The exceptions to the prohibition of "usury" make clear that "usury", in thirteenth century Canon Law, is a less evident object than licit credit. A close analysis of the text devoted by Cardinal Hostiensis to the practice of "usury" and to the circumstances transforming usury in a well defined and equitable economic way of reimbursement, elucidate the central role played in medieval economic discourse by the social position of those who participated in the market as lenders or borrowers. The long-established historiographical idea of an absolute medieval condemnation of usury can then be reconsidered
Catholic Church’s usury restrictions and their effects on business life have long attracted scholars...
Patristic and monastic litterature during Early Middle Ages condemn wealth, but use an economic lang...
International audienceInformation and Risk in the Medieval Doctrine of Usury during the Thirteenth C...
This paper presents a historical investigation of usury in the context of the development of credit ...
This paper presents an in-depth historical investigation of the related but distinctive phenomena o...
What were the economic consequences of the usury doctrine in the Middle Ages?� We examine how mercha...
‘Where law or conscientious scruples prevent lending at interest, the capital which belongs to perso...
The widespread historiographical idea that \u93usury\u94 and its forbidding were the heart of the me...
The development of capital markets in medieval Europe was shaped for centuries by the religious ban ...
The objectives of this paper are three-fold. The first is to rebut Charles Kindleberger’s famous dic...
In this dissertation I provide an edition of the treatise on usury (De usuris, bk. 2, tit. 7) contai...
International audienceTheorizing interest in Scholastic economic thought can be viewed as a by-produ...
Starting in the mid-thirteenth century, kings, bishops, and local rulers throughout western Europe r...
This dissertation traces the meaning of the idea that usurers sell time through 12th- and 13th-centu...
A ban on the practice of usury, taking interest on loans, was evolved in medieval law both canonica...
Catholic Church’s usury restrictions and their effects on business life have long attracted scholars...
Patristic and monastic litterature during Early Middle Ages condemn wealth, but use an economic lang...
International audienceInformation and Risk in the Medieval Doctrine of Usury during the Thirteenth C...
This paper presents a historical investigation of usury in the context of the development of credit ...
This paper presents an in-depth historical investigation of the related but distinctive phenomena o...
What were the economic consequences of the usury doctrine in the Middle Ages?� We examine how mercha...
‘Where law or conscientious scruples prevent lending at interest, the capital which belongs to perso...
The widespread historiographical idea that \u93usury\u94 and its forbidding were the heart of the me...
The development of capital markets in medieval Europe was shaped for centuries by the religious ban ...
The objectives of this paper are three-fold. The first is to rebut Charles Kindleberger’s famous dic...
In this dissertation I provide an edition of the treatise on usury (De usuris, bk. 2, tit. 7) contai...
International audienceTheorizing interest in Scholastic economic thought can be viewed as a by-produ...
Starting in the mid-thirteenth century, kings, bishops, and local rulers throughout western Europe r...
This dissertation traces the meaning of the idea that usurers sell time through 12th- and 13th-centu...
A ban on the practice of usury, taking interest on loans, was evolved in medieval law both canonica...
Catholic Church’s usury restrictions and their effects on business life have long attracted scholars...
Patristic and monastic litterature during Early Middle Ages condemn wealth, but use an economic lang...
International audienceInformation and Risk in the Medieval Doctrine of Usury during the Thirteenth C...