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E-grāmata: Urban Logistic Network: Cities, Transport and Distribution in Europe from the Middle Ages to Modern Times

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This edited collection examines the formation of urban networks and role of gateways in Europe from the Middle Ages to the modern world. In the past, gateway cities were merely perceived as transport points, only relevant to maritime shipping. Today they are seen as the organic entities coordinating the allocation of resources and supporting the growth, efficiency and sustainability of logistics (including both the transport and distribution of goods and services). Using different historical case studies, the authors consider how logistics shaped urban networks and were shaped by them.
1 Introduction
1(22)
Giovanni Favero
Michael-W. Serruys
Miki Sugiura
Part I A Single Gateway
2 Gateway of Gothenburg
23(30)
Per Hallen
Part II Changing Shapes of Urban Networks
3 Bordeaux from Its Vineyards to Its Hinterland: A Regional Capital in the Late Middle Ages
53(22)
Sandrine Lavaud
4 Urban Networks on the Move: The Austrian Netherlands' Transit Policy and the Development of the Belgian Urban Networks in the Eighteenth Century (1704-1793)
75(26)
Michael-W. Serruys
5 Persistence and Evolution in the Eastern Sicilian Coastal Corridor: The Mobility of Goods and People at the Port of Catania (1817-1860)
101(22)
Giovanni Cristina
6 Bridging the Gap: The Belfast-Dublin Railway Corridor in the Nineteenth Century
123(22)
Agustina Martire
Part III The Making of a Regional Network
7 Urban Network and Economic Policy: The Milanese Case During the Spanish and Austrian Ages
145(16)
Giovanna Tonelli
8 The Construction of an Inland Gateway: Milan in the Course of the Early Modern Period
161(12)
Luca Mocarelli
9 Gateways as Inter-Modal Nodes in Different Ages: The Venetian Region, Eighteenth to Twentieth Centuries
173(20)
Giovanni Favero
Part IV Using the Network
10 The Flaxseed Trade Between Courland and Brittany in the Eighteenth Century
193(16)
Pierrick Pourchasse
11 Ports and Their Functions: Some Reflections About Preindustrial Logistics
209(16)
Werner Scheltjens
12 Tracking Waters: Small Cities Transport Network of Early Modern Friesland
225(24)
Miki Sugiura
Index 249
Giovanni Favero is Professor of Economic History at the Ca' Foscari University of Venice, Italy, in the Department of Management. In 2018-19 he was the Thomas K. McCraw Visiting Fellow in US Business History at Harvard Business School. He works on organisational history in a long term perspective.





Michael-W. Serruys is a Marie Skodowska Curie Action Fellow at the Université de Bretagne Occidentale in Brest, France. In recent years his main focus lay on 18th century Belgian economic, maritime and transport history. As a MSCA Fellow he now researches the societal effects of environmental crisis, like the shipworm epidemic in 18th century Western Europe.





Miki Sugiura is Professor of Global Economic History at the Faculty of Economics of Hosei University, Japan. Currently (2018-2020) she is Visiting Professor of Global History and Culture at the University of Warwick. Her research interests include historyof distribution and trade organizations, urban formation and womens property formation. She also has published recently multiple articles and books on circulations and recycling of textile products.