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Business Cycles and the Sense of Time in Medieval Genoa
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 June 2012
Abstract
A great deal has been written about the perception of time before the invention of mechanical timepieces, but the nature of the evidence has led much of this literature to take on an impressionistic, even metaphysical, cast. In the following article, Professor Epstein uses specific data gleaned from the cartularies of thirteenth–century Genoese notaries to investigate more concretely the uses of time and the structure of the business day in Genoa. He concludes that, in this early center of Western commercial activity at least, an impulse toward greater precision in marking the time of day preceded the arrival of the clock.
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References
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4 Landes, Revolution in Time, 58–66, argues persuasively that an interest in time preceded the invention of the clock.
5 Archivio di Stato di Genova (hereafter ASG), Sezione Manoscritti, Manoscritto N. 102, Diversorum Notariorum, 174r. The notarial cartulary was a large folio notebook of paper quires into which the notary wrote the business and legal records of Genoese society. At some time in the late twelfth century it became customary for notaries to deposit these cartularies in an archive; hence, some of them have survived the ravages of war and time. This particular cartulary is called a manuscript because it was rebound in order to preserve it.
6 Thorndike, Lynn, “Invention of the Mechanical Clock about 1271 A.D.,” Speculum 16, no. 2 (April 1941): 242–43CrossRefGoogle Scholar, and Landes, Revolution in Time, 53–66. An ancient device, the water clock, used the flow of water to measure time by volume, or occasionally the weight of the fluid to power some primitive movement. For a succinct history of this timepiece, see Boorstin, Daniel J., The Discoverers (New York, 1983), 30–33Google Scholar. The water clock had a lamentable tendency to freeze in winter. Alfonso X of Castille had such a clock that used mercury instead, a rare innovation entailing both health hazards and expense. See White, Lynn Jr., Medieval Technology and Social Change (Oxford, England, 1962), 119–22Google Scholar. I have found no reference to water clocks in Genoa, and so the “clock” referred to here is a purely mechanical clock driven by something other than fluids.
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16 Ibid., 20–23. This distinction between internal and external time is more useful than Le Goff's church and merchant time.
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19 ASG, Cartolari Notarili, Cartolare N. 14, 327r, notary Maestro Salmone: “… matutino sancti andree usque sero secundum consuetudinem laneriorum.”
20 A.S.G., Notai Ignoti, Busta I, Anni 1180–1245, fascie XXXVIII. “die mercurio XXIII iulii in sero circa pulsationem ultime campane natus est filius ——— luna erat in aries gradu XXVII et sol erat in cancero gradu XXVII.” The notary left a blank for the name of his son; the last compline refers to the last church to ring its bells for that hour.
21 These 3,902 acts come from the following sources: Hall-Cole, Margaret W., Krueger, Hilmar C., Renert, Ruth G., and Reynolds, Robert L., Giovanni di Guiberto (Turin, 1939)—1,811Google Scholar acts; Krueger, Hilmar C. and Reynolds, Robert L., Lanfranco (Genoa, 1951–1953)—907Google Scholar acts; and ASG, Cartolari Notarili, Cartolare N. 4, Oberto Scriba de Mercato—1,184 acts.
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24 The computer program for calculating the days of the week must be for the Julian calendar.
25 For example, the statutes of the tailor's guild in Bologna state that the tailors should not work on Sunday. Gaudenzi, Augusto, Statuti delle società del popolo di Bologna, vol. 2: Società delle arti (Rome, 1896), 279–80Google Scholar.
26 Thompson, “Time, Work–Discipline, and Industrial Capitalism,” 75.
27 Hall–Cole, et al. , Giovanni di Guiberto, document number 412: 197–98Google Scholar.
28 Bilfinger, Mittelalterlichen Horen, 16, with some minor changes. Umberto Eco produces a similar table at the beginning of his novel, The Name of the Rose.
29 Cocito, Luciana, Anonimo Genovese: Poesie (Rome, 1970), 308Google Scholar. The poem is in Genoese, a far cry from Tuscan:
Lo dì no è da fir loao
se no de poi vespo passao
che la fin si è tuto–or
zuxe de ogni lavor.
30 Elisabeth Pavan has examined the night as a time of violence; see “Recherches sur la nuit venitienne à la fin du moyen age,” Journal of Medieval History 7, no. 4 (1981): 339–56CrossRefGoogle Scholar. A fear of crime, not unique to Venice, helps to explain the hesitancy about cash transactions at night.
31 See Cohn, Samuel K., The Laboring Classes in Renaissance Florence (New York, 1980), 117–23Google Scholar, for marriage patterns among the artisans of Florence.
32 Epstein, Steven, Wills and Wealth in Medieval Genoa, 1150–1250 (Cambridge, Mass., 1984), 49–50Google Scholar.
33 Murray, Alexander, Reason and Society in the Middle Ages (Oxford, England, 1978), 105–7Google Scholar, discusses the important connection between time and ambition.
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