Amsterdam as Global-City Hub (1650)
commerce pace layer · 1602–1750
lifespan: 165 yrs · motor: pull
Class card for Amsterdam as the apex global-city Place of the Dutch Golden Age (~1585–1750), modeled at the 1650 operational configuration. Amsterdam was the dominant northern-European commercial entrepôt and the canonical MM-Day successor to Venice 1500 and Antwerp 1585 in Braudel's world-economy hub succession. Its institutional machinery — the Amsterdam Wisselbank (1609), the Amsterdam Bourse (1602, world's first stock exchange), the VOC Heeren XVII headquarters (1602+), the WIC (1621+), the Staten-Generaal delegation, and the Calvinist merchant-republic government — organized the global circuits of Baltic grain, Indian Ocean spices, Atlantic cloth and fish, Iberian silver, and Caribbean sugar into a coherent extraction-clearing-redistribution complex. De Vries and van der Woude (The First Modern Economy, 1997) document Amsterdam's population of ~200,000 by 1650, making it the largest city in northern Europe; Israel (Dutch Primacy in World Trade, 1989) quantifies the Dutch Republic's domination of global carrying trade at ~50% of total European shipping tonnage in this period. The card is a Place-Machine: identity constituted by flows that touch it (Massey, For Space) — Baltic grain, Iberian silver, VOC spice redistribution, Bourse-capital flows. Substrate: [corporeal, social, semiotic] — the city's physical form (canal infrastructure, warehouses, harbor) + Dutch merchant-political society + the semiotic apparatus of bills of exchange, Bourse price-lists (the Amsterdam Courant), Wisselbank bank-money, and VOC share certificates. Plasticity: rigid — the regent-merchant oligarchy constitution was stable from the 1588 Union of Utrecht through 1747; the Calvinist commercial-republic form resisted internal restructuring. The decline is externally driven: Glorious Revolution 1688 carries Amsterdam financial circuits toward London; Treaty of Utrecht 1713 confirms relative decline. Artifact type in 2026: historical — the Dutch Republic dissolved 1795 under French occupation; no successor-institution carries the same OPP. Note: offshore-colonial expulsion dynamics (VOC/WIC coercive periphery extraction, slave trade) are encoded in flows_out and couplings, not in expulsion_index_city (which measures internal-city dynamics per Sassen).
Machine type
corporeal
Plasticity
rigid
Substrate
Wave source
synthesized-mm-amsterdam-place
Inputs
- Baltic grain (rye, wheat) — the moedernegotie / mother trade
- Iberian silver (New World silver via Spain/Portugal; specie for VOC Asia trade)
- Dutch herring (North Sea) and salted fish — key Atlantic trade good
- Merchant capital (passive shareholder subscriptions; Bourse equity investment)
Outputs
- VOC spice redistribution to European markets (pepper, cloves, nutmeg, cinnamon)
- Amsterdam Bourse services (equity trading, commodity futures, state-bond market)
- Wisselbank clearing services (intermerchant ledger transfer; bankgeld as unit of account)
- Dutch carrying-trade shipping services (fluit-fleet; ~50% European shipping tonnage)
Landscape pressures
- English Navigation Acts (1651, 1660) — direct mercantilist assault on Dutch carrying trade (75% intensity)
- Anglo-Dutch Wars (First 1652-54; Second 1665-67; Third 1672-74) — military pressure on Dutch trade dominance (82% intensity)
- French invasion and Rampjaar 1672 (Year of Disaster) — Louis XIV's assault destabilizes Dutch polity (80% intensity)
- Glorious Revolution 1688 — William III as English king begins finance transfer to London (70% intensity)
Intra-era couplings
- contains Central Bank / Monetary Authority (Merchant form, 1609) · 0.95 CANON
- contains Joint-Stock Company (Mercantile form, 1602) · 0.92 CANON
- anchors machine:baltic-grain-entrepot-1650 · 0.88 CANON
- instruments Dutch Republic (Republiek der Zeven Verenigde Nederlanden) · 0.82 CANON
- succeeds machine:antwerp-commercial-hub-1500 · 0.78 CANON
Cross-era couplings
- substrate_provision machine:london-global-city-1750 · 0.72 CANON
- adapted_inheritance machine:new-york-global-city-2026 · 0.52
State variables
Phase snapshots
Notable instances
- Amsterdam, Dutch Republic (ca. 1585-1750) (1585) — The class card IS the instance in this case; Amsterdam is both the class (Atlantic-era commercial-republic global city) …
Sources
- Braudel (1979). Civilization and Capitalism, Vol. III: The Perspective of the World
- de Vries & van der Woude (1997). The First Modern Economy: Success, Failure, and Perseverance of the Dutch Economy, 1500-1815
- Israel (1989). Dutch Primacy in World Trade 1585-1740
- Schama (1987). The Embarrassment of Riches: An Interpretation of Dutch Culture in the Golden Age
- Lesger (2006). The Rise of the Amsterdam Market and Information Exchange
- Massey (2005). For Space