Visit our new beta site!

shipping

From: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition  |  Date: 2008

shipping transportation of passengers and goods on waterways. From prehistoric times shipping has had a major influence on human social development. Water routes, unlike roads, did not need building, and the difficulties and dangers were less than those offered by mountains, marshes, and enemy tribes. Therefore many early civilizations developed on navigable rivers or on the coasts of warm seas.

Shipping in Ancient Times

Ancient peoples famous for their shipping enterprises include the Phoenicians, the Cretans, the Egyptians, the Greeks, and the Romans. The shipping routes of those highly civilized peoples were chiefly in the Mediterranean, but their voyages extended to India, along the Atlantic coast of Africa, and to Britain, where tin was secured. The goods shipped consisted largely of luxuries, including spices, perfumes, and such fine pottery as the famous Athenian ware; but shipments of grain became important as cities grew in size.

Shipping in the Commercial Revolution

The great modern merchant marines (national fleets of commercial ships) first appeared in the commercial revolution. Leaders in shipping included the Spanish, the Portuguese, and the Venetians. The activities of mariners of SW Europe included discovery and conquest in the New World. In the 13th and 14th cent. the Hanseatic League built up a great trading and fishing fleet, while the Italian city-republics developed marine insurance on modern lines. England's shipping industry was associated with colonization, with the development of manufacturing, and especially with leadership in the Industrial Revolution. The greatest competitors of the British were the French and the Dutch. Both were vanquished in war and strangled in peace by the British Navigation Acts .

The introduction of slave labor into the American colonies made the slave trade one of the most profitable branches of shipping for two centuries. America's vast resources in timber provided an advantage in building wooden ships, and swift sailing vessels of American design, such as the schooner and the clipper, dominated shipping until the mid-19th cent. The introduction of steel steamships enabled Great Britain to reassume the chief place in shipbuilding and shipping.

Shipping in the Twentieth Century

From about 1900 until World War I, Germany held second place in the world in both navy and merchant marine, and its challenge to Great Britain's domination of the sea was an important cause of the war. In the period between the two world wars the principal maritime nations were Great Britain and its dominions, the United States, Japan, Norway, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, and France. The United States merchant marine steadily declined, and in order to stimulate shipbuilding the Merchant Marine Act of 1936 created the U.S. Maritime Commission. At the beginning of World War II in Europe, U.S. shipping, handicapped by the Neutrality Act , again declined. American vessels were diverted to trade outside the war zones and many were transferred to other flags, mainly the Panamanian.

After the entry of the United States into the war (Dec., 1941), a huge shipbuilding program rapidly got under way, and standardized vessels were turned out by assembly-line methods. A brief period of United States dominance in world shipping followed the war. Subsequently, however, the U.S. merchant marine again declined steadily; as the expense of American labor and ship construction increased, the cost of operation went beyond competitive levels, despite the fact that the American shipping industry was receiving a large subsidy from the federal government.

Since the 1960s, U.S. ports have modernized their facilities by automating operations, installing computerized tracking systems, and handling containers ( "intermodal shipping" ) that can be transferred directly to truck trailers or rail cars. Older facilities that do not have the room to handle containerized shipping have declined. These changes have greatly reduced the number of jobs in the shipping industry.

Much of the cargo formerly carried in American vessels and in those of other major nations is now carried by so-called flag of convenience fleets. Such lines arose with the tendency of large shippers, especially those of Greece and the United States, to avoid the high taxes of their home countries by registering their ships in low-tax nations such as Panama and Liberia. In 1998 about 1.08 trillion tons of goods were imported to or exported from the United States by ship, but vessels flying the U.S. flag handled only 3% of that shipping.

See also ship ; maritime law .

Bibliography

See J. Hornell, Water Transport: Origins and Early Evolution (1946, repr. 1970); B. Landstrom, The Ship: An Illustrated History (1983).

Author not available, SHIPPING., The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition 2008

Related articles from HighBeam Research:

Development of Indian Shipping during Five Year Plans
Finance India; 12/1/2005; Meera, S N; 10651 words; ... aspects of the growth of the national shipping since independence and the impact of ... requirements of the trading community. Thus shipping is a vital ingredient of any nation's ... provides rich opportunities of Coastal Shipping. Besides it plays a key role in foreign ...
The state and economic performance: globalisation adn marginalisation in India's shipping.
The Journal of Commonwealth & Comparative Politics; 3/1/1997; Nayar, Baldev Raj; 14098 words; ... challenge. 2. THE STATE AND THE CRISIS IN SHIPPING It requires no strenuous effort to discern ... ideal types abstractly, but presciently, maps out the consequences that flow from its ... capacity, the two elements of state power. Shipping affairs in the government did not remain ... in the polity. Ministers ...
The demise of regulation in ocean shipping: a study in the evolution of competition policy and the predictive power of microeconomics.
Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law; 5/1/2006; Sagers, Chris; 21543 words; ... cynicism is not so easily avoided as to the shipping industry's century-long effort to defend ... but only because the near century of U.S. shipping policy contributed to industry organization ... 7 AM. ECON. REV. 331 (1917). (3.) Ocean Shipping Reform Act of 1998, Pub. L. 105-258, 112 ... 1998), amending ...
Cartels, imperial relations and Australian shipping policy in the Asia-Pacific region, 1914-1939.
Journal of Contemporary Asia; 8/1/1997; Tsokhas, Kosmas; 9020 words; While the history of the British shipping industry has been the subject of numerous studies, the role of shipping in imperial relations in the twentieth ... growth and profitability of British shipping to the spread of the trading and plantation ...
Ship, ship, hooray! How to control shipping costs.(Management; jewelry industry)
Jewelers Circular Keystone; 8/1/2003; Shuster, William George; 2518 words; ... jewelers substantial savings on overnight shipping for packages valued up to $50,000 (up to ... Jewelers in Richmond, Va., for example, cut shipping costs 5% in the past two years by switching ... Comparison-shop online, too. The major shipping services have Web sites where you can check services, pricing, ...
Great Lakes short sea shipping and the domestic cargo-carrying fleet.
Transportation Journal; 1/1/2007; Higginson, James K. Dumitrascu, Tudorita; 8425 words; ... Strengths and Weaknesses of Short Sea Shipping, Maritime Policy, 26, pp. 167-178. Peeters ... Analysis of Competitive Position of Short Sea Shipping. A Methodology and Empirical Applications ... of the Competitive Position of Short Sea Shipping. Development of Policy Measures. The Corridor ... Erie and Ontario ...
The Eastern & Australian Steampship Company and the shipping dispute between Australia and Japan, 1936-39.
Business History; 4/1/1992; Tsokhas, Kosmas; 8325 words; In the 1930s British shipping companies in the Far East found it ... quotas for cotton textiles until the shipping dispute had been resolved. As a result ... manufacturers, the major customers of the shipping companies, insisted that they reach ...
Managing decline: The political economy of British shipping in the 1930s
The Journal of Transport History; 3/1/2007; Greaves, Julian; 6392 words; For the global shipping industry the inter-war years proved ... period, however, was that the supply of shipping services greatly exceeded the demand ... significant challenge to the more established shipping nations, not just to the actual owners ...
A study on the performance of Indian Shipping with reference to its problems and prospects
Finance India; 9/1/2002; Meera, S N; 3120 words; ... IS a comprehensive treatise of Indian Shipping scenario and its growth since independence ... plans. It explored problems of inadequate shipping carrying capacity, its infrastructure facilities and shipping activities to meet intenational competition ...
The Ocean Shipping Reform Act of 1998.(analysis of its effect on the regulation of the maritime shipping industry)
Transportation Journal; 6/22/2000; LEWIS, IRA VELLENGA, DAVID B.; 5689 words; ... Advisory Commission on Conferences in Ocean Shipping, April 10, 1992 (Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office); Shipping Act Review: What each group wants, Journal ... p. 8B; Monteiro and Robertson, op.cit., Shipping Act of 1984, op. cit. (6.) Clott and Wilson ... Joseph Monteiro and Gerald ...
A Generic Systems Model for ocean shipping companies in the bulk sector.
Transportation Journal; 1/1/2004; Lagoudis, I.N. Lalwani, C.S. Naim, M.M.; 8285 words; Abstract Ocean shipping transportation has been studied mainly ... factors or activities within the ocean shipping management companies via the creation ... validation of the model. ********** The ocean shipping industry is a sector of increasing importance ...
The Role of Offshore Shipping Centres in Transportation Management: An Empirical Study of Management and Employee Attitudes
International Journal of Management; 12/1/2007; Chang, Ya-Fu; 3848 words; ... launched the Kaohsiung Harbor Offshore Shipping Center, which the Taiwan government ... of administrators and employees of shipping companies and port authority towards the role of the offshore shipping center and the problems it has encountered ...
Networks and Markets in Clyde Shipping: The Donaldsons and the Hogarths, 1870-1939.
Business History; 4/1/2001; MUNRO, FORBES SLAVEN, TONY; 14220 words; ... Shipping Co. Over time, however, the Kelvin Shipping Co. evolved into an adjunct of the tramp shipping operations of the Hogarth Shipping Co., with the result that the small liner ... separated out from the rest in the Iberia Shipping Company of 1924. Additionally, the group ... World War, and ...
Free shipping and purchasing decisions in B2B transactions: a game-theoretic analysis.(Business to business transactions)
IIE Transactions; 12/1/2005; Leng, Mingming Parlar, Mahmut; 7634 words; 1. Introduction Although free shipping started out as a temporary marketing ... transaction security and price discounts, free shipping was one of the best means of enticing ... Bayles, 2001). In addition to the free shipping offers advertised by almost every B2C ...
The blind leading the blind. (shipping finance)
The Banker; 11/1/1996; Varnavides, Lambros; 933 words; Shipping finance has become a popular area of banking but, warns ... those looking for higher returns will be disappointed Shipping finance has become a fashionable sector for banks. Ten years ago there were about 10 banks active in shipping. Two years ago there were probably 50 but now the figure ...

See all results from premium newspaper and magazine articles, images, maps and more at HighBeam Research.

Related articles from newspapers, magazines and other sources:

Shipping out: if you can afford to join the fray, offering online customers free shipping may help you compete. (Net Profits).
Entrepreneur; 6/1/2003; Campanelli, Melissa; 902 words;
Foolproof gun shipping: save time and money.
Shooting Industry; 1/1/1989; Swartley, Ron; 1276 words;
Changing Shipping Policy Makes China Access Easier.(Brief Article)(Statistical Data Included)
AgExporter; 5/1/2001; Chen, Ursula Caron, Jim; 677 words;
Who pays to get it there?; Net Profits: Your site's shipping and handling charges can make or break an online sale. (Tech).(Brief Article)
Entrepreneur; 2/1/2002; Campanelli, Melissa; 921 words;
Package makes perfect: Brown paper packages tied up with string? When it comes to shipping, e-tailers are learning that presentation is the key to becoming the consumer's favorite thing. (Logistics).(Company Profile)(Industry Overview)
Chief Executive (U.S.); 3/1/2002; Hodges, Jane; 1894 words;
SHIPPING FIREARMS.
American Handgunner; 7/1/2001; GERICKE, SHANE; 1711 words;
Higher prices lure shipping companies.(price of shipping a 40-foot container from Asia to the West Coast to increase by $900)(Industry Overview)
Los Angeles Business Journal; 5/10/1999; Petterson, Edvard; 724 words;
L.A. Port may lose new tenant in battle over pollution rules.(Up Front)(Port of Los Angeles may lose China Shipping Container Lines)
Los Angeles Business Journal; 9/1/2003; Greenberg, David; 697 words;
Point & counterpoint on direct shipping.
Wines & Vines; 11/1/1996; Haimann, Walter M. Mead, Jerry; 2314 words;
Why not ship wine, not guns? (shipping wine out of California)
Wines & Vines; 9/1/1993; Rondeau, Rene; 2263 words;
Browse by alphabet: