1st Edition

A Short History of the World's Shipping Industry

By C. Ernest Fayle Copyright 2005
344 Pages
by Routledge

320 Pages
by Routledge

344 Pages
by Routledge

This book outlines the story of shipping as a business and describes the way in which, at each period of the world's history, merchant ships were owned and operated. It provides information on the relations between ship-owners and governments, and the conditions of life and work afloat.

Prologue: The Sea as barrier and highway

1. 'Ships of Tarshish' - the sea-traders of antiquity

2. 'Brides of the Adriatic' - The Mediterranean epoch

3. King Herring and Golden Fleece - the early shipping industry of northern Europe

4. The wealth of the Indies - The opening of the ocean routes

5. Merchant adventurers - the rise of England

6. 'The prodigious increase of the Netherlands' - the Dutch as general carriers

7. 'Ships, colonies and commerce' - the era of the navigation acts

8. 'The shipping interest' - the carrying trade in the eighteenth century

9. 'White wings' and 'tin kettles' - the clipper ship ear and the rise of steam

10. Liners and tramps - the evolution of the modern shipping industry

11. Competition and combination - the organisation of modern shipping

12. The world's key industry - the shipping industry's today

Biography

C. Ernest Fayle