This paper presents an in-depth historical investigation of the related but distinctive phenomena of interest and usury, in the context of the development of concepts of credit, and of the eventual creation of medieval banking in something semi-recognisable as banking in today's sense of the word. We explore progress through a 'line of time' passing in particular from the 11th to the 15th Centuries. As they logically must, operating, economic and reporting practices changed continually, to meet the varying needs of production and operation, changing as it did from subsistence farming to sophisticated international trading, and we analyse these relationships on a chronological basis. An essential, and fascinating, parallel but much i...
The development of capital markets in medieval Europe was shaped for centuries by the religious ban ...
The following is a summary of some of the key findings of an ESRC-funded project (Grant number RES-0...
Today usury consists in lending money at excessive rate of interest. At the threshold of the sixteen...
This paper presents a historical investigation of usury in the context of the development of credit ...
This chapter discusses the evolution of non-cash payment mechanisms in the course of the development...
The essays in this volume look at the mechanics of debt, the legal process, and its economics in ear...
Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.The project investigated the ...
What were the economic consequences of the usury doctrine in the Middle Ages?� We examine how mercha...
The charging of interest for borrowing money, and the level at which it is charged, is of fundamenta...
‘Where law or conscientious scruples prevent lending at interest, the capital which belongs to perso...
This article provides a new perspective on sovereign finance and money in England from pre- modern t...
A major gap in our understanding of the medieval economy concerns interest rates, especially relatin...
The exceptions to the prohibition of "usury" make clear that "usury", in thirteenth century Canon La...
The widespread historiographical idea that \u93usury\u94 and its forbidding were the heart of the me...
The Prohibition of Loan at Interest, Principles and Current Developments. These days, even countries...
The development of capital markets in medieval Europe was shaped for centuries by the religious ban ...
The following is a summary of some of the key findings of an ESRC-funded project (Grant number RES-0...
Today usury consists in lending money at excessive rate of interest. At the threshold of the sixteen...
This paper presents a historical investigation of usury in the context of the development of credit ...
This chapter discusses the evolution of non-cash payment mechanisms in the course of the development...
The essays in this volume look at the mechanics of debt, the legal process, and its economics in ear...
Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.The project investigated the ...
What were the economic consequences of the usury doctrine in the Middle Ages?� We examine how mercha...
The charging of interest for borrowing money, and the level at which it is charged, is of fundamenta...
‘Where law or conscientious scruples prevent lending at interest, the capital which belongs to perso...
This article provides a new perspective on sovereign finance and money in England from pre- modern t...
A major gap in our understanding of the medieval economy concerns interest rates, especially relatin...
The exceptions to the prohibition of "usury" make clear that "usury", in thirteenth century Canon La...
The widespread historiographical idea that \u93usury\u94 and its forbidding were the heart of the me...
The Prohibition of Loan at Interest, Principles and Current Developments. These days, even countries...
The development of capital markets in medieval Europe was shaped for centuries by the religious ban ...
The following is a summary of some of the key findings of an ESRC-funded project (Grant number RES-0...
Today usury consists in lending money at excessive rate of interest. At the threshold of the sixteen...