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Italian merchants: privileges he unquestioned dominance of the Italian merchants was based on the privileges that Byzantium had offered them. These privileges facilitated the full freedom of movement for people and goods, while they often exempted the beneficiaries from the payment of duties. The Italians were able to reconfirm these privileges frequently by offering something in exchange, such as military aid or an alliance. Such privileges had already been granted, since the early years of the Empire of Nicaea, to the Italians, who, however, did not develop any particularly important activity in the region. After the recovery of Constantinople, the privileges became even more extensive. The Venetian and Genoese merchants were exempted from some or all import and export taxes as well as from most other duties. In the areas where they established themselves, they enjoyed the right of autonomy and of self-government, and they had their own places of residence, their own weights and measures, as well as their own law courts.
The recovery of Constantinople was followed by a series of treaties, which, depending on the political and financial interests of Byzantium, conceded privileges alternately to the Venetians or to the Genoese. Among these, for instance, was the treaty of Nymphaion in 1261, by which
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