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How Commerce Became Legal

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When Egypt's markets opened to private capital in the 1840s, a new infrastructure of commercial laws and institutions emerged. Egypt became the site of profound legal experimentation, and the resul...
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  • 30 September 2025
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When Egypt's markets opened to private capital in the 1840s, a new infrastructure of commercial laws and institutions emerged. Egypt became the site of profound legal experimentation, and the resulting commercial sphere reflected the political contestations among the governors of Egypt, European consulates, Ottoman rulers, and a growing number of private entrepreneurs, both foreign and local. How Commerce Became Legal explores the legal and business practices that resulted from this fusion of Ottoman, French, and Islamic legal concepts and governed commerce in Egypt.

  Focusing on the decades between the formalization of Cairo's practical autonomy within the Ottoman Empire in the 1840s and its incorporation into the British Empire in the 1880s, Omar Cheta considers how modern laws redefined the commercial sphere, shaping a mode of market governance that would persist for decades to come. He highlights the demarcation of a new law-defined commercial realm separate from the land regime and from civil or family-centered exchanges, and reconstructs these changes through both legal codes and state orders, as well as individual merchant voices preserved in court documents. As this book documents both individual experiences and structural explanations, it offers a rare perspective on the scope and reach of market governance over the mid nineteenth century, revealing changes simultaneously from within and without state institutions.

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Price: $70.00
Pages: 268
Publisher: Stanford University Press
Imprint: Stanford University Press
Publication Date: 30 September 2025
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781503643390
Format: Hardcover
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"A remarkable study of market governance where the government is dispersed, diffuse, and at odds with itself. Omar Cheta masterfully weaves together rich and detailed character studies with perceptive structural analysis of how Egyptian commerce was brought under the rule of many laws." —Johan Mathew, Rutgers University
Omar Youssef Cheta is Assistant Professor of History at Syracuse University.
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Note on Transliteration
Introduction: "How Come I Have Never Heard of Them?"
1. Institutions: The Commercial-Legal Infrastructure
2. Butrus/Pierre: The Merchant Who Avoided the Law
3. Musa and Hasan: The Merchants Who Used the Law
4. Tito: The "Avukatu" Who Knew the Law
5. Concepts: The Law-Defined Realm of Commerce
Epilogue: "There Was No Special Law for Commercial Activities"
Notes
Bibliography
Index