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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
trading post
noun
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ And there's a new trading post in the museum.
▪ The fort became a trading post that attracted a religiously diverse population.
▪ They realised the strategic importance of the site and used it as a naval base and trading post.
▪ Traders began encouraging Navajo women to weave rugs to trade for food and necessities at the trading post.
Wiktionary
trading post

n. A place where trading of goods takes place.

WordNet
trading post

n. a retail store serving a sparsely populated region; usually stocked with a wide variety of merchandise [syn: country store, general store]

Wikipedia
Trading post

A trading post was a place or establishment where the trading of goods took place; the term is generally used, in modern parlance, in reference to such establishments in historic Northern America, although the practice long predates that continent's colonization by Europeans. The preferred travel route to a trading post or between trading posts, was known as a trade route.

Trading posts were also places for people to meet and exchange the news of the world or simply the news from their home country (many of the world's trading posts were located in places which were popular destinations for emigration) in a time when not even newspapers existed.

European colonialism traces its roots to ancient Carthage. Originally a trading settlement of Phoenician colonists, Carthage grew into a vast economic and political power throughout the Mediterranean, accumulating wealth and influence through its economic (trading) prowess. Numerous cities of importance once started their history as trading posts: Venice, New York, Shanghai, Singapore, Hong Kong, Naples, Rotterdam etc.

The annexation of trading posts along ancient trade routes took place in the 16th and 17th century by European powers like the Dutch and English. It began with the capture of Ceuta (a terminus of the trans-Saharan trade route) by the Portuguese in 1415. They went on to establish further enclaves as they explored the coasts of Africa, Arabia, India and South East Asia in search of the source of the lucrative spice trade. Trading posts were also very common in the early settlements of Canada and the United States for the trade of such things as fur. They were also used in many camps across the United States as places to buy snacks, items and souvenirs.

The Hudson's Bay Company set up trading posts around Hudson Bay during the fur trade. Goods were traded for beaver pelts amongst the Europeans and the Native Americans. In the United States in the early 19th century, trading posts used by Native Americans were licensed by the federal government and called " factories". Tribes were to concede substantial territory to the United States in order to access the "factories" as happened at Fort Clark in the Treaty of Fort Clark in which the Osage Nation conceded most of Missouri in order to access the trading post.