Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://scholarhub.balamand.edu.lb/handle/uob/6188
Title: The customs adopted in the treaties concluded between the Mamluk sultans and the Venetian doges (13th-15th centuries)
Other Titles: العادات المتّبعة في إبرام المعاهدات بين السلاطين المماليك والدوقات البنادقة (بين القرنين الثالث عشر والخامس عشر)
Les usages adoptés dans les traités conclus entre les sultans mamelouks et les doges vénitiens (XIIIe-XVe siècles)
Authors: Moukarzel, Pierre
Keywords: Customs
Treaties
Mamluk Sultans
Venetian Doges
13th-15th century
Issue Date: 2017
Publisher: University of Balamand
Part of: Chronos
Issue: 36
Start page: 137
End page: 162
Abstract: 
Venice's economic and diplomatic relationship with the Mamluk sultanate dated back to the thirteenth century. It became the Mamluk's main and favorite European trading partner during the fourteenth and the fifteenth centuries. As international trade grew and commercial exchange intensified, Venice concluded treaties with the sultans and obtained privileges for its nationals. These privileges were at least equal and often superior to those adopted in trade among European merchant cities. The Venetian privileges in Egypt and Syria did not mean an agreement between two States, but a concession made by the sultan for a group of foreign traders living on his territories. This concession protected them as far as it recognized them legally, not only granted the protection, but especially gave a legal and social existence to the traders. Regular negotiations became established and embassies were sent to Cairo to protect a climate of good agreement indispensable to the realization of fruitful exchanges between Venice and the East. If the claims of the Venetians did not stop from the thirteenth till the fifteenth centuries and occupied the largest part of treaties with the sultans, it was because they constituted means to exercise a certain pressure on the sultan and to oppose to his commercial policy.
URI: https://scholarhub.balamand.edu.lb/handle/uob/6188
Open URL: Link to full text
Type: Journal Article
Appears in Collections:Chronos

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