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Buying Cannons Outside : When, Why, How Many? : the Supplying of Foreign Iron Cannons for the Spanish Navy in the Eighteenth Century
P. 130-152
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Dans le même volume
- Introduction
- Supplying the Belligerent Countries : Transnational Trading Networks during the Napoleonic Wars
- Trading with the Enemy : British Private Trade and the Supply of Arms to India, c. 1750-1820
- Global Power, Local Connections : The Dutch Admiralties and their Supply Networks
- Provisioning the Combined Army in Germany, 1758-1762 : Who Benefited?
- Victualling Louis XV's Armies. : the Munitionnaire des Vivres de Flandres et d'Allemagne and the Military Supply System
- Who Spends the Spanish Inquisition's Money?
- Buying Cannons Outside : When, Why, How Many? : the Supplying of Foreign Iron Cannons for the Spanish Navy in the Eighteenth Century
- Contractors, Warships of the Royal Navy and Sea Power, 1739-1748
- War, Government and the Market : the Direction of the Debate on the British Contractor State, c. 1740-1815
- Contracts and the Role of the State : Portuguese Military Provisions Supply System in the Early Nineteenth Century
- A Global Perspective for the Comprehension of Fiscal State Formation across Eurasia from the Rise of Venice to the Opium War.
- The Royal African Company's contractors
- Buying Supplies from your Enemy or how the French Navy Stocked up with Products from the North in the Eighteenth Century
- Contracting and Accounting : Spanish Army Expenditure in Wardrobe and the General Treasury Accounts in Eighteenth Century
- The Transformation of Tokugawa Military Regime in the First Half of the Eighteenth Century in Japan : with Special Reference to Yoshimune's Reformation
- Contractor State and Mercantilism : the Spanish-Navy Hemp, Rigging and Sailcloth Supply Policy in the Second Half of the Eighteenth Century