1st Edition

Bullion Flows and Monetary Policies in England and the Low Countries, 1350–1500

By John H. Munro Copyright 1992
329 Pages
by Routledge

329 Pages
by Routledge

Did ’money matter’ in the economic history of medieval Europe? In these essays John Munro has pursued the controversies surrounding the monetary (not ’monetarist’) history of the period, specifically in relation to England and Flanders, and the other Burgundian Low Countries, during the late Middle Ages. He argues that, without doubt, monetary factors and policies were crucial, and attempts to... Read more
Contents: Introduction; An economic aspect of the collapse of the Anglo-Burgundian alliance, 1428-1442; An aspect of medieval public finance: the profits of counterfeiting in the 15th-century Low Countries; Billon-billoen-billio: from bullion to base coinage, an essay in numismatic philology; Bullionism and the bill of exchange in England, 1272-1663: a study in monetary management and popular prejudice; Mint policies, ratios, and outputs in the Low Countries and England, 1335-1420: some reflections on new data; Bullion flows and monetary contraction in late-medieval England and the Low Countries; Monnayage, monnaies de compte et mutations monétaires au Brabant à la fin du moyen âge; Deflation and the petty coinage problem in the late-medieval economy: the case of Flanders, 1334-1484; Index.

Biography

John H. Munro