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Harvey, M. L., The Development of Russian Commerce on the Black Sea and Its Significance, London, 1931

English  
Trabzon  Theodosia  Taganrog  Sevastopol  Rostov on Don  Odessa  Nikolayev  Mariupol  Kerch  Istanbul/Constantinople  Galatz  Evpatoria  Berdyansk  
Shipping  Marine Environment - Harbour Systems  Economy and Infrastructure  Black Sea Connections  
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This is a valuable unpublished ph.D thesis which analyzes in great detail the development of Black sea grain trade in the 19th century based on official statistical series of the Russian Empire. The port cities, their foundation and evolution over time forms the basis of the analysis of the rise of the Black sea region in the international grain trade and the role of this process to the economic development. The development of the Black sea region is linked to the expansion of the productive hinterland, the expansion of sea and land transportation networks and the diffusion of the technology of steam. /Η διδακτορική διατριβή αναφερει την ανάπτυξη του ρωσικού εμπορίου στη Μαύρη θάλασσα και τις επιπτώσεις του στην οικονομία της εποχής.

Miller, Michael B., Europe and the Maritime World: A Twentieth Century History, New York: Cambridge University Press, 2012

English  
Urban Landscape - Geography  Shipping  Marine Environment - Harbour Systems  Economy and Infrastructure  Administration  
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The present volume offers a new framework for understanding globalization over the past century. Through a detailed analysis of ports, shipping, and trading companies whose networks spanned the world, this book shows how a European maritime infrastructure made modern production and consumer societies possible. The study argues that the combination of overseas connections and close ties to home ports contributed to globalization. It also explains how the ability to manage merchant shipping's complex logistics was central to the outcome of both world wars and chronicles transformations in hierarchies, culture, identities, and port city space, all of which produced a new and different maritime world by the end of the century.

Oliphant, Laurence, The Russian shores of the Black Sea in the autumn of 1852 with a voyage down the Volga, and a tour through the country of the Don Cossacks, William Blackwood and Sons, London 1854

English  
Urban Landscape - Geography  Marine Environment - Harbour Systems  Economy and Infrastructure  Culture and Communities  Black Sea Connections  Administration  
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This book is a narrative of the journey Oliver Oliphant, author of travel diaries and novels, traveller, correspondent for The Times during the Franco-Prussian War (1870-1) and Secretary to British Diplomat Lord Elgin, made to Russia as a young man, with his friend Oswald Smith. From the splendour of mid-nineteenth-century St Petersburg, to the annexation of the Crimea, and the international consequences of Russian foreign policy for Europe, this illustrated book is also full of witty anecdotes and captivating descriptions. 

Spenser, Edmund, Travels in Circassia, Krim-Tartary, and C: Including a steam voyage down the Danube, from Vienna to Constantinople, and round the Black Sea, London: Henry Colburn, 1839, vol. I-II

English  
Urban Landscape - Geography  Marine Environment - Harbour Systems  
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The article refers to crew reports of a steamboat in the Mediterranean and Black Sea/ Το άρθρο αναφέρεται σε αναφορές του πληρώματος ενός ατμόπλοιου σε Μεσόγειο και Μαύρη θάλασσα. 

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