Financial revolutions in Europe have been ascribed to the Italian innovation of the bill of exchange in the thirteenth century and to the British ordering of government debt at the end of the seventeenth and beginning of the eighteenth centuries. Less attention has been paid to the series of financial crises and ensuing transformations in teh sixteenth century, occuring especially in the 1550s and involving at least five broad and parallel changes in national and international finance.
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Paper provided by International Economics Section, Departement of Economics Princeton University, in its series Princeton Essays in International Economics with number
208.
Length: 27 pages Date of creation: 1998 Date of revision: Handle: RePEc:fth:priifi:208
Contact details of provider: Postal: International Finance Section, Department of Economics Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey, U.S.A Phone: (609) 258-4000 Fax: (609) 258-6419 Email: Web page: http://www.econ.princeton.edu/ More information through EDIRC
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Find related papers by JEL classification: F30 - International Economics - - International Finance - - - General N23 - Economic History - - Financial Markets and Institutions - - - Europe: Pre-1913