This book challenges the notion that economic crises are
modern phenomena through its exploration of the tumultuous ‘credit-crunch’ of
the later Middle Ages. It illustrates clearly how influences such as the Black
Death, inter-European warfare, climate change and a bullion famine occasioned
severe and prolonged economic decline across fifteenth century England. Early
chapters discuss trends in lending and borrowing, and the use of credit to fund
domestic trade through detailed analysis of the Statute Staple and rich primary
sources. The author then adopts a broad-based geographic lens to examine
provincial credit before focusing on London’s development as the commercial powerhouse
in late medieval business.
Academics and students of modern economic change and historic
financial revolutions alike will see that the years from 1353 to
1532 encompassed immense upheaval and change, reminiscent of modern recessions.
The author carefully guides the reader to see that these shifts arethe
precursors of economic change in the early modern period, laying the
foundations for the financial world as we know it today.
Goddard
Credit and Trade in Later Medieval England, 1353-1532 jetzt bestellen!
Weitere Infos & Material
Chapter 1) The Statute
Staple and Trade Finance in Later Medieval England.- Chapter 2) Merchants
and Trade.- Chapter 3) Boom and Bust: Patterns of Borrowing in Later Medieval England.- Chapter 4) The
Geography of Recession: Provincial Credit in Later Medieval England.- Chapter 5) London: The
Commercial Powerhouse.- Chapter 6) Conclusions.
Richard Goddard
is Associate Professor of Medieval History
at the University of Nottingham, UK. He is author of
Lordship and Medieval Urbanization: Coventry, 1043-1355
(Woodbridge,
2004) and co-editor of
Survival and
Discord in Medieval Society
(Turnhout, 2010). He has written extensively on
the economic and social history of later medieval England.