Th e 16th century was the century of ‘codifi cation’ of insurance customs in Europe. Th e passage from oral knowledge to written rules entailed signifi cant changes and favoured major developments. Th is was particularly the case for England, where an insurance code was written between the late 1570s and the early 1580s. In the 16th century English mercantile customs evolved rapidly, detaching themselves from the Italian infl uence. At the same time, the increasing importance of Anglo-Dutch trade favoured the assimilation of Dutch customs into the London insurance practice. Th e fast development of English insurance customs, however, entailed signifi cant uncertainty ...
The purpose of this paper is to explore the nature of sumptuary legislation in sixteenth century Eng...
The article explores how the liability for barratry of the shipmaster developed in both Italy and En...
The resolution of commercial conflicts was an important issue for the municipality of Amsterdam. The...
There is an on-going debate among scholars from various disciplines about economic institutions and ...
The law-code known as ‘IV Æthelred’ has been identified since the midnineteenth century as a text co...
The statutes enacted during the reigns of the Yorkist kings, Edward IV (1461-1483) and Richard III (...
In the course of the sixteenth century, in the Low Countries maritime law was changing. At first, d...
This essay is focused on the protection of purchaser’s reliance during the 16th–18th centuries, with...
Insurance law in the eighteenth century is often seen as a perfect illustration of the way commercia...
the work examines the early development of maritime insurance in England during the Sixteenth centur
Thirteenth-century England was a commercial backwater whose trade was dominated by foreigners. To ac...
A ban on the practice of usury, taking interest on loans, was evolved in medieval law both canonica...
From the publisher: A compelling reexamination of how Britain used law to shape its empire For many ...
The work analyses the development of the rules of maritime insurance practice on the abandonment to ...
The sustained and more powerful presence of the Westminster parliament following the Revolution of 1...
The purpose of this paper is to explore the nature of sumptuary legislation in sixteenth century Eng...
The article explores how the liability for barratry of the shipmaster developed in both Italy and En...
The resolution of commercial conflicts was an important issue for the municipality of Amsterdam. The...
There is an on-going debate among scholars from various disciplines about economic institutions and ...
The law-code known as ‘IV Æthelred’ has been identified since the midnineteenth century as a text co...
The statutes enacted during the reigns of the Yorkist kings, Edward IV (1461-1483) and Richard III (...
In the course of the sixteenth century, in the Low Countries maritime law was changing. At first, d...
This essay is focused on the protection of purchaser’s reliance during the 16th–18th centuries, with...
Insurance law in the eighteenth century is often seen as a perfect illustration of the way commercia...
the work examines the early development of maritime insurance in England during the Sixteenth centur
Thirteenth-century England was a commercial backwater whose trade was dominated by foreigners. To ac...
A ban on the practice of usury, taking interest on loans, was evolved in medieval law both canonica...
From the publisher: A compelling reexamination of how Britain used law to shape its empire For many ...
The work analyses the development of the rules of maritime insurance practice on the abandonment to ...
The sustained and more powerful presence of the Westminster parliament following the Revolution of 1...
The purpose of this paper is to explore the nature of sumptuary legislation in sixteenth century Eng...
The article explores how the liability for barratry of the shipmaster developed in both Italy and En...
The resolution of commercial conflicts was an important issue for the municipality of Amsterdam. The...