Saga


Saga - 2001, Side 138

Saga - 2001, Side 138
136 SIGFÚS HAUKUR ANDRÉSSON considered worth it on these conditions. Due to constant shortage of timber in Iceland and common exorbitant price of the scarce commodities resident merchant imported, the Danish govemment decided in 1821 to drop these licence fees on timber completely for an indefinite time. After this a few Norwegian merchants, some of which had earlier been involved in the Iceland trade before the separation of Norway from Denmark in 1814, began importing timber with a considerable benefit to the Icelanders. Resident merchants protested to this and thought the exclusive rights of the Danish subjects to the Iceland trade were diminished. They also complained bitterly about the increased competition with the merchants in Denmark and the duchies (Schleswig-Holstein ), who sent vessels to Iceland for nonresident trade in the summer, and demanded various further restrictions on their trade than already had been legalized. On the other hand the latter, who as a rule had differences with the resident merchants and their factors, requested further and more favourable definitions of their rights than they had so far been given. Nonresident merchants had the full support of most officials in Iceland, who repeatedly pointed out to authorities in Copenhagen the harmful monopoly of the resident merchants and the urgent necessity of working for increased competition with them, both in resident and nonresident trade. This would serve the interests of both the Icelanders and the Danish businessmen, who wanted to enter the Iceland trade. It also was important to the trade and navigation of the Danish subjects in general. Early in 1834 the Danish govemmental authorities concemed had reached the conclusion that the time had come to review and amend some provisions of the Icelandic trade law, yet without tampering with its colonial mould. A special committee was then set up to deal with this. According to its proposals the decree from December, 1836, stipulated, among other things, the abolition of the division of the trading posts in the country into so-called townships and additional posts, yet with the exception that Reykjavík could maintain its rights as a town without any legalized privileges in trade. Thus nonresident merchants got rid of the obligation first to have to stop at one of the four towns at that time before they got permission to start trading in other authorized harbours. Moreover, they were permitted to divide the fixed four week time of residence in each trading harbour at their own convenience in such a way that they could sail to the same harbour and trade more than once each summer. Furthermore, newcomers in resident trade did not any longer have to start business in one of these towns to be permitted to establish businesses in other trading posts, as they had been forced to do, formally at least. The resident merchants, however, who were the owners of the former royal businesses in the country, had been exempted from such obligations and had been able to arrange their trade more or less at pleasure. These were the main stipulations of the decree. They considerably reinförced the position of nonresident merchants and newcomers in resident trade in re- lation to the old resident merchants. Thus the Iceland trade revived at the same time as trade and navigation in the Danish realm had come to life after the great blows due to the participation of the Danes in the Napoleonic wars in 1807-1814.
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