Knowledge Exchanges Between Portugal and Europe
Maritime Diplomacy, Espionage, and Nautical Science in the Early Modern World (15th-17th Centuries)
Collection
European Research Council (ERC)Language
EnglishAbstract
Following recent historiographical appeals on the need to study knowledge exchanges between European maritime rivals and their impact on overseas expansionist processes, this book makes this study for the Portuguese overseas empire between the fifteenth and seventeenth centuries. As the first European maritime power to systematically launch long-distance voyages, Portugal became a model worth emulation when Spain, France, England and the Dutch Republic started their own overseas enterprises. In different chapters that each adopt a case study relation (Portugal-Spain, Portugal-England, Portugal-France and Portugal-Dutch Republic), this book documents how Portuguese maritime knowledge was outsourced by its maritime rivals. The impact that Portuguese nautical knowledge had is evaluated, resorting particularly to a wide range of diplomatic and espionage documents. Finally, the book discusses the alleged Iberian secrecy policies regarding maritime knowledge, explaining why there is no serious reason to consider their success.
Keywords
Secrecy, espionage, interchange, navyDOI
10.5117/9789048560479ISBN
9789048560479, 9789048560486Publisher
Amsterdam University PressPublisher website
https://www.aup.nl/Publication date and place
Amsterdam, 2024Grantor
Series
Maritime Humanities, 1400-1800, 7Classification
Specialised gardening methods
Nature and the natural world: general interest