Until relatively recently, the history of credit in late medieval Europe was written almost exclusively from the perspective of the merchants, princes, ecclesiastical institutions and cities that played such central roles in the so-called commercial revolution. Consequently, women were absent from this story, and credit seemed to have been a product of the revolution itself. The past several decades of research have, however, upended these assumptions. Almost everyone in late medieval Europe ..
My dissertation argues that eighteenth-century fiction about marriageable women helped create the at...
Credit was a central feature of the early-modern British economy. Due to shortages of specie, men an...
The study of women’s social position throughout history has often led to this image of women as soci...
Social scientists emphasize that economic development and women’s empowerment are closely interrelat...
Many scholars suggest that credit networks were fundamental to the operation of early modern towns. ...
According to several historians, the customary laws of the Low Countries offered women exceptional e...
This chapter examines female participation and strategies in French local credit markets in the eigh...
While most research on early modern credit focuses on men, a micro-historical perspective on eightee...
© 2015 John Wiley & Sons Ltd. In the transition from medieval notions of usury to modern notions o...
This paper presents an in-depth historical investigation of the related but distinctive phenomena o...
Credit may mean both a way of doing business and the reputation of the individuals transacting it. ...
By the mid-twelfth century, the revitalized cities of northern Italy joined the well-developed cycle...
This article examines the strategies, actions, and meaning of the credit activities of single women ...
textThe dissertation centers on representations of women in the genres of romance, pastourelle and f...
In the Late Middle Ages the social position of women underwent major transitions. However, until tod...
My dissertation argues that eighteenth-century fiction about marriageable women helped create the at...
Credit was a central feature of the early-modern British economy. Due to shortages of specie, men an...
The study of women’s social position throughout history has often led to this image of women as soci...
Social scientists emphasize that economic development and women’s empowerment are closely interrelat...
Many scholars suggest that credit networks were fundamental to the operation of early modern towns. ...
According to several historians, the customary laws of the Low Countries offered women exceptional e...
This chapter examines female participation and strategies in French local credit markets in the eigh...
While most research on early modern credit focuses on men, a micro-historical perspective on eightee...
© 2015 John Wiley & Sons Ltd. In the transition from medieval notions of usury to modern notions o...
This paper presents an in-depth historical investigation of the related but distinctive phenomena o...
Credit may mean both a way of doing business and the reputation of the individuals transacting it. ...
By the mid-twelfth century, the revitalized cities of northern Italy joined the well-developed cycle...
This article examines the strategies, actions, and meaning of the credit activities of single women ...
textThe dissertation centers on representations of women in the genres of romance, pastourelle and f...
In the Late Middle Ages the social position of women underwent major transitions. However, until tod...
My dissertation argues that eighteenth-century fiction about marriageable women helped create the at...
Credit was a central feature of the early-modern British economy. Due to shortages of specie, men an...
The study of women’s social position throughout history has often led to this image of women as soci...