"The book is a fascinating example of how the confluence of commercial, religious, and scholarly interests could utmostly sustain the creation of new knowledge on different cultures." -- Viviana Tagliaferri , Nordicum Mediterraneum "Written in clear prose, A Commerce of Knowledge offers an informative account of the scholarly pursuits of English orientalist scholars in Ottoman Aleppo by shedding light on ongoing commercial activities in the city. It is an important contribution to the history of early modern orientalism from an often neglected point of view . an engrossing read, especially suitable for specialists working on humanist scholarship, early modern orientalism and the early English missions in the Middle East." -- Duygu Yildirim, Journal of Jewish Studies "A Commerce of Knowledge provides a new basis from which the intellectual traditions and connections between England and the wider world can be understood, while placing local interests and actors in their rightful place in these narratives." -- Peter Good, Journal of Early Modern History "It is based on an astonishingly wide acquaintance with both primary and secondary sources, as a glance at the bibliography (277-315) will confirm, and these are faithfully recorded in the (often voluminous) footnotes.numerous and weighty contributions to our knowledge and understanding of the complex of trade, scholarship, missionary work, and exploration between Europe and the Ottoman Empire.Everyone with a serious interest in any of those aspects will learn much from this book.
" -- G. J. Toomer, Erudition and the Republic of Letters "This book is constructed around the careers at Aleppo of the chaplains to the Levant Company in that city from the late sixteenth to the later eighteenth centuries. However, it is not a series of biographies, but rather an attempt to place their activities in the context of the historical and social milieux, and to relate them to contemporary interests and aspirations. The 'Commerce' of the title is a key to the author's approach." -- G. J. Toomer, Professor Emeritus of the History of Mathematics, Brown University, Providence, RI, USA, Erudition and the Republic of Letters 7 "The book marshals a marvelously detailed series of individually important case studies in order to fill out traditional lines of inquiry in the historiography of European scholarship and religion.
Even more importantly, the book lends empirical support to general arguments that have been recently made by historians who, like Mills, favor an approach to questions about humanistic scholarship between the late Renaissance and early Enlightenment that is grounded in the study of practices and institutions." -- William J. Bulman, Lehigh University, Journal of Modern History "It is a work that I find inspiring and that I hope will serve as an inspiration to others." -- Gustaf Fryksén, International Journal of Maritime History 35.