The Dutch Tulip Bubble: How a Flower Fever Gripped the Golden Age episode artwork

EPISODE · Jul 5, 2026 · 8 MIN

The Dutch Tulip Bubble: How a Flower Fever Gripped the Golden Age

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

In the 1630s, the Dutch Republic was gripped by an extraordinary mania: tulip bulbs were traded for sums that could buy a canal house in Amsterdam. This episode explores the tulip bubble not as a simple parable of greed, but as a window into the financial innovations, social tensions, and global trade networks of the Golden Age. We trace the tulip's journey from the Ottoman Empire to Leiden's botanical gardens, examine how futures markets and 'windhandel' (paper trading) turned flowers into speculative assets, and look at the crash of February 1637 through the eyes of real people: the tavern owners who hosted bulb auctions, the weavers who bet their savings, and the magistrates who struggled to restore order. Along the way, we consider what the episode reveals about the intersection of luxury goods, new wealth, and the birth of modern finance. Featuring figures like Carolus Clusius, the Habsburg botanist who planted the first tulips in the Netherlands, and the city of Haarlem, where the mania reached its peak. A story of beauty, speculation, and the limits of economic rationality. #DutchTulipBubble #Tulipmania #GoldenAge #Speculation #CarolusClusius #Haarlem #Amsterdam #VOC #Wisselbank #FuturesMarkets #Windhandel #LuxuryGoods #HistoryOfFinance #OttomanEmpire #Netherlands #17thCentury #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo

In the 1630s, the Dutch Republic was gripped by an extraordinary mania: tulip bulbs were traded for sums that could buy a canal house in Amsterdam. This episode explores the tulip bubble not as a simple parable of greed, but as a window into the financial innovations, social tensions, and global trade networks of the Golden Age. We trace the tulip's journey from the Ottoman Empire to Leiden's botanical gardens, examine how futures markets and 'windhandel' (paper trading) turned flowers into speculative assets, and look at the crash of February 1637 through the eyes of real people: the tavern owners who hosted bulb auctions, the weavers who bet their savings, and the magistrates who struggled to restore order. Along the way, we consider what the episode reveals about the intersection of luxury goods, new wealth, and the birth of modern finance. Featuring figures like Carolus Clusius, the Habsburg botanist who planted the first tulips in the Netherlands, and the city of Haarlem, where the mania reached its peak. A story of beauty, speculation, and the limits of economic rationality. #DutchTulipBubble #Tulipmania #GoldenAge #Speculation #CarolusClusius #Haarlem #Amsterdam #VOC #Wisselbank #FuturesMarkets #Windhandel #LuxuryGoods #HistoryOfFinance #OttomanEmpire #Netherlands #17thCentury #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo

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The Dutch Tulip Bubble: How a Flower Fever Gripped the Golden Age

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This episode was published on July 5, 2026.

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In the 1630s, the Dutch Republic was gripped by an extraordinary mania: tulip bulbs were traded for sums that could buy a canal house in Amsterdam. This episode explores the tulip bubble not as a simple parable of greed, but as a window into the...

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