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Quantifying Trade from Renaissance Merchant Letters

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  • Fabio Gatti

Abstract

Medieval and Early-Modern business correspondence between European companies constitutes a rich source of economic, business, and trade information in that the writing of letters was the very instrument through which merchants ordered and organized the shipments of goods, and performed financial operations. While a comprehensive analysis of such material enables scholars to re-construct the supply chains and sales of various goods, as well as identify the trading networks in the Europe, much of the archival sources have not undergone any systematic and quantitative analysis. In this paper we develop a new holistic and quantitative approach for analysing the entire outgoing, and so far unexploited, correspondence of a major Renaissance merchantbank - the Saminiati & Guasconi company of Florence - for the first years of its activity. After digitization of the letters, we employ an AI-based HTR model on the Transkribus platform and perform an automated-text analysis over the HTR-model’s output. For each letter (6,376 epistles) this results in the identification of the addressee (446 merchants), their place of residence (65 towns), and the traded goods (27 main goods). The approach developed arguably provides a best-practice methodology for the quantitative treatment of medieval and early-modern merchant letters and the use of the derived historical text as data

Suggested Citation

  • Fabio Gatti, 2024. "Quantifying Trade from Renaissance Merchant Letters," Diskussionsschriften dp2403, Universitaet Bern, Departement Volkswirtschaft.
  • Handle: RePEc:ube:dpvwib:dp2403
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Grimmer, Justin & Stewart, Brandon M., 2013. "Text as Data: The Promise and Pitfalls of Automatic Content Analysis Methods for Political Texts," Political Analysis, Cambridge University Press, vol. 21(3), pages 267-297, July.
    2. Pezzolo, Luciano & Tattara, Giuseppe, 2008. "“Una fiera senza luogo”: Was Bisenzone an International Capital Market in Sixteenth-Century Italy?," The Journal of Economic History, Cambridge University Press, vol. 68(4), pages 1098-1122, December.
    3. Benoît Maréchaux, 2023. "Business organisation in the Mediterranean Sea: Genoese galley entrepreneurs in the service of the Spanish Empire (late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries)," Business History, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 65(1), pages 56-87, January.
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    Cited by:

    1. McLaughlin, Eoin & Sharp, Paul & Skovsgaard, Christian Volmar & Vedel, Christian, 2024. "Milk Wars: Cooperation, Contestation, Conflict and the Irish War of Independence," CAGE Online Working Paper Series 737, Competitive Advantage in the Global Economy (CAGE).
    2. Robert J R Elliott & Fabio Gatti & Eric Strobl, 2024. "The Trade Effects of the Plague: The Saminiati and Guasconi Bank of Florence (1626-1634)," Working Papers 0271, European Historical Economics Society (EHES).

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