The late Middle Ages witnessed the transformation of the county of Holland from a peripheral agrarian region to a highly commercialised and urbanised one. This book examines how the organisation of commodity markets contributed to this remarkable development. Comparing Holland to England and Flanders, the book shows that Holland’s specific history of reclamation and settlement had given rise to a favourable balance of powers between state, nobility, towns and rural communities that reduced opportunities for rent-seeking and favoured the rise of efficient markets. This allowed burghers, peasants and fishermen to take full advantage of new opportunities presented by changing economic and ecological circumstances in the late fourteenth and ear...
The land market has been recognized as an important part of the economy and society of the medieval ...
The demographic catastrophe of the Black Death in the second half of the fourteenth century caused a...
This article challenges the growing consensus in the literature that medieval manorial managers were...
Although the importance of the institutional approach for understanding pre-industrial economic deve...
This paper compares the development and role of rural trade venues in Holland in the 13th, 14th and ...
Large parts of the Netherlands saw an early rise in market traffic during the late Middle Ages alrea...
The book is structured as follows. Chapter 1 introduces medieval Holland as a significant entity for...
Although the importance of New Institutional Economics and the institutional approach for understand...
Large parts of the Netherlands saw an early rise in market traffic during the late Middle Ages alrea...
This book examines the vital role of market towns in the medieval economy. It focuses on Exeter, and...
The involvement of rural populations in market activities in the past is still debated. Were people ...
Abstract: At the centre of the debate on pre\u2010industrial economic growth is the study of market ...
Paper given at a conference organised by the Centre for Metropolitan History and supported by the Ec...
The peasant economy in north-east England, and indeed throughout the country as a whole, underwent m...
Around 1280 the villages of Akersloot, Uitgeest and Wormer in the district of Kennemerland received ...
The land market has been recognized as an important part of the economy and society of the medieval ...
The demographic catastrophe of the Black Death in the second half of the fourteenth century caused a...
This article challenges the growing consensus in the literature that medieval manorial managers were...
Although the importance of the institutional approach for understanding pre-industrial economic deve...
This paper compares the development and role of rural trade venues in Holland in the 13th, 14th and ...
Large parts of the Netherlands saw an early rise in market traffic during the late Middle Ages alrea...
The book is structured as follows. Chapter 1 introduces medieval Holland as a significant entity for...
Although the importance of New Institutional Economics and the institutional approach for understand...
Large parts of the Netherlands saw an early rise in market traffic during the late Middle Ages alrea...
This book examines the vital role of market towns in the medieval economy. It focuses on Exeter, and...
The involvement of rural populations in market activities in the past is still debated. Were people ...
Abstract: At the centre of the debate on pre\u2010industrial economic growth is the study of market ...
Paper given at a conference organised by the Centre for Metropolitan History and supported by the Ec...
The peasant economy in north-east England, and indeed throughout the country as a whole, underwent m...
Around 1280 the villages of Akersloot, Uitgeest and Wormer in the district of Kennemerland received ...
The land market has been recognized as an important part of the economy and society of the medieval ...
The demographic catastrophe of the Black Death in the second half of the fourteenth century caused a...
This article challenges the growing consensus in the literature that medieval manorial managers were...