Les marchands de coton grecs dans le paysage économique de La Nouvelle-Orléans
DOI :
https://doi.org/10.25071/2561-5467.1411Mots-clés :
Greeks, merchants, cotton, New Orleans, American Civil War, EgyptRésumé
En retrait des manchettes du commerce du coton au milieu du XIXe siècle se trouvait un réseau prospère de négociants grecs en matières premières qui faisaient affaire en Nouvelle-Orléans et à New York. Ces villes faisaient partie d’un réseau qui était actif dans les principaux ports d’Europe, de la Méditerranée et d’Inde. Le réseau jouait un rôle particulier dans le commerce du coton du Sud et un rôle primordial dans les efforts franco-britanniques visant à développer des chaînes d’approvisionnement de rechange pendant la guerre de Sécession en important du coton d’Égypte, d’Inde et de l’Empire ottoman. Le réseau a également été à l’origine de la première communauté de l’Église orthodoxe aux États-Unis.
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© Alexander Billinis 2026

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