Binding and Unwinding the British Empire: Philadelphia's German Merchants as Consumer and Political Revolutionaries

Andrew Zonderman
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Abstract

abstract:This article explores the German-speaking merchant community that arose in mid-eighteenth-century Philadelphia, and its members' efforts to integrate themselves and fellow Central European immigrants into British systems of commerce, credit, law, and politics. These naturalized merchants developed commercial ties around the Atlantic—in Great Britain, Iberia, and the Caribbean—and worked to align their largely colinguistic customer bases with British tastes and goods. They also sought to assist new arrivals through their civic and political engagement, especially through the newly formed German Society of Pennsylvania. After decades of striving to integrate themselves into the British Empire, Philadelphia's German merchants emerged as vocal critics of Parliament's imperial reforms in the late 1760s. They feared that the new laws subverted their economic gains and equality as naturalized subjects. By the 1770s German merchants financed the Patriot war effort and served within the newly independent Pennsylvania government. The merchants' activities reveal how Central Europeans, despite originating beyond Europe's metropoles, became trans-formative figures in the eighteenth-century Atlantic economy as well as in Great Britain's empire and its fracturing in North America.
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捆绑与解除大英帝国:费城的德国商人作为消费者和政治革命者
本文探讨了18世纪中期费城兴起的德语商人社区,以及其成员如何努力将自己和其他中欧移民融入英国的商业、信贷、法律和政治体系。这些归化的商人在大西洋沿岸——大不列颠、伊比利亚和加勒比地区——建立了商业联系,并努力使他们的主要客户群体与英国的口味和商品保持一致。他们还试图通过公民和政治参与,特别是通过新成立的宾夕法尼亚州德国人协会,来帮助新来者。经过几十年的努力融入大英帝国,费城的德国商人在18世纪60年代末成为议会帝国改革的直言不讳的批评者。他们担心新的法律会破坏他们作为归化主体的经济利益和平等。到18世纪70年代,德国商人资助了爱国者的战争努力,并在新独立的宾夕法尼亚州政府中任职。这些商人的活动揭示了中欧人是如何在18世纪大西洋经济、大英帝国及其在北美的分裂中成为变革性人物的,尽管他们起源于欧洲大都市之外。
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18
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