Money, prices, and wages essays in honour of Professor Nicholas Mayhew
Machine generated contents note:Introduction; Martin Allen and D'Maris Coffman1. Coin Finds and the English Money Supply, c. 973-1544; Martin Allen2. National Income in Domesday England; James T. Walker3. Modelling the Medieval Economy: Money, Prices and Income in England, 1263-1520; Mark Casso...
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Format: | UnknownFormat |
Sprache: | eng |
Veröffentlicht: |
Basingstoke, Hampshire u.a.
Palgrave Macmillan
2015
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Schriftenreihe: | Palgrave studies in the history of finance
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Schlagworte: | |
Online Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
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Zusammenfassung: | Machine generated contents note:Introduction; Martin Allen and D'Maris Coffman1. Coin Finds and the English Money Supply, c. 973-1544; Martin Allen2. National Income in Domesday England; James T. Walker3. Modelling the Medieval Economy: Money, Prices and Income in England, 1263-1520; Mark Casson and Catherine Casson4. Prices from the Durham Obedientiary Account Rolls, 1278-1367; Elizabeth Gemmill5. Credit, Crisis and the Money Supply, c. 1280-c. 1330; Phillipp Schofield6. Finance on the Frontier: Money and Credit in Northumberland, Westmorland, and Cumberland, in the Later Middle Ages; Pamela Nightingale7. Money and Rural Credit in the Later Middle Ages Revisited; Chris Briggs8. The Morality of Money in Late Medieval England; James Davis9. Labour Turnover and Wage Rates on the Demesnes of Durham Priory, 1370-1410; Richard Britnell10. A Golden Age Rediscovered: Labourers' Wages in the Fifteenth Century; Christopher Dyer11. Corn Prices, Corn Models and Corn Rents: What Can We Learn from the English Corn Returns?; D'Maris Coffman and Daivd Ormrod 12. London's Market for Bullion and Specie in the Eighteenth Century: The Roles of the London Mint and the Bank of England in the Stabilization of Prices; Anthony C. Hotson and Terence C. Mills13. Monetary Trends in the UK since 1870; Nicholas Dimsdale. "Professor Nicholas Mayhew is Professor of Numismatics and Monetary History at Oxford, a former Deputy Director of the Ashmolean Museum, Director of the Winton Institute for Monetary History and Fellow of St Cross College. Over the course of his forty-year career, Mayhew has made key contributions to fields as diverse as medieval European monetary history, numismatics, financial history, price and wage history, and macroeconomic history. His recent analysis of the Price Revolution is the most influential account of one of the defining features of early modern English economic life. He has been instrumental in debunking notions of a pre-monetary, feudal past, and in the application of the Fisher Equation to historical data. Mayhew has inspired two generations of medieval historians and many colleagues in related disciplines. These essays, in his honour, demonstrate the analytical power and chronological reach of the novel interdisciplinary approach he has nurtured in himself and others"-- |
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Beschreibung: | Enth. 13 Beitr |
Beschreibung: | XIII, 284 S. Ill. |
ISBN: | 9781137394019 978-1-137-39401-9 |