Seafarers were the first workers to inhabit a truly international labour
market. They worked in an economic sector – the maritime one – which,
throughout the early modern period, drove European economic and imperial
expansion, technological and scientific development and cultural and
material exchanges around the world. The period from the late sixteenth to
the early nineteenth centuries was a time of economic and cultural transition,
punctuated by crises, in which new emergent powers challenged the
dominance of older centres, legal systems were reshaped by international
interactions, and skilled labourers were subjected to the pressures of interconnecting
and growing economies. Sailors were key protagonists throughout
all of these developments, intertwined in the long and complicated
process of globalisation. The cumulative actions of their myriad and diverse
working lives are of pivotal importance to understanding this era and its
consequences.
Although frequently seen as homogeneous and powerless, seamen possessed
a degree of individual agency which deserves to be recognised: to
understand that agency, its limits and its consequences is the primary aim
of this volume. Given the mobility of seafarers and the flexibility of their
employment between different national domains, it is of crucial importance
to adopt a comparative approach if we are to contemplate the workings of
this global labour market, the actions of seamen within it and their ultimate
impact. It is equally critical to reconcile the vast but practically faceless context
of economic factors and legal codes in maritime trade with the experiences of
individual people and communities. These two dimensions have sometimes
been overlooked in historical research on seafarers, often written within a
single national history or, when international comparisons are pursued, most
regularly presented in broad statistical terms. Even beyond national histories,
there has been a tendency to work within oceanic regions rather than to draw
comparisons and connections between them, and more attention has been
given to European sailors’ activities in the Atlantic and Indian Oceans than
to seafaring in the Mediterranean, despite its continuing importance to the
European economy and international politics, and the profound influence
of Mediterranean traditions upon maritime practices elsewhere. Moreover,
where research has explored the globalisation of European legal regimes and
seafarers’ involvement in it, scholars have often focused on colonisation,
piracy and war, while the customary and civil law apparatus through which
the vast bulk of maritime trade was regulated has been neglected.