Ottoman Manufacturing in the Age of the Industrial Revolution

Portada
Cambridge University Press, 3 d’oct. 2002 - 252 pàgines
This book uncovers the rich, fascinating and complex world of Ottoman manufacturing and manufacturers in the age of the European industrial revolution. Using a wealth of sources from Ottoman, European and American archives, Professor Donald Quataert explores the technological methods of producing cotton cloth, wool cloth, yarn and silk, how these changed throughout the nineteenth century, the organisation of home and workshop production and trends in the domestic and international markets. By focusing on textile manufacturing in homes and small workshops, the author reveals a dynamism that refutes traditional notions of a declining economy in the face of European expansion. He shows how manufacturers adopted a variety of strategies, such as reduced wages and low technology inputs, to confront European competitors, protect their livelihoods and retain domestic and international customers.
 

Continguts

XIV
27
XV
29
XVI
31
XVII
40
XVIII
49
XIX
61
XX
71
XXI
80
XXIX
109
XXX
116
XXXI
134
XXXII
142
XXXIII
144
XXXIV
148
XXXV
150
XXXVI
154

XXII
84
XXIII
90
XXIV
95
XXV
96
XXVI
99
XXVII
105
XXVIII
107
XXXVII
161
XXXVIII
167
XXXIX
178
XL
207
XLI
219
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