The Amsterdam Entrepôt: How Dutch Warehousing Built Global Trade episode artwork

EPISODE · Jul 17, 2026 · 6 MIN

The Amsterdam Entrepôt: How Dutch Warehousing Built Global Trade

from The Story of the Netherlands: Trade, Empire, and Innovation — Fexingo History · host Fexingo

In the 17th century, Amsterdam didn't just trade goods—it stored them. The Dutch Republic's vast warehouse complexes, known as 'pakhuizen', turned the city into the world's first modern entrepôt, where commodities from Baltic grain to Asian spices sat waiting for buyers. This episode explores the physical infrastructure—the brick warehouses lining the canals, the specialized storage for bulky goods like timber and grain, and the role of the Wisselbank in financing inventory. We follow a typical cargo of Swedish copper from the ship's hold to the weigh house, the exchange, and the warehouse, revealing how Amsterdam's storage system lowered costs and stabilized prices across Europe. We also touch on the darker side: how warehouses enabled the slave trade by holding goods for months before shipment to Africa or the Americas. Finally, we consider the decline of the entrepôt model as rival ports like London adopted similar practices. #Amsterdam #DutchGoldenAge #Entrepôt #Warehouses #Pakhuizen #Wisselbank #BalticTrade #VOC #GrainTrade #CopperTrade #StapleMarket #CommodityExchange #WeighHouse #DutchRepublic #17thCentury #GlobalTrade #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo

Episode metadata supplied by the publisher feed · Published Jul 17, 2026

In the 17th century, Amsterdam didn't just trade goods—it stored them. The Dutch Republic's vast warehouse complexes, known as 'pakhuizen', turned the city into the world's first modern entrepôt, where commodities from Baltic grain to Asian spices sat waiting for buyers. This episode explores the physical infrastructure—the brick warehouses lining the canals, the specialized storage for bulky goods like timber and grain, and the role of the Wisselbank in financing inventory. We follow a typical cargo of Swedish copper from the ship's hold to the weigh house, the exchange, and the warehouse, revealing how Amsterdam's storage system lowered costs and stabilized prices across Europe. We also touch on the darker side: how warehouses enabled the slave trade by holding goods for months before shipment to Africa or the Americas. Finally, we consider the decline of the entrepôt model as rival ports like London adopted similar practices. #Amsterdam #DutchGoldenAge #Entrepôt #Warehouses #Pakhuizen #Wisselbank #BalticTrade #VOC #GrainTrade #CopperTrade #StapleMarket #CommodityExchange #WeighHouse #DutchRepublic #17thCentury #GlobalTrade #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo

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The Amsterdam Entrepôt: How Dutch Warehousing Built Global Trade

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This episode was published on July 17, 2026.

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In the 17th century, Amsterdam didn't just trade goods—it stored them. The Dutch Republic's vast warehouse complexes, known as 'pakhuizen', turned the city into the world's first modern entrepôt, where commodities from Baltic grain to Asian spices...

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