This article provides an overview of long-term changes in the relative conditions of the rich in preindustrial Europe. It covers four pre-unification Italian states (Sabaudian State, Florentine State, Kingdom of Naples and Republic of Venice) as well as other areas of Europe (Low Countries, Catalonia) during the period 1300-1800. Three different kinds of indicators are measured systematically and combined in the analysis: headcount indexes, the share of the top rich, and richness indexes. Taken together, they suggest that overall, during the entirety of the early modern period the rich tended to become both more prevalent and more distanced from the other strata of society. The only period during which the opposite process took place was th...
This essay constitutes a cross-section of a work of upcoming publication which aims to trace a macro...
This paper uses new archival data collected by an ERC-funded research project, EINITE-Economic Ineq...
This Element explores the longest spell that can be computed from quantifiable fiscal records when t...
This article provides an overview of long-term changes in the relative conditions of the rich in pre...
This article provides an overview of economic inequality, particularly of wealth, in the Florentine ...
This article provides a picture of economic inequality in northwestern Italy (Piedmont), 1300-1800. ...
This article provides an overview of economic inequality, particularly of wealth, in the Florentine ...
Recent literature has reconstructed estimates of wealth and income inequality for a range of preindu...
This article offers an overview of recent research on preindustrial inequality, from the late Middle...
In the past 700 years inequality only declined significantly after the Black Death and the two world...
This article provides a comparison of long-term changes in inequality in two key areas of preindustr...
This article explores the relationship between concentration of wealth and population dynamics in th...
This article provides an overview of current knowledge about economic inequality, of both income and...
This article provides an overview of wealth inequality in Germany during 1300–1850, introducing a no...
This article provides an overview of wealth inequality in England from the late thirteenth to the si...
This essay constitutes a cross-section of a work of upcoming publication which aims to trace a macro...
This paper uses new archival data collected by an ERC-funded research project, EINITE-Economic Ineq...
This Element explores the longest spell that can be computed from quantifiable fiscal records when t...
This article provides an overview of long-term changes in the relative conditions of the rich in pre...
This article provides an overview of economic inequality, particularly of wealth, in the Florentine ...
This article provides a picture of economic inequality in northwestern Italy (Piedmont), 1300-1800. ...
This article provides an overview of economic inequality, particularly of wealth, in the Florentine ...
Recent literature has reconstructed estimates of wealth and income inequality for a range of preindu...
This article offers an overview of recent research on preindustrial inequality, from the late Middle...
In the past 700 years inequality only declined significantly after the Black Death and the two world...
This article provides a comparison of long-term changes in inequality in two key areas of preindustr...
This article explores the relationship between concentration of wealth and population dynamics in th...
This article provides an overview of current knowledge about economic inequality, of both income and...
This article provides an overview of wealth inequality in Germany during 1300–1850, introducing a no...
This article provides an overview of wealth inequality in England from the late thirteenth to the si...
This essay constitutes a cross-section of a work of upcoming publication which aims to trace a macro...
This paper uses new archival data collected by an ERC-funded research project, EINITE-Economic Ineq...
This Element explores the longest spell that can be computed from quantifiable fiscal records when t...