Showing 1 - 16 results of 16 for search '"Manila galleon"', query time: 0.25s Refine Results
  1. 1

    Revisiting the Manila Galleon, a Chilean Perspective from the XXI Century by Juan Pablo Glasinovic Vernon

    Published 2019-05-01
    “…The Manila Galleon marked the beginning of globalization as we know it today, linking Asia with the Americas and Europe through trade, from the second half of the XVI century until the first decades of the XIX century. …”
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  2. 2

    The Remains of a Manila Galleon Compass: 16th-Century Nautical Material Culture by Flor Trejo Rivera, Roberto Junco Sánchez

    Published 2023-05-01
    “…This article reveals the recovery of a compass balance from a Manila galleon that was wrecked in the 16th century off the coast of Baja California, Mexico, and discusses the possibility that it was made in Spain. …”
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    Los últimos años de la Nao de China: pervivencia y cambio en el comercio intercolonial novohispano-filipino by Manuel Pérez Lecha

    Published 2015-12-01
    “…The trade links of the Manila Galleon were the first transactions set up on a global scale. …”
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  7. 7

    Comercio y atlantización del Pacífico mexicano y sudamericano: La crisis del lago indiano y del Galeón de Manila, 1750-1821 by Mariano Ardash Bonialian Assadourian

    Published 2017-01-01
    “…The first, the appearance on the scene of the peninsular commercial companies by the Pacific novohispano begin to compete commercially with the Manila galleon under review. The second reason is about the market close Peru foreign goods trade from Acapulco, through the opening of the route around Cabo de Hornos (1740) for the registration of ships traffic from Europe. …”
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  8. 8

    Colima and Manila: Two cities linked by history by Paulina Machuca Chávez

    Published 2012-06-01
    “…During more than two centuries, Colima and Manila had a close relationship, as a result of the transpacific voyages held by the Manila Galleon. In its voyage towards Acapulco, this ship stopped first in the port of Salagua (Manzanillo, Colima), in order to get food supply and to send the viceroy of the New Spain an official report about the status of the merchandise. …”
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  9. 9

    Las fundaciones piadosas en correspondencias de riesgo a premio de mar en la Casa de la Santa Misericordia de Manila en el transcurso del siglo XVIII = The pious foundation in mari... by Carmen Yuste

    Published 2015-12-01
    “…<br /><br /><em>This paper examines the material conditions of the Hermandad de la Santa Misericordia,  the nature of its foundations and the special features of the maritime loans that the corporation held to the neighbours of Manila who searched for monetary resources to ship goods in the Manila Galleon, to finance commercial enterprises or to buy merchandises in the Asiatic ports.…”
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  10. 10

    Symbolism and Expression of Performing <i>Panata</i> in the Philippines: An Ethnohistorical Analysis of <i>Nuestro Padre Jesus Nazareno</i> of Quiapo by Mark Inigo Macam Tallara

    Published 2022-03-01
    “…In addition to commercial goods, the Manila Galleon facilitated the first transpacific people-to-people exchange along with their ideas, and the transmission and transplantation of Catholicism to the Philippines. …”
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    The Collapse of Mercantilism: Anglo-Hispanic Trans-Pacific Ventures in Asia at the End of the Spanish Empire (1815–30) by Ander Permanyer-Ugartemendia

    Published 2023-01-01
    “…This particularly applies to the consequences of the commercial developments at the end of the Manila Galleon and the collapse of the Spanish Empire in America. …”
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  12. 12

    Los "chinos" de Nueva España: migración asiática en el México colonial by Rubén Carrillo Martín

    Published 2015-12-01
    “…Este artículo reconstruye la experiencia de los chinos novohispanos y muestra cómo estos inmigrantes perturbaron el delicado equilibrio de relaciones de poder existentes entre los diferentes grupos étnicos presentes en el México colonial From 1565 to 1815, between 10,000 and 20,000 Asians crossed the Pacific from Manila to Acapulco on board the Manila Galleon. Despite coming from an extensive geographical area which included regions from Southern, Southeast and East Asia, these immigrants were given the generic name of “Chinese”. …”
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    México, epicentro semiinformal del comercio hispanoamericano (1680-1740) by Mariano Bonialian

    Published 2011-06-01
    “…In the novohispan space converged two of the most important official interoceanic routs of the empire: the Atlantic float, the one that connected Spain to Veracruz and the transpacific float, the one that from the route of the Manila galleon connected both Philippines and Acapulco seaports. …”
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    Una presencia no tan singular: españoles en la economía del opio en Asia oriental (1815-1843) by Ander Permanyer Ugartemendia

    Published 2015-12-01
    “…Likewise, it spotlights the leading role of the Philippine economy in Asia, emphasising its connection with the opium business and Cantonese trade, as a result of Philippine Creole initiatives following the end of the Manila Galleon. Detailing common Spanish and British (mainly Scottish) interests, the article also makes reference to recent redefinitions of the “Canton System”, which highlight the predominance of collaboration, rather than confrontation, during its development.…”
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    The Art of <i>Barniz de Pasto</i> and Its Appropriation of Other Cultures by Yayoi Kawamura

    Published 2023-03-01
    “…A search for similarity is justified by the documentary and material evidence of Japanese works created in these styles being transported from Japan to the Viceroyalty of New Spain by Manila galleons via the trade route between Acapulco and Callao. …”
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