Administration of a Free Port
My four commercial voyages had been among the
exchange islands, or free islands, in Thassa, administered as free ports by
members of the Merchants. There were several such islands. Three, which I
encountereed frequently in my voyages, were Teletus, and, south of it, Tabor,
named for the drum, which it resembles, and to the north, among the northern
islands, Scagnar. Others were Farnacium, Hulneth and Asperiche. I did not go as
far south as Anango or Ianda, or as far north as Hunjer or Skjern, west of
Torvaldsland. These islands, with occasional free ports on the coast, north and
south of the Gorean equator, such as Lydius and Helmutsport, and Schendi
and Bazi, make possible the commerce between Cos and Tyros, and the mainland,
and its cities, such as Ko-ro-ba, Thentis, Tor, Ar, Turia, and many others. ~Raiders
of Gor~
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Merchants control free ports and exchange islands, under merchant law. Merchants were more interested in payment for wharfage and trade business in the port than proper (legal & correct) paperwork. |
The representative of the Merchants, to whom I reported my business, and to whom I paid wharfage, asked no questions. He did not even demand the proof of registration of the Tesephone of Tabor. The Merchants, who control Lydius, under merchant law, for it is a free port, like Helmutsport, and Schendi and Bazi, are more interested in having their port heavily trafficked than strictly policed. ~Hunters of Gor~
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Pirates, paying wharfage and declaring some sort of trade business in the port, are allowed entry. |
Indeed, at the wharves I had even seen two green ships. Green is the color common to pirates. I supposed, did they pay their wharfage and declare some sort of business, the captains of those ships were as little interrogated as I. ~Hunters of Gor~
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Government of free ports and exchange islands is identical (falling under Merchant law which is common through Gor). Though some may be more strictly controlled and others more permissive. |
The governance of Lydius, under the merchants,
incidentally, is identical to that of the exchange islands, or free islands, in
Thassa. Three with which I was familiar, from various voyages, were Tabor,
Teletus and, to the north, offshore from Torvaldsland, Scagnar. Of these, to be
honest, and to give the merchants their due, I will admit that Tabor and Teletus
are rather strictly controlled. It is said, however, by some of the merchants
there, that this manner of caution and restriction, has to some extent
diminished their position in the spheres of trade. Be that as it may, Lydius,
though not what you would call an open port, was indulgent, and permissive. ~Hunters
of Gor~
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Ports and islands that are not exchange islands or free ports, and not managed by the Merchants, are commonly managed by magistrated appointed by the city council. |
Most ports and islands on Thassa, of course, are
not managed by the Merchants, but, commonly, by magistrates appointed by the
city councils. In Port Kar, my city, the utilization of the facilities of the
port is regulated by a board of four magistrates, the Port Consortium, which
reports directly to the Council of Captains, which, since the downfall of the
warring Ubars, is sovereign in the city. I suppose the magistrate, who, with his
papers, met us at the dock, did not believe my story. ~Hunters of Gor~
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Management of a free port is similar to management of a free keep maintained by the merchants. |
"You are Dina," she said. "You are slave now
within the Keep of Stones of Turmus. This is a merchant keep, under the banner
and shield of Turia." That the keep was under the banner of Tuna designated it
as a Turian keep, distinguishing it in this sense not only from keeps maintained
by other cities but more importantly from the "free keeps" maintained by the
merchant caste in its own right, keeps without specific municipal affiliations.
Similarly, the merchant caste, which is international, so to speak, in its
organization, arranges and conducts the four great fairs which occur annually in
the vicinity of the Sardar mountains. The merchant caste, too, maintains certain
free ports on certain islands and on the coasts of Thassa, such as Teletus and
Bazi. ~Slave Girl of Gor~
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Space in a free port, as in a free keep, is rented on a commercial basis, regardless of municipal affiliation |
Space in a "free keep" is rented on a commercial basis, regardless of municipal affiliation. In a banner keep, or one maintained by a given city, preference, if not exclusive rights, are accorded to the merchants and citizens of the city under whose banner the keep is established and administered. ~Slave Girl of Gor~
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Warehouse space in a free port available for rent to merchants for trade purposes |
We continued along the docks of Lydius, satisfying our curiosity as to the port. We passed some fortified warehouse, in which space is available to merchants. In such places, there would be gems, and gold, silks, and wines and perfumes, jewelries and spices, richer goods not to be left exposed on the docks. ~Hunters of Gor~
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Merchants maintain fine harbors and markets to encourage business |
I had been taken by Tellius, the henchman of the Lady Elicia of Ar, by tarn, to Schendi. This infamous port is the home port of the famed black slavers of Schendi, a league of slavers well known for their cruel depredations on shipping, but it is also a free port, administered by black merchants, and its fine harbor and its inland markets to the north and east attract much commerce. It is thought that an agreement exists between the merchants of Schendi and the members of the league of black slavers, though I know of few who have proclaimed this publicly in Schendi and lived. The evidence, if evidence it is that such an agreement exists, is that the black slavers tend to avoid preying on shipping which plies to and from Schendi. They conduct their work commonly in more northern waters, returning to Schendi as their home port. ~Slave Girl of Gor~
Excerpt of The Goren Library of Knowledge