Before the discovery of the Cape of Good Hope the spices,
drugs, incense, carpets, tapestries, porcelains, and gems of India, China, and
the East Indies reached the West by three main routes. All had been used in
ancient times. The central and most important route led up the Persian
Gulf and Tigris River to Bagdad, from which city goods went by caravan to
Antioch or Damascus. The southern route reached Cairo and Alexandria by way of
the Red Sea and the Nile. By taking advantage of the monsoons, a merchant ship
could make the voyage from India to Egypt in about three months. The northern
route, entirely overland, led to ports on the Black Sea and thence to
Constantinople. It traversed high mountain passes and long stretches of desert,
and could profitably be used only for the transport of valuable articles small
in bulk. The conquests of the Ottoman Turks greatly interfered with the use of
this route by Christians after the middle of the fifteenth century.
EUROPEAN TRADE ROUTES
Oriental goods, upon reaching the Mediterranean, could be
transported by water to northern Europe. Every year the Venetians sent a fleet
loaded with eastern products to Bruges in Flanders, a city which was the most
important depot of trade with Germany, England, and Scandinavia. Bruges also
formed the terminus of the main overland route leading from Venice over the
Alps and down the Rhine. But as the map indicates, many other commercial
highways linked the Mediterranean with the North Sea and the Baltic.
COMMERCIAL RELATIONS
It is important to note that until late in the Middle Ages
trade existed, not between nations, but between cities. A merchant of London
was almost as much a foreigner in any other English city as he would have been
in Bruges, Paris, or Cologne. Consequently, each city needed to make commercial
treaties with its neighbors, stipulating what were the privileges and
obligations of its merchants, wherever they went. It was not until the kings
grew strong in western Europe that merchants could rely on the central
government, rather than on local authorities, for protection.