List of maps; List of tables; List of graphs; Acknowledgements; Introduction; Part I. Before the Commercial Revolution: 1. Roman-Barbarian discontinuity; 2. The appearance of the denier and the revival of trade; 3. 'Feudal' deniers and 'Viking' dirhams; 4. Saxon silver and the expansion of minting; Part II. The Commercial Revolution of the Thirteenth Century: 5. New silver c.1160–c.1330; 6. The balance of payments and the movement of silver; 7. European silver and African gold; 8. New mints; 9. Ingots of silver; 10. New money; 11. The place of money in the commercial revolution of the thirteenth century; Part III. The Late Middle Ages: 12. The victory of gold; 13. The scourge of debasement; 14. The money of Europe around 1400; 15. The bullion-famines of the Late Middle Ages; 16. Money on the eve of the price revolution; Conclusion; Appendices; Coin index; General index.
This is a full-scale study that explores every aspect of money in Europe and the Middle Ages.
' ... a well-researched and documented synthesis which will not only provide a background survey and ready reference for medievalists in all disciplines, but lays down new guidelines for a new generation of research in monetary history ... The centrepiece of the book is the chapter entitled 'The place of money in the commercial revolution of the thirteenth century' ... [which] should be read by every scholar with an interest in theoretical approaches to medieval history.' Alan M. Stahl, Speculum ' ... a major contribution to numismatic literature, and a mature achievement by a scholar whose name will be well known to most readers ... It is a book to read and re-read, for it is the fruit of very wide historical learning, assimilated by an experienced monetary historian, who has thought constructively about the problems he discusses for half a life-time ... Highly recommended.' Michael Metcalf, Spink's Numismatic Circular
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