Money in Sixteenth-century Florence

Money in Sixteenth-century Florence
Title Money in Sixteenth-century Florence PDF eBook
Author Carlo M. Cipolla
Publisher Univ of California Press
Pages 184
Release 1989-01-01
Genre History
ISBN 9780520062221

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"The clarification of the monetary system will be of absolutely essential use to all historians who work on Florence during the later Renaissance, including historians of art, literature, and music."--Richard A. Goldthwaite, Johns Hopkins University

Money in Sixteenth-Century Florence

Money in Sixteenth-Century Florence
Title Money in Sixteenth-Century Florence PDF eBook
Author Carlo M. Cipolla
Publisher Univ of California Press
Pages 184
Release 2023-04-28
Genre Business & Economics
ISBN 0520335988

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This title is part of UC Press's Voices Revived program, which commemorates University of California Press’s mission to seek out and cultivate the brightest minds and give them voice, reach, and impact. Drawing on a backlist dating to 1893, Voices Revived makes high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarship accessible once again using print-on-demand technology. This title was originally published in 1989.

Medici Money

Medici Money
Title Medici Money PDF eBook
Author Tim Parks
Publisher Profile Books
Pages 288
Release 2013-08-22
Genre History
ISBN 1847656870

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The Medici are famous as the rulers of Florence at the high point of the Renaissance. Their power derived from the family bank, and this book tells the fascinating, frequently bloody story of the family and the dramatic development and collapse of their bank (from Cosimo who took it over in 1419 to his grandson Lorenzo the Magnificent who presided over its precipitous decline). The Medici faced two apparently insuperable problems: how did a banker deal with the fact that the Church regarded interest as a sin and had made it illegal? How in a small republic like Florence could he avoid having his wealth taken away by taxation? But the bank became indispensable to the Church. And the family completely subverted Florence's claims to being democratic. They ran the city. Medici Money explores a crucial moment in the passage from the Middle Ages to the Modern world, a moment when our own attitudes to money and morals were being formed. To read this book is to understand how much the Renaissance has to tell us about our own world. Medici Money is one of the launch titles in a new series, Atlas Books, edited by James Atlas. Atlas Books pairs fine writers with stories of the economic forces that have shaped the world, in a new genre - the business book as literature.

Filippo Strozzi and the Medici

Filippo Strozzi and the Medici
Title Filippo Strozzi and the Medici PDF eBook
Author Melissa Meriam Bullard
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Pages 214
Release 2008-10-30
Genre Biography & Autobiography
ISBN 9780521088169

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Filippo Strozzi (1489-1538), the Florentine aristocrat and banker, is usually remembered for the dramatic exploits at the end of his life. Forced into exile, he became an outspoken defender of the last Florentine Republic against the tyranny of the city's new dukes. His place in Florentine history, however, changes drastically when we focus not on his final years but on his extensive career as a Medici favourite and loyal financier. At the courts of the Medici popes he furthered the grandiose schemes of Leo X and Clement VII and accumulated a personal fortune of legendary size. Dr Bullard's study reassesses Strozzi's place in Renaissance history and considers the more general problems of paper economy and war finance, and Florentine political life, in the early sixteenth century. It documents the intricate financial ties between Florence and the papal court, and Strozzi's key role as a manipulator of the city's public funds to pay for papal wars.

Private Money and Public Currencies: The Sixteenth Century Challenge

Private Money and Public Currencies: The Sixteenth Century Challenge
Title Private Money and Public Currencies: The Sixteenth Century Challenge PDF eBook
Author M-.T.Boyer- Xambeau
Publisher Routledge
Pages 248
Release 2016-07-01
Genre Business & Economics
ISBN 1315491044

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First Published in 1994. Writing as a unified team, the authors, three French economists—they insist they are economists, not economic historians, though they are steeped in the monetary, financial, economic, social, and political history of Europe in the sixteenth century—have written a fascinating account of the development of means of payment at the end of the Renaissance and the beginning of the modern period. The account is limited for the most part to what they call “Latin Christianity”—primarily France, Italy, and Spain. It describes both the development of an integrated circuit of intra-European payments by means of bills of exchange negotiated at trade and payment fairs and the emergence of national systems of money of account and metallic coins at the hands of the monarchs of the emerging state system.

Cosimo I De' Medici as Collector

Cosimo I De' Medici as Collector
Title Cosimo I De' Medici as Collector PDF eBook
Author Andrea Gáldy
Publisher Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Pages 606
Release 2009
Genre Art
ISBN

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"This study increases the sum of knowledge about a major Italian collection of antiquities of the sixteenth century. It also shows that Cosimo's antiquities were objects of study to Cinquecento artists and scholars. As such the collection exercised a significant influence on the history and development of archaeology in early modern Florence."--Introduction, page xxv.

The Intellectual World of Sixteenth-Century Florence

The Intellectual World of Sixteenth-Century Florence
Title The Intellectual World of Sixteenth-Century Florence PDF eBook
Author Ann E. Moyer
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Pages 401
Release 2020-08-06
Genre History
ISBN 1108851398

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By the sixteenth century, Florence was famous across Europe for its achievements in the arts, letters, and humanist learning. Its intellectual life flourished anew at midcentury with Duke Cosimo and the Accademia Fiorentina. In this study, Ann Moyer provides an overview of Florentine intellectual life and community in the late Renaissance. She shows how studies of language helped Florentines develop their own story as a people distinct from ancient Greece or Rome, trace the rise of the city's medieval government, and explore how the city evolved into a hospitable environment for letters and the arts. Studies of Florentine art gave rise to art history, while those devoted to Florentine traditions and customs inspired broader questions about how to think about cultural change. Demonstrating how the intellectual activity around language, history, and art related and supported each other, Moyer's book documents the origins of the modern narrative of the Renaissance itself.