1st Edition

Private Money and Public Currencies: The Sixteenth Century Challenge The Sixteenth Century Challenge

By M-.T.Boyer- Xambeau, A. Azodi Copyright 1994
    250 Pages
    by Routledge

    248 Pages
    by Routledge

    First Published in 1994. Writing as a unified team, the authors, three French economists—they insist they are economists, not economic historians, though they are steeped in the monetary, financial, economic, social, and political history of Europe in the sixteenth century—have written a fascinating account of the development of means of payment at the end of the Renaissance and the beginning of the modern period. The account is limited for the most part to what they call “Latin Christianity”—primarily France, Italy, and Spain. It describes both the development of an integrated circuit of intra-European payments by means of bills of exchange negotiated at trade and payment fairs and the emergence of national systems of money of account and metallic coins at the hands of the monarchs of the emerging state system.

    Chapter 1 Introduction: Money and Society in Sixteenth-Century Europe; Chapter 2 The Italian Exchange Bankers and the World of Fairs; Chapter 3 French Moneyers and the World of Coins; Chapter 4 The European Area of Exchange by Bills; Chapter 5 National Areas of Monetization; Chapter 6 Private Monetization by Exchange Bankers and Public Monetization by Princes; Chapter 7 The International Monetary Crisis of the 1570s; conclusion Conclusion;

    Biography

    Authored by Marie-Therese Boyer-Xambeau, Ghislain Deleplace, Lucien Gillard. Translated by Azodi, A.