Venice's close trading relationship with the Ottomans is often cited as evidence of commercial 'pragmatism': "Venetians first, Christians second".
But in fact, Venice was committed to a highly idealised and ideologically-charged notion of her commercial role.
Posts by Jake Dyble
6 months ago
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๐จ New Law & History Review article alert:
@jakedyble.bsky.social Jake Dyble, "The Twentieth-Century Origins of the Medieval Lex Mercatoria Thesis"
Open Access โ
doi.org/10.1017/S073...
9 months ago
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Superb intellectual history/genealogy of the "lex mercatoria" by @jakedyble.bsky.social! I learned so much from this piece and you will too!
9 months ago
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My current side project: the historically themed card game, FORTUNA. As merchants from the golden age of sail, players must trade, bluff, and avoid disaster.
If you're interested in learning more and following the development journey, sign up for the newsletter below:
mailchi.mp/13cc6aa303d9...
1 year ago
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