Officers, Entrepreneurs, Career Migrants, and Diplomats
Military Entrepreneurs in the Early Modern World
Contributor(s)
Holenstein, André (editor)
Rogger, Philippe (editor)
Collection
Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF)Language
EnglishAbstract
“Money, money, and more money.” In the eyes of early modern warlords, these were the three essential prerequisites for waging war. The transnational studies presented here describe and explain how belligerent powers did indeed rely on thriving markets where military entrepreneurs provided mercenaries, weapons, money, credit, food, expertise, and other services. In a fresh and comprehensive examination of pre-national military entrepreneurship – its actors, structures and economic logic – this volume shows how readily business relationships for supplying armies in the 17th and 18th centuries crossed territorial and confessional boundaries. By outlining and explicating early modern military entrepreneurial fields of action, this new transnational perspective transcends the limits of national historical approaches to the business of war. Contributors are Astrid Ackermann, John Condren, Jasmina Cornut, Michael Depreter, Sébastien Dupuis, Marian Füssel, Julien Grand, André Holenstein, Katrin Keller, Michael Paul Martoccio, Tim Neu, David Parrott, Alexander Querengässer, Philippe Rogger, Guy Rowlands, Benjamin Ryser, Regula Schmid, and Peter H. Wilson.
Keywords
Clientelism and Patronage; business history; business of war; contractor state; contracts and alliances; diplomatic history; family and kinship; fiscal military system; logistics; mercenaries; migration; military labour; social mobility; transnational historyDOI
10.1163/9789004700857ISBN
9789004700857, 9789004515659, 9789004700857Publisher
BrillPublisher website
https://0-brill-com.catalogue.libraries.london.ac.uk/Publication date and place
2024Classification
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