Gender at Sea: Women and the East India Company in Seventeenth-Century London
chapter
posted on 2023-05-22, 11:35authored bySharpe, P
Journalistic comment on the recent anti-globalization protests make the assumption that multinational trade, where companies take on some of the functions of nations, is a modern phenomenon. Yet the East India Companies of the various states of the seventeenth century present some similar circumstances, and the English East India Company has recently celebrated its 400th anniversary. As the major historian of the English East India Company, Chaudhuri, put it: 'In many ways, the East India Company was the direct ancestor of the modern giant. 'business firm, handling a multitude of trading products and operating in an international setting.'! The East India Company traded on the seas -the pre-eminent commercial realm of the early modern period -but also their operations included quasi-banking functions, property management and a role in the relief of . poverty.
History
Publication title
Women, Work and Wages in England 1600-1850
Editors
P Lane, N Raven & K Snell
Pagination
47-67
ISBN
1-898529-20-5
Department/School
School of Humanities
Publisher
The Boydell Press
Place of publication
Woodbridge
Extent
10101
Repository Status
Restricted
Socio-economic Objectives
Understanding past societies not elsewhere classified