Swedish South Company
Appearance
The Swedish South Company, also known as the Company of New-Sweden (Swedish, Söderkompaniet, Nya Sverige-kompaniet), was a trading company from Sweden founded in 1626, that supported the trade between Sweden and its colony New Sweden, in North America. The colony was envisioned by its founding father Willem Usselincx; it was to become the first Swedish transoceanic trading project.[1][2][3][4][5][6]
In 1649 it lost its monopoly on tobacco granted by the queen of Sweden in 1641. In 1655 New Sweden was annexed by New Netherland, this brought an end to the activities of the Swedish South Company, it was dissolved in 1680.
References
[edit]- ^ Nordisk Familjebok, Uggleupplagan, Usselinxartikel (läst 21 januari 2011)
- ^ Svensk Tobakshistoria (läst 21 januari 2011)
- ^ Colonial Swedes (läst 21 januari 2011)
- ^ Nordisk Familjebok, Uggleupplagan, Söderkompanietartikel (läst 21 januari 2011)
- ^ Hampton L. Carson, « Dutch and Swedish Settlements on the Delaware », The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography, vol. 33, no 1, 1909, p. 8
- ^ Franklin J. Jameson (1887). Willem Usselinx, Founder of the Dutch and Swedish West India Companies. Johns Hopkins University, New York.
External links
[edit]
Categories:
- Chartered companies
- New Sweden
- Fur trade
- Trading companies of Sweden
- Exploration of North America
- Defunct companies of Sweden
- 1626 establishments in Sweden
- 1680 disestablishments in Europe
- Trading companies established in the 17th century
- Trading companies disestablished in the 17th century
- Swedish slave trade
- Swedish company stubs