Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Chapter I The Population of Europe from the Black Death to the Eve of the Vital Revolution
- Chapter II Scientific Method and the Progress of Techniques
- Chapter III Transport and Trade Routes
- Chapter IV European Economic Institutions and the New World; the Chartered Companies
- Chapter V Crops and Livestock
- Chapter VI Colonial Settlement and Its Labour Problems
- Chapter VII Prices in Europe from 1450 to 1750
- Chapter VIII Trade, Society and the State
- BIBLIOGRAPHIES
- References
Chapter VII - Prices in Europe from 1450 to 1750
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 March 2008
- Frontmatter
- Chapter I The Population of Europe from the Black Death to the Eve of the Vital Revolution
- Chapter II Scientific Method and the Progress of Techniques
- Chapter III Transport and Trade Routes
- Chapter IV European Economic Institutions and the New World; the Chartered Companies
- Chapter V Crops and Livestock
- Chapter VI Colonial Settlement and Its Labour Problems
- Chapter VII Prices in Europe from 1450 to 1750
- Chapter VIII Trade, Society and the State
- BIBLIOGRAPHIES
- References
Summary
The history of prices in Europe from the mid-fifteenth to the mideighteenth century is a very large problem indeed, and not to be undertaken in a single chapter without some trepidation. It is easy enough to outline the framework for such a history, but there is little possibility in the present state of our knowledge of discovering all the facts, or even of interpreting them with confidence. The principal advantage of such an enquiry is to establish once more the validity and basic characteristics of price history.
The first difficulty is that the economy under review is old, and now largely superseded, with structures and rhythms very different from those of industrializing Europe in the nineteenth and even more in the twentieth century. A readjustment of basic concepts is thus required on the part of the reader and of the historian of this economy.
Then again, price history has not yet succeeded in acquiring its own tools of analysis. For better or worse, it must rely on those provided by economists and statisticians. This has meant a constant effort to define terms, and in turn as a result, the methodological refinements have imposed uncertainties and repeated changes of view. It is as though each scholar believed in the persuasive value of a single method – his own – which‘ in the name of Science’ made him free to dispense with, and even reject, the contributions of his predecessors.
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- Information
- Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1967
References
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