Commercial Deceit: Fraudulent Trade from the Ports of Cilicia and Cyprus to the Mamlūks
Künye
USTA, Ahmet. "Commercial Deceit: Fraudulent Trade from the Ports of Cilicia and Cyprus to the Mamlūks." Al-Masāq Journal of the Medieval Mediterranean, (2023): 1-23.Özet
The article aims to examine the deceitful practices employed by
traders in the eastern Mediterranean. It investigates three
principal types of deception that Italian merchants in the
Kingdom of Cilician Armenia and in Cyprus used in order to
conceal prohibited products and their routes to Mamlūk ports
between 1260 and 1310. The papacy issued several decrees that
prohibited Christian merchants from trading in various strategic
items, such as timber, iron and slaves, in the harbours of Islamic
states. However, despite these bans, Christian merchants
continued trading in such items by devising methods to conceal
this traffic. Current literature has so far focused on the items that
were shipped across the eastern Mediterranean and their
destinations; however, there is a gap in knowledge about who
these merchants were and the methods they used to circumvent
the prohibitions while shipping the goods. This research aims to
fill this gap by answering questions about the conditions of the
trade and the covert methods used for the transportation of
prohibited goods to Mamlūk ports.