The Irish traders in beef and butter who settled in the Charente area moved
on to the rapidly growing brandy trade by the mid-eighteenth century. As
world demand for brandy grew with urbanization and economic welfare, so did
new markets develop for those families with contacts in Dublin and France's
western seaboard.
The struggles of families such as Hennessy, Saule and Jennings, Otard,
Galwey and Delamain are described in the pivotal period 1760-1793, when
Ireland 'fleetingly became the central point of the international brandy
business'. Family connections and intermarriage, trading problems,
marketing and finance are detailed by Professor Cullen, against the
background of a burgeoning French economy. This regional specialization by
foreign merchants who went on to became household names is a fascinating
study by Ireland's leading economic historian.
THE AUTHOR
Louis M. Cullen is Professor of Modern Irish History at Trinity College,
Dublin. His many books include The Brandy Trade under the Ancien Régime
(1998).
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