 | Milja van Tielhof - 2002 - 370 oldal
...Amsterdam grain market; and 3) the Baltic trade in general. To raise security at sea during the wars at the end of the seventeenth and the beginning of the eighteenth century, the delegates of Baltic merchants chartered small ships to warn the merchant fleet of privateers or... | |
 | Gordon Collier, Ulrich Fleischmann - 2003 - 550 oldal
...Africa and Surmname in the Caribbean, During the formative era of the Guyanese plantation economies: ie at the end of the seventeenth and the beginning of the eighteenth century (1680—1720), the Slave Coast was the chief supplier of slaves to Suriname (almost three-fifths).... | |
 | Wiep Van Bunge - 2003 - 268 oldal
...anderen Körper mitteilen kann.' V. Geulincx Muzzled Arnold Geulincx must have had quite an audience at the end of the seventeenth and the beginning of the eighteenth century. His Ethics was published in at least eight editions: five in Latin and three in Dutch. 47 We know that... | |
 | Steven E. Lobell - 2009 - 256 oldal
...According to Rosecrance and Taw, “Dutch capital largely financed British commercial and industrial growth at the end of the seventeenth and the beginning of the eighteenth century. Similarly, British investment provided an essential stimulus to the growth of the United States both... | |
 | Gordon Collier, Ulrich Fleischmann - 2003 - 550 oldal
...Africa and Suriname in the Caribbean. During the formative era of the Guyanese plantation economies: ie at the end of the seventeenth and the beginning of the eighteenth century (1680—1720), the Slave Coast was the chief supplier of slaves to Suriname (almost three-fifths).... | |
 | Clement C. J. Webb - 2004 - 286 oldal
...playing a considerable part in the Trinitarian controversy which agitated the learned of that country at the end of the seventeenth and the beginning of the eighteenth century. But it afterwards seems almost to have disappeared from the English language. As a philosophical term... | |
 | Nicholas Russell - 2007 - 284 oldal
...procedure seems to have been adequate at this date for the generation of successful racehorses. 28 At the end of the seventeenth and the beginning of the eighteenth century, one of the leading owners and breeders of racehorses in England was John Hervey, first Earl of Bristol,... | |
| |