Difference between revisions of "House of Battier, Zornlin & Co"

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'''Notes'''<br />
 
'''Notes'''<br />
 
See Hoppit, Julian (1987), Risk and Failure in English Business 1700-1800, Cambridge University Press, pp.156-160.
 
See Hoppit, Julian (1987), Risk and Failure in English Business 1700-1800, Cambridge University Press, pp.156-160.
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[[category:Merchant House]]

Revision as of 14:28, 10 September 2018

London-based company/merchant house (DNA: DAC, Negotie-journal, 1789-1791, no. 589-590)

Actors

Related actors

Timeline
1781 - Described as merchants in 10 Devonshire Square. (Bailey's Northern Directory)

1783 - Described as merchants in 10 Devonshire Square. (Longman: The New Complete Guide to All Persons who Have Any Trade Or Concern with the City of London..)

1788 - The company name appears on a letter from a French slave captain in Accra to Le Havre via London. "Manuscript transit mark" applied (Spink.com)

1792 - Bill of exchange drawn by Andreani, Count on Battier, Zornlin & Co was sent by Jefferson, Thomas in Philadelphia to Donald, Alexander. (Founders Online)

1797-5-31 - Bought goods from the East India Company for export. (Henchman: Observations on the Reports of the Directors of the East India Company ..)

1799 - Bankrupted - described as a big Swiss firm. (Margrit Schulte Beerbühl: The risk of bankruptcy among German merchants in eighteenth-century England, p. 15) Claims against the company came from Vienna, Milan, the Royal Prussian Bank of Franconia in Fürth and from the US. (Pihlajamäki et al (ed.): Understanding the Sources of Early Modern and Modern Commercial Law, p. 331)

1821-3-21 - Bankrupted - described as located in Devonshire Square, Bishopsgate-Street, London. Battier and Zornlin are described as merchants, dealers, chapmen and copartners. (The London Gazette, Part 1)

Notes
See Hoppit, Julian (1987), Risk and Failure in English Business 1700-1800, Cambridge University Press, pp.156-160.