AbstractThis paper reconstructs the organization and development of factor markets in early medieval Iraq. It shows that from the late Sasanian period on, and accelerating in the early Islamic period, there was a relatively unrestricted functioning of markets for goods, labour, and capital. This stimulated market exchange, associated with growing monetization of the economy, especially in the towns, but also in the countryside, even though coercion remained more pronounced there. We hypothesize that these developments brought economic dynamism but simultaneously increased inequality and furthered the rise of new, powerful elite groups, causing the decline of the same markets
International audienceThis paper aims to identify types of landowners in Lower Iraq, where land was ...
International audienceThe aim of my paper is to appraise the role played by the Islamic state in Low...
<p><em>The </em><em>‘</em><em>Abbasid caliphate in the fourth/te...
The conventional view of markets for land, labour, and capital as a modern, Western phenomenon is qu...
New Perspectives on Factor Markets and Ancient Middle Eastern Economies: A Survey Author: Bas van B...
Following a Weberian approach, in this paper, I expand on Islam and discuss that religion itself is ...
This paper studies the evidence for the existence of a labour market, a market for agri-cultural lan...
This paper discusses the impact of the foundation of major cities in Mesopotamia in the early Islami...
Abbasid caliphate in the fourth/tenth century suffered from a sharp economic decline. This was the r...
This article examines the system of military payment in the early Islamic state (c.650-900 AD) and i...
This research examines the economic origins of Islam and uncovers two empirical regularities. First,...
International audienceStudying landholding in Lower-Iraq is essential in trying to understand the fo...
Sommaire New Perspectives on Factor Markets and Ancient Middle Eastern Economies: A Survey Author: ...
International audienceThis paper aims to identify types of landowners in Lower Iraq, where land was ...
International audienceThe aim of my paper is to appraise the role played by the Islamic state in Low...
<p><em>The </em><em>‘</em><em>Abbasid caliphate in the fourth/te...
The conventional view of markets for land, labour, and capital as a modern, Western phenomenon is qu...
New Perspectives on Factor Markets and Ancient Middle Eastern Economies: A Survey Author: Bas van B...
Following a Weberian approach, in this paper, I expand on Islam and discuss that religion itself is ...
This paper studies the evidence for the existence of a labour market, a market for agri-cultural lan...
This paper discusses the impact of the foundation of major cities in Mesopotamia in the early Islami...
Abbasid caliphate in the fourth/tenth century suffered from a sharp economic decline. This was the r...
This article examines the system of military payment in the early Islamic state (c.650-900 AD) and i...
This research examines the economic origins of Islam and uncovers two empirical regularities. First,...
International audienceStudying landholding in Lower-Iraq is essential in trying to understand the fo...
Sommaire New Perspectives on Factor Markets and Ancient Middle Eastern Economies: A Survey Author: ...
International audienceThis paper aims to identify types of landowners in Lower Iraq, where land was ...
International audienceThe aim of my paper is to appraise the role played by the Islamic state in Low...
<p><em>The </em><em>‘</em><em>Abbasid caliphate in the fourth/te...