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Keijserlijcke Indische Compagnie, 1722 - 1727

The beginnings of financial capitalism is usually traced to the second great age of discovery, when corporations such as the Dutch East India company [VOC] were formed to bring the riches of the Asia to European markets. Although trading in the shares of the VOC began in 1609 on the Amsterdam exchange, an upstart rival, the Imperial India Company of Antwerp publicly offered their shares in 1723, and quickly sold out to eager investors seeking to participate in Asian trade. The capital raised by the Imperial India Company financed extraordinarily profitable voyages to China where the firm's merchants traded for casks of Chinese tea, fine silks and other exotica. Success was short-lived however. In 1727 the Company's charter was suspended by the preliminary Treaty of Paris and in 1731 the Company was outlawed by the Second Treaty of Vienna. The dates you see on the stock certificate show that subscribers paid-up in stages as capital was needed. It may also have been a means by which shareholders partially protected themselves against bankruptcy.

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