A ban on the practice of usury, taking interest on loans, was evolved in medieval law both canonical and secular. Over the centuries the law was challenged, questioned, refined and modified, but in essence stood firm. Ahile a grievance to the poor, however, usury was a necessity to the businessman who developed a whole range of subterfuges to disguise it. The Reformation did not sweep away canon law, so that Elizabethan divines condemned usury in arguments that echo their medieval predecessors. The man of business did not live up to the ideals of his church or his state, and so universal was the practice of usury that a normative market rate of Interest existed, but because of the official disapproval, it can only be reconstruc...
The purpose of this paper is to explore the nature of sumptuary legislation in sixteenth century Eng...
Tudor England experienced crisis levels of poverty and unemployment which manifested in the form of ...
The Statute of Uses: A Tudor Solution to the Evasion of Feudal Incidents and Its Consequences Fo...
‘Where law or conscientious scruples prevent lending at interest, the capital which belongs to perso...
What were the economic consequences of the usury doctrine in the Middle Ages?� We examine how mercha...
This paper presents a historical investigation of usury in the context of the development of credit ...
Article by Dr Warren Swain and Karen Fairweather, School of Law, Durham University published in Amic...
Today usury consists in lending money at excessive rate of interest. At the threshold of the sixteen...
Vita.The concept of usury is found in Western man's earliest writings on ethical principles, e.g. th...
The development of capital markets in medieval Europe was shaped for centuries by the religious ban ...
This thesis revises the late medieval and early modern legislative foundation of public welfare in ...
This paper presents an in-depth historical investigation of the related but distinctive phenomena o...
Starting in the mid-thirteenth century, kings, bishops, and local rulers throughout western Europe r...
The objectives of this paper are three-fold. The first is to rebut Charles Kindleberger’s famous dic...
The century 1540-1640 in England was a period of profoundchange, almost universally regarded as the ...
The purpose of this paper is to explore the nature of sumptuary legislation in sixteenth century Eng...
Tudor England experienced crisis levels of poverty and unemployment which manifested in the form of ...
The Statute of Uses: A Tudor Solution to the Evasion of Feudal Incidents and Its Consequences Fo...
‘Where law or conscientious scruples prevent lending at interest, the capital which belongs to perso...
What were the economic consequences of the usury doctrine in the Middle Ages?� We examine how mercha...
This paper presents a historical investigation of usury in the context of the development of credit ...
Article by Dr Warren Swain and Karen Fairweather, School of Law, Durham University published in Amic...
Today usury consists in lending money at excessive rate of interest. At the threshold of the sixteen...
Vita.The concept of usury is found in Western man's earliest writings on ethical principles, e.g. th...
The development of capital markets in medieval Europe was shaped for centuries by the religious ban ...
This thesis revises the late medieval and early modern legislative foundation of public welfare in ...
This paper presents an in-depth historical investigation of the related but distinctive phenomena o...
Starting in the mid-thirteenth century, kings, bishops, and local rulers throughout western Europe r...
The objectives of this paper are three-fold. The first is to rebut Charles Kindleberger’s famous dic...
The century 1540-1640 in England was a period of profoundchange, almost universally regarded as the ...
The purpose of this paper is to explore the nature of sumptuary legislation in sixteenth century Eng...
Tudor England experienced crisis levels of poverty and unemployment which manifested in the form of ...
The Statute of Uses: A Tudor Solution to the Evasion of Feudal Incidents and Its Consequences Fo...