Merchants, pedlars and pirates: a history of Scotland's relations with Northern Germany and the Baltic in the later Middle Ages
dc.contributor.author
Ditchburn, David
en
dc.date.accessioned
2013-06-26T12:42:26Z
dc.date.available
2013-06-26T12:42:26Z
dc.date.issued
1988
dc.description.abstract
The history of Scotland's relations with northern
Germany and the Baltic in the middle ages can be approached
from various angles. A few Scottish crusaders fought in
Prussia. Some Scottish students studied at continental
universities. In the fifteenth century Scottish kings
sought to establish marital and military alliances with
the kings and princes of northern Europe. Although
mention is made of these intellectual, crusading and
political contacts, the thesis is mainly concerned with
an examination of the trading links between Scotland
and the various geographical groups of Hanseatic towns.
Merchants from western Germany and the Wendish
towns were visiting Scotland'by at least the later
thirteenth century. During the fourteenth century,
however, the prosperous basis of the Scottish economy
was overturned by war devastation and climatic
regression. The quality of Scottish wool, the principal
Scottish export, declined. Diversification into other
exports failed to compensate for the drop in wool exports.
German commercial activity in Scotland declined. Scottish
merchants came to dominate the conduct of Scotland's German
trade. There was a shift in the focus of this trade from
western to eastern Germany. The Scots could more readily
obtain supplies of grain and flax in Prussia. It was
also to Prussia, in particular, that many Scots emigrated
in order to seek a livelihood from peddling a mixture
of Scottish wares to the poorer sections of Prussian
society.
The conduct of trade was facilitated by the
introduction of more sophisticated commercial techniques.
Compared to Italian merchants, however, the commercial
practices of Scottish and Hanseatic merchants were
not particularly innovative. Scottish-Hanseatic trade
was also impeded by a number of factors over which
merchants and skippers had little control. Ships might
be shipwrecked or attacked by political enemies. Pirates
were also a danger and, in response to a sustained campaign
of Scottish piracy in the early fifteenth century, the
Hansa imposed an embargo on Scottish trade. Such
impediments to trade, coupled with the generally
depressed economic climate, probably ensured that
Scotland's Baltic trade was in deficit. Thus,
Scotland's Baltic trade probably contributed to the
overall trade deficit of the later medieval Scottish
economy.
en
dc.identifier.other
327783
dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/1842/6878
dc.language.iso
eng
dc.publisher
University of Edinburgh
en
dc.subject
History
en
dc.title
Merchants, pedlars and pirates: a history of Scotland's relations with Northern Germany and the Baltic in the later Middle Ages
en
dc.type.qualificationname
PhD Doctor of Philosophy
en
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