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Italian city-states and financial evolution

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 December 2006

MICHELE FRATIANNI
Affiliation:
Indiana University CIBER, Kelley School of Business, Bloomington, Indiana 47405, USA and Università Politecnica delle Marche, Dipartimento di Economia, Piazza Martelli, 60121 Ancona, Italy
FRANCO SPINELLI
Affiliation:
Università degli Studi di Brescia, Dipartimento di Economia, via San Faustino 74B, Brescia 25122, Italy
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Abstract

The term financial revolution has been abused in the literature. Revolution connotes a sharp and unique break from the past that should stand up to careful historical scrutiny, but in fact it does not. Evolution describes financial history better than revolutions. We compare the classic ‘financial revolutions’ with the financial innovations of Genoa, Venice and Florence in the Quattrocento and Cinquecento and the upshot is that these Italian city-states – the two maritime cities more than Florence – had developed many of the features that were to be found later on in the Netherlands, England and the United States. The importance of the early financial innovators has been eclipsed by the fact that these city-states did not survive politically. Instead, the innovations were absorbed in the long chain of financial evolution and, in the process, lost the identity of their creators.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Cambridge University Press 2006

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