Location:  Home » Transportation Industry » Shipbuilders of the Venetian Arsenal: Workers and Workplace in the Preindustrial City (The Johns Hopkins University Studies in Historical and Political Science)  

Shipbuilders of the Venetian Arsenal: Workers and Workplace in the Preindustrial City (The Johns Hopkins University Studies in Historical and Political Science)

Shipbuilders of the Venetian Arsenal: Workers and Workplace in the Preindustrial City (The Johns Hopkins University Studies in Historical and Political Science)Author: Robert C. Davis
Publisher: The Johns Hopkins University Press
Category: Book

List Price: $25.00
Buy New: $22.49
as of 9/9/2010 13:35 CDT details
You Save: $2.51 (10%)

Qty 2 In Stock


New (14) Used (3) from $20.50

Seller: the_book_depository_
Sales Rank: 1066376

Media: Paperback
Pages: 280
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1
Dimensions (in): 8.8 x 6.1 x 0.7

ISBN: 0801886252
Dewey Decimal Number: 940
EAN: 9780801886256
ASIN: 0801886252

Publication Date: January 11, 2007
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Also Available In:

  • Hardcover - Shipbuilders of the Venetian Arsenal: Workers and Workplace in the Preindustrial City (The Johns Hopkins University Studies in Historical and Political Science)

Similar Items:


Editorial Reviews:

Product Description

The master ship builders of seventeenth-century Venice formed part of what was arguably the greatest manufacturing complex in early modern Europe. As many as three thousand masters, apprentices, and laborers regularly worked in the city's enormous shipyards. This is the social history of the men and women who helped maintain not only the city's dominion over the sea but also its stability and peace.

Drawing on a variety of documents that include nearly a thousand petitions from the shipbuilders to the Venetian governments as well as on parish records, inventories, and wills, Robert C. Davis offers a vivid and compelling account of these early modern workers. He explores their mentality and describes their private and public worlds (which in some ways, he argues, prefigured the factories and company towns of a later era). He uncovers the far-reaching social and cultural role played by women in this industrial community. He shows how the Venetian government formed its shipbuilders into a militia to maintain public order. And he describes the often colorful ways in which Venetians dealt with the tensions that role provoked -- including officially sanctioned community fistfights on the city's bridges.

The recent decision by the Italian government to return the Venetian Arsenal to civilian control has sparked renewed interest in the subject among historians. Shipbuilders of the Venetian Arsenal offers new evidence on the ways in which large, state-run manufacturing operations furthered the industrialization process, as well as on the extent of workers' influence on the social dynamics of the early modern European city.



Subcategories
Paperback
Mass Market
Trade