American Versus West Indian Traders in Liverpool, 1793–1815
S. G. Checkland
The Journal of Economic History, 1958, vol. 18, issue 2, 141-160
Abstract:
The war between Britain and France, extending over some twenty two years down to 1815, lies across the great formative period of modern Western society. Like all of its kind, the war may be regarded from two points of view: First, it altered the societies involved in it, as fighting needs conflicted with peaceable ones; second, it affected the nexus which binds countries together—trade and its financing.
Date: 1958
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