In this study, the first of its kind in the English language, Richard von Glahn offers a definitive analysis of the economic, political, and social history of money and monetary policy during the Song, Yuan, Ming, and early Qing dynasties. Von Glahn presents a revisionist interpretation of previously held ideas about the effect of money and international trade in bullion on the rise and decline of dynastic power in China.Von Glahn's study also links Chinese monetary history to changing trends in money use and trade in gold and silver in Asia, Europe, and the Western Hemisphere. China's shift to a silver economy had a decisive influence not only on the growth of a market economy in China, but also on the formation of a global economy in the ...
A Monetary History of China, Volumes One and Two by Peng Xinwei, translated by Edward H. Kaplan. Tra...
In a recent publication, Prof. Van der Spek (2011) made an intriguing comparison between the flows o...
This article argues that the commodity “nature” ascribed to early modern money should be understood ...
This article is written by Richard von Glahn, Professor at the Department of History in UCLA. This a...
Thierry François. Von Glahn Richard, Fountain of Fortune, Money and monetary policy in China, 1000-1...
In this paper, we discuss monetary thought in ancient China from the perspective of Western monetary...
The circulation of silver between the Americas, Europe, and China has provided a critical impetus fo...
This article provides the first systematic econometric study on the evolution of Chinese silver exch...
UnrestrictedThis thesis analyzed Chinese currency reform initiated by Nanjing nationalist government...
Chinese Money in Global Context: Historic Junctures Between 600 BCE and 2012 offers a groundbreaking...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 77-98)This thesis addresses an unexplored area in U.S.-Ch...
International audienceThis volume is a collection of papers on money, currency and economic history....
This article provides an historical overview on the development of Chinese money and monetary regime...
It is widely recognised that monetary paper instruments appeared in China earlier than in the West, ...
The breakdown of the monopoly of coinage in Spanish America by the 1820s meant the cessation of the ...
A Monetary History of China, Volumes One and Two by Peng Xinwei, translated by Edward H. Kaplan. Tra...
In a recent publication, Prof. Van der Spek (2011) made an intriguing comparison between the flows o...
This article argues that the commodity “nature” ascribed to early modern money should be understood ...
This article is written by Richard von Glahn, Professor at the Department of History in UCLA. This a...
Thierry François. Von Glahn Richard, Fountain of Fortune, Money and monetary policy in China, 1000-1...
In this paper, we discuss monetary thought in ancient China from the perspective of Western monetary...
The circulation of silver between the Americas, Europe, and China has provided a critical impetus fo...
This article provides the first systematic econometric study on the evolution of Chinese silver exch...
UnrestrictedThis thesis analyzed Chinese currency reform initiated by Nanjing nationalist government...
Chinese Money in Global Context: Historic Junctures Between 600 BCE and 2012 offers a groundbreaking...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 77-98)This thesis addresses an unexplored area in U.S.-Ch...
International audienceThis volume is a collection of papers on money, currency and economic history....
This article provides an historical overview on the development of Chinese money and monetary regime...
It is widely recognised that monetary paper instruments appeared in China earlier than in the West, ...
The breakdown of the monopoly of coinage in Spanish America by the 1820s meant the cessation of the ...
A Monetary History of China, Volumes One and Two by Peng Xinwei, translated by Edward H. Kaplan. Tra...
In a recent publication, Prof. Van der Spek (2011) made an intriguing comparison between the flows o...
This article argues that the commodity “nature” ascribed to early modern money should be understood ...