The Economy of Later Renaissance Europe 1460-1600CUP Archive, 30 nov. 1977 - 240 pages This is an economic history of sixteenth-century Europe that combines the virtues of a scholarly monograph with those of a general history. Professor Miskimin describes the intellectual and philosophical context in which economic decisions were made, and on which the fundamental economic categories of the period were based. |
Table des matières
population and money supply | 20 |
the rising demand for food | 47 |
technology and organization | 83 |
Trade patterns in the wider world | 123 |
private and public | 155 |
Retrospect | 180 |
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Expressions et termes fréquents
ages agricultural Antwerp appears areas balance Baltic became bullion Cambridge capital caused central central Europe cloth commerce common consequently continued copper costs course crown custom demand dependent Dutch early East Economic History effective efforts England English Europe European example expanded export favored fifteenth figures force fourteenth France French further German grain growth half hand important increased industry inflation interest Italy labor land late later less limited London major manufactured medieval metal middle mines monetary natural natural law noted once output Paris patterns percent perhaps period political population Portuguese production profit prosperity quantities region relatively remained result rise rose royal ships silver sixteenth century Spain Spanish spice success supply Table throughout tion towns trade University Press urban York