William Gosling wrote:Did you know that...
... In our time period, England is one of Russia's closest trading partners, if not the closest trading partner Russia has, and has been since Elizabethan times? The Baltic states, the Poles, and other such factions refuse to trade with Russia and forced similar embargoes on much of Germany and Scandinavia. England was unbound by these terms and traded freely with Muscovy and Russia. The Muscovy Company had a monopoly on Russian trade until 1698.
Wrong.
It might be that England was one of Russia’s closest trading partner (but was Russia England’s?). But I think you’ve gotten the part about the Baltic States and the trading embargoes a bit wrong.
In that time Estonia belonged to Sweden and Danes and Poles had influence over the other two Baltic states. The Baltic States didn’t even
exist as separate countries and the local peasants were pretty much slaves. They couldn’t even influence the decisions made by Germans and Poles and Scandinavians and wouldn’t have had a chance in forcing any embargos. It would have been simply unfathomable. The Baltic States were small and relatiely poor colonies of sort and their main value was in their geopolitically strategic location.
In addition, the Baltic States
have never and
will never not trade with Russia. We might not always be very fond of our big neighbour, but in order to survive we need Russia’s trade. And Russia needs us. If you look at the map, Russia is a quite unfortunate country – it’s big, but very closed off as it has virtually no access to the sea. So if Russia wanted to trade with the rest of Europe, it pretty much had to go through the Baltic States.
Now trade wise.
17th century trade in the Baltic Sea basin was largely taken over by foreign merchants – from Germany, Netherlands and England. There was a reason why I have Kane trading with Russia as well. Nearly half of the grain grown locally (most of it was distilled into strong liquour) went to Russia, salt, spices, wine, fruit, fabrics all were exported. And from Russia came shipbuilding materials, timber, furs. Sweden shipped iron to Estonia and England shipped tin here.
Tallinn and Narva flourished in that era
thanks to trade with Russia. Sweden even considered shifting their eastern capital here, because of it. Tallinn and Narva are both very well situated – Narva River was a direct trading route to Pskov, Novgorod and Moscow. And Tallinn port is the pearl of the Baltic sea, because Tallinn port practically never freezes, not even during the coldest winters when it gets to -30 degrees by Celsius and below. Heck, it’s such a good trading port that the Chinese are starting to more and more use Tallinn as the port via which they send their goods to the rest of Europe.
Of course, Sweden wanted its cut of the profit so the
customs in Tallinn and Narva were high and occasionally the Swedish government directed a shipment or two of grain to Swedish army or to relieve famines rather than export it to Russia, but trade flourished!
The Baltic States didn’t implement any means whatsoever to limit trade with Russia and even if they had wanted to do so they wouldn't have been able to. And if Russia had any limitations on trading via Tallinn and Narva, then Russia agreed to these terms in the peace contract with Sweden after being beaten in a war.
Sorry if the rant is a bit long, but Kane also trades in the Baltic Sea basin for a very simple reason - I know the history of it, because it's
my history.