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Geschichte der österreichischen Gewerbepolitik von 1740 bis 1860

1907

by Karl Příbram

Knowledge EconomicsEconomic PolicyMercantilismGeorg Friedrich KnappGuildsNatural LawPhysiocracyPrice ControlsEconomic HistoryLabor MarketWerner SombartGeopoliticsWagesBalance of PaymentsCompetitionFree TradeProperty RightsRationalityProtectionismUsuryMoney SupplyInnovationMonopolyLiberalismFrench RevolutionBureaucracyPrice TheoryCapitalismFiat Money

Table of Contents · 65 segments

1
English Google Book Search Public Domain Noticeessay
2
German Google Book Search Public Domain Noticeessay
3
Title Pages, Publication Data, and Dedicationessay
4
Preface and Opening of the Volume One Table of Contentschapter
5
First Volume Table of Contents Continued: Introduction through Joseph II's Industrial Policychapter
6
Continuation of the Volume I Table of Contents: Reactionary Gewerbepolitik, New Epoch, and Appendiceschapter
7
Introduction: Starting Point, Theresian State Tasks, and the Gewerbeverfassung under Karl VIessay
8
The Period 1740–1762: Organization of the Commercial Authoritieschapter
9
Inner and Vorder Austrian Commercial Councils and Transition to Chapter Twochapter
10
Chapter Two: Guild Policy, General Principles, and Police Tradeschapter
11
State Supervision of Guilds and the Town-Country Division of Craftschapter
12
Commercial Guilds, Failed Guild Abolition, Rural Weaving, and Foreign Masterschapter
13
Positive Measures for the Promotion of Industrychapter
14
Second Book, Chapter One: The Commerce-Promotion Authorities, 1762–1776chapter
15
Industrial Development under State Directionchapter
16
Changes in the Industrial and Guild Constitution, 1762–1770chapter
17
Chapter Four: Spinner and Weaver Policy in Detailchapter
18
Distribution of Livelihood Branches Between City and Countrysidechapter
19
Chapter Six: The Position of Domestic Trade in Industrial Policychapter
20
The Circular of 16 July 1770 and the Failed System for Regulating Commercial Industrieschapter
21
Manufakturen: Liberalization of Home Manufactures and Relief from Feudal and State Dueschapter
22
Guild-Regulated Commercial Tradeschapter
23
Factories and Internal Trade Policy after 1770chapter
24
Distribution of Occupations Between Town and Countrysidechapter
25
Guild Legislation of 1770–1776 and the Patent Against Blue Mondayschapter
26
Journeymen’s Migration, Marriage, and Guild Giftschapter
27
Mastership Costs, the Reich Police Ordinance, and City–Suburb Masterschapter
28
Old Principles of Austrian Mercantilist Industrial Policychapter
29
Emergence of Liberal Economic Ideas: Weinbrenner and Zinzendorfchapter
30
Quality Regulations, Administrative Reorganization, and the End of the Old Systemchapter
31
Abolition of the Lower Austrian Craft Commission and Local Licensing Powerschapter
32
Food Policy and the Vienna Lebensmittelmarktchapter
33
Real Trades, Saleable Guild Rights, and Attempts at Reformchapter
34
The Circular of 30 March 1776 and the Reorganization of Commercial Trade Licensingchapter
35
Implementation of Freer Competition, Guild Conflicts, and the Transition to the Fourth Bookchapter
36
Opening of Joseph II's Industrial Policy: Industrial Conditions and Social Changechapter
37
Joseph II's Absolutism, Physiocracy, Natural Law, and Industrial Policychapter
38
Continuity of the Trade Constitution and Categories of Industrial Rightschapter
39
Administrative Organization and Licensing Competence under Joseph IIchapter
40
Tolerance, Jewish, and Peasant-Emancipation Laws Affecting Industrychapter
41
Credit-Law Liberalization and Opening of the Second Chapterchapter
42
General orders to free internal industrial and commercial circulationchapter
43
Textile guild restrictions and expanded industrial competitionchapter
44
Reorganization of metalworking guilds and liberation of other tradeschapter
45
Exclusive privileges, invention patents, and resistance to monopolychapter
46
Abolition of quality rules, district assignments, and wage regulationchapter
47
Conclusion on Joseph II’s internal trade policy and transition to state industrial promotionchapter
48
State Promotion of Industry under Joseph IIchapter
49
Fourth Chapter Headingchapter
50
Fourth Chapter: Craft and Guild Policy under Joseph II, with Transition to the Real-Gewerbe Chapterchapter
51
Fifth Chapter: The Treatment of Real Gewerbe under Joseph IIchapter
52
Chapter Six: The Fight against Market Restrictions and Price Taxeschapter
53
Collapse of Joseph II’s Food-Market Liberalizationchapter
54
The Reactionary Gewerbepolitik of 1790–1798: Fear, Pity, and Stagnationchapter
55
Chapter Two: The Reaction in Food Policychapter
56
Trade Policy in the Reaction Years 1790 and 1791chapter
57
Opening: Leopold II’s commission and Zinzendorf’s free-trade positionchapter
58
Sonnenfels’s theoretical system for regulating tradestheoretical
59
Provincial responses to Sonnenfels: freedom, guilds, local conditions, and real tradeschapter
60
Failure of the proposed general reform of Gewerbe legislationchapter
61
Industrial Policy under the Spell of Security Policing, 1792–1797chapter
62
Chapter Six: Signs of a New Epoch in Industrial Lifechapter
63
Appendix A: Chronological Overview of Court Agencies Responsible for Commercial Affairschapter
64
Appendix B: Archival Records Used in Volume 1bibliography
65
Appendix B: Printed Works Used in Volume 1bibliography