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3 - Caravan Business in the Age of Steam Ships and Railways

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 January 2025

Philippe Pétriat
Affiliation:
Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne
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Summary

This chapter discusses the resilience of caravans in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries by suggesting a move from competition and technologies-focused narratives to more comprehensive histories of mobility. The aim is not to deny the transformative effects of steam and, later, automobiles. It rather promotes a synergy approach in which speed was not systematically the decisive factor and the experience of mobility and the ‘channelling’ (V. Huber) was not yet an unescapable feature. Geography, season, markets’ specific features provided economic rationality to slow, incremental and yet efficient type of mobility. As suggested by the intertwined histories of the chapter, this did not influence economic calculations only. The persistence of caravan trade and its connection to a widening array of means of mobility also had an influence on the very working of inland territories from urban settlements along caravan routes to the cities’ daily connections with the steppe and desert.

Type
Chapter
Information
The Last Caravan
Camels, Traders and Markets in the Middle East
, pp. 127 - 179
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2025

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