Britain's global trade in the Great Days of Sail - John McAleer
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Britain's history has been shaped by its relationship with the sea. The possibilities and profits offered by maritime trade were particularly important in defining the country's development as a global power in the Age of Sail. Richly illustrated with images and objects from the collection of the National Maritime Museum and beyond, this lecture explores how British overseas trade went hand in hand with Britain's global empire in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Britain's commercial success was built on complex and multifaceted foundations. Trade with colonies in the Atlantic Ocean, initially conducted through chartered companies, was increasingly financed, organised and operated by private merchants. Meanwhile, the East India Company, based in the City of London, jealously protected its monopoly on British trade east of the Cape of Good Hope. And all of this commercial activity relied on the protection offered by the Royal Navy. The systems of global connections and international trade created by these circumstances laid the basis for Britain's global empire and continue to affect our world today. [All images featured in this lecture are courtesy of the National Maritime Museum, Greenwich.] The transcript and downloadable versions of the lecture are available from the full conference's page on the Gresham College website: http://www.gresham.ac.uk/lectures-and-events/soothing-the-savage-breast Gresham College has been giving free public lectures since 1597. This tradition continues today with all of our five or so public lectures a week being made available for free download from our website. http://http://www.gresham.ac.uk
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can you upload your videos with high resolution ...thanks
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Could'nt of said it better :)
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Ships manifests uncovered in India House in London, unveil more than tea in those clippers. Prime poppy seeds were grown in Kew Gardens in London, then shipped to India, and then the raw opium was shipped to China to make China a nation of Opium addicts, it was organized by Lord Palmerston, and was known to all the lords and ladies of Britain, the profits were shared among what is known today as The Committee of 300." The descendants of this cabal, still run the world today with an iron grip.
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