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  • The Netherlands: a tiny European country that is actually one of the wealthiest and most

  • important economic centers of the continent.

  • The surprising success of the Dutch is invariably tied to one company, which was arguably the

  • greatest and most successful one in history.

  • Today, we'll see how the Netherlands transformed from swampy backwater into a global trading

  • empire thanks to the Dutch East India Company.

  • This video is brought to you by Cheddar, who made a video about a different kind of spice

  • than the ones the Dutch were trading, but when you're finished here make sure to check

  • out their channel.

  • The Netherlands today might be an economic powerhouse, but back in the 16th century,

  • well, it wasn't doing too great.

  • To start things off, it wasn't even independent: instead it was under the domain of the Spanish

  • Empire.

  • As one of the earliest European colonizers, the Spanish Empire controlled vast territories

  • across the world and used the money it gained from slavery and trade to fund numerous wars

  • of conquest and suppression.

  • The Netherlands ultimately became victim of one such war: they had became part of the

  • empire unwittingly due to marriage and spent the next 80 years trying to break free.

  • But the Dutch independence effort ran into a big problem very early on.

  • You see, the Dutch were a seafaring people: fishing and mercantile shipping was their

  • thing and they had been doing it for centuries.

  • The main goods they shipped were spices coming from the Far East, but this was before the

  • Dutch had any colonies of their own.

  • Back then Portugal held a virtual monopoly on the spice trade, controlling all the major

  • trade routes to Asia and back.

  • Thus, what the Dutch did was to buy all their spices from Lisbon and then ship them around

  • Europe to sell them at a profit.

  • But Portugal was absorbed into the Spanish Empire in 1580 and, of course, the first thing

  • the Spanish did was to close off Lisbon to the Dutch merchants.

  • Suddenly the main artery of the Dutch economy had been cut off and there was really only

  • one thing the Dutch merchants could do: they had to sail to Far East and build their own

  • trading network.

  • At first this effort was very decentralized: merchants from various Dutch cities would

  • establish companies for single voyages.

  • Essentially, they would fund a few ships and their sailors and they would send them off

  • to find a new trade route to the Far East.

  • Some missions were successful and came back with lots of spices, but most did not go very

  • smoothly.

  • During the first six years of the expedition effort a total of 65 ships were sent out.

  • 1 in 10 never made it back, and those that did, came back with only a third of their

  • crew on average.

  • Suffice to say, being a sailor in these early fleets wasn't a very safe job.

  • Nevertheless, these early voyages gave the Dutch the knowledge and experience on how

  • to establish a more permanent trading network.

  • But coordinating individual merchants, each of whom was competing with the rest, is difficult

  • to say the least and with the English, Spanish and Portuguese all trying to create their

  • own trading empires, the Dutch knew that they had to band together.

  • In 1602 under the patronage of the Prime Minister of Holland, the various expedition companies

  • united into a single company with vast sovereign power.

  • It's name wasn't the Dutch East India Company, even though that's how we call

  • it today.

  • It was actually called the United East India Company, or VOC for short and its creation

  • marked a new chapter in the history of the Netherlands.

  • The political motivations were clear: the Dutch needed a new economic engine to fight

  • off the Spanish and to restore their wartorn country.

  • The VOC was their only hope which is why it was granted not only a monopoly on trade,

  • but also the ability to train its own army, to negotiate and declare war, to occupy land

  • and even to enforce slavery.

  • But just getting permission to do all these things meant nothing if the VOC couldn't

  • actually do them, and to conquer the Far East would require a lot of capital.

  • The VOC, however, figured out an ingenious solution, which would later on become the

  • cornerstone of modern capitalism.

  • In the center of Amsterdam, the VOC built a trading house, where every Dutch citizen

  • could go and buy shares of the company, effectively giving the VOC money now in exchange for a

  • claim on its profits in the future.

  • The VOC had effectively created the world's first stock market and the VOC itself had

  • become the first publicly-traded company in history.

  • Pretty much every rich man in the Netherlands invested in the VOC and even many immigrants

  • did so.

  • In total, the VOC's initial public offering raised over 6 million guilders, which is equivalent

  • to about $110 million today.

  • And keep in mind, this is coming from a country that's half-occupied by Spain and whose

  • economy had been in the drain for a decade.

  • Of course, circumstances were favorable to the Dutch: the Spanish Empire was at war with

  • England at the time, allowing the Dutch to sweep into the Far East and kick out the Portuguese

  • establishment.

  • The first victim of the VOC's colonial ambitions was Indonesia: the Dutch conquered modern-day

  • Jakarta in 1611, slaughtering the locals and building vast spice plantations on nearby

  • islands.

  • With the island of Java as its headquarters, the VOC spread throughout the Far East.

  • Their factories in India produced exquisite silks and fabrics, which the VOC then shipped

  • to Japan to trade for their famous and crucial supply of silver.

  • The VOC got silk from China as well, which also produced valuable porcelain.

  • What matters though, is that the profits margins the VOC earned by monopolizing these trade

  • routes were as high as 1500%, and all of this money was of course being funneled into the

  • Netherlands.

  • They finally won their independence in 1648 and with that out of the way the VOC's profits

  • were invested in one type of project unique to the Netherlands: land reclamation.

  • You see, the Netherlands is extremely flat and is below sea level, which makes it prone

  • to flooding; but, if you build dikes and keep the water out, you can turn swamps into farmland

  • and that's exactly what the Dutch did with their VOC profits.

  • Just by looking at the geography you can tell when the VOC was running at full force.

  • In total, over one and a half thousand ships sailed for the VOC during its two centuries

  • of existence and its influence is still felt to this day.

  • Many former Dutch colonies, for example, still bear the scars of the oppression they suffered.

  • But the VOC has other interesting legacies that few people know.

  • Cape Town, for instance, started out as a VOC resting station in 1652.

  • A decade earlier, a VOC merchant discovered two big land masses south of the Dutch Indies.

  • He called them New Holland and New Zeeland and you can guess which name stuck and which

  • one didn't.

  • But in any case, just as the ideal set of circumstances gave the Dutch the opportunity

  • to become a colonial empire, a perfect storm in the late 18th century ended up destroying

  • the VOC.

  • To start things off, the Dutch lost a disastrous war against the British in 1784 which disrupted

  • the VOC's network in Asia.

  • Then, just a decade later, the newly-created French Republic invaded the Netherlands and

  • conquered them.

  • WIth the British attacking in Asia and the French attacking at home, the VOC really had

  • no chance and officially went into bankruptcy in 1799.

  • Sadly, without the spice trade the Netherlands lost their status as a global power.

  • And speaking of spice, Cheddar (who were kind enough to sponsor this episode) made a great

  • video on how Old Spice was saved by one of the most iconic marketing campaigns in recent

  • history.

  • If you don't know, Cheddar's channel covers business and technology in fun bite-sized

  • videos that leave you craving for more, so if you haven't seen them go check out their

  • channel, watch the video and consider subscribing if you wanna see more.

  • In any case, thank you for watching.

  • If you liked the story of the VOC consider liking the video and subscribing if you haven't

  • already.

  • We're gonna see each other again in two weeks, and until then: stay smart.

The Netherlands: a tiny European country that is actually one of the wealthiest and most

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When The Dutch Ruled The World: The Rise & Fall of the Dutch East India Company

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    Knight に公開 2022 年 03 月 15 日
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