ABSTRACT: This paper describes the evolution of the bill of exchange in medieval and early modern Europe both as a means of remittance and as an instrument of credit. It examines the evolution of the instrument, its use in remittance, its effect on international bullion flows, and its use as an instrument of credit. The paper also describes the international network of exchange markets on which the use of the bill of exchange relied. The paper concludes with a discussion of the emergence of negotiability in Antwerp in response to problems in the system of settlement. An Appendix describes the determination of exchange rates in this period
Two drawbacks of current empirical studies on late medieval financial market integration are: the u...
This paper employs a new method and dataset to estimate the effect of currency unions on the integra...
This article presents a detailed analysis of how liquid money market instruments—sterling bills of e...
in English The thesis aims especially on questions concerning law of exchange which are not satisfac...
in English The thesis aims especially on questions concerning law of exchange which are not satisfac...
This chapter discusses the evolution of non-cash payment mechanisms in the course of the development...
A vast economic history literature suggests that medieval institutions supporting contract enforceme...
As of the second half of the sixteenth century, bills of exchange gained importance in commercial fi...
This paper presents an in-depth historical investigation of the related but distinctive phenomena o...
By the close of the seventeenth century international trade had expanded beyond the reach of the per...
As other European countries of that time, Early modern France was characterized by its monetary plur...
A major gap in our understanding of the medieval economy concerns interest rates, especially relatin...
Based on the reconstruction of the monetary flows of a merchant-banking company operating in Barcelo...
The chapter focus on the monetary systems and the global balance-of-payments adjustment in the pre-g...
As other European countries of that time, Early modern France was characterized by its monetary plur...
Two drawbacks of current empirical studies on late medieval financial market integration are: the u...
This paper employs a new method and dataset to estimate the effect of currency unions on the integra...
This article presents a detailed analysis of how liquid money market instruments—sterling bills of e...
in English The thesis aims especially on questions concerning law of exchange which are not satisfac...
in English The thesis aims especially on questions concerning law of exchange which are not satisfac...
This chapter discusses the evolution of non-cash payment mechanisms in the course of the development...
A vast economic history literature suggests that medieval institutions supporting contract enforceme...
As of the second half of the sixteenth century, bills of exchange gained importance in commercial fi...
This paper presents an in-depth historical investigation of the related but distinctive phenomena o...
By the close of the seventeenth century international trade had expanded beyond the reach of the per...
As other European countries of that time, Early modern France was characterized by its monetary plur...
A major gap in our understanding of the medieval economy concerns interest rates, especially relatin...
Based on the reconstruction of the monetary flows of a merchant-banking company operating in Barcelo...
The chapter focus on the monetary systems and the global balance-of-payments adjustment in the pre-g...
As other European countries of that time, Early modern France was characterized by its monetary plur...
Two drawbacks of current empirical studies on late medieval financial market integration are: the u...
This paper employs a new method and dataset to estimate the effect of currency unions on the integra...
This article presents a detailed analysis of how liquid money market instruments—sterling bills of e...