This book examines women's financial activity from the early days of the stock market in eighteenth century England and the South Sea Bubble to the mid-twentieth century. The essays demonstrate how many women managed their own finances despite legal and social restrictions and show that women were neither helpless, incompetent and risk-averse, nor were they unduly cautious and conservative. Rather, many women learnt about money and made themselves effective and engaged managers of the funds at their disposal. The essays focus on Britain, from eighteenth-century London, to the expansion of British financial markets of the nineteenth century, with comparative essays dealing with the US, Italy, Sweden and Japan. Hitherto, writing about wome...
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2019Â. This article uses a quantitative and qualitative metho...
SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre-DSC:DXN042742 / BLDSC - British Library D...
© 2015 John Wiley & Sons Ltd. In the transition from medieval notions of usury to modern notions o...
This book examines women's financial activity from the early days of the stock market in eighteenth ...
The late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries witnessed significant developments in the structur...
This essay explores the ways in which the developing use of banks made it possible for women and out...
This paper is concerned with the ways in which Lady Betty Hastings (1682-1739) and her half-sisters ...
Modern historians infrequently acknowledge that women were financial investors before the twentieth ...
This article considers how three English businesswomen managed the financial aspects of their enterp...
My dissertation argues that eighteenth-century fiction about marriageable women helped create the at...
Irish Women in Business, 1850-1922: navigating the credit economy Antonia Florence Madeleine James...
This thesis investigates the economic accountability of women in eighteenth-century England, particu...
There is a growing literature on the history of investment in Britain. However, the role played by w...
This volume of essays examines the lives of women in country houses in Ireland and Britain from the ...
The paper provides some new evidence on the economic role and position of women in nineteenth centur...
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2019Â. This article uses a quantitative and qualitative metho...
SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre-DSC:DXN042742 / BLDSC - British Library D...
© 2015 John Wiley & Sons Ltd. In the transition from medieval notions of usury to modern notions o...
This book examines women's financial activity from the early days of the stock market in eighteenth ...
The late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries witnessed significant developments in the structur...
This essay explores the ways in which the developing use of banks made it possible for women and out...
This paper is concerned with the ways in which Lady Betty Hastings (1682-1739) and her half-sisters ...
Modern historians infrequently acknowledge that women were financial investors before the twentieth ...
This article considers how three English businesswomen managed the financial aspects of their enterp...
My dissertation argues that eighteenth-century fiction about marriageable women helped create the at...
Irish Women in Business, 1850-1922: navigating the credit economy Antonia Florence Madeleine James...
This thesis investigates the economic accountability of women in eighteenth-century England, particu...
There is a growing literature on the history of investment in Britain. However, the role played by w...
This volume of essays examines the lives of women in country houses in Ireland and Britain from the ...
The paper provides some new evidence on the economic role and position of women in nineteenth centur...
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2019Â. This article uses a quantitative and qualitative metho...
SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre-DSC:DXN042742 / BLDSC - British Library D...
© 2015 John Wiley & Sons Ltd. In the transition from medieval notions of usury to modern notions o...