After more than two decades of warfare with France between 1793 and 1815 the British National Debt stood at £844,300,000, over 200% of GDP.1 Where did this money come from? Using often overlooked contemporary objections to the workings of the British funding-system a surprising paradox is explored. A paradox centred around the fact that the government’s ostensible creditors often had, in reality, very little ‘real’ money to lend. Indeed, they were often reliant for their own solvency upon the very government they were lending to. By viewing the workings of the British funding-system not only through the prism of economic developments, but also through the prism of power relations, it is demonstrated how the objections raised towards this sy...
Why did the country that borrowed the most industrialize first? Earlier research has viewed the expl...
Although intellectual historians have long established that the evolution of national debt had a dec...
We present a detailed study of the Seven Years’ War (1756–1763) using a new dataset based on the Ban...
The thesis began as a study and evaluation of the methods employed by the British Government to fina...
From its foundation as a private corporation in 1694, the Bank of England extended large amounts of ...
Economists and historians have offered several explanations for the significant fluctuations in 1 8t...
The article traces a hitherto-neglected form of political obligation, one that resulted from nationa...
The thesis looks through the lens of bank balance sheet accounting to investigate the structural cha...
From its foundation as a private corporation in 1694, the Bank of England extended large amounts of...
By the 1820s as a result of the protracted struggle with France the market value of the British Gove...
It has become common for authors to argue that government commitment to repay debt depends upon inst...
It has become common for authors to argue that government commitment to repay debt depends upon inst...
Economic historians conventionally date the origins of the English fiscal state to the foundation of...
England's financial revolution in the eighteenth century has long been hailed as a key contributor t...
By the 1820s as a result of the protracted struggle with France the market value of the British Gove...
Why did the country that borrowed the most industrialize first? Earlier research has viewed the expl...
Although intellectual historians have long established that the evolution of national debt had a dec...
We present a detailed study of the Seven Years’ War (1756–1763) using a new dataset based on the Ban...
The thesis began as a study and evaluation of the methods employed by the British Government to fina...
From its foundation as a private corporation in 1694, the Bank of England extended large amounts of ...
Economists and historians have offered several explanations for the significant fluctuations in 1 8t...
The article traces a hitherto-neglected form of political obligation, one that resulted from nationa...
The thesis looks through the lens of bank balance sheet accounting to investigate the structural cha...
From its foundation as a private corporation in 1694, the Bank of England extended large amounts of...
By the 1820s as a result of the protracted struggle with France the market value of the British Gove...
It has become common for authors to argue that government commitment to repay debt depends upon inst...
It has become common for authors to argue that government commitment to repay debt depends upon inst...
Economic historians conventionally date the origins of the English fiscal state to the foundation of...
England's financial revolution in the eighteenth century has long been hailed as a key contributor t...
By the 1820s as a result of the protracted struggle with France the market value of the British Gove...
Why did the country that borrowed the most industrialize first? Earlier research has viewed the expl...
Although intellectual historians have long established that the evolution of national debt had a dec...
We present a detailed study of the Seven Years’ War (1756–1763) using a new dataset based on the Ban...