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See also: merchant and writer, was a factor in the service of the See also: mercantile See also: house of the Bardi, and in this capacity we find him at See also: Antwerp from 1315 (or earlier) to 1317; in See also: London in 1317 and apparently for some See also: time after; in See also: Cyprus from 1324 to 1327, and again (or perhaps in unbroken continuation of his former residence) in 1335
.
In this last See also: year he obtained from the See also: king of Little Armenia (i.e.
See also: medieval See also: Cilicia, &c.) a See also: grant of privileges for Florentine
See also: trade
.
Between 1335 and 1343, probably in 1339-1340, he compiled his See also: Libra di divisamenti di paesi e di misuri di mercatanzie e d'altre See also: case bisognevoli di sapere a' mercatanti, commonly known as the Pratica della mercatura (the name given it by Pagnini)
.
Beginning with a sort of glossary of See also: foreign terms then in use for all kinds of taxes or payments on merchandise as well as for " every kind of place where goods might be bought or sold in cities," the Pratica next describes some of the chief trade routes of the 14th century, and many of the See also: principal markets then known to See also: Italian merchants; the imports and exports of various important commercial regions; the business customs prevalent in each of those regions; and the See also: comparative value of the leading moneys, weights and See also: measures
.
The most distant and extensive trade routes described by Pegolotti are: (1) that from See also: Tana or See also: Azov to See also: Peking via See also: Astrakhan, See also: Khiva, Otrar, See also: Kulja and Kanchow (Gittarchan, Organci, Ottrarre, Armalecco and Camexu in the Pratica); (2) that from Lajazzo on the Cilician See also: coast to See also: Tabriz in See also: north See also: Persia via Sivas, Erzingan and See also: Erzerum (Salvastro, Arzinga and Arzerone); (3) that from See also: Trebizond to Tabriz
.
Among the markets enumerated are: Tana, Constantinople, Alexandria, See also: Damietta, and the ports of Cyprus and the See also: Crimea
.
Pegolotti's notices of ports on the north of the Black See also: Sea are very valuable; his See also: works show us that Florentine exports had now gained a high reputation in the See also: Levant
.
In other chapters an account is given of 14th-century methods of packing goods (ch
.
20; of See also: assaying gold and See also: silver (ch
.
35); of shipment; of " London in See also: England in itself " (ch
.
62); of monasteries in Scotland and England (" Scotland of England," Scozia di Inghilterra) that were See also: rich in wool (ch
.
63)
.
Among the latter are Newbattle, See also: Balmerino, See also: Cupar, See also: Dunfermline, Dundrennan, Glenluce, Coldingham, See also: Kelso, Newminster near See also: Morpeth, Furness, Fountains, Kirkstall, Kirstead, Swineshead, Sawley
and See also: Calder
.
Pegolotti's See also: interest in England and Scotland is chiefly connected with the wool trade
.
There is only one MS. of the Pratica, viz
.
No
.
2441 in the Riccardian Library at Florence (241 fols., occupying the whole See also: volume), written in 1471; and one edition of the text, in vol. iii. of Gian See also: Francesco Pagnini's Della Decima e delle altre gravezze imposte dal commune di Firenze (See also: Lisbon and Lucca—really Florence—1766) ; See also: Sir See also: Henry
See also: Yule, See also: Cathay, ii
.
279–308, translated into See also: English the most interesting sections of Pegolotti, with valuable commentary (London, See also: Hakluyt Society, 1866)
.
See also W
.
Heyd, Commerce du Levant, ii., 12, 50, 58, 78-79, 85-86, 112–119 (See also: Leipzig, 1886) ; H
.
See also: Kiepert, in Sitzungsberichte der philos.-hist
.
Cl. der berliner Akad., p
.
901, &c
.
(Berlin, 1881); C
.
R . Beazley, Dawn ofSee also: Modern Geography, iii
.
324-332, 550, 555 (See also: Oxford, 1906)
.
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