prominent trade-relations with all big export players such as India, China, Persia, the Ottoman Empire, England, Venice, the Levant, etc. Soon they captured Eastern and Western Europe, Russia, the Levant, the Middle East, Central Asia, India, and the Far East trade routes, carrying out mostly caravan-trade activities. A significant reason for Armenians' massive involvement in international trade was their geographic location – the Armenian lands stand at the crossroads between Asia and Europe. Another reason was their religion, as they were a Christian nation isolated between Muslim Iran and Muslim Turkey. European Christians preferred to carry out trade with Christians in the region.[51]

Eighteenth-century merchants who traded in foreign markets developed a network of relationships which crossed national boundaries, religious affiliations, family ties, and gender. The historian, Vannneste, has argued that a new "cosmopolitan merchant mentality" based on trust, reciprocity and a culture of communal support developed and helped to unify the early modern world. Given that these cosmopolitan merchants were embedded within their societies and participated in the highest level of exchange, they transferred a more outward-looking mindset and system of values to their commercial-exchange transactions, and also helped to disseminate a more global awareness to broader society and therefore acted as agents of change for local society. Successful, open-minded cosmopolitan merchants began to acquire a more esteemed social position within the political elites. They were often sought as advisors for high-level political agents.[52] The English nabobs belong to this era.

By the eighteenth century, a new type of manufacturer-merchant was emerging and modern business practices were becoming evident. Many merchants held showcases of goods in their private homes for the benefit of wealthier clients.[53] Samuel Pepys, for example, writing in 1660, describes being invited to the home of a retailer to view a wooden jack.[54] McKendrick, Brewer and Plumb found extensive evidence of eighteenth-century English entrepreneurs and merchants using "modern" marketing techniques, including product differentiation, sales promotion and loss-leader pricing.[55] English industrialists, Josiah Wedgewood (1730–1795) and Matthew Boulton (1728–1809), are often portrayed as pioneers of modern mass-marketing methods.[56] Wedgewood was known to have used marketing techniques such as direct mail, travelling salesmen and catalogues in the eighteenth century.[57] Wedgewood also carried out serious investigations into the fixed and variable costs of production and recognised that increased production would lead to lower unit-costs. He also inferred that selling at lower prices would lead to higher demand and recognised the value of achieving scale economies in production. By cutting costs and lowering prices, Wedgewood was able to generate higher overall profits.[58] Similarly, one of Wedgewood's contemporaries, Matthew Boulton, pioneered early mass-production techniques and product differentiation at his Soho Manufactory in the 1760s. He also practiced planned obsolescence and understood the importance of "celebrity marketing" – that is supplying the nobility, often at prices below cost – and of obtaining royal patronage, for the sake of the publicity and kudos generated.[59] Both Wedgewood and Boulton staged expansive showcases of their wares in their private residences or in rented halls.[60]

Eighteenth-century American merchants, who had been operating as importers and exporters, began to specialise in either wholesale or retail roles. They tended not to specialise in particular types of merchandise, often trading as general merchants, selling a diverse range of product types. These merchants were concentrated in the larger cities. They often provided high levels of credit financing for retail transactions.[61]

In the nineteenth century, merchants and merchant houses played a role in opening up China and the Pacific to Anglo-American trade interests. Note for example Jardine Matheson & Co. and the merchants of New South Wales. Other merchants profited from natural resources (the Hudson's Bay Company theoretically controlled much of North America, names like Rockefeller and Nobel dominated trade in oil in the US and in the Russian Empire), while still others made fortunes from exploiting new inventions – selling space on and commodities carried by railways and steamships.

In fully planned economies of the 20th century, planners replaced merchants in organising the distribution of goods and services.[62]

However, merchants, increasingly labelled with euphemisms such as "industrialists", "businessmen", "entrepreneurs" or "oligarchs",[63] continue their activities in the 21st century. The wealth and influence of figures such as Jeff Bezos, Bill Gates and Jack Ma testify to the ongoing importance of merchandising.

In art

Elizabeth Honig has argued that artists, especially the Dutch painters of Antwerp, developed a fascination with merchants from the mid-16th century. At this time, the economy was undergoing profound changes – capitalism emerged as the dominant social organisation replacing earlier modes of production. Merchants were importing produce from afar – grain from the Baltic, textiles from England, wine from Germany and metals from various countries. Antwerp was the centre of this new commercial world. The public began to distinguish between two types of merchant, the eerseniers who were local merchants including bakers, grocers, sellers of dairy products and stall-holders, and the koopman, which were a new, emergent class of trader who dealt in goods or credit on a large scale. With the rise of a European merchant class, this distinction was necessary to separate the daily trade that the general population understood from the rising ranks of traders who operated on a world stage and were seen as quite distant from everyday experience.[64] The wealthier merchants also had the means to commission artworks with the result that individual merchants and their families became important subject matter for artists. For instance, Hans Holbein the younger painted a series of portraits of Hanseatic merchants working out of London's Steelyard in the 1530s.[65] These included including Georg Giese of Danzig; Hillebrant Wedigh of Cologne; Dirk Tybis of Duisburg; Hans of Antwerp, Hermann Wedigh, Johann Schwarzwald, Cyriacus Kale, Derich Born and Derick Berck.[66] Paintings of groups of merchants, notably officers of the merchant guilds, also became subject matter for artists and documented the rise of important mercantile organisations.[citation needed]

In recent art: Dutch photographer Loes Heerink spend hours on bridges in Hanoi to take pictures of Vietnamese street Merchants. She published a book called Merchants in Motion: the art of Vietnamese Street Vendors.[67]

In architecture

Although merchant halls were known in antiquity, they fell into disuse and were not reinvented until Europe's Medieval period.[68] During the 12th century, powerful guilds which controlled the way that trade was conducted were established and were often incorporated into the charters granted to market towns. By the 13th and 14th centuries, merchant guilds had acquired sufficient resources to erect guild halls in many major market towns.[69] Many buildings have retained the names derived from their former use as the home or place of business of merchants:[citation needed]

See also

References

References
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  2. ^ Online Dictionary of Etymology, http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?term=merchant
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  42. ^ Dion C. Smythe (2016). Strangers to Themselves: The Byzantine Outsider: Papers from the Thirty-Second Spring Symposium of Byzantine Studies, University of Sussex, Brighton, March 1998. Routledge. pp. 129–130. ISBN 978-1351897808.
  43. ^ Jeannie Labno (2016). "3". Commemorating the Polish Renaissance Child: Funeral Monuments and their European Context. Routledge. ISBN 978-1317163954.
  44. ^ R. S. Alexander (2012). Europe's Uncertain Path 1814-1914: State Formation and Civil Society. John Wiley & Sons. p. 82. ISBN 978-1405100526.
  45. ^ Jonathan Dewald (1996). The European Nobility, 1400-1800. Cambridge University Press. pp. 95–96. ISBN 052142528X.
  46. ^ Southerton, Dale, ed. (15 September 2011). Encyclopedia of Consumer Culture. SAGE Publications (published 2011). p. xxx. ISBN 9781452266534. Retrieved 16 August 2021.
  47. ^ Jones, C. and Spang, R., "Sans Culottes, Sans Café, Sans Tabac: Shifting Realms of Luxury and Necessity in Eighteenth-Century France," Chapter 2 in Consumers and Luxury: Consumer Culture in Europe, 1650–1850 Berg, M. and Clifford, H., Manchester University Press, 1999; Berg, M., "New Commodities, Luxuries and Their Consumers in Nineteenth-Century England," Chapter 3 in Consumers and Luxury: Consumer Culture in Europe, 1650–1850 Berg, M. and Clifford, H., Manchester University Press, 1999
  48. ^ Minto, W., Daniel Defoe, Tredition Classics, [Project Gutenberg ed.], Chapter 10
  49. ^ Richetti, J., The Life of Daniel Defoe: A Critical Biography, Malden, MA., Blackwell, 2005, 2015, pp 147–49 and 158-59
  50. ^ Backscheider, P.R., Daniel Defoe: His Life, Baltimore, Maryland, Johns Hopkins University Press, 1989.
  51. ^ Bakhchinyan, Artsvi (2017). "The Activity of Armenian Merchants in International Trade" (PDF): 23–29. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  52. ^ Vanneste, R., Global Trade and Commercial Networks: Eighteenth-Century Diamond Merchants, London, Pickering and Chatto, 2011, ISBN 9781848930872
  53. ^ McKendrick, N., Brewer, J. and Plumb . J.H., The Birth of a Consumer Society: The Commercialization of Eighteenth Century England, London, 1982.
  54. ^ Cox, N.C. and Dannehl, K., Perceptions of Retailing in Early Modern England, Aldershot, Hampshire, Ashgate, 2007, pp 155–59
  55. ^ McKendrick, N., Brewer, J. and Plumb . J.H., The Birth of a Consumer Society: The Commercialization of Eighteenth Century England, London, 1982.
  56. ^ Tadajewski, M. and Jones, D.G.B., "Historical research in marketing theory and practice: a review essay", Journal of Marketing Management, Vol. 30, No. 11-12, 2014 [Special Issue: Pushing the Boundaries, Sketching the Future], pp 1239–1291.
  57. ^ Flanders, J., "They Broke It", New York Times, 9 January 2009, <Online:https://www.nytimes.com/2009/01/10/opinion/10flanders.html?_r=2>
  58. ^ Drake, D., "Dinnerware & Cost Accounting? The Story of Josiah Wedgwood: Potter and Cost Accountant," HQ Financial Views, Volume I, 1 May–July 2005, pp 1–3
  59. ^ Applbaum, K., The Marketing Era: From Professional Practice to Global Provisioning, Routledge, 2004, p. 126-127
  60. ^ McKendrick, N., Brewer, J. and Plumb . J.H., The Birth of a Consumer Society: The Commercialization of Eighteenth Century England, London, 1982.
  61. ^ Savitt, R., "Looking Back to See Ahead: Writing the History of American Retailing", in Retailing: The Evolution and Development of Retailing, A. M. Findlay, Leigh Sparks (eds), pp 138–39.
  62. ^ Tang Lixing (14 December 2017). Merchants and Society in Modern China: From Guild to Chamber of Commerce. China Perspectives. Routledge (published 2017). ISBN 9781351612968. Retrieved 16 August 2021. We see the permutation and extension of the traditional economic elements in highly planned economy. The anti-commerce policy reached to such an extreme that merchants were dismissed as the capitalist heresy.
  63. ^ Graph of proportionate terminology usage
  64. ^ Honig, E.A., Painting & the Market in Early Modern Antwerp, Yale University Press, 1998, pp 6–10
  65. ^ Fudge, J.F., Commerce and Print in the Early Reformation, Brill, 2007, p.110
  66. ^ Holman, T.S., "Holbein's Portraits of the Steelyard Merchants: An Investigation," Metropolitan Museum Journal, vol. 14, 1980, pp 139–158
  67. ^ "Merchants in Motion". Loes Heerink. Retrieved 18 February 2022.
  68. ^ Gelderblom, O. and Grafe, E., "The Persistence and Decline of Merchant Guilds: Re-thinking the Comparative Study of Commercial Institutions in Pre-modern Europe," [Working Paper], Yale University, 2008
  69. ^ Epstein S.A, Wage Labor and Guilds in Medieval Europe, University of North Carolina Press, 1991, pp 50–100

Sources and further reading

  • Adams Julia. The Familial State. Ruling Families and Merchant Capitalism in Early Modern Europe (Cornell University Press, 2005)
  • Braudel, F. The Wheels of Commerce: Civilization and Capitalism, 15th to 18th Century (U of California Press, 1992)
  • Burset, Christian R. "Merchant courts, arbitration, and the politics of commercial litigation in the eighteenth-century British Empire." Law and History Review 34.3 (2016): 615–647.
  • Casson, Mark. The entrepreneur: An economic theory (Rowman & Littlefield, 1982). Influential scholarly survey
  • Enciso, Agustín González. "The merchant and the common good: social paradigms and the state’s influence in Western history." in The Challenges of Capitalism for Virtue Ethics and the Common Good (Edward Elgar Publishing, 2016).
  • Julien, Pierre-André, ed. The state of the art in small business and entrepreneurship (Routledge, 2018).
  • Lindemann, Mary. The Merchant Republics—Amsterdam, Antwerp, and Hamburg, 1648–1790 (Cambridge UP, 2015)
  • Marsden, Magnus, and Vera Skvirskaja. "Merchant identities, trading nodes, and globalization: Introduction to the Special Issue." History and Anthropology 29.sup1 (2018): S1-S13. online
  • Smith, Adam, "An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations" (Bantam Classics, Annotated Edition, 4 March 2003) ISBN 978-0553585971
  • Origo, Iris. The Merchant of Prato: Daily Life in a Medieval Italian City (Penguin UK, 2017).
  • Outhwaite, R. B. "Merchants and Gentry in North-East England, 1650–1830: The Carrs and the Ellisons." English Historical Review 115.462 (2000): 729–729.
  • Persaud, Alexander. "Indian Merchant Migration within the British Empire." Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Asian History. (2020)
  • Thrupp, Sylvia L. (1989). The Merchant Class of Medieval London, 1300–1500. University of Michigan Press. ISBN 978-0-472-06072-6.
  • Williams, E. N. "Our Merchants Are Princes": The English Middle Classes In The Eighteenth Century" History Today (Aug 196) 2, Vol. 12 Issue 8, pp548–557.

External links

  •   The dictionary definition of merchant at Wiktionary
  •   Media related to Merchants at Wikimedia Commons
  •   Quotations related to Merchant at Wikiquote

merchant, other, uses, disambiguation, merchant, person, trades, commodities, produced, other, people, especially, trades, with, foreign, countries, historically, merchant, anyone, involved, business, trade, have, operated, long, industry, commerce, trade, hav. For other uses see Merchant disambiguation A merchant is a person who trades in commodities produced by other people especially one who trades with foreign countries Historically a merchant is anyone who is involved in business or trade Merchants have operated for as long as industry commerce and trade have existed In 16th century Europe two different terms for merchants emerged meerseniers referred to local traders such as bakers and grocers and koopman Dutch koopman referred to merchants who operated on a global stage importing and exporting goods over vast distances and offering added value services such as credit and finance Merchants from Holland and the Middle East trading The status of the merchant has varied during different periods of history and among different societies In modern times the term merchant has occasionally been used to refer to a businessperson or someone undertaking activities commercial or industrial for the purpose of generating profit cash flow sales and revenue using a combination of human financial intellectual and physical capital with a view to fueling economic development and growth A scale or balance is often used to symbolise a merchant Merchants have been known for as long as humans have engaged in trade and commerce Merchants and merchant networks operated in ancient Babylonia and Assyria China Egypt Greece India Persia Phoenicia and Rome During the European medieval period a rapid expansion in trade and commerce led to the rise of a wealthy and powerful merchant class The European age of discovery opened up new trading routes and gave European consumers access to a much broader range of goods From the 1600s goods began to travel much further distances as they found their way into geographically dispersed market places Following the opening of Asia to European trade and the discovery of the New World merchants imported goods over very long distances calico cloth from India porcelain silk and tea from China spices from India and South East Asia and tobacco sugar rum and coffee from the New World By the eighteenth century a new type of manufacturer merchant had started to emerge and modern business practices were becoming evident Contents 1 Etymology and usage 2 Types of merchant 3 History 3 1 Merchants in antiquity 3 2 Merchants in the medieval period 3 3 Merchants in the modern era 4 In art 5 In architecture 6 See also 7 References 8 Sources and further reading 9 External linksEtymology and usage Edit Costumes of merchants from Brabant and Antwerp engraving by Abraham de Bruyn 1577 The English term merchant comes from the Middle English marchant which is derived from Anglo Norman marchaunt which itself originated from the Vulgar Latin mercatant or mercatans formed from present participle of mercatare to trade to traffic or to deal in 1 The term refers to any type of reseller but can also be used with a specific qualifier to suggest a person who deals in a given characteristic such as speed merchant which refer to someone who enjoys fast driving noise merchant which refers to a group of musical performers 2 and dream merchant which refers to someone who peddles idealistic visionary scenarios Elizabeth Honig has argued that concepts relating to the role of a merchant began to change in the mid 16th century The Dutch term koopman became rather more fluid during the 16th century when Antwerp was the most global market town in Europe Two different terms for a merchant began to be used meerseniers referred to local merchants including bakers grocers sellers of dairy products and stall holders while the alternate term koopman referred to those who traded in goods or credit on a large scale This distinction was necessary to separate the daily trade that the general population understood from the rising ranks of traders who took up their places on a world stage and were seen as quite distant from everyday experience 3 Types of merchant EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Merchant news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Broadly merchants can be classified into two categories A wholesale merchant operates in the chain between the producer and retail merchant typically dealing in large quantities of goods 4 In other words a wholesaler does not sell directly to end users Some wholesale merchants only organize the movement of goods rather than move the goods themselves A retail merchant or retailer sells merchandise to end users or consumers including businesses usually in small quantities A shop keeper is an example of a retail merchant However the term merchant is often used in a variety of specialised contexts such as in merchant banker merchant navy or merchant services History EditSee also Retail history Market place and History of marketing Merchants in antiquity Edit Phoenician trade route map Merchants have existed as long as humans have conducted business trade or commerce 5 6 7 8 9 10 A merchant class operated in many pre modern societies Open air public markets where merchants and traders congregated functioned in ancient Babylonia and Assyria China Egypt Greece India Persia Phoenicia and Rome These markets typically occupied a place in the town s centre Surrounding the market skilled artisans such as metal workers and leather workers occupied premises in alley ways that led to the open market place These artisans may have sold wares directly from their premises but also prepared goods for sale on market days 11 need quotation to verify In ancient Greece markets operated within the agora open space and in ancient Rome in the forum Rome s forums included the Forum Romanum the Forum Boarium and Trajan s Forum The Forum Boarium one of a series of fora venalia or food markets originated as its name suggests as a cattle market 12 Trajan s Forum was a vast expanse comprising multiple buildings with shops on four levels The Roman forum was arguably the earliest example of a permanent retail shop front 13 In antiquity exchange involved direct selling through permanent or semi permanent retail premises such as stall holders at market places or shop keepers selling from their own premises or through door to door direct sales via merchants or peddlers citation needed The nature of direct selling centred around transactional exchange where the goods were on open display allowing buyers to evaluate quality directly through visual inspection Relationships between merchant and consumer were minimal 14 often playing into public concerns about the quality of produce 15 Phoenician merchants traded across the entire Mediterranean region The Phoenicians became well known amongst contemporaries as traders in purple a reference to their monopoly over the purple dye extracted from the murex shell 16 The Phoenicians plied their ships across the Mediterranean becoming a major trading power by the 9th century BCE Phoenician merchant traders imported and exported wood textiles glass and produce such as wine oil dried fruit and nuts Their trading necessitated a network of colonies along the Mediterranean coast stretching from modern day Crete through to Tangiers in present day Morocco and northward to Sardinia 17 The Phoenicians not only traded in tangible goods but were also instrumental in transporting the trappings of culture The Phoenicians extensive trade networks necessitated considerable book keeping and correspondence In around 1500 BCE the Phoenicians developed a script which was much easier to learn than the pictographic systems used in ancient Egypt and Mesopotamia Phoenician traders and merchants were largely responsible for spreading their alphabet around the region 18 Phoenician inscriptions have been found in archaeological sites at a number of former Phoenician cities and colonies around the Mediterranean such as Byblos in present day Lebanon and Carthage in North Africa 19 Wall painting from Pompeii depicting every day activities at a market place Mosaic showing garum container from the house of Umbricius Scaurus of Pompeii The inscription which reads G ari F los SCO mbri SCAURI EX OFFI CI NA SCAURI has been translated as The flower of garum made of the mackerel a product of Scaurus from the shop of Scaurus The social status of the merchant class varied across cultures ranging from high status the members even eventually achieving titles such as that of Merchant Prince or Nabob to low status as in China Greece and Roman cultures owing to the presumed distastefulness of profiting from mere trade rather than from labor or the labor of others as in agriculture and craftsmanship 20 The Romans defined merchants or traders in a very narrow sense Merchants were those who bought and sold goods while landowners who sold their own produce were not classed as merchants Being a landowner was a respectable occupation On the other hand the Romans did not consider the activities of merchants respectable 21 In the ancient cities of the Middle East where the bazaar was the city s focal point and heartbeat merchants who worked in bazaar enjoyed high social status and formed part of local elites 22 In Medieval Western Europe the Christian church which closely associated merchants activities with the sin of usury criticised the merchant class strongly influencing attitudes towards them 23 In Greco Roman society merchants typically did not have high social status though they may have enjoyed great wealth 24 Umbricius Scauras for example was a manufacturer and trader of garum in Pompeii circa 35 C E His villa situated in one of the wealthier districts of Pompeii was very large and ornately decorated in a show of substantial personal wealth Mosaic patterns in the floor of his atrium were decorated with images of amphorae bearing his personal brand and inscribed with quality claims One of the inscriptions on the mosaic amphora reads G ari F los SCO m SCAURI EX OFFI ci NA SCAU RI which translates as The flower of garum made of the mackerel a product of Scaurus from the shop of Scaurus Scaurus fish sauce had a reputation for very high quality across the Mediterranean its fame travelled as far away as modern southern France 25 Other notable Roman merchants included Marcus Julius Alexander 16 44 CE Sergius Orata fl c 95 BCE and Annius Plocamus 1st century CE citation needed In the Roman world local merchants served the needs of the wealthier landowners While the local peasantry who were generally poor relied on open air market places to buy and sell produce and wares major producers such as the great estates were sufficiently attractive for merchants to call directly at their farm gates The very wealthy landowners managed their own distribution which may have involved exporting 26 Markets were also important centres of social life and merchants helped to spread news and gossip 27 The nature of export markets in antiquity is well documented in ancient sources and in archaeological case studies Both Greek and Roman merchants engaged in long distance trade A Chinese text records that a Roman merchant named Lun reached southern China in 226 CE Archaeologists have recovered Roman objects dating from the period 27 BCE to 37 CE from excavation sites as far afield as the Kushan and Indus ports The Romans sold purple and yellow dyes brass and iron they acquired incense balsam expensive liquid myrrh and spices from the Near East and India fine silk from China 28 and fine white marble destined for the Roman wholesale market from Arabia 29 For Roman consumers the purchase of goods from the East was a symbol of social prestige 30 Merchants in the medieval period Edit Marco Polo was among the earliest European merchants to travel to the Orient helping to open it up to trade in the 13th century Medieval England and Europe witnessed a rapid expansion in trade and the rise of a wealthy and powerful merchant class Blintiff has investigated the early Medieval networks of market towns and suggests that by the 12th century there was an upsurge in the number of market towns and the emergence of merchant circuits as traders bulked up surpluses from smaller regional different day markets and resold them at the larger centralised market towns Peddlers or itinerant merchants filled any gaps in the distribution system 31 From the 11th century the Crusades helped to open up new trade routes in the Near East while the adventurer and merchant Marco Polo stimulated interest in the far East in the 13th century Medieval merchants began to trade in exotic goods imported from distant shores including spices wine food furs fine cloth notably silk glass jewellery and many other luxury goods Market towns began to spread across the landscape during the medieval period citation needed Merchant guilds began to form during the Medieval period A fraternity formed by the merchants of Tiel in Gelderland in present day Netherlands in 1020 is believed to be the first example of a guild The term guild was first used for gilda mercatoria and referred to body of merchants operating out of St Omer France in the 11th century Similarly London s Hanse was formed in the 12th century 32 These guilds controlled the way that trade was to be conducted and codified rules governing the conditions of trade Rules established by merchant guilds were often incorporated into the charters granted to market towns In the early 12th century a confederation of merchant guilds formed out the German cities of Lubeck and Hamburg known as The Hanseatic League came to dominate trade around the Baltic Sea By the 13th and 14th centuries merchant guilds had sufficient resources to have erected guild halls in many major market towns 33 Mediterranean port with Turkish merchants by Adriaen van der Kabel 1682 During the thirteenth century European businesses became more permanent and were able to maintain sedentary merchants and a system of agents Merchants specialised in financing organisation and transport while agents were domiciled overseas and acted on behalf of a principal These arrangements first appeared on the route from Italy to the Levant but by the end of the thirteenth century merchant colonies could be found from Paris London Bruges Seville Barcelona and Montpellier Over time these partnerships became more commonplace and led to the development of large trading companies These developments also triggered innovations such as double entry book keeping commercial accountancy international banking including access to lines of credit marine insurance and commercial courier services These developments are sometimes known as the commercial revolution 34 Luca Clerici has made a detailed study of Vicenza s food market during the sixteenth century He found that there were many different types of merchants operating out of the markets For example in the dairy trade cheese and butter was sold by the members of two craft guilds i e cheesemongers who were shopkeepers and that of the so called resellers hucksters selling a wide range of foodstuffs and by other sellers who were not enrolled in any guild Cheesemongers shops were situated at the town hall and were very lucrative Resellers and direct sellers increased the number of sellers thus increasing competition to the benefit of consumers Direct sellers who brought produce from the surrounding countryside sold their wares through the central market place and priced their goods at considerably lower rates than cheesemongers 35 A merchant making up the account by Katsushika Hokusai From 1300 through to the 1800s a large number of European chartered and merchant companies were established to exploit international trading opportunities The Company of Merchant Adventurers of London chartered in 1407 controlled most of the fine cloth imports 36 while the Hanseatic League controlled most of the trade in the Baltic Sea A detailed study of European trade between the thirteenth and fifteenth century demonstrates that the European age of discovery acted as a major driver of change In 1600 goods travelled relatively short distances grain 5 10 miles cattle 40 70 miles wool and wollen cloth 20 40 miles However in the years following the opening up of Asia and the discovery of the New World goods were imported from very long distances calico cloth from India porcelain silk and tea from China spices from India and South East Asia and tobacco sugar rum and coffee from the New World 37 In Mesoamerica a tiered system of traders developed independently The local markets where people purchased their daily needs were known as tianguis while pochteca referred to long distance professional merchants traders who obtained rare goods and luxury items desired by the nobility This trading system supported various levels of pochteca from very high status merchants through to minor traders who acted as a type of peddler to fill in gaps in the distribution system 38 The Spanish conquerors commented on the impressive nature of the local and regional markets in the 15th century The Mexica Aztec market of Tlatelolco was the largest in all the Americas and said to be superior to those in Europe 39 In much of Renaissance Europe and even after merchant trade remained seen as a lowly profession and it was often subject to legal discrimination or restrictions although in a few areas its status began to improve 40 41 42 43 44 45 Merchants in the modern era Edit The modern era is generally understood to refer to period that started with the rise of consumer culture in seventeenth and eighteenth century Europe 46 need quotation to verify As standards of living improved in the 17th century consumers from a broad range of social backgrounds began to purchase goods that were in excess of basic necessities An emergent middle class or bourgeoisie stimulated demand for luxury goods and the act of shopping came to be seen as a pleasurable pastime or form of entertainment 47 Merchants engaged in international trade began to develop a more outward looking mindset As Britain continued colonial expansion large commercial organisations came to provide a market for more sophisticated information about trading conditions in foreign lands Daniel Defoe c 1660 1731 a London merchant published information on trade and economic resources of England Scotland and India 48 49 Defoe was a prolific pamphleteer His many publications include titles devoted to trade including Trade of Britain Stated 1707 Trade of Scotland with France 1713 The Trade to India Critically and Calmly Considered 1720 and A Plan of the English Commerce 1731 all pamphlets that became highly popular with contemporary merchants and business houses 50 Armenians operated as a prominent trade nation during the 17th century They stood out in international trade due to their vast network mostly built by Armenian migrants spread across Eurasia Armenians had established prominent trade relations with all big export players such as India China Persia the Ottoman Empire England Venice the Levant etc Soon they captured Eastern and Western Europe Russia the Levant the Middle East Central Asia India and the Far East trade routes carrying out mostly caravan trade activities A significant reason for Armenians massive involvement in international trade was their geographic location the Armenian lands stand at the crossroads between Asia and Europe Another reason was their religion as they were a Christian nation isolated between Muslim Iran and Muslim Turkey European Christians preferred to carry out trade with Christians in the region 51 Eighteenth century merchants who traded in foreign markets developed a network of relationships which crossed national boundaries religious affiliations family ties and gender The historian Vannneste has argued that a new cosmopolitan merchant mentality based on trust reciprocity and a culture of communal support developed and helped to unify the early modern world Given that these cosmopolitan merchants were embedded within their societies and participated in the highest level of exchange they transferred a more outward looking mindset and system of values to their commercial exchange transactions and also helped to disseminate a more global awareness to broader society and therefore acted as agents of change for local society Successful open minded cosmopolitan merchants began to acquire a more esteemed social position within the political elites They were often sought as advisors for high level political agents 52 The English nabobs belong to this era By the eighteenth century a new type of manufacturer merchant was emerging and modern business practices were becoming evident Many merchants held showcases of goods in their private homes for the benefit of wealthier clients 53 Samuel Pepys for example writing in 1660 describes being invited to the home of a retailer to view a wooden jack 54 McKendrick Brewer and Plumb found extensive evidence of eighteenth century English entrepreneurs and merchants using modern marketing techniques including product differentiation sales promotion and loss leader pricing 55 English industrialists Josiah Wedgewood 1730 1795 and Matthew Boulton 1728 1809 are often portrayed as pioneers of modern mass marketing methods 56 Wedgewood was known to have used marketing techniques such as direct mail travelling salesmen and catalogues in the eighteenth century 57 Wedgewood also carried out serious investigations into the fixed and variable costs of production and recognised that increased production would lead to lower unit costs He also inferred that selling at lower prices would lead to higher demand and recognised the value of achieving scale economies in production By cutting costs and lowering prices Wedgewood was able to generate higher overall profits 58 Similarly one of Wedgewood s contemporaries Matthew Boulton pioneered early mass production techniques and product differentiation at his Soho Manufactory in the 1760s He also practiced planned obsolescence and understood the importance of celebrity marketing that is supplying the nobility often at prices below cost and of obtaining royal patronage for the sake of the publicity and kudos generated 59 Both Wedgewood and Boulton staged expansive showcases of their wares in their private residences or in rented halls 60 Eighteenth century American merchants who had been operating as importers and exporters began to specialise in either wholesale or retail roles They tended not to specialise in particular types of merchandise often trading as general merchants selling a diverse range of product types These merchants were concentrated in the larger cities They often provided high levels of credit financing for retail transactions 61 In the nineteenth century merchants and merchant houses played a role in opening up China and the Pacific to Anglo American trade interests Note for example Jardine Matheson amp Co and the merchants of New South Wales Other merchants profited from natural resources the Hudson s Bay Company theoretically controlled much of North America names like Rockefeller and Nobel dominated trade in oil in the US and in the Russian Empire while still others made fortunes from exploiting new inventions selling space on and commodities carried by railways and steamships In fully planned economies of the 20th century planners replaced merchants in organising the distribution of goods and services 62 However merchants increasingly labelled with euphemisms such as industrialists businessmen entrepreneurs or oligarchs 63 continue their activities in the 21st century The wealth and influence of figures such as Jeff Bezos Bill Gates and Jack Ma testify to the ongoing importance of merchandising In art EditElizabeth Honig has argued that artists especially the Dutch painters of Antwerp developed a fascination with merchants from the mid 16th century At this time the economy was undergoing profound changes capitalism emerged as the dominant social organisation replacing earlier modes of production Merchants were importing produce from afar grain from the Baltic textiles from England wine from Germany and metals from various countries Antwerp was the centre of this new commercial world The public began to distinguish between two types of merchant the eerseniers who were local merchants including bakers grocers sellers of dairy products and stall holders and the koopman which were a new emergent class of trader who dealt in goods or credit on a large scale With the rise of a European merchant class this distinction was necessary to separate the daily trade that the general population understood from the rising ranks of traders who operated on a world stage and were seen as quite distant from everyday experience 64 The wealthier merchants also had the means to commission artworks with the result that individual merchants and their families became important subject matter for artists For instance Hans Holbein the younger painted a series of portraits of Hanseatic merchants working out of London s Steelyard in the 1530s 65 These included including Georg Giese of Danzig Hillebrant Wedigh of Cologne Dirk Tybis of Duisburg Hans of Antwerp Hermann Wedigh Johann Schwarzwald Cyriacus Kale Derich Born and Derick Berck 66 Paintings of groups of merchants notably officers of the merchant guilds also became subject matter for artists and documented the rise of important mercantile organisations citation needed In recent art Dutch photographer Loes Heerink spend hours on bridges in Hanoi to take pictures of Vietnamese street Merchants She published a book called Merchants in Motion the art of Vietnamese Street Vendors 67 A Jewish merchant and his family by Paolo Uccello 1465 1469 The Arnolfini Portrait believed to be of Italian merchant Giovanni de Nicolao Arnolfini with his wife by Jan van Eyck c 1434 Lorenzo de Medici merchant Florentine bust 14th or 15th century Mathias Mulich 1470 1528 Merchant in Lubeck by Jacob Claesz van Utrecht c 1522 Portrait of Anton Fugger by Hans Maler zu Schwaz c 1525 Portrait of George Gisze the merchant by Hans Holbein the Younger c 1532 Portrait of a member of the Wedigh merchant family by Hans Holbein the Younger c 1532 The Hanseatic merchant Cyriacus Kale by Hans Holbein the Younger c 1533 A Hanseatic merchant by Hans Holbein the Younger c 1538 Portrait of a Merchant by Corneille de Lyon c 1541 Sir Thomas Gresham by Anthonis Mor c 1560 Cornelis van der Geest merchant of Antwerp by Anthony van Dyck c 1620 Portrait of Nicolaes van der Borght merchant of Antwerp by Van Dyk 1625 35 Portrait of the cloth merchant Abraham del Court and his wife Maria de Keerssegieter by Bartelmeus van der Helst c 1654 Frederick Rihel a merchant on horseback by Rembrandt c 1663 Portrait of Amsterdam merchant Cornelis Nuyts 1574 1661 by Jurgen Ovens Portrait of Joshua van Belle merchant in Spain by Bartolome Esteban Murillo c 1670 Portrait of Pieter Cnoll senior merchant of Batavia with family by Jacob Janz Coeman c 1655 The Merchant by Abraham van Strij c 1800 Caspar Voght German merchant 1801 by Jean Laurent Mosnier Joshua Watson English wine merchant 1863 The Carpet Merchant by Jean Leon Gerome c 1887 Merchant Sytov by anonymous Rybinsk museum mid 19th century Governors of the Wine Merchant s Guild by Ferdinand Bol c 1680 The Syndics of the Drapers Guild by Rembrandt c 1662 Four officers of the Amsterdam Coopers and wine rackers Guild by Gerbrand Jansz van den Eeckhout c 1660 Reception of Jan Karel de Cordes at the guild hall by Balthasar van den Bossche c 1711In architecture EditAlthough merchant halls were known in antiquity they fell into disuse and were not reinvented until Europe s Medieval period 68 During the 12th century powerful guilds which controlled the way that trade was conducted were established and were often incorporated into the charters granted to market towns By the 13th and 14th centuries merchant guilds had acquired sufficient resources to erect guild halls in many major market towns 69 Many buildings have retained the names derived from their former use as the home or place of business of merchants citation needed The Merchant s House Kirkcaldy Scotland Merchant Tower Kentucky USA Medieval merchant s house Southampton England Tudor Merchant s Hall Southampton England Drapers Hall Coventry England The Blacksmiths Guild Hall Venice Italy Shoemakers Guild Hall Venice Italy Brodhaus Bakers Guild Einbeck Germany Knochenhaueramtshaus Butcher s guild hall Hildesheim Germany The Butcher s Hall Antwerp Belgium The Hanseatic League Building Antwerp 16th centurySee also EditBusinessperson Capitalism Chapmen Commerce Costermonger Distribution Entrepreneur Free market Free trade Guild Guildhall Hawker History of marketing Judaism Licensed victualler Market place Mercantilism Merchant account Merchant marine Peddler Phoenicians and wine Pochteca Retail Roman commerce Barker occupation References EditReferences Merriam Webster Dictionary https www merriam webster com dictionary merchant Online Dictionary of Etymology http www etymonline com index php term merchant Honig E A Painting amp the Market in Early Modern Antwerp Yale University Press 1998 pp 4 10 Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English 2013 mer chant Demirdjian Z S Rise and Fall of Marketing in Mesopotamia A Conundrum in the Cradle of Civilization In The Future of Marketing s Past Proceedings of the 12th Annual Conference on Historical Analysis and Research in Marketing Leighton Neilson ed CA Longman Association for Analysis and Research in Marketing 2005 Rahul Oka amp Chapurukha M Kusimba The Archaeology of Trading Systems Part 1 Towards a New Trade Synthesis The Archaeology of Trading Systems Part 1 Towards a New Trade Synthesis Journal of Archaeological Research Vol 16 pp 339 395 Bar Yosef O The Upper Paleolithic Revolution Annual Review of Anthropology Vol 31 pp 363 393 Alberti M E Trade and Weighing Systems in the Southern Aegean from the Early Bronze Age to the Iron Age How Changing Circuits Influenced Global Measures in Molloy B ed Of Odysseys and Oddities Scales and Modes of Interaction Between Prehistoric Aegean Societies and their Neighbours Sheffield Studies in Aegean Archaeology Oxford Oxbow E Book 2016 Bintliff J Going to Market in Antiquity In Stuttgarter Kolloquium zur Historischen Geographie des Altertums Eckart Olshausen and Holger Sonnabend eds Stuttgart Franz Steiner 2002 pp 209 250 Shaw E H Ancient and Medieval Marketing Chapter 2 in Jones D G B and Tadajewski M The Routledge Companion to Marketing History Routledge 2016 pp 23 24 Bintliff J Going to Market in Antiquity In Stuttgarter Kolloquium zur Historischen Geographie des Altertums Eckart Olshausen and Holger Sonnabend eds Stuttgart Franz Steiner 2002 pp 209 250 https books google com books id IAMK1952av4C Parker John Henry 1876 The Other Forums The Forum Romanum Oxford James Parker amp Company p 42 Retrieved 29 June 2019 The Forum Boarium was the cattle market or Smithfield of ancient Rome Coleman P Shopping Environments Elsevier Oxford 2006 p 28 Shaw Eric H 2016 2 Ancient and medieval marketing In Jones D G Brian Tadajewski Mark eds The Routledge Companion to Marketing History Routledge Companions London Routledge p 24 ISBN 9781134688685 Retrieved 3 January 2017 Perhaps the only substantiated type of retail marketing practice that evolved from Neolithic times to the present was the itinerant tradesman also known as peddler packman or chapman These forerunners of travelling salesmen roamed from village to village bartering stone axes in exchange for salt or other goods Dixon 1975 Stabel P Guilds in Late Medieval Flanders myths and realities of guild life in an export oriented environment Journal of Medieval History vol 30 2004 pp 187 212 Rawlinson G History of Phoenicia Library of Alexandria 1889 Cartwright M Trade in the Phoenician World World History Encyclopedia 1 April 2016 Daniels 1996 p 94 95 John Noble Wilford 13 November 1999 Discovery of Egyptian Inscriptions Indicates an Earlier Date for Origin of the Alphabet New York Times lt Online https www nytimes com library national science 111499sci alphabet origin html gt Oka R and Kusimba C M The Archaeology of Trading Systems Part 1 Towards a New Trade Synthesis The Archaeology of Trading Systems Part 1 Towards a New Trade Synthesis Journal of Archaeological Research Vol 16 p 359 Tchernia A The Romans and Trade Oxford Oxford University Press 2016 Ch 1 Ashraf A Bazaar Mosque Alliance The Social Basis of Revolts and Revolutions International Journal of Politics Culture and Society Vol 1 No 4 1988 pp 538 567 Stable URL JSTOR 20006873 p 539 Decameron Web Society Brown edu Archived from the original on 1 March 2013 Retrieved 8 February 2017 Barnish S J B 1989 The Transformation of Classical Cities and the Pirenne Debate Journal of Roman Archaeology Vol 2 p 390 Curtis R I A Personalized Floor Mosaic from Pompeii American Journal of Archaeology Vol 88 No 4 October 1984 DOI 10 2307 504744 pp 557 566 Stable URL JSTOR 504744 Bintliff J Going to Market in Antiquity In Stuttgarter Kolloquium zur Historischen Geographie des Altertums Eckart Olshausen and Holger Sonnabend eds Stuttgart Franz Steiner 2002 p 229 https books google com books id IAMK1952av4C The kind of model that Morley and other specialists in Greco Roman marketing have been developing sees the local market town as primarily serving local peasantry Here they unload their small surplus and purchase minor amounts of farm equipment and luxuries for their barns and homes some of their needs are already met through travelling pedlars and non urban periodic fairs held at long intervals Major producers the great estates would be attractive enough foci for merchants to consider travelling directly to purchase commercially focussed harvests at the farm gate and some landowners were wealthy enough to handle their own distribution to urban markets in the country of production and even to other countries These latter processes are documented both in the ancient sources and archaeological case studies Millar F The World of the Golden Ass Journal of Roman Studies Vol 71 1981 pp 63 67 McLaughlin R The Roman Empire and the Silk Routes The Ancient World Economy and the Empires of Parthia Central Asia and Han China South Yorkshire Pen and Sword Books 2016 McLaughlin R The Roman Empire and the Indian Ocean The Ancient World Economy and the Kingdoms of Africa Arabia and India South Yorkshire Pen and Sword Books 2014 p 135 The pure white marble that was quarried in southern Arabia had a fine crystalline texture and Roman merchnts took aboard this heavy material as ballast to stabilise their ships On their return to the empire this valuable marble was sold to stoneworkers and carved into elegant unguent jars that resembled radiant alabaster McLaughlin R The Roman Empire and the Indian Ocean The Ancient World Economy and the Kingdoms of Africa Arabia and India South Yorkshire Pen and Sword Books 2014 p 222 A further Roman criticism of eastern trade was that it created a consumer market for expensive foreign goods that were wastefully extravagant and ultimately unnecessary During the Julio Claudian era aristocratic families competed for political status and prestige through the ostentatious display of wealth Bintliff J Going to Market in Antiquity In Stuttgarter Kolloquium zur Historischen Geographie des Altertums Eckart Olshausen and Holger Sonnabend eds Stuttgart Franz Steiner 2002 p 224 Encyclopaedia Britannica Online https www britannica com topic merchant guild Epstein S A Wage Labor and Guilds in Medieval Europe University of North Carolina Press 1991 pp 50 100 Casson M and Lee J The Origin and Development of Markets A Business History Perspective Business History Review Vol 85 Spring 2011 doi 10 1017 S0007680511000018 pp 22 26 Clerici L Le prix du bien commun Taxation des prix et approvisionnement urbain Vicence XVIe XVIIe siecle The price of the common good Official prices and urban provisioning in sixteenth and seventeenth century Vicenza in I prezzi delle cose nell eta preindustriale The Prices of Things in Pre Industrial Times forthcoming Firenze University Press 2017 Merchant Adventurers in Encyclopaedia Britannica Online Library Edition 2013 Retrieved 22 July 2013 Braudel F and Reynold S The Wheels of Commerce Civilization and Capitalism 15th to 18th Century Berkeley CA University of California Press 1992 Salomon F Pochteca and mindala a comparison of long distance traders in Ecuador and Mesoamerica Journal of the Steward Anthropological Society Vol 1 2 1978 pp 231 246 Rebecca M Seaman ed 27 August 2013 Conflict in the Early Americas An Encyclopedia of the Spanish Empire s Aztec Incan and Mayan Conquests p 375 ISBN 9781598847772 Querciolo Mazzonis 2007 Spirituality Gender and the Self in Renaissance Italy Angela Merici and the Company of St Ursula 1474 1540 CUA Press p 79 ISBN 978 0813214900 Margaret L King 2016 A Short History of the Renaissance in Europe University of Toronto Press p 332 ISBN 978 1487593087 Dion C Smythe 2016 Strangers to Themselves The Byzantine Outsider Papers from the Thirty Second Spring Symposium of Byzantine Studies University of Sussex Brighton March 1998 Routledge pp 129 130 ISBN 978 1351897808 Jeannie Labno 2016 3 Commemorating the Polish Renaissance Child Funeral Monuments and their European Context Routledge ISBN 978 1317163954 R S Alexander 2012 Europe s Uncertain Path 1814 1914 State Formation and Civil Society John Wiley amp Sons p 82 ISBN 978 1405100526 Jonathan Dewald 1996 The European Nobility 1400 1800 Cambridge University Press pp 95 96 ISBN 052142528X Southerton Dale ed 15 September 2011 Encyclopedia of Consumer Culture SAGE Publications published 2011 p xxx ISBN 9781452266534 Retrieved 16 August 2021 Jones C and Spang R Sans Culottes Sans Cafe Sans Tabac Shifting Realms of Luxury and Necessity in Eighteenth Century France Chapter 2 in Consumers and Luxury Consumer Culture in Europe 1650 1850 Berg M and Clifford H Manchester University Press 1999 Berg M New Commodities Luxuries and Their Consumers in Nineteenth Century England Chapter 3 in Consumers and Luxury Consumer Culture in Europe 1650 1850 Berg M and Clifford H Manchester University Press 1999 Minto W Daniel Defoe Tredition Classics Project Gutenberg ed Chapter 10 Richetti J The Life of Daniel Defoe A Critical Biography Malden MA Blackwell 2005 2015 pp 147 49 and 158 59 Backscheider P R Daniel Defoe His Life Baltimore Maryland Johns Hopkins University Press 1989 Bakhchinyan Artsvi 2017 The Activity of Armenian Merchants in International Trade PDF 23 29 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Vanneste R Global Trade and Commercial Networks Eighteenth Century Diamond Merchants London Pickering and Chatto 2011 ISBN 9781848930872 McKendrick N Brewer J and Plumb J H The Birth of a Consumer Society The Commercialization of Eighteenth Century England London 1982 Cox N C and Dannehl K Perceptions of Retailing in Early Modern England Aldershot Hampshire Ashgate 2007 pp 155 59 McKendrick N Brewer J and Plumb J H The Birth of a Consumer Society The Commercialization of Eighteenth Century England London 1982 Tadajewski M and Jones D G B Historical research in marketing theory and practice a review essay Journal of Marketing Management Vol 30 No 11 12 2014 Special Issue Pushing the Boundaries Sketching the Future pp 1239 1291 Flanders J They Broke It New York Times 9 January 2009 lt Online https www nytimes com 2009 01 10 opinion 10flanders html r 2 gt Drake D Dinnerware amp Cost Accounting The Story of Josiah Wedgwood Potter and Cost Accountant HQ Financial Views Volume I 1 May July 2005 pp 1 3 Applbaum K The Marketing Era From Professional Practice to Global Provisioning Routledge 2004 p 126 127 McKendrick N Brewer J and Plumb J H The Birth of a Consumer Society The Commercialization of Eighteenth Century England London 1982 Savitt R Looking Back to See Ahead Writing the History of American Retailing in Retailing The Evolution and Development of Retailing A M Findlay Leigh Sparks eds pp 138 39 Tang Lixing 14 December 2017 Merchants and Society in Modern China From Guild to Chamber of Commerce China Perspectives Routledge published 2017 ISBN 9781351612968 Retrieved 16 August 2021 We see the permutation and extension of the traditional economic elements in highly planned economy The anti commerce policy reached to such an extreme that merchants were dismissed as the capitalist heresy Graph of proportionate terminology usage Honig E A Painting amp the Market in Early Modern Antwerp Yale University Press 1998 pp 6 10 Fudge J F Commerce and Print in the Early Reformation Brill 2007 p 110 Holman T S Holbein s Portraits of the Steelyard Merchants An Investigation Metropolitan Museum Journal vol 14 1980 pp 139 158 Merchants in Motion Loes Heerink Retrieved 18 February 2022 Gelderblom O and Grafe E The Persistence and Decline of Merchant Guilds Re thinking the Comparative Study of Commercial Institutions in Pre modern Europe Working Paper Yale University 2008 Epstein S A Wage Labor and Guilds in Medieval Europe University of North Carolina Press 1991 pp 50 100Sources and further reading EditAdams Julia The Familial State Ruling Families and Merchant Capitalism in Early Modern Europe Cornell University Press 2005 Braudel F The Wheels of Commerce Civilization and Capitalism 15th to 18th Century U of California Press 1992 Burset Christian R Merchant courts arbitration and the politics of commercial litigation in the eighteenth century British Empire Law and History Review 34 3 2016 615 647 online Casson Mark The entrepreneur An economic theory Rowman amp Littlefield 1982 Influential scholarly survey Enciso Agustin Gonzalez The merchant and the common good social paradigms and the state s influence in Western history in The Challenges of Capitalism for Virtue Ethics and the Common Good Edward Elgar Publishing 2016 Julien Pierre Andre ed The state of the art in small business and entrepreneurship Routledge 2018 Lindemann Mary The Merchant Republics Amsterdam Antwerp and Hamburg 1648 1790 Cambridge UP 2015 Marsden Magnus and Vera Skvirskaja Merchant identities trading nodes and globalization Introduction to the Special Issue History and Anthropology 29 sup1 2018 S1 S13 online Smith Adam An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations Bantam Classics Annotated Edition 4 March 2003 ISBN 978 0553585971 Origo Iris The Merchant of Prato Daily Life in a Medieval Italian City Penguin UK 2017 Outhwaite R B Merchants and Gentry in North East England 1650 1830 The Carrs and the Ellisons English Historical Review 115 462 2000 729 729 Persaud Alexander Indian Merchant Migration within the British Empire Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Asian History 2020 Thrupp Sylvia L 1989 The Merchant Class of Medieval London 1300 1500 University of Michigan Press ISBN 978 0 472 06072 6 Williams E N Our Merchants Are Princes The English Middle Classes In The Eighteenth Century History Today Aug 196 2 Vol 12 Issue 8 pp548 557 External links Edit The dictionary definition of merchant at Wiktionary Media related to Merchants at Wikimedia Commons Quotations related to Merchant at Wikiquote Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Merchant amp oldid 1125888261, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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