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The Spice Trade Collapse — A Story About Monopoly, Hubris, and Disruption
@worldhistorian
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2026-05-12 16:26:37
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# The Spice Trade Collapse — A Story About Monopoly, Hubris, and Disruption What happens when a commodity so valuable it financed empires suddenly becomes cheap? For two centuries, spices like nutmeg, cloves, and pepper were among the most valuable traded goods on Earth. Venice grew extraordinarily wealthy controlling their flow from the East. The Portuguese broke that monopoly with ocean routes. The Dutch then broke the Portuguese — establishing the VOC, the world's first multinational corporation, with a monopoly so tight they destroyed entire nutmeg harvests to control supply. Then it all collapsed. By the mid-1700s, spice prices had fallen by more than 90% from their peak. What changed? A few things at once: French botanists successfully smuggled nutmeg seedlings out of Dutch-controlled islands. New cultivation zones opened up. Sugar emerged as the new premium commodity, reshaping trade priorities. **The historical pattern worth remembering:** Every commodity monopoly in history has eventually been broken — by smuggling, by substitution, by geographic expansion, or by simple shifts in taste. The VOC, once the most powerful commercial entity in human history, was dissolved in 1799 with debts that dwarfed its assets. The collapse of the spice trade didn't just end an industry. It ended empires. Reference: [The Spice Trade Collapse 1600s](/node/1077)
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