This paper examines the questions of whether and how feudal rulers were able to credibly commit to preserving monetary stability, and of which consequences their decisions had for the efficiency of financial markets. The study reveals that princes were usually only able to commit to issuing a stable coinage in gold, but not in silver. As for silver currencies, the hypothesis is that transferring the right of coinage to an autonomous city was the functional equivalent to establishing an independent central bank. An analysis of market performance indicates that financial markets between cities that were autonomous with regard to their monetary policies were significantly better integrated and more efficient than markets between cities whose c...
The article uses new sources to review the hypotheses that Charles V’s currency bill of 1551 failed ...
By analysing a newly compiled database of exchange rates, this paper finds that Central European fin...
Currency debasement, defined as a loss of precious metal content (intrinsic value) of the circulatin...
This paper examines the questions of whether and how feudal rulers were able to credibly commit to p...
This paper examines the questions of whether and how feudal rulers were able to credibly commit to p...
This paper examines the questions of whether and how feudal rulers were able to credibly commit to p...
This paper examines the questions of whether and how feudal rulers were able to credibly commit to m...
Monetary crises as well as disruptions of the financial system have been part of European history si...
This paper employs a new method and dataset to estimate the effect of currency unions on the integra...
The paper discusses which options medieval political authorities had to satisfy the demand for compl...
The article argues that in the first half of the sixteenth century the need to avoid rounds of compe...
Using new sources, this article examines how in the years around 1550 Charles V and the imperial est...
The paper starts out from the insight that success or failure of the common currency, on which the d...
In this paper, the problem of why low-purchasing power silver coins depreciated relative to high-pur...
This paper revisits the question of debasement by analysing a newly compiled dataset with a novel ap...
The article uses new sources to review the hypotheses that Charles V’s currency bill of 1551 failed ...
By analysing a newly compiled database of exchange rates, this paper finds that Central European fin...
Currency debasement, defined as a loss of precious metal content (intrinsic value) of the circulatin...
This paper examines the questions of whether and how feudal rulers were able to credibly commit to p...
This paper examines the questions of whether and how feudal rulers were able to credibly commit to p...
This paper examines the questions of whether and how feudal rulers were able to credibly commit to p...
This paper examines the questions of whether and how feudal rulers were able to credibly commit to m...
Monetary crises as well as disruptions of the financial system have been part of European history si...
This paper employs a new method and dataset to estimate the effect of currency unions on the integra...
The paper discusses which options medieval political authorities had to satisfy the demand for compl...
The article argues that in the first half of the sixteenth century the need to avoid rounds of compe...
Using new sources, this article examines how in the years around 1550 Charles V and the imperial est...
The paper starts out from the insight that success or failure of the common currency, on which the d...
In this paper, the problem of why low-purchasing power silver coins depreciated relative to high-pur...
This paper revisits the question of debasement by analysing a newly compiled dataset with a novel ap...
The article uses new sources to review the hypotheses that Charles V’s currency bill of 1551 failed ...
By analysing a newly compiled database of exchange rates, this paper finds that Central European fin...
Currency debasement, defined as a loss of precious metal content (intrinsic value) of the circulatin...