London: The Selden Map and the Making of a Global City, 1549-1689

London: The Selden Map and the Making of a Global City, 1549-1689

by Robert K. Batchelor
London: The Selden Map and the Making of a Global City, 1549-1689

London: The Selden Map and the Making of a Global City, 1549-1689

by Robert K. Batchelor

eBook

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Overview

A historian recounts the unlikely rise of a world capital, and how its understanding of Asia played a key role.
 
If one had looked for a potential global city in Europe in the 1540s, the most likely candidate would have been Antwerp, which had emerged as the center of the German and Spanish silver exchange as well as the Portuguese spice and Spanish sugar trades. It almost certainly would not have been London, an unassuming hub of the wool and cloth trade with a population of around 75,000, still trying to recover from the onslaught of the Black Plague.
 
But by 1700, London’s population had reached a staggering 575,000 and it had developed its first global corporations, as well as relationships with non-European societies outside the Mediterranean. What happened in the span of a century and half? And how exactly did London transform itself into a global city? London’s success, Robert K. Batchelor argues, lies not just with the well-documented rise of Atlantic settlements, markets, and economies. Using his discovery of a network of Chinese merchant shipping routes on John Selden’s map of China as his jumping-off point, Batchelor reveals how London also flourished because of its many encounters, engagements, and exchanges with East Asian trading cities. Translation plays a key role in Batchelor’s study—not just of books, manuscripts, and maps, but also of meaning and knowledge across cultures. He demonstrates how translation helped London understand and adapt to global economic conditions. Looking outward at London’s global negotiations, Batchelor traces the development of its knowledge networks back to a number of foreign sources, and credits particular interactions with England’s eventual political and economic autonomy from church and King.
 
London offers a much-needed non-Eurocentric history of London, first by bringing to light and then by synthesizing the many external factors and pieces of evidence that contributed to its rise as a global city. It will appeal to students and scholars interested in the cultural politics of translation, the relationship between merchants and sovereigns, and the cultural and historical geography of Britain and Asia.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780226080796
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Publication date: 03/04/2020
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 341
Sales rank: 624,732
File size: 17 MB
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About the Author

Robert K. Batchelor is associate professor of history at Georgia Southern University. He lives in Savannah, GA.

Table of Contents

Introduction: Translating Asia
The View from the Library
The Global City
The Question of Translation
The Subject of the Book
 
1. The Global Corporation
1553: The Joint-Stock Company
Redefining the Translator
The Cosmographic Break
Asian Demands: The Emerging Silver Cycle
 
2. National Autonomy
1588: Reading a Chinese Map in London
Translating “China” and “Giapan”
Exchanging Chinese Maps
The State and Sovereign Space
 
3. The Value of History: Languages, Records, and Laws
1619: John Selden, Hugo Grotius, and East Asia
Legal Relations: Opening London to Asian Trade
Asian Libraries in London, Oxford, and Cambridge
The Selden Map
 
4. The Image of Absolutism
1661: Taming the Rebellious Emporium
Asia and the Problem of Restored Sovereignty
Absolutism and John Ogilby’s World Picture
Brokering the Absolutist Image: Interventions from Bombay and Taiwan
 
5. The System of the World
1687: Global Revolutions
The Search for New Translation Methods
The Newtonian System
 
Conclusion: Asia and the Making of Modern London
Acknowledgments
A Note on Manuscripts
Notes
Index
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