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

    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