First Published in 1985. When modern sovereign states were first
established in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries they did not
immediately assume full control over their national economies. The
arrangements inherited from the middle-ages survived for some time
so that ports, inland commercial centres, provinces and even
private persons retained a wide measure of control over the
movement of goods from one place to another. This study looks at
the rise and development of the great industries of Western Europe
through the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. The Common Market
of the twentieth century owed much to the pioneer work of
nineteenth-century statesmen who attempted in various ways to
liberalize European trade.
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