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Books
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Publication year: 2007
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| Series: | Later Medieval Europe, 1 |
| ISBN-13 (i)The ISBN (International Standard Book Number) has been changed from 10 to 13 digits on 1 January 2007: | 978 90 04 15633 3 |
| ISBN-10: | 90 04 15633 X |
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| Cover: | Hardback |
| Number of pages: | xx, 652 pp. |
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| List price: | € 149.00 / US$ 221.00 |
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Table of contents
Preface Herman Van der Wee
Money and Ethics
Law, Ethics and Economy: Gerard of Siena and Giovanni d’Andrea on Usury Lawrin Armstrong Max Weber and Usury: Implications for Historical Research Lutz Kaelber Taxation and Revenue The King’s Business in Africa: Decisions and Strategies of the Portuguese Crown Ivana Elbl Civic Debt, Civic Taxes, and Urban Unrest: A Catalan Key to Interpreting the Late Fourteenth-Century European Crisis Jeffrey Fynn-Paul Tolls and Trade in Medieval England James Masschaele
Expenditure and War
Calculating Profits and Losses during the Hundred Years War Kelly DeVries The Cost of Majesty: Financial Reform and the Development of the Royal Court in Portugal and England at the Turn of the Sixteenth Century Susannah C. Humble Ferreira Warfare, Shipping, and Crown Patronage: The Economic Impact of the Hundred Years War on the English Port Towns Maryanne Kowaleski
Land and Labour
Peasant Servitude in Later Medieval Provence: Archaism or Innovation? John Drendel Bargaining Power and Institutional Change: Seven Centuries of Italian Sharecropping Contracts, 821 to 1517 A.D. Francesco Galassi Market Integration A Test Case for Regional Market Integration? The Grain Trade between Malta and Sicily in the Fifteenth Century Mark Aloisio Capital Market and Central Place Function in Thirteenth-Century Ypres David Nicholas Thresholds for Market Integration in the Low Countries and England in the Fifteenth Century Richard W. Unger
Long-Distance Trade and Markets
Egyptian Specie Markets and the International Gold Crisis of the Fifteenth Century Ian Blanchard From Venice to the Tuat: Trans-Saharan Copper Trade and Francesco di Marco Datini of Prato Martin Malcolm Elbl The Borromei Bank Research Project Francesco Guidi Bruscoli and J. L. Bolton
Regional and Local Markets
Shops and Shopping in the Thirteenth Century: Three Texts Martha Carlin Movable/Immovable, What’s in a Name?— The Case of Late Medieval Ghent Martha Howell Cultivation and Consumption: Medieval Lübeck’s Gardens Charlotte Masemann
Reviews
“this Festschrift in honor of the revered John Munro contains original and remarkable work, .. are all characterized by a notable wealth of historical evidence, references, and sources. Given the scope of topics and the diversity of approaches, the volume should be of great interest to a wide range of scholars in diverse fields” Karine van der Beek in EH.Net (September 2007)
“in its range and diversity the collection is a fine tribute to Munro’s work, and the bibliographies, not least that of his own publications, provide most valuable references”, Pamela Nightingale in Economic History Review, 61, 1 (2008)
Readership
Readers interested in medieval economic, social, and institutional history, and particularly in commerce, in fiscal, organizational, and related legal issues, as well as in banking, capital markets, and market integration.
About the author(s)
Lawrin Armstrong (Ph.D., University of Toronto, 1996) is Associate Professor of Medieval Studies and Associate Director of the Centre for Medieval Studies, University of Toronto. His research focuses on the relationship between economics and law in late medieval and Renaissance Italy. Ivana Elbl (Ph.D., University of Toronto, 1986) is Associate Professor of History, Trent University, and Chief Editor of the Portuguese Studies Review. Her research focuses on societal dynamics of the late medieval Portugal and the early Portuguese overseas expansion. Martin Elbl (M.A, University of Toronto, 1981) is adjunct member of the Department of History, Trent University, and Associate Editor of the Portuguese Studies Review. His research and publications focus on late medieval Italian and Iberian relations with North Africa.
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Assembled in honour of John H. A. Munro (University of Toronto), the volume groups nineteen original studies by a diversified panel of scholars. The essays explore late medieval market mechanisms and associated institutional, fiscal and monetary, organizational, decision-making, legal and ethical issues, as well as various aspects of production, consumption and market integration. The geographical scope stretches from North-Western and Central Europe to North and West Africa, and the individual contributions deal with a variety of local, regional, and long-distance markets and networks. The mix of approaches, cutting-edge archival research, and presentations of current projects addresses the interests of scholars in diverse fields, from economic to social and institutional history. The volume offers a full bibliography of John H. A. Munro’s works.
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