ABSTRACT

Trading Companies and Travel Knowledge in the Early Modern World explores the links between trade, empire, exploration, and global information transfer during the early modern period. By charting how the leaders, members,
employees, and supporters of different trading companies gathered, processed, employed, protected, and divulged intelligence about foreign lands, peoples, and markets, this book throws new light on the internal uses of information by corporate actors and the ways they engaged with, relied on, and supplied various external publics. This ranged from using secret knowledge to beat competitors, to shaping debates about empire, and to forcing Europeans to reassess their understandings of specific environments due to contacts with non-European peoples. Reframing our understanding of trading companies through the lens of travel literature, this volume brings together thirteen experts in the field to facilitate a new understanding of how European corporations and empires were shaped by global webs of
information exchange

part I|92 pages

Managing information

chapter 2|21 pages

Mapping travel knowledge

The use of maps on the first Dutch voyages to Asia

chapter 3|28 pages

Writing that travels

The Dutch East India Company's 
paper-based information management

part II|68 pages

Multiple actors and perspectives

chapter 6|25 pages

William Hawkins in the Mughal Court, 1608–1611

Cultural, social, and affective 
boundary-crossings

chapter 7|19 pages

Writing the macabre

Travel, taxation, and the Bengal famine of 1770

chapter 8|23 pages

Reading marginalised, 
non-European agency in EIC-Nepalese encounters

The expeditions of William Kirkpatrick, 1793, and Maulvi Abdul Kadir Khan, 1795

part III|116 pages

Company lives

chapter 10|29 pages

‘Passages recollected by memory’

Remembering the Levant Company 
in seventeenth-century merchants' 
life writing

chapter 11|26 pages

‘Blackened and whispered away my reputation’

Fashioning a reputation in the late 
seventeenth-century Levant Company

chapter 12|22 pages

‘Unburying’ company history

Reconstructing European company 
narratives through digital 
cemetery archives

chapter 13|9 pages

Afterword