1st Edition

Orthodox Mercantilism Political Economy in the Byzantine Commonwealth

By Alex Feldman Copyright 2024
310 Pages 3 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

310 Pages 3 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

310 Pages 3 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

This book demonstrates how the political economy of mercantilism was not simply a Western invention by various cities and kingdoms during the Renaissance, but was the natural by-product of perpetually limited growth rates and rulers’ relentless pursuits of bullion. It contributes to discussions of the economic history surrounding the so-called “Great Divergence” between East and West, which would... Read more

A Zero-Sum World

Pronoia: Orthodox feudalism?

Mercantilism 101

What was the “Byzantine Commonwealth”?

1. Byzantium: nation-state or civilization-state?

2. Did Byzantium generate a “commonwealth”?

3. How should the œcumene be interpreted?

The Œcumene

Chapter 1

The Byzantine Commonwealth unfolds

Byzantium and the baptism of Vladimir, 986-989 – the problems of the sources

The evidence of Cherson’s involvement in the Phokas rebellion, 987-989

A reassemblage of the revisionist hypothesis, 987-989

Chapter 2

The Rus’ian metropolitanate:  “proto-state” or exarchate?

Beyond Commonwealth

Byzantine western exarchates of the 6-8th c.

The loyalty of the thema of Bulgaria after 1019

The metropolitanate of Rus’ia reconsidered

The Law

Chapter 3

From customary law to Christian law

The Russkaja Pravda (11-12th centuries)

Byzantine legal influences in the expanded Russkaja Pravda

The adoption of the Zakon Sudnyj Ljudem (9-12th c.)

From the Zakon Sudnyj Ljudem to the Kormčaja Kniga

Chapter 4

Overlapping sovereignties: empire, commonwealth and jurisdiction

Orthodox tax, debt and property law to the 13th century

Orthodox tax, debt and property law since the 13th century

The Coin

Chapter 5

The hoarding period: Eastern Europe, 11-14th centuries

Bullion, deniers and debasement

Barter, debt and law

Imagined borders

Chapter 6

Sovereignty and bullion: 13-17th centuries

Coins of the Romanía dynasties

Coins of the Œcumene dynasties

Cycles of Divergence and Convergence

Misconceptions of feudalism and mercantilism

1. The misconception that Roman laws and feudal laws have been different

2. The misconception that feudalism has been exclusive to Latin Christendom

3. The misconception that feudalism and mercantilism have been mutually exclusive economic systems

The contested inheritance of Byzantium’s political economy and rhetoric

Orthodox ecumenism

Rex Catholicissimus, the Spains and “The Powerful Mr. Money”

Pravoslavie, the Russias and “The Artery of War - Money”

The Great Divergence?

Ecumenical sovereignty and the national idea

Liberal interpretations of zero-sum economic history

Bibliography

Primary Sources

Secondary Sources

Index

Biography

Alex M. Feldman is the chair of the department of languages and literature at CIS-Endicott International University of Madrid. He received a BA from Roger Williams University of Rhode Island and received an MRes and PhD from the University of Birmingham. He has held a postdoctoral fellowship at the University of London’s Warburg Institute and has taught at the Rosenbaum Yeshiva of North Jersey, the State University of New York, Rockland and the University of Birmingham.

'This is an impressive and engaging book: erudite, personal and passionate as it is dense and demanding. Rich rewards await readers as they are asked to follow a path that draws on a multitude of texts from Antiquity to the last couple of years to weave a gripping narrative of how medieval political, economic and theological systems emerged and grew in the Byzantine world writ large. This is a book about political economy and inequality that clearly demonstrates how the latter’s multiple forms can all be traced back to the same principles. Alex Mesibov Feldman guides us confidently through his meticulously collected material to explore the past but without ever losing sight of the present' - Dionysios Stathakopoulos, University of Cyprus.