History of the Credit Market in Central Europe

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Austrian Duke
Austrian Jews
Bohemian King
Bohemian Lands
Category=KFFK
Central European countries
Church Endowments
comparative European credit markets
Credit Market
Credit markets
Czech Lands
early modern economics
Early modern europe
Early modern european history
Early modern period
Economic growth in central europe
Economic history
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Farm Holding
Farm Money
Financial history
Golden Florins
Goldsmiths
Historical economics
History of economic thought
Hungarian Kings
Jewish Credit
Jewish financial history
Jewish Moneylenders
Leopold III
Medieval europe
medieval finance
Precious Metal Mining
Public credit
Public debt
Royal Chamber
Royal Incomes
rural credit systems
SOA
social stratification loans
statutory interest regulation
Territorial Princes
Town Books
Town Hall
Vanek
Vice Versa
Viennese
Vladislaus Jagiellon

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367544324
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 29 Apr 2022
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This is the first comprehensive study of loans and debts in Central European countries in the Middle Ages and Early Modern Period. It outlines the issues of debts and loans in the Czech lands, Poland and Hungary, with respect to the influence of Austria and Germany. It focuses on the role of loans and debts in medieval and early modern society, credit markets in these countries, the mechanism of lending and borrowing, forms of credit, availability of loans, frequency of credits dealings, range of lending business, and last, but not least, the financial relationships inside the social classes and between them.

The research presented in the book is based on a wide range of resources including credit contracts and agreements, evidence of loans and debts of courts, accounting of nobility, towns, churches and guilds, merchant diaries and Jewish registers, as well as other financial records. It covers a wide range of historical disciplines including economic and financial history, social history, the history of economic thought as well as the history of everyday life. It also contains a wealth of case studies, which offer, for the first time in English, a comprehensive and representative sample of the most up-to-date Central European research on the history of loans and debts and serves as a basis for a comparison with the other parts of Europe during the same period.

The book is designed primarily for postgraduates, researchers and academics in financial, economic and historical sciences but will also be a valuable resource for students of business schools.

Pavla Slavíčková is an assistant professor at the Palacky University in Olomouc, the Czech Republic.