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The Cotton Industry of Northern Italy in the Late Middle Ages: 1150–1450

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 May 2010

Maureen Fennell Mazzaoui
Affiliation:
Indiana University

Extract

In studies of the late medieval economy, the dominant position of the textile industry has long been recognized. Since the opening decades of this century however, scholarly attention has been directed almost exclusively toward the luxury industries of silk and fine woolens, which involved a complex financial and commercial structure geared to the satisfaction of the needs and desires of a wealthy and select clientele. Relatively neglected is that branch of the textile industry devoted to the production of low-priced cotton cloth for popular consumption. This neglect is all the more surprising in view of a rich if somewhat dispersed documentation attesting to the importance of this industry in numerous towns of Northern Italy. The large-scale production of cotton cloth posed problems of financing and organization not unlike those of silk and wool and gave rise to similar entrepreneurial forms. At the same time a study of the organization of cotton manufacture provides a number of unique insights into aspects of economic organization in Northern Italy. In the period covered by this paper, the cotton manufacturing centers of this area formed a single production zone characterized by a high degree of economic interdependence and a marked tendency toward the standardization of products.

Type
Papers Presented at the Thirty-first Annual Meeting of the Economic History Association
Copyright
Copyright © The Economic History Association 1972

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References

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3 The Paduan Da Nono lamented the preference of the upper classes for fine linens over the more common cotton cloth or pignolato in the thirteenth century. Cessi, La Corporazione …, pp. 25–26.

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14 In addition to the sources cited in fn. 1, see Borlandi, “Futainiers …,” pp. 135–136; Schulte, Mittelalt. Handels, p. 140; Wescher, “Cotton and Cotton Trade …,” pp. 2329–2331.

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28 These measurements concerned primarily the so called panno stricto. See Mazzaoui, “Cotonieri Veronesi,” pp. 146–47.

29 Pegolotti, La Practica …, p. 180.

30 Mazzaoui, “Cotonieri Veronesi,” p. 142. Cf. also Simeoni, Statuti, pp. 130, 131, 170–83; Pancotti, VincenzoI Paratici Vicentini e I Loro Statuti (Piacenza: Biblioteca Storica Piacentina. 19251930), pp. 323–26Google Scholar; Monticolo, I Capitolari …, II, pt. 2, pp. 548–51, 557, 568; Gaudenzi, Statuti …, II, p. 405.

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34 Ibid., pp. 59–61; In the light of the Italian documentation it is difficult to accept Endrei's affirmation (p. 109) that the bow was only rarely used for beating cotton in the middle ages.

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36 On the labor of religious houses see Cessi, La Corporazione … p. 15.

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39 For a discussion of these institutions see Gualazzini, Ugo, “Rapporti fra Capitale e Lavoro nelle Industrie Tessili Lombarde del Medio Evo,” Memorie dell' Instituto Giuridico della R. Università di Torino, series II, XX (1932), pp. 34 ff, 70 ff.Google Scholar On the Casa dei Mercanti in Verona, see Mazzaoui, “Cotonieri Veronesi,” pp. 103 ff.

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53 A.S.V. Casa dei Mercanti II, f. 145 v–152 r.

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56 Heers, Gênes, p. 229.