Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-dsjbd Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-28T06:57:29.792Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Publications on financial history 2005

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 November 2007

Serge Noiret
Affiliation:
European University Institute, Florence

Extract

This bibliography covers publications that appeared during 2005 and 2004 when they were not known before the deadline of last year's bibliography. In that case the year of publication is mentioned in the citation.

Type
Bibliography
Copyright
Copyright © European Association for Banking and Financial History 2007

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

GENERAL

Financial condition in the City of Portland, 1995–2004, Portland: City Auditor Audit Services Division, www.portlandonline.com/auditor/auditservicesGoogle Scholar
Fuga de divisas en la Argentina. Comisión Especial Investigadora de la Cámara de Diputados sobre Fuga de Divisas de la Argentina durante el año 2001, Buenos Aires: Veintiuno Editores Argentina.Google Scholar
Los archivos bancarios Mexicanos. notas para el analisis de fuentes del sistema bancario 1900–1940’, América Latina en la Historia Económica. Boletín de Fuentes, 23, pp. 105–17.Google Scholar
Amt, E., The great roll of the pipe for the eighth year of the reign of King Henry III, Michaelmas 1224, London/Loughborough: Pipe Roll Society/Quorn Litho.Google Scholar
Baer, C. A. and McComb, D., Oral history interview of Charles A. Baer, Denver: Colorado Historical Society.Google Scholar
Ball, A., Remembering VE Day: money matters then and now. A collection of viewpoints about money management 1945–2005, featuring oral histories from World War II veterans and teenagers of Bedfordshire, Moggerhanger: Family Matters Institute.Google Scholar
Barnard, R. and McComb, D., Oral history interview of Rollin D. Barnard, Denver: Colorado Historical Society.Google Scholar
Bergère, M., ‘Les archives de l’épuration financière: les comités de confiscation des profits illicites', in Joly, (ed.), Faire l'histoire des entreprises sous l'occupation, pp. 187–91.Google Scholar
Berson-Levinson, J.Soldier's individual pay record, Washington, DC: US Government Printing Office.Google Scholar
Boissellier, S., ‘Sur quelques manuscrits concernant la fiscalité pontificale au Portugal’, Archivum historiae pontificiae, 43, pp. 1347.Google Scholar
Browne, Z. and Donnelly, S., ‘Ionian Bank Limited: retro-conversion and digitisation project’, Business Archives, 91, pp. 1627.Google Scholar
Chazelle, M-H., ‘Conserver les archives bancaires: le cas des sociétés de crédit, d'une banque d'affaires et de la Banque de France (1875–1935)’, Livraisons d'histoire de l'architecture et des arts qui s'y rattachent, 10, pp. 1931.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chevandier, C., Descamps, F. and Zuber, H., ‘Mémoire orale et mémoire écrite au Ministère des Finances; de la série à l'individu, archives du personnel et archives orales’, Gazette des archives, 198, pp. 7392.Google Scholar
D'Angio, A. and Quennouëlle-Corre, L., ‘Les archives des administrations financières’, in Joly, (ed.), Faire l'histoire des entreprises sous l'occupation, pp. 1526.Google Scholar
Daumas, J-C., ‘L'apport des archives de la délégation de Dijon du MPI à la connaissance de l'industrie régionale’, in Joly, (ed.), Faire l'histoire des entreprises sous l'occupation, pp. 61–7.Google Scholar
Delhoumme, J-P., ‘Une source d'histoire rurale à l’épreuve de la critique: les états des fonds limousins (XVIIIe siècle)', Archives en Limousin, 23 (2004), pp. 20–6.Google Scholar
Del Mar, A., A history of money in ancient countries, from the earliest times to the present [S.l.]: Kessinger Publishing [facsimile of original edition: London: George Bell and Sons, 1885].Google Scholar
Derwael, J., ‘Op zoek naar de ondernemersgeest. Bedrijfsarchieven in west-vlaanderen, Bibliotheek en archiefgids Vlaamse vereniging voor bibliotheek, archief, en documentatiewezen, 81/2, pp. 2630.Google Scholar
Douglas, C. H. J., The financial history of Massachusetts: from the organization of the Massachusetts Bay Company to the American Revolution, Clark: Lawbook Exchange [first published: New York: [Columbia University], 1892].Google Scholar
Fenwick, C. C., The poll taxes of 1377, 1379 and 1381. Part 3, Wiltshire-Yorkshire: unidentified documents and additional data, Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Follain, A., Le Page, D. and Rolley, F., ‘L'impôt au village: une question de sources’, in Follain, A. and Larguier, G. (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, fragile fondement de l'Etat dit moderne (XVe-XVIIIe siècles). Actes du Colloque tenu à Bercy, Paris: 2–3 décembre 2002, Paris: Comité pour l'histoire économique et financière de la France, pp. 513–48.Google Scholar
Fon-Vinkler, P. P., Iz istorii monetnogo dela v Rossii, St Petersburg: Tip. P.P. Soikina [first published: St Petersburg, 1892–1900].Google Scholar
Gómez Mendoza, A., ‘El futuro de los archivos de empresa en Mexico en el espejo español’, América Latina en la Historia Económica. Boletín de Fuentes, 23, pp. 7784.Google Scholar
Gómez-Galvarriato, A., ‘Sacando la nuez de la cascara: los archivos de empresa como fuente para la historia: mi experiencia en los archivos de la CIVSA, la cidosa y la fundidora Monterrey’, América Latina en la Historia Económica. Boletín de Fuentes, 23, pp. 2534.Google Scholar
Joly, H., Les archives des entreprises sous l'occupation: conservation, accessibilité et apport, Lille: IFRESI.Google Scholar
Joly, H. (ed.), Faire l'histoire des entreprises sous l'occupation: les acteurs économiques et leurs archives, Paris: Comité des travaux historiques et scientifiques, 2004.Google Scholar
Kerhervé, J., ‘L'historien et les sources financières de la fin du Moyen Age’, in Carozzi, C. and Taviani-Carozzi, H. (eds.), Le médiéviste devant ses sources: questions et méthodes. [Communications faites au séminaire de l'équipe de recherches sociétés, idéologies et croyances au moyen âge à l'université de Provence, en 2001 et 2002], Aix-en-Provence: Publications de l'université de Provence, 2004, pp. 185206.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lohmann, E., Das Steuerregister des Gemeinen Pfennigs für das Bistum Worms: Einleitung und Edition, Darmstadt: Selbstverlag der Hessischen Historischen Kommission und der Historischen Kommission für Hessen.Google Scholar
Ludlow, L., ‘Archivos y documentos de los antiguos bancos de emision existentes en el Archivo General de la nacion’, América Latina en la Historia Económica. Boletín de Fuentes, 23, pp. 1123.Google Scholar
Mac Devitt, M., Irish banknotes: Irish paper money 1783–2005, Kells, Co. Meath: Seachrán.Google Scholar
Mack Martin, W. and Latimer, K. S., State of Georgia treasury notes, treasury certificates, and bonds: a comprehensive collector's guide, [United States]: the author.Google Scholar
Magan, R. M., Latin American bank note records: American Bank Note Company archives, [United States]: the author.Google Scholar
Margairaz, M., ‘Les archives des institutions financières’, in Joly, (ed.), Faire l'histoire des entreprises sous l'occupation, pp. 37–32.Google Scholar
Michelin, B., ‘Les problèmes méthodologiques posés par les sources comptables: 57 registres de comptes municipaux de Pont-Audemer et leurs annexes (1447–1551)’, Histoire et Archives, 2004, 15, pp. 135–51.Google Scholar
Millard, S., Ulph, J. and Wilding, H., ‘A new direction for an Old Lady: an overview of the Bank of England Archive, its work and future challenges’, Business Archives, 91, pp. 4459.Google Scholar
Nougaret, R., ‘Les archives des administrations bancaires’, in Joly, (ed.), Faire l'histoire des entreprises sous l'occupation, pp. 3343.Google Scholar
Peña Peña, S. S., Moneda metálica y papel moneda en Venezuela (1498–2005), Trujillo: [s.n.].Google Scholar
Pino, F., ‘Orizzonte internazionale e “leadership” nelle carte bancarie di Giovanni Malagodi’, in Giovanni Malagodi banchiere, 1927–1952: atti del convegno: Fondazione Raffaele Mattioli, Milano, 20 ottobre 2004, Rome: Edizioni di storia e letteratura, pp. 746.Google Scholar
Poor, H. V., Money and its laws: embracing a history of monetary theories, and a history of the currencies of the United States Clark: Lawbook Exchange [first published: New York: H. V. and H. W. Poor, 1877].Google Scholar
Robert, F., ‘Fonction des délégations régionales et archives de la circonscription de Lyon’, in Joly, (ed.), Faire l'histoire des entreprises sous l'occupation, pp. 4560.Google Scholar
Robra, G., Das Protokoll- und Rechnungsbuch der Hillighemans und Kerkswaren für die Zeit von 1513–1582: im Archiv des Presbyteriums der Evangelisch-reformierten Kirchengemeinde in Leer (Ostfriesland), Aurich: Ostfriesische Landschaftliche Verlags- und Vertriebsgesellschaft.Google Scholar
Shaw, C., ‘Rothschilds and Brazil: an introduction to sources in the Rothschild archive’, Latin American Research Rev., 40/1, pp. 165–85.Google Scholar
Sumner, W. G., A history of American currency: with chapters on the English bank restriction and Austrian paper money, New York: Cosimo Classics [first published: New York: H. Holt & Co., 1874].Google Scholar
Thuillier, G., La réforme monétaire de 1785: Calonne et la refonte des louis, Paris: Comité pour l'histoire économique et financière de la France.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tortella, T., Billetes Españoles, 1874–1939, Madrid: Banco de España.Google Scholar
Zinnbauer, M. J., Die Zins- und Steuerbücher des Pflegamtes Murach. Bd.2: Die murachischen Zinsbücher des 15. Jh., T.1.2, Oberviechtach: Heimatkundlicher Arbeitskreis Oberviechtach.Google Scholar
Beckers, T., ‘Literaturbericht 2004’, Bankhistorisches Archiv, 31/1, pp. 7986.Google Scholar
Davies, R., Money – past, present & future – information on monetary history, contemporary developments, and electronic money, www.ex.ac.uk/%7ERDavies/arian/money.htmlGoogle Scholar
De Luca, G. and Moioli, A. (eds.), Bibliografia di Storia della Finanza Italiana – Italian finance history bibliography, www.dssi.unimi.it/dipstoria/biblio/cirsfi/bsfi.htmlGoogle Scholar
Higgins, D. M., ‘British business history: a review of the periodical literature for 2003’, Business History, 47/2, pp. 159–73.Google Scholar
Noiret, S., ‘Publications on financial history, 2003’, Financial History Rev., 12/2, pp. 247310.Google Scholar
Acquisti, A. and Varian, H. R., ‘Conditioning prices on purchase history’, Marketing Science, 24/3, pp. 367–81.Google Scholar
Arthur, C. J., ‘Value and money’, in Moseley, F. (ed.), Marx's theory of money: modern appraisals, New York: Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 111–23.Google Scholar
Auerbach, A. J., ‘Comments on John B. Shoven and John Whalley's “Irving Fisher's spendings (consumption) tax in retrospect”’, in Dimand, and Geanakoplos, (eds.), Celebrating Irving Fisher, pp. 237–44.Google Scholar
Backhaus, J. G., ‘From continental public finance to public choice: mapping continuity’, History of Political Economy, 37, pp. 314–33.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Backhouse, R. E, ‘Misunderstanding the history of the business cycle’, History of Political Economy, 37/2, pp. 179–84.Google Scholar
Balletta, F., ‘Modelli di interazione fra debito pubblico e mercati finanziari’, in ‘Seminario su Debito pubblico e formazione dei mercati finanziari fra età moderna e contemporanea, tenuto, a Cassino, il 15 e 16 ottobre 2004’, Riv. di Storia Finanziaria, 15, pp. 111–32, www.delpt.unina.it/stof/indice.htmlGoogle Scholar
Baranzini, M., ‘Modigliani's life-cycle theory of savings fifty years later’, Banca Nazionale del Lavoro Q. Rev., 58/233–34, pp. 109172.Google Scholar
Baranzini, R., Léon Walras e la moneta senza velo, 1860–1886: contributo analitico ed epistemologico alla ricostruzione del modello monetario walrasiano. Turin: UTET.Google Scholar
Barber, W. J., ‘Irving Fisher of Yale’, in Dimand, and Geanakoplos, (eds.), Celebrating Irving Fisher, pp. 4356.Google Scholar
Barnett, W. and Block, W., ‘Money: capital good, consumer good, or (media of) exchange good?’, Rev. of Austrian Economics, 18/2, pp. 179–94.Google Scholar
Bellofiore, R., ‘The monetary aspects of the capitalist process in the Marxian system: an investigation from the point of view of the theory of the monetary circuit’, in Moseley, (ed.), Marx's theory of money, pp. 124–42.Google Scholar
Boch, R., Unternehmensgeschichte heute: Theorieangebote, Quellen, Forschungstrends: Beiträge des 4. unternehmensgeschichtlichen Kolloquiums, Leipzig: Leipziger Universitätsverlag.Google Scholar
Campagnolo, G., ‘Carl Menger's “money as measure of value”: an introduction’, History of Political Economy, 37/2, pp. 233–45.Google Scholar
Campbell, M., ‘Marx's explanation of money's functions: overturning the quantity theory’, in Moseley, (ed.), Marx's Theory of Money, pp. 143–59.Google Scholar
Cardoso, J-L. and De Vasconcelos-Nogueira, A., ‘Isaac de Pinto (1717–1787): an enlightened economist and financier’, History of Political Economy, 37/2, pp. 263–92.Google Scholar
Carlsson, B., ‘Ekonomernas valfardsrecept: hoga loner och trygga truster Economists’, Ekonomisk debatt, 33/7, pp. 1729.Google Scholar
Catalano, R., ‘La teoria del valore di Ferdinando Galiani alla luce di una versione inedita di “Della Moneta”’, Il Pensiero economico italiano, 13/2, pp. 114–45.Google Scholar
Cerrito, E., ‘Principi e fondamenti di un paradigma storico della moneta e della stabilità finanziaria’, Studi storici, 46, pp. 5121.Google Scholar
Cheney, P., ‘Finances, philosophical history and the “empire of climate”: Enlightenment historiography and political economy’, Historical reflections–Réflexions historiques, 31/1, pp. 141–67.Google Scholar
Colautti, S. and Florio, M., ‘A logistic growth theory of public expenditures: a study of five countries over 100 years’, Public Choice, 122/3–4, pp. 355–93.Google Scholar
Costabile, L., ‘Money, cycles and capital formation: von Mises the “Austrian” v.s. Robertson the “Dynamist”’, Cambridge J. of Economics, 29/5, pp. 685707.Google Scholar
Cozzi, T., ‘A reappraisal of Modigliani's finance theories’, Banca Nazionale del Lavoro Q. Rev., 58/233–4, pp. 215–36.Google Scholar
Danby, C., ‘Noyola's institutional approach to inflation’, J. of the History of Economic Thought, 27/2, pp. 161–79.Google Scholar
Davis, T., Ricardo's macroeconomics: money, trade cycles & growth, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
De Brunhoff, S., ‘Marx's contribution to the search for a theory of money’, in Moseley, (ed.), Marx's theory of money, pp. 209–21.Google Scholar
De Cecco, M., ‘Sraffa's lectures on continental banking: a preliminary appraisal’, Rev. of Political Economy, 17/3, pp. 349–58.Google Scholar
De Ianni, N., ‘Sul capitalismo industriale e finanziario di Giacinto Motta’, Rivista di Storia Finanziaria, 15, pp. 2332, www.delpt.unina.it/stof/indice.html.Google Scholar
De Molina, L., ‘Treatise on money: argument 396: diverse senses in which the terms barter and exchange may be used: to barter in a strict sense’, J. of Markets and Morality, 8/1, pp. 199323.Google Scholar
DeRidder, J. J., ‘Evolution of accounting since Luca Paciolo’, Essays in Economic and Business History, 23, pp. 1419.Google Scholar
Diewert, W. E., ‘Index number theory using differences rather than ratios’, in Dimand, and Geanakoplos, (eds.), Celebrating Irving Fisher, pp. 311–60.Google Scholar
Dimand, R. W., ‘Fisher, Keynes, and the corridor of stability’, in Dimand, and Geanakoplos, (eds.), Celebrating Irving Fisher, pp. 185200.Google Scholar
Dimand, R. W., ‘Comments on William D. Nordhaus's, “Irving Fisher and the contribution of improved longevity to living standards”’, in Dimand, and Geanakoplos, (eds.), Celebrating Irving Fisher, pp. 393–8.Google Scholar
Dimand, R. W. and Geanakoplos, J. (eds.), Celebrating Irving Fisher: the legacy of a great economist, London: Blackwell.Google Scholar
Dimand, R. W. and Geanakoplos, J. ‘Celebrating Irving Fisher: the legacy of a great economist’, in Dimand, and Geanakoplos, (eds.), Celebrating Irving Fisher, pp. 318.Google Scholar
Ding, F. and Wolman, A. L., ‘Inflation and changing expenditure shares’, Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond Economic Q., 91/1, pp. 120.Google Scholar
Eltis, W., ‘Money and general gluts: the analysis of Say, Malthus, and Ricardo’, History of Political Economy, 37/4, pp. 661–89.Google Scholar
Fantacci, L., ‘Complementary currencies: a prospect on money from a retrospect on premodern practices’, Financial History Rev., 12/1, pp. 4361.Google Scholar
Faucci, R., ‘Perché la “tradizione italiana di finanza pubblica” incontra ancora tanto interesse?’, Economia Politica, 22/2, pp. 201–8.Google Scholar
Figuera, S., ‘Moltiplicatore dei depositi e offerta di moneta: elementi per una riflessione critica’, Storia del pensiero economico, 34/2, pp. 3979.Google Scholar
Foley, D., ‘Marx's theory of money in historical perspective’, in Moseley, (ed.), Marx's theory of money, pp. 3649.Google Scholar
Fleischman, R., Accounting history, London: Sage.Google Scholar
Friedman, M., ‘A natural experiment in monetary policy covering three episodes of growth and decline in the economy and the stock market’, J. of Economic Perspectives, 19/4, pp. 145–50.Google Scholar
Fuchs, V. R., ‘Health, government, and Irving Fisher’, in Dimand, and Geanakoplos, (eds.), Celebrating Irving Fisher, pp. 407–26.Google Scholar
Funnell, W., Williams, R. B. and Gaffikin, M. J. R., Critical and historical studies in accounting, Sydney: Pearson Education Australia.Google Scholar
Gaffeo, E., ‘Requiem for the unit root in per capita real GDP? Additional evidence from historical data’, Empirical economics, 30/1, pp. 3765.Google Scholar
Garegnani, P., ‘On a turning point in Sraffa's theoretical and interpretative position in the late 1920s’, European J. of the History of Economic Thought, 12/3, pp. 453–93.Google Scholar
Garnaut, R., ‘Is macroeconomics dead? Monetary and fiscal policy in historical context’, Oxford Rev. of Economic Policy, 21/4, pp. 524–31.Google Scholar
Geanakoplos, J., ‘The ideal inflation-indexed bond and Irving Fisher's impatience theory of interest with overlapping generations’, in Dimand, and Geanakoplos, (eds.), Celebrating Irving Fisher, pp. 257306.Google Scholar
Geanakoplos, J. and Shiller, R. J., ‘The ideal inflation-indexed bond and Irving Fisher's impatience theory of interest with overlapping generations’, American Journal of Economics and Sociology, 64/1, pp. 257310.Google Scholar
Genito, E., ‘Principi e fondamenti di un paradigma storico della moneta e della stabilità finanziaria’, Studi storici, 46/1, pp. 5122.Google Scholar
Germer, C., ‘The commodity nature of money in Marx's theory’, in Moseley, (ed.), Marx's theory of money, pp. 2135.Google Scholar
Gomez Camacho, F., ‘Treatise on money: introduction’, J. of Markets and Morality, 8/1, pp. 167–98.Google Scholar
Goodhart, C. A. E., ‘What is the essence of money? Review article’, Cambridge J. of Economics, 29/5, pp. 817–25.Google Scholar
Gootzeit, M., ‘Mill's concept of paper credit led to a short-run theory of the cycle’, Riv. internazionale di scienze economiche e commerciali, 52/4, pp. 467–82.Google Scholar
Graetz, M. J., ‘Comments on John B. Shoven and John Whalley's, “Irving Fisher's spendings (consumption) tax in retrospect”’, in Dimand, and Geanakoplos, (eds.), Celebrating Irving Fisher, pp. 245–56.Google Scholar
Hall, R. E., ‘Controlling the price level’, in Dimand, and Geanakoplos, (eds.), Celebrating Irving Fisher, pp. 93112.Google Scholar
Hammes, D., ‘Thomas Edison's “except one”: the monetary views of Arthur Kitson revisited’, J. of Economic Studies, 32/1, pp. 3346.Google Scholar
Haudeville, B. and Rietsch, C., ‘Peut-on travailler sur des données “approximées” en histoire financière?’, Economies et sociétés, 39/7, pp. 1341–75.Google Scholar
Hoag, C., ‘Deposit drains on “interest-paying” banks before financial crises’, Explorations in Economic History, 42/4, pp. 567–85.Google Scholar
Homer, S. and Sylla, R. E., A history of interest rates, Hoboken: Wiley.Google Scholar
Ishikawa, J., ‘A social science of contemporary value-based accounting: economic foundations of accounting for financial instruments’, Critical perspectives on accounting, 16/2, pp. 115–36.Google Scholar
Itoh, M., ‘The new interpretation and the value of money’, in Moseley, (ed.), Marx's theory of money, pp. 177–91.Google Scholar
Jappelli, T., ‘The life-cycle hypothesis, fiscal policy and social security’, Banca Nazionale del Lavoro Q. Rev., 58/233–4, pp. 173–86.Google Scholar
Kloft, H., ‘Money history vs. numismatics. Theodor Mommsen and the ancient coins’, Historische Zeitschrift, 281/3, pp. 719–20.Google Scholar
Klüßendorf, N., ‘Numismatik und Geldgeschichte’, Historische Hilfswissenschaften. Cologne, pp. 107–54.Google Scholar
Kurz, H. D., ‘Removing an “insuperable obstacle” in the way of an objectivist analysis: Sraffa's attempts at fixed capital’, European J. of the History of Economic Thought, 12/3, pp. 493525.Google Scholar
Lapavitsas, C., ‘The universal equivalent as monopolist of the ability to buy’, in Moseley, (ed.), Marx's theory of money, pp. 95110.Google Scholar
Likitkijsomboon, P., ‘Marx's anti-quantity theory of money: a critical evaluation’, in Moseley, (ed.), Marx's theory of money, pp. 160–76.Google Scholar
Lewin, P., ‘The capital idea and the scope of economics’, Rev. of Austrian Economics, 18/2, pp. 145–67.Google Scholar
Lushin, S. I., ‘O funktsiiakh finansov. Istoricheskii aspect’ [On the functions of finance. A historical view], Finansy, 7, pp. 54–8.Google Scholar
MacLean, L. C., Ziemba, W. T. and Li, Y. M., ‘Time to wealth goals in capital accumulation’, Quantitative Finance, 5/4, pp. 343–55.Google Scholar
McLure, M., ‘Equilibrium and Italian fiscal sociology: a reflection on the Pareto-Griziotti and Pareto-Sensini letters on fiscal theory’, European J. of the History of Economic Thought, 12/4, pp. 609–34.Google Scholar
Mäkeler, H., ‘Bemerkungen zu den Anfängen der stempelvergleichenden Methode', Geldgeschichtliche Nachrichten, 40, pp. 128–32.Google Scholar
Martins Gandra da Silva, I., Uma teoria do tributo, São Paulo: Editora Quartier Latin do Brasil.Google Scholar
Medema, S. G., ‘“Marginalizing” government: from “la scienza delle finanze” to Wicksell’, History of Political Economy, 37/1, pp. 125.Google Scholar
Menger, C., ‘Carl Menger's “Money as Measure of Value”’, History of Political Economy, 37/2, pp. 245–61.Google Scholar
Molina, M. G., ‘Capital theory and the origins of the elasticity of substitution (1932–1935’, Cambridge J. of Economics, 29/3, pp. 423–37.Google Scholar
Moseley, F., ‘Money has no price: Marx's theory of money and the transformation problem’, in Moseley, (ed.), Marx's theory of money, pp. 192208.Google Scholar
Moseley, F. (ed.), Marx's theory of money: modern appraisals, New York: Palgrave Macmillan.Google Scholar
Muchlinski, E., ‘Kontroversen in der internationalen Wahrungspolitik: Retrospektive zu Keynes-White-Boughton und IMF’, Intervention, 2/1, pp. 5773.Google Scholar
Murphy, R. P., ‘Dangers of the one-good model: Böhm-Bawerk's critique of the “naïve productivity theory of interest”’, J. of the History of Economic Thought, 27/4, pp. 375–83.Google Scholar
Murray, D., Chapters in the history of bookkeeping, accountancy & commercial arithmetic, Mansfield: Martino.Google Scholar
Murray, P., ‘Money as displaced social form: why value cannot be independent of price’, in Moseley, (ed.), Marx's theory of money, pp. 5064.Google Scholar
Nasica, E. and Raybaut, A., ‘Profits, confidence, and public deficits: modeling Minsky's institutional dynamics’, J. of Post Keynesian Economics, 28/1, pp. 135–55.Google Scholar
Nelson, A., ‘Marx's objections to credit theories of money’, in Moseley, (ed.), Marx's theory of money, pp. 6594.Google Scholar
Noguchi, M., ‘Interaction between tax and accounting practice: accounting for stock-in-trade’, Accounting, Business & Financial History, 15/1, pp. 134.Google Scholar
Nordhaus, W. D., ‘Irving Fisher and the contribution of improved longevity to living standards’, in Dimand, and Geanakoplos, (eds.), Celebrating Irving Fisher, pp. 367–92.Google Scholar
Obstfeld, M., Shambaugh, J. C. and Taylor, A. M., ‘The trilemma in history: tradeoffs among exchange rates, monetary policies, and capital mobility’, Rev. of Economics and Statistics, 87/3, pp. 423–38.Google Scholar
Obstfeld, M. and Taylor, A. M., Global capital markets: integration, crisis, and growth, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pagano, M., ‘The Modigliani-Miller theorems: a cornerstone of finance’, Banca Nazionale del Lavoro Q. Rev. 58/233–4, pp. 237–48.Google Scholar
Papademos, L., ‘Macroeconomic theory and monetary policy: the contributions of Franco Modigliani and the ongoing debate’, Banca Nazionale del Lavoro Q. Rev. 58/233–4, pp.187214.Google Scholar
Phillips, P. C. B., ‘Econometric analysis of Fisher's equation’, in Dimand, and Geanakoplos, (eds.), Celebrating Irving Fisher, pp. 125–68.Google Scholar
Pomini, M. and Spiller, C. N., ‘The revision of monetary theory in Fanno's analysis’, Riv. internazionale di scienze economiche e commerciali, 52/1, pp. 118.Google Scholar
Quattrone, P., ‘Is time spent, passed or counted? The missing link between time and accounting history’, Accounting Historians J., 32/1, pp. 185208.Google Scholar
Reuten, G., ‘Money as constituent of value’, in Moseley, (ed.), Marx's theory of money, pp. 7894.Google Scholar
Rust, J., ‘Comments on “Econometric analysis of Fisher's equation” by Peter C. B. Phillips’, in Dimand, and Geanakoplos, (eds.), Celebrating Irving Fisher, pp. 169–84.Google Scholar
Sarcinelli, M., ‘Politica bancaria e sviluppo economico: rileggendo l'era menichelliana e quella attuale’, Moneta e Credito, 58/229, pp. 328.Google Scholar
Shapiro, M. D., ‘Comment on W. Erwin Diewert's “Index number theory using differences rather than ratios”’, in Dimand, and Geanakoplos, (eds.), Celebrating Irving Fisher, pp. 361–6.Google Scholar
Shiller, R. J., ‘Comments on John Geanakoplos's “The ideal inflation-indexed bond and Irving Fisher's impatience theory of interest with overlapping generations”’, in Dimand, and Geanakoplos, (eds.), Celebrating Irving Fisher, pp. 307–10.Google Scholar
Shoven, J. B. and Whalley, J., ‘Irving Fisher's spendings (consumption) tax in retrospect’, in Dimand, and Geanakoplos, (eds.), Celebrating Irving Fisher, pp. 215–36.Google Scholar
Shubik, M., ‘Stable prices, money and the cost of living’, in Dimand, and Geanakoplos, (eds.), Celebrating Irving Fisher, pp. 117–24.Google Scholar
Sihag, B. S., ‘Kautilya on public goods and taxation’, History of Political Economy, 37/4, pp. 723–53.Google Scholar
Smith, T., ‘Towards a Marxian theory of world money’, in Moseley, (ed.), Marx's theory of money, pp. 222–38.Google Scholar
Srinivasan, T. N., ‘Comments on William D. Nordhaus's, “Irving Fisher and the contribution of improved longevity to living standards”’, in Dimand, and Geanakoplos, (eds.), Celebrating Irving Fisher, pp. 399406.Google Scholar
Stabile, D. R., Forerunners of modern financial economics. A random walk in the history of economic thought, Cheltenham: Elgar.Google Scholar
Steele, G. R., ‘Hayek's theory of money and cycles: retrospective and reappraisal’, Q. J. of Austrian Economics, 8/1, pp. 314.Google Scholar
Szakolczai, G., ‘Analysis of the equilibrium of the real and monetary economy’, Development and Finance/Fejlesztes es Finanszirozas: Q. Hungarian Economic Rev., 1, pp. 5665.Google Scholar
Szostak, R., ‘Evaluating the historiography of the great depression: explanation or single-theory driven?’, J. of Economic Methodology, 12/1, pp. 3563.Google Scholar
Tobin, J., ‘Comment on Robert E. Hall's “Controlling the price level”’, in Dimand, and Geanakoplos, (eds.), Celebrating Irving Fisher, pp. 113–16.Google Scholar
Tobin, J., ‘Fisher's introductory text’, in Dimand, and Geanakoplos, (eds.), Celebrating Irving Fisher, p. 201.Google Scholar
Tobin, J., ‘Fisher's “The nature of capital and income”’, in Dimand, and Geanakoplos, (eds.), Celebrating Irving Fisher, pp. 207–36.Google Scholar
Tobin, J., ‘Irving Fisher (1867–1947)’, in Dimand, and Geanakoplos, (eds.), Celebrating Irving Fisher, pp. 1942.Google Scholar
Toporowski, J., Theories of financial disturbance: an examination of critical theories of finance from Adam Smith to the present day, Cheltenham: Edward Elgar.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Trask, H. A. S., ‘William Graham Sumner: monetary theorist’, J. of Austrian Economics, 8/2, pp. 3554.Google Scholar
Tusset, G., ‘How the International Monetary Fund's policies change according to economic theory (1945–1973)’, Rivista internazionale di scienze economiche e commerciali, 52/4, pp. 483513.Google Scholar
Walker, S. P., ‘Accounting in history’, Accounting Historians J., 32/2, pp. 233–59.Google Scholar
Wennerlind, C., ‘David Hume's monetary theory revisited: was he really a quantity theorist and an inflationist?’, J. of Political Economy, 113/1, pp. 223–37.Google Scholar
Zarate, S. M., ‘Cambios en la estructura salarial: una historia desde la regresion Cuantilica’, Monetaria, 27/4, pp. 339–64.Google Scholar
Zarlenga, S., ‘Moving monetary reform to the “front burner”’, American Rev. of Political Economy, 3/1, pp. 3984.Google Scholar
Zeckhauser, R., ‘Irving Fisher, Victor Fuchs, and the health-government tangle’, in Dimand, and Geanakoplos, (eds.), Celebrating Irving Fisher, pp. 435–49.Google Scholar
Aliber, R. Z., ‘The 35 most tumultuous years in monetary history: shocks, the transfer problem, and financial trauma’, IMF Staff Papers, 52, pp. 142–59.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Aliber, R. Z. and Kindleberger, C. P., Manias, panics and crashes: a history of financial crises, 5th edn, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.Google Scholar
Ara, D., ‘Banking in Islam: genesis and development from historical perspective’, Hamdard Islamicus, 28/2, pp. 4551.Google Scholar
Armingeon, K., ‘Die Ausbreitung der Aktiengesellschaft und der Wandel des Wohlfahrtsstaates und der Arbeitsbeziehungen. Ein internationaler Vergleich’, in Windolf, (ed.), Finanzmarkt-Kapitalismus, pp. 441–59.Google Scholar
Bagchi, A. K., Perilous passage: mankind and the global ascendancy of capital, Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield.Google Scholar
Baucom, I., Specters of the Atlantic: finance capital, slavery and the philosophy of history. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.Google Scholar
Berghoff, H., ‘Markterschließung und Risikomanagement. die Rolle der Kreditauskunfteien und Rating-Agenturen im Industrialisierungs- und Globalisierungsprozess des 19. Jahrhunderts’, Vierteljahrschrift für sozial- und wirtschaftsgeschichte, 92/2, pp. 141–63.Google Scholar
Bernstein, P. L., Die Macht des Goldes. Auf den Spuren einer Faszination, Munich: FinanzBuch Verlag.Google Scholar
Best, J., The Limits of Transparency: Ambiguity and the History of International Finance. Ithaca: Cornell University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Beynet, P., Carnot, N. and Hagege, C., ‘La hausse récente des cours du pétrole: un troisième choc pétrolier pour nos économies’, Regards sur l'actualité, 314, pp. 5568.Google Scholar
Bootle, R. P., Money for nothing: real wealth, financial fantasies, and the economy of the future, London: Nicholas Brealey.Google Scholar
Bonin, H., ‘The Compagnie du canal de Suez and Transit Shipping, 1900–1956’, International J. of Maritime History, 27/2, pp. 87112.Google Scholar
Bordo, M. D. and MacDonald, R., ‘Interest rate interactions in the classical gold standard, 1880–1914: was there any monetary independence?’, J. of Monetary Economics, 52/2, pp. 307–27.Google Scholar
Bordo, M. D., Meissner, C. M. and Redish, A., ‘How original sin was overcome: the evolution of external debt denominated in domestic currencies in the United States and the British dominions, 1800–2000’, in Eichengreen, and Hausmann, (eds.), Other people's money, pp. 122–53.Google Scholar
Cassis, Y., Capitals of capital: a history of international financial centres, 1780–2005, Geneva: Pictet/Editions Slatkine.Google Scholar
Castiglione, D., ‘Blood and oil: eighteenth-century monetary anxieties’, Historical Reflections, 31/1, pp. 2748.Google Scholar
Cespedes, L. F., Chang, R. and Velasco, A., ‘Must original sin cause macroeconomic damnation?’, in Eichengreen, and Hausmann, (eds.), Other people's money, pp. 4867.Google Scholar
Chamon, M. and Hausmann, R., ‘Why do countries borrow the way they borrow?’, in Eichengreen, and Hausmann, (eds.), Other people's money, pp. 218–32.Google Scholar
Chibber, V., “Capital outbound”, New Left Review, 36, pp. 151–8.Google Scholar
Clavin, P. and Wessels, J.-W., ‘Transnationalism and the league of nations: understanding the work of its economic and financial organisation’, Contemporary European History, 14/4, pp. 465–92.Google Scholar
Clement, P. and Toniolo, G., Central bank cooperation at the bank for international settlements, 1930–1973, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Cohen, E., Le nouvel âge du capitalisme: bulles, krachs et rebonds, Paris: Fayard.Google Scholar
Corsetti, G. and Mackowiak, B., ‘A fiscal perspective on currency crises and original sin’, in Eichengreen, and Hausmann, (eds.), Other people's money, pp. 6894.Google Scholar
D'Adda, C., ‘Guardando al futuro del Sistema Monetario Internazionale’, Moneta e credito, 58/232, pp. 155–74.Google Scholar
Dailami, M., Masson, P. R. and Padou, J. J., Global monetary conditions versus country-specific factors in the determination of emerging market debt spreads, Washington, DC: World Bank, Development Prospects Group.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dale, R. S., ‘Financial markets can go mad: evidence of irrational behaviour during the South Sea bubble’, Economic History Rev., 58/2, pp. 233–71.Google Scholar
De Goede, M., Virtue, fortune, and faith: a genealogy of finance, Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.Google Scholar
Dupuis, F., Guide to monetary policies of the main industrialized and emerging countries, Montreal: Mouvement des caisses Desjardins.Google Scholar
Eichengreen, B., ‘Global dysequilibrium and the lessons of Bretton Woods’, Desarrollo Economico – Rev. de Ciencias Sociales, 44/176, pp. 619–44.Google Scholar
Eichengreen, B. and Hausmann, R. (eds.), Other people's money: debt denomination and financial instability in emerging market economies, Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Eichengreen, B. and Hausmann, R., ‘Introduction: debt denomination and financial instability in emerging market economies’, in Eichengreen, and Hausmann, (eds.), Other people's money, pp. 312.Google Scholar
Eichengreen, B. and Hausmann, R., ‘Original sin: the road to redemption’, in Eichengreen, and Hausmann, (eds.), Other people's money, pp. 266–82.Google Scholar
Eichengreen, B, Hausmann, R. and Panizza, U., ‘The pain of original sin’, in Eichengreen, and Hausmann, (eds.), Other people's money, pp. 1347.Google Scholar
Eichengreen, B., Hausmann, R. and Panizza, U., ‘The mystery of original sin’, in Eichengreen, and Hausmann, (eds.), Other people's money, pp. 233–65.Google Scholar
Endres, A. M., Architects of the international financial system, London: Routledge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Engel, J. A., ‘The SURIy Bonds: American Cold War constraints on British aviation’, Enterprise and Society, 6/1, pp. 144.Google Scholar
Fantacci, L., La moneta: storia di un'istituzione mancata, Padova: Marsilio.Google Scholar
Federico, G., ‘Not guilty? Agriculture in the 1920s and the great depression’, J. of Economic History, 65/4, pp. 949–77.Google Scholar
Feiertag, O., Mesurer la monnaie: banques centrales et construction de l'autorité monétaire, XIXe-XXe siècle, Paris: Albin Michel.Google Scholar
Feinstein, A. R., ‘Does “health promotion” really promote health?”’, in Dimand, and Geanakoplos, (eds.), Celebrating Irving Fisher, pp. 427–34.Google Scholar
Feldkamp, F. L., Jung, B. T. D. and Lane, P. J., The law and economics of financial markets: lessons of history that assure success in the future, Boston: Aspatore.Google Scholar
Feldman, G. D., ‘Banks, Bankenmacht, and financial institutions from 1900 to 1933’, in Windolf, (ed.), Finanzmarkt-Kapitalismus, pp. 316–30.Google Scholar
Fischer, G., Finanzierung der kirchlichen Sendung. Das kanonische Recht und die Kirchenfinanzierungssysteme in der Bundesrepublik Deutschland und den USA, Paderborn: Schöningh.Google Scholar
Flandreau, M. and Jobst, C., ‘The ties that divide: a network analysis of the international monetary system, 1890–1910’, J. of Economic History, 65/4, pp. 9771007.Google Scholar
Flandreau, M. and Sussman, N., ‘Old sins: exchange clauses and European foreign lending in the nineteenth century’, in Eichengreen, and Hausmann, (eds.), Other people's money, pp. 154–89.Google Scholar
Galbraith, J. K., Der große Crash 1929. Ursachen, Verlauf, Folgen, Munich: FinanzBuch-Verlag.Google Scholar
Garnot, B., ‘Introduction: justice, argent et société’, in Garnot, B. (ed.), Justice et argent: les crimes et les peines pécuniaires du XIIIe au XXIe siècle, Dijon: Editions universitaires de Dijon, pp. 714.Google Scholar
Glukhov, V. V., Vstuplenie Rossii v VTO kak ekonomicheskaia problema, St Petersburg: Peterburgskii gos. politekhnicheskii universitet.Google Scholar
Goetzmann, W. N. and Koll, E., ‘Paying in paper’, in Goetzmann, and Rouwenhorst, (eds.), The origins of value, pp. 91104.Google Scholar
Goetzmann, W. N. and Rouwenhorst, K. G., ‘Perpetuities in the stream of history’, in Goetzmann, and Rouwenhorst, (eds.), The origins of value, pp. 177–88.Google Scholar
Goetzmann, W. N. and Rouwenhorst, K. G., ‘Introduction: financial innovations in history’, in Goetzmann, and Rouwenhorst, (eds.), The origins of value, pp. 316.Google Scholar
Goetzmann, W. N. and Rouwenhorst, K. G. (eds.), The origins of value: the financial innovations that created modern capital markets, Oxford: Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gómez, A., El dinero y las palabras: conexiones insospechadas, Buenos Aires: Prometeo Libros.Google Scholar
Guinnane, T. W., ‘Trust: a concept too many’, Jahrbuch für Wirtschaftsgeschichte, 1, pp. 7792.Google Scholar
Halbeisen, P., ‘Goldstandard oder manipulierte Währung? Partikularinteressen und Währungspolitik in den 1930er-Jahren’, Traverse, 12/1, pp. 169–76.Google Scholar
Henisz, W. J., Guillén, M. F. and Zelner, B. A., ‘The worldwide diffusion of market-oriented infrastructure reform, 1977–1999’, American Sociological Rev., 70/6, pp. 871–97.Google Scholar
Hixson, W. F., Triumph of the bankers: money and banking in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, Montgomery: E-BookTime.Google Scholar
Hofinger, H. and Holger, B., ‘Reservefonds mit Fürsorgecharakter bei Vorschuss- und Kreditvereinen (Kreditgenossenschaften)’, Bankhistorisches Archiv, 31/2, pp. 134–43.Google Scholar
Höpner, M., ‘Sozialdemokratie, Gewerkschaften und organisierter Kapitalismus, 1880–2002’, in Windolf, (ed.), Finanzmarkt-Kapitalismus, pp. 196221.Google Scholar
Hou, J. and Zhao, W., ‘Gongyehuaqian zhong-ying xiangcun jiedai bijiao yanjiu’ [A comparative study of rural credit in preindustrial China and England], Shixue Yuekan, 2, pp. 7580.Google Scholar
Iqbal, M. and Molyneux, P., Thirty years of Islamic banking: history, performance, and prospects, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.Google Scholar
James, H., ‘Der Wettbewerb zwischen den Finanzzentren Europas und denen der USA’, in Merki, C. M. (ed.), Europas Finanzzentren. Geschichte und Bedeutung im 20. Jh., Frankfurt/M.: Campus Verlag, pp. 295304.Google Scholar
Jeanne, O., ‘Why do emerging economies borrow in foreign currency?’, in Eichengreen, and Hausmann, (eds.), Other people's money, pp. 190217.Google Scholar
Jeanne, O. and Zettelmeyer, J., ‘Original sin, balance-sheet crises, and the roles of international lending’, in Eichengreen, and Hausmann, (eds.), Other people's money, pp. 95121.Google Scholar
Jia-Ming, Z. and Morss, E., ‘The financial revolutions of the twentieth century’, in Chandler, A. D. and Mazlish, B. (eds.), Leviathans: multinational corporations and the new global history, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 203–18.Google Scholar
Jones, G., Multinationals and global capitalism: from the Nineteenth to the Twenty-first century, Oxford: Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kettell, S., The political economy of exchange rate policy-making: from the gold standard to the euro, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2004.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kim, N. and Wallis, J. J., ‘The market for American state government bonds in Britain and the United States, 1830–1843’, Economic History Rev., 58/4, pp. 736–64.Google Scholar
Kolm, E., ‘The emerging system of double taxation agreements in the late 19th and 20th centuries’, Development and Finance, 2, pp. 6675.Google Scholar
Le, M. V. and Suruga, T., ‘Foreign direct investment, public expenditure and economic growth: the empirical evidence for the period 1970–2001’, Applied Economics Letters, 12/1, pp. 45–9.Google Scholar
Leblang, D. and Mukherjee, B., ‘Government partisanship, elections, and the stock market: examining American and British stock returns, 1930–2000’, American J. of Political Science, 49/4, pp. 780802.Google Scholar
Lindert, P. H., Growing public: social spending and economic growth since the eighteenth century (vol. 1: The story; vol. 2: Further evidence), Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Malmendier, U., ‘Roman shares’, in Goetzmann, and Rouwenhorst, (eds.), The Origins of value, pp. 3142.Google Scholar
Manow, P., ‘Globalisierung, “Corporate Finance” und koordinierter Kapitalismus. Die Altersicherungssysteme als (versiegende) Quelle geduldigen Kapitals in Deutschland und Japan’, in Windolf, (ed.), Finanzmarkt-Kapitalismus, pp. 242–75.Google Scholar
Marcel, B. and Taïeb, J., Crises d'hier, crises d'aujourd'hui. Les grandes crises: 1873, 1929, 1973, Paris: A. Colin.Google Scholar
Marietta, M. and Perlman, M., ‘The politics of social accounting: public goals and the evolution of the national accounts in Germany, the United Kingdom and the United States’, Rev. of Political Economy, 17/2, pp. 211–30.Google Scholar
McCulley, P., ‘History lessons for 21st century investment managers’, Financial Analysts J., 61/2, pp. 1923.Google Scholar
Meissner, C. M., ‘A new world order: explaining the international diffusion of the gold standard, 1870–1913’, J. of International Economics, 66/2, pp. 385406.Google Scholar
Meissner, D. J., Chinese capitalists versus the American flour industry, 1890–1910: profit and patriotism in international trade, Lewiston: Edwin Mellen Press.Google Scholar
Menéndez Romero, F., El Banco de México y la reserva federal de Estados Unidos de América, FED, Mexico: Porrúa Hermanos.Google Scholar
Mooij, J., ‘Corporate culture of central banks: lessons from the past’, J. of European Economic History, 34/1, pp. 1142.Google Scholar
Moore, L. and Kaluzny, J., ‘Regime change and debt default: the case of Russia, Austro-Hungary, and the Ottoman empire following world war one’, Explorations in Economic History, 42/2, pp. 237–59.Google Scholar
Morck, R., A history of corporate governance around the world: family business groups to professional managers, Chicago: University of Chicago Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nemtsev, A. D., Problemy globalizatsii sovremennogo obshchestva: materialy Vserossiiskoi nauchno-prakticheskoi konferentsii, 21 oktiabria 2005 goda, Samara: Samarskii gos. ekonomicheskii universitet.Google Scholar
Nosova, G. V., ‘Poisk putei preodoleniia infliatsii v nachale XIX veka’ [Search for ways to overcome inflation at the beginning of the 19th century], Finansy, 7, pp. 65–7.Google Scholar
Rouwenhorst, G. K., ‘The origins of mutual funds’, in Goetzmann, and Rouwenhorst, (eds.), The origins of value, pp. 249–70.Google Scholar
Ruppert, K., ‘International financial history in the twentieth century: system and anarchy’, Historische Zeitschrift, 281/2, pp. 508–9.Google Scholar
Saager, H. and Vogt, W., Schweizer Geld am Tafelberg. Die Wirtschaftsbeziehungen zwischen der Schweiz und Südafrika zwischen 1948 und 1994, Zurich: Orell Füssli.Google Scholar
Schaffer, S., ‘L'inventaire de l'astronome. Le commerce d'instruments scientifiques au XVIIIe siècle (Angleterre-Chine-Pacifique)’, Annales, 60/4, pp. 791815.Google Scholar
Shaw, D. J., ‘Turning point in the evolution of soft financing: the united nations and the world bank’, Canadian J. of Development Studies, 26/1, pp. 4361.Google Scholar
Shirokorad, L. D., ‘V. M. Shtein o denezhnom obrashchenii v period Pervoi mirovoi voiny’ [Problems of money circulation during the first world war in V. M. Stein's early works], Vestnik Sankt Peterburgskogo universiteta, 2/13, pp. 7487.Google Scholar
Schulz, G., ‘Sparkassen in der Geschichte’, Bankhistorisches Archiv, 31/1, pp. 5767.Google Scholar
Schwinges, R. C. (ed.), Finanzierung von Universität und Wissenschaft in Vergangenheit und Gegenwart, Basel: Schwabe.Google Scholar
Soederberg, S., ‘The transnational debt architecture and emerging markets: the politics of paradoxes and punishment’, Third World Q., 26/6, pp. 927–49.Google Scholar
Solimano, A. and Watts, N., International migration, capital flows and the global economy: a long run view, Santiago de Chile: CEPAL, Economic Development Division.Google Scholar
Spraakman, G. and Margret, J., ‘The transfer of management accounting practices from London counting houses to the British North American fur trade’, Accounting, Business & Financial History, 15/2, pp. 101–19.Google Scholar
Surmann, J., ‘Raubgold und die Restitutionspolitik der USA gegenüber der neutralen Schweiz’, Sozial Geschichte, 20/1, pp. 5776.Google Scholar
Takahashi, H., ‘Tanki ichiba kinri seitei kodo: saiken kinhon isei shita no rondon to nyu yoku ichiba’ [Short-term interest rates and arbitrage: money markets in London and New York under the reconstructed gold standard], Shakai-Keizai Shigaku, 71/3, pp. 4966.Google Scholar
Tremblay, Y., ‘Controlled consumption: control of prices and rationing during the Second World War’, Rev. d'Histoire de l'Amérique Française, 58/4, pp. 569607.Google Scholar
Tschoegl, A. E., ‘The California subsidiaries of Japanese banks: a genealogical history’, J. of Asian Business, 20/2, pp. 5982.Google Scholar
Toms, S. and Wright, M., ‘Divergence and convergence within anglo-american corporate governance systems: evidence from the US and UK, 1950–2000’, Business History, 47/2, pp. 267–95.Google Scholar
Van de Mieroop, M., ‘The invention of interest’, in Goetzmann, and Rouwenhorst, (eds.), The origins of value, pp. 1730.Google Scholar
Vanoli, A., A history of national accounting, Amsterdam: IOS Press.Google Scholar
Villegas Revueltas, S., Deuda y diplomacia: la relación México-Gran Bretaña, 1824–1884, Mexico: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México.Google Scholar
Virén, M., Fiscal policy in the 1920s and 1930s: how much different is it from the post war period's policies?, Helsinki: Bank of Finland.Google Scholar
Von der Heydt Coca, M., ‘Andean silver and the rise of the western world’, Critical Sociology, 31/4, pp. 481514.Google Scholar
Weins, C., ‘Die Entwicklung der Lohnungleichheit in Deutschland und den USA zwischen 1980 und 2000’, in Windolf, (ed.), Finanzmarkt-Kapitalismus, pp. 484503.Google Scholar
Wenzel, E., ‘Conclusion: justice, argent et répression pénale’, in Garnot, B. (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 325–31.Google Scholar
Windolf, A. (ed.), Finanzmarkt-Kapitalismus. Analysen zum Wandel von Produktionsregimen, Wiesbaden: Verlag für Sozialwissenschaft.Google Scholar
Wood, J. H., A history of central banking in Great Britain and the United States, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Woodruff, D. M., ‘Boom, gloom, doom: balance sheets, monetary fragmentation, and the politics of financial crisis in Argentina and Russia’, Politics & Society, 33/1, pp. 345.Google Scholar
Zaballa Lazo, A., Economía de guerra: crisis de hegemonía mundial, La Paz, Bolivia: Facultad de Ciencias Económicas y Financieras, UMSA.Google Scholar
Financial condition in the City of Portland, 1995–2004, Portland: City Auditor Audit Services Division, www.portlandonline.com/auditor/auditservicesGoogle Scholar
Fuga de divisas en la Argentina. Comisión Especial Investigadora de la Cámara de Diputados sobre Fuga de Divisas de la Argentina durante el año 2001, Buenos Aires: Veintiuno Editores Argentina.Google Scholar
Los archivos bancarios Mexicanos. notas para el analisis de fuentes del sistema bancario 1900–1940’, América Latina en la Historia Económica. Boletín de Fuentes, 23, pp. 105–17.Google Scholar
Amt, E., The great roll of the pipe for the eighth year of the reign of King Henry III, Michaelmas 1224, London/Loughborough: Pipe Roll Society/Quorn Litho.Google Scholar
Baer, C. A. and McComb, D., Oral history interview of Charles A. Baer, Denver: Colorado Historical Society.Google Scholar
Ball, A., Remembering VE Day: money matters then and now. A collection of viewpoints about money management 1945–2005, featuring oral histories from World War II veterans and teenagers of Bedfordshire, Moggerhanger: Family Matters Institute.Google Scholar
Barnard, R. and McComb, D., Oral history interview of Rollin D. Barnard, Denver: Colorado Historical Society.Google Scholar
Bergère, M., ‘Les archives de l’épuration financière: les comités de confiscation des profits illicites', in Joly, (ed.), Faire l'histoire des entreprises sous l'occupation, pp. 187–91.Google Scholar
Berson-Levinson, J.Soldier's individual pay record, Washington, DC: US Government Printing Office.Google Scholar
Boissellier, S., ‘Sur quelques manuscrits concernant la fiscalité pontificale au Portugal’, Archivum historiae pontificiae, 43, pp. 1347.Google Scholar
Browne, Z. and Donnelly, S., ‘Ionian Bank Limited: retro-conversion and digitisation project’, Business Archives, 91, pp. 1627.Google Scholar
Chazelle, M-H., ‘Conserver les archives bancaires: le cas des sociétés de crédit, d'une banque d'affaires et de la Banque de France (1875–1935)’, Livraisons d'histoire de l'architecture et des arts qui s'y rattachent, 10, pp. 1931.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chevandier, C., Descamps, F. and Zuber, H., ‘Mémoire orale et mémoire écrite au Ministère des Finances; de la série à l'individu, archives du personnel et archives orales’, Gazette des archives, 198, pp. 7392.Google Scholar
D'Angio, A. and Quennouëlle-Corre, L., ‘Les archives des administrations financières’, in Joly, (ed.), Faire l'histoire des entreprises sous l'occupation, pp. 1526.Google Scholar
Daumas, J-C., ‘L'apport des archives de la délégation de Dijon du MPI à la connaissance de l'industrie régionale’, in Joly, (ed.), Faire l'histoire des entreprises sous l'occupation, pp. 61–7.Google Scholar
Delhoumme, J-P., ‘Une source d'histoire rurale à l’épreuve de la critique: les états des fonds limousins (XVIIIe siècle)', Archives en Limousin, 23 (2004), pp. 20–6.Google Scholar
Del Mar, A., A history of money in ancient countries, from the earliest times to the present [S.l.]: Kessinger Publishing [facsimile of original edition: London: George Bell and Sons, 1885].Google Scholar
Derwael, J., ‘Op zoek naar de ondernemersgeest. Bedrijfsarchieven in west-vlaanderen, Bibliotheek en archiefgids Vlaamse vereniging voor bibliotheek, archief, en documentatiewezen, 81/2, pp. 2630.Google Scholar
Douglas, C. H. J., The financial history of Massachusetts: from the organization of the Massachusetts Bay Company to the American Revolution, Clark: Lawbook Exchange [first published: New York: [Columbia University], 1892].Google Scholar
Fenwick, C. C., The poll taxes of 1377, 1379 and 1381. Part 3, Wiltshire-Yorkshire: unidentified documents and additional data, Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Follain, A., Le Page, D. and Rolley, F., ‘L'impôt au village: une question de sources’, in Follain, A. and Larguier, G. (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, fragile fondement de l'Etat dit moderne (XVe-XVIIIe siècles). Actes du Colloque tenu à Bercy, Paris: 2–3 décembre 2002, Paris: Comité pour l'histoire économique et financière de la France, pp. 513–48.Google Scholar
Fon-Vinkler, P. P., Iz istorii monetnogo dela v Rossii, St Petersburg: Tip. P.P. Soikina [first published: St Petersburg, 1892–1900].Google Scholar
Gómez Mendoza, A., ‘El futuro de los archivos de empresa en Mexico en el espejo español’, América Latina en la Historia Económica. Boletín de Fuentes, 23, pp. 7784.Google Scholar
Gómez-Galvarriato, A., ‘Sacando la nuez de la cascara: los archivos de empresa como fuente para la historia: mi experiencia en los archivos de la CIVSA, la cidosa y la fundidora Monterrey’, América Latina en la Historia Económica. Boletín de Fuentes, 23, pp. 2534.Google Scholar
Joly, H., Les archives des entreprises sous l'occupation: conservation, accessibilité et apport, Lille: IFRESI.Google Scholar
Joly, H. (ed.), Faire l'histoire des entreprises sous l'occupation: les acteurs économiques et leurs archives, Paris: Comité des travaux historiques et scientifiques, 2004.Google Scholar
Kerhervé, J., ‘L'historien et les sources financières de la fin du Moyen Age’, in Carozzi, C. and Taviani-Carozzi, H. (eds.), Le médiéviste devant ses sources: questions et méthodes. [Communications faites au séminaire de l'équipe de recherches sociétés, idéologies et croyances au moyen âge à l'université de Provence, en 2001 et 2002], Aix-en-Provence: Publications de l'université de Provence, 2004, pp. 185206.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lohmann, E., Das Steuerregister des Gemeinen Pfennigs für das Bistum Worms: Einleitung und Edition, Darmstadt: Selbstverlag der Hessischen Historischen Kommission und der Historischen Kommission für Hessen.Google Scholar
Ludlow, L., ‘Archivos y documentos de los antiguos bancos de emision existentes en el Archivo General de la nacion’, América Latina en la Historia Económica. Boletín de Fuentes, 23, pp. 1123.Google Scholar
Mac Devitt, M., Irish banknotes: Irish paper money 1783–2005, Kells, Co. Meath: Seachrán.Google Scholar
Mack Martin, W. and Latimer, K. S., State of Georgia treasury notes, treasury certificates, and bonds: a comprehensive collector's guide, [United States]: the author.Google Scholar
Magan, R. M., Latin American bank note records: American Bank Note Company archives, [United States]: the author.Google Scholar
Margairaz, M., ‘Les archives des institutions financières’, in Joly, (ed.), Faire l'histoire des entreprises sous l'occupation, pp. 37–32.Google Scholar
Michelin, B., ‘Les problèmes méthodologiques posés par les sources comptables: 57 registres de comptes municipaux de Pont-Audemer et leurs annexes (1447–1551)’, Histoire et Archives, 2004, 15, pp. 135–51.Google Scholar
Millard, S., Ulph, J. and Wilding, H., ‘A new direction for an Old Lady: an overview of the Bank of England Archive, its work and future challenges’, Business Archives, 91, pp. 4459.Google Scholar
Nougaret, R., ‘Les archives des administrations bancaires’, in Joly, (ed.), Faire l'histoire des entreprises sous l'occupation, pp. 3343.Google Scholar
Peña Peña, S. S., Moneda metálica y papel moneda en Venezuela (1498–2005), Trujillo: [s.n.].Google Scholar
Pino, F., ‘Orizzonte internazionale e “leadership” nelle carte bancarie di Giovanni Malagodi’, in Giovanni Malagodi banchiere, 1927–1952: atti del convegno: Fondazione Raffaele Mattioli, Milano, 20 ottobre 2004, Rome: Edizioni di storia e letteratura, pp. 746.Google Scholar
Poor, H. V., Money and its laws: embracing a history of monetary theories, and a history of the currencies of the United States Clark: Lawbook Exchange [first published: New York: H. V. and H. W. Poor, 1877].Google Scholar
Robert, F., ‘Fonction des délégations régionales et archives de la circonscription de Lyon’, in Joly, (ed.), Faire l'histoire des entreprises sous l'occupation, pp. 4560.Google Scholar
Robra, G., Das Protokoll- und Rechnungsbuch der Hillighemans und Kerkswaren für die Zeit von 1513–1582: im Archiv des Presbyteriums der Evangelisch-reformierten Kirchengemeinde in Leer (Ostfriesland), Aurich: Ostfriesische Landschaftliche Verlags- und Vertriebsgesellschaft.Google Scholar
Shaw, C., ‘Rothschilds and Brazil: an introduction to sources in the Rothschild archive’, Latin American Research Rev., 40/1, pp. 165–85.Google Scholar
Sumner, W. G., A history of American currency: with chapters on the English bank restriction and Austrian paper money, New York: Cosimo Classics [first published: New York: H. Holt & Co., 1874].Google Scholar
Thuillier, G., La réforme monétaire de 1785: Calonne et la refonte des louis, Paris: Comité pour l'histoire économique et financière de la France.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tortella, T., Billetes Españoles, 1874–1939, Madrid: Banco de España.Google Scholar
Zinnbauer, M. J., Die Zins- und Steuerbücher des Pflegamtes Murach. Bd.2: Die murachischen Zinsbücher des 15. Jh., T.1.2, Oberviechtach: Heimatkundlicher Arbeitskreis Oberviechtach.Google Scholar
Beckers, T., ‘Literaturbericht 2004’, Bankhistorisches Archiv, 31/1, pp. 7986.Google Scholar
Davies, R., Money – past, present & future – information on monetary history, contemporary developments, and electronic money, www.ex.ac.uk/%7ERDavies/arian/money.htmlGoogle Scholar
De Luca, G. and Moioli, A. (eds.), Bibliografia di Storia della Finanza Italiana – Italian finance history bibliography, www.dssi.unimi.it/dipstoria/biblio/cirsfi/bsfi.htmlGoogle Scholar
Higgins, D. M., ‘British business history: a review of the periodical literature for 2003’, Business History, 47/2, pp. 159–73.Google Scholar
Noiret, S., ‘Publications on financial history, 2003’, Financial History Rev., 12/2, pp. 247310.Google Scholar
Acquisti, A. and Varian, H. R., ‘Conditioning prices on purchase history’, Marketing Science, 24/3, pp. 367–81.Google Scholar
Arthur, C. J., ‘Value and money’, in Moseley, F. (ed.), Marx's theory of money: modern appraisals, New York: Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 111–23.Google Scholar
Auerbach, A. J., ‘Comments on John B. Shoven and John Whalley's “Irving Fisher's spendings (consumption) tax in retrospect”’, in Dimand, and Geanakoplos, (eds.), Celebrating Irving Fisher, pp. 237–44.Google Scholar
Backhaus, J. G., ‘From continental public finance to public choice: mapping continuity’, History of Political Economy, 37, pp. 314–33.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Backhouse, R. E, ‘Misunderstanding the history of the business cycle’, History of Political Economy, 37/2, pp. 179–84.Google Scholar
Balletta, F., ‘Modelli di interazione fra debito pubblico e mercati finanziari’, in ‘Seminario su Debito pubblico e formazione dei mercati finanziari fra età moderna e contemporanea, tenuto, a Cassino, il 15 e 16 ottobre 2004’, Riv. di Storia Finanziaria, 15, pp. 111–32, www.delpt.unina.it/stof/indice.htmlGoogle Scholar
Baranzini, M., ‘Modigliani's life-cycle theory of savings fifty years later’, Banca Nazionale del Lavoro Q. Rev., 58/233–34, pp. 109172.Google Scholar
Baranzini, R., Léon Walras e la moneta senza velo, 1860–1886: contributo analitico ed epistemologico alla ricostruzione del modello monetario walrasiano. Turin: UTET.Google Scholar
Barber, W. J., ‘Irving Fisher of Yale’, in Dimand, and Geanakoplos, (eds.), Celebrating Irving Fisher, pp. 4356.Google Scholar
Barnett, W. and Block, W., ‘Money: capital good, consumer good, or (media of) exchange good?’, Rev. of Austrian Economics, 18/2, pp. 179–94.Google Scholar
Bellofiore, R., ‘The monetary aspects of the capitalist process in the Marxian system: an investigation from the point of view of the theory of the monetary circuit’, in Moseley, (ed.), Marx's theory of money, pp. 124–42.Google Scholar
Boch, R., Unternehmensgeschichte heute: Theorieangebote, Quellen, Forschungstrends: Beiträge des 4. unternehmensgeschichtlichen Kolloquiums, Leipzig: Leipziger Universitätsverlag.Google Scholar
Campagnolo, G., ‘Carl Menger's “money as measure of value”: an introduction’, History of Political Economy, 37/2, pp. 233–45.Google Scholar
Campbell, M., ‘Marx's explanation of money's functions: overturning the quantity theory’, in Moseley, (ed.), Marx's Theory of Money, pp. 143–59.Google Scholar
Cardoso, J-L. and De Vasconcelos-Nogueira, A., ‘Isaac de Pinto (1717–1787): an enlightened economist and financier’, History of Political Economy, 37/2, pp. 263–92.Google Scholar
Carlsson, B., ‘Ekonomernas valfardsrecept: hoga loner och trygga truster Economists’, Ekonomisk debatt, 33/7, pp. 1729.Google Scholar
Catalano, R., ‘La teoria del valore di Ferdinando Galiani alla luce di una versione inedita di “Della Moneta”’, Il Pensiero economico italiano, 13/2, pp. 114–45.Google Scholar
Cerrito, E., ‘Principi e fondamenti di un paradigma storico della moneta e della stabilità finanziaria’, Studi storici, 46, pp. 5121.Google Scholar
Cheney, P., ‘Finances, philosophical history and the “empire of climate”: Enlightenment historiography and political economy’, Historical reflections–Réflexions historiques, 31/1, pp. 141–67.Google Scholar
Colautti, S. and Florio, M., ‘A logistic growth theory of public expenditures: a study of five countries over 100 years’, Public Choice, 122/3–4, pp. 355–93.Google Scholar
Costabile, L., ‘Money, cycles and capital formation: von Mises the “Austrian” v.s. Robertson the “Dynamist”’, Cambridge J. of Economics, 29/5, pp. 685707.Google Scholar
Cozzi, T., ‘A reappraisal of Modigliani's finance theories’, Banca Nazionale del Lavoro Q. Rev., 58/233–4, pp. 215–36.Google Scholar
Danby, C., ‘Noyola's institutional approach to inflation’, J. of the History of Economic Thought, 27/2, pp. 161–79.Google Scholar
Davis, T., Ricardo's macroeconomics: money, trade cycles & growth, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
De Brunhoff, S., ‘Marx's contribution to the search for a theory of money’, in Moseley, (ed.), Marx's theory of money, pp. 209–21.Google Scholar
De Cecco, M., ‘Sraffa's lectures on continental banking: a preliminary appraisal’, Rev. of Political Economy, 17/3, pp. 349–58.Google Scholar
De Ianni, N., ‘Sul capitalismo industriale e finanziario di Giacinto Motta’, Rivista di Storia Finanziaria, 15, pp. 2332, www.delpt.unina.it/stof/indice.html.Google Scholar
De Molina, L., ‘Treatise on money: argument 396: diverse senses in which the terms barter and exchange may be used: to barter in a strict sense’, J. of Markets and Morality, 8/1, pp. 199323.Google Scholar
DeRidder, J. J., ‘Evolution of accounting since Luca Paciolo’, Essays in Economic and Business History, 23, pp. 1419.Google Scholar
Diewert, W. E., ‘Index number theory using differences rather than ratios’, in Dimand, and Geanakoplos, (eds.), Celebrating Irving Fisher, pp. 311–60.Google Scholar
Dimand, R. W., ‘Fisher, Keynes, and the corridor of stability’, in Dimand, and Geanakoplos, (eds.), Celebrating Irving Fisher, pp. 185200.Google Scholar
Dimand, R. W., ‘Comments on William D. Nordhaus's, “Irving Fisher and the contribution of improved longevity to living standards”’, in Dimand, and Geanakoplos, (eds.), Celebrating Irving Fisher, pp. 393–8.Google Scholar
Dimand, R. W. and Geanakoplos, J. (eds.), Celebrating Irving Fisher: the legacy of a great economist, London: Blackwell.Google Scholar
Dimand, R. W. and Geanakoplos, J. ‘Celebrating Irving Fisher: the legacy of a great economist’, in Dimand, and Geanakoplos, (eds.), Celebrating Irving Fisher, pp. 318.Google Scholar
Ding, F. and Wolman, A. L., ‘Inflation and changing expenditure shares’, Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond Economic Q., 91/1, pp. 120.Google Scholar
Eltis, W., ‘Money and general gluts: the analysis of Say, Malthus, and Ricardo’, History of Political Economy, 37/4, pp. 661–89.Google Scholar
Fantacci, L., ‘Complementary currencies: a prospect on money from a retrospect on premodern practices’, Financial History Rev., 12/1, pp. 4361.Google Scholar
Faucci, R., ‘Perché la “tradizione italiana di finanza pubblica” incontra ancora tanto interesse?’, Economia Politica, 22/2, pp. 201–8.Google Scholar
Figuera, S., ‘Moltiplicatore dei depositi e offerta di moneta: elementi per una riflessione critica’, Storia del pensiero economico, 34/2, pp. 3979.Google Scholar
Foley, D., ‘Marx's theory of money in historical perspective’, in Moseley, (ed.), Marx's theory of money, pp. 3649.Google Scholar
Fleischman, R., Accounting history, London: Sage.Google Scholar
Friedman, M., ‘A natural experiment in monetary policy covering three episodes of growth and decline in the economy and the stock market’, J. of Economic Perspectives, 19/4, pp. 145–50.Google Scholar
Fuchs, V. R., ‘Health, government, and Irving Fisher’, in Dimand, and Geanakoplos, (eds.), Celebrating Irving Fisher, pp. 407–26.Google Scholar
Funnell, W., Williams, R. B. and Gaffikin, M. J. R., Critical and historical studies in accounting, Sydney: Pearson Education Australia.Google Scholar
Gaffeo, E., ‘Requiem for the unit root in per capita real GDP? Additional evidence from historical data’, Empirical economics, 30/1, pp. 3765.Google Scholar
Garegnani, P., ‘On a turning point in Sraffa's theoretical and interpretative position in the late 1920s’, European J. of the History of Economic Thought, 12/3, pp. 453–93.Google Scholar
Garnaut, R., ‘Is macroeconomics dead? Monetary and fiscal policy in historical context’, Oxford Rev. of Economic Policy, 21/4, pp. 524–31.Google Scholar
Geanakoplos, J., ‘The ideal inflation-indexed bond and Irving Fisher's impatience theory of interest with overlapping generations’, in Dimand, and Geanakoplos, (eds.), Celebrating Irving Fisher, pp. 257306.Google Scholar
Geanakoplos, J. and Shiller, R. J., ‘The ideal inflation-indexed bond and Irving Fisher's impatience theory of interest with overlapping generations’, American Journal of Economics and Sociology, 64/1, pp. 257310.Google Scholar
Genito, E., ‘Principi e fondamenti di un paradigma storico della moneta e della stabilità finanziaria’, Studi storici, 46/1, pp. 5122.Google Scholar
Germer, C., ‘The commodity nature of money in Marx's theory’, in Moseley, (ed.), Marx's theory of money, pp. 2135.Google Scholar
Gomez Camacho, F., ‘Treatise on money: introduction’, J. of Markets and Morality, 8/1, pp. 167–98.Google Scholar
Goodhart, C. A. E., ‘What is the essence of money? Review article’, Cambridge J. of Economics, 29/5, pp. 817–25.Google Scholar
Gootzeit, M., ‘Mill's concept of paper credit led to a short-run theory of the cycle’, Riv. internazionale di scienze economiche e commerciali, 52/4, pp. 467–82.Google Scholar
Graetz, M. J., ‘Comments on John B. Shoven and John Whalley's, “Irving Fisher's spendings (consumption) tax in retrospect”’, in Dimand, and Geanakoplos, (eds.), Celebrating Irving Fisher, pp. 245–56.Google Scholar
Hall, R. E., ‘Controlling the price level’, in Dimand, and Geanakoplos, (eds.), Celebrating Irving Fisher, pp. 93112.Google Scholar
Hammes, D., ‘Thomas Edison's “except one”: the monetary views of Arthur Kitson revisited’, J. of Economic Studies, 32/1, pp. 3346.Google Scholar
Haudeville, B. and Rietsch, C., ‘Peut-on travailler sur des données “approximées” en histoire financière?’, Economies et sociétés, 39/7, pp. 1341–75.Google Scholar
Hoag, C., ‘Deposit drains on “interest-paying” banks before financial crises’, Explorations in Economic History, 42/4, pp. 567–85.Google Scholar
Homer, S. and Sylla, R. E., A history of interest rates, Hoboken: Wiley.Google Scholar
Ishikawa, J., ‘A social science of contemporary value-based accounting: economic foundations of accounting for financial instruments’, Critical perspectives on accounting, 16/2, pp. 115–36.Google Scholar
Itoh, M., ‘The new interpretation and the value of money’, in Moseley, (ed.), Marx's theory of money, pp. 177–91.Google Scholar
Jappelli, T., ‘The life-cycle hypothesis, fiscal policy and social security’, Banca Nazionale del Lavoro Q. Rev., 58/233–4, pp. 173–86.Google Scholar
Kloft, H., ‘Money history vs. numismatics. Theodor Mommsen and the ancient coins’, Historische Zeitschrift, 281/3, pp. 719–20.Google Scholar
Klüßendorf, N., ‘Numismatik und Geldgeschichte’, Historische Hilfswissenschaften. Cologne, pp. 107–54.Google Scholar
Kurz, H. D., ‘Removing an “insuperable obstacle” in the way of an objectivist analysis: Sraffa's attempts at fixed capital’, European J. of the History of Economic Thought, 12/3, pp. 493525.Google Scholar
Lapavitsas, C., ‘The universal equivalent as monopolist of the ability to buy’, in Moseley, (ed.), Marx's theory of money, pp. 95110.Google Scholar
Likitkijsomboon, P., ‘Marx's anti-quantity theory of money: a critical evaluation’, in Moseley, (ed.), Marx's theory of money, pp. 160–76.Google Scholar
Lewin, P., ‘The capital idea and the scope of economics’, Rev. of Austrian Economics, 18/2, pp. 145–67.Google Scholar
Lushin, S. I., ‘O funktsiiakh finansov. Istoricheskii aspect’ [On the functions of finance. A historical view], Finansy, 7, pp. 54–8.Google Scholar
MacLean, L. C., Ziemba, W. T. and Li, Y. M., ‘Time to wealth goals in capital accumulation’, Quantitative Finance, 5/4, pp. 343–55.Google Scholar
McLure, M., ‘Equilibrium and Italian fiscal sociology: a reflection on the Pareto-Griziotti and Pareto-Sensini letters on fiscal theory’, European J. of the History of Economic Thought, 12/4, pp. 609–34.Google Scholar
Mäkeler, H., ‘Bemerkungen zu den Anfängen der stempelvergleichenden Methode', Geldgeschichtliche Nachrichten, 40, pp. 128–32.Google Scholar
Martins Gandra da Silva, I., Uma teoria do tributo, São Paulo: Editora Quartier Latin do Brasil.Google Scholar
Medema, S. G., ‘“Marginalizing” government: from “la scienza delle finanze” to Wicksell’, History of Political Economy, 37/1, pp. 125.Google Scholar
Menger, C., ‘Carl Menger's “Money as Measure of Value”’, History of Political Economy, 37/2, pp. 245–61.Google Scholar
Molina, M. G., ‘Capital theory and the origins of the elasticity of substitution (1932–1935’, Cambridge J. of Economics, 29/3, pp. 423–37.Google Scholar
Moseley, F., ‘Money has no price: Marx's theory of money and the transformation problem’, in Moseley, (ed.), Marx's theory of money, pp. 192208.Google Scholar
Moseley, F. (ed.), Marx's theory of money: modern appraisals, New York: Palgrave Macmillan.Google Scholar
Muchlinski, E., ‘Kontroversen in der internationalen Wahrungspolitik: Retrospektive zu Keynes-White-Boughton und IMF’, Intervention, 2/1, pp. 5773.Google Scholar
Murphy, R. P., ‘Dangers of the one-good model: Böhm-Bawerk's critique of the “naïve productivity theory of interest”’, J. of the History of Economic Thought, 27/4, pp. 375–83.Google Scholar
Murray, D., Chapters in the history of bookkeeping, accountancy & commercial arithmetic, Mansfield: Martino.Google Scholar
Murray, P., ‘Money as displaced social form: why value cannot be independent of price’, in Moseley, (ed.), Marx's theory of money, pp. 5064.Google Scholar
Nasica, E. and Raybaut, A., ‘Profits, confidence, and public deficits: modeling Minsky's institutional dynamics’, J. of Post Keynesian Economics, 28/1, pp. 135–55.Google Scholar
Nelson, A., ‘Marx's objections to credit theories of money’, in Moseley, (ed.), Marx's theory of money, pp. 6594.Google Scholar
Noguchi, M., ‘Interaction between tax and accounting practice: accounting for stock-in-trade’, Accounting, Business & Financial History, 15/1, pp. 134.Google Scholar
Nordhaus, W. D., ‘Irving Fisher and the contribution of improved longevity to living standards’, in Dimand, and Geanakoplos, (eds.), Celebrating Irving Fisher, pp. 367–92.Google Scholar
Obstfeld, M., Shambaugh, J. C. and Taylor, A. M., ‘The trilemma in history: tradeoffs among exchange rates, monetary policies, and capital mobility’, Rev. of Economics and Statistics, 87/3, pp. 423–38.Google Scholar
Obstfeld, M. and Taylor, A. M., Global capital markets: integration, crisis, and growth, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pagano, M., ‘The Modigliani-Miller theorems: a cornerstone of finance’, Banca Nazionale del Lavoro Q. Rev. 58/233–4, pp. 237–48.Google Scholar
Papademos, L., ‘Macroeconomic theory and monetary policy: the contributions of Franco Modigliani and the ongoing debate’, Banca Nazionale del Lavoro Q. Rev. 58/233–4, pp.187214.Google Scholar
Phillips, P. C. B., ‘Econometric analysis of Fisher's equation’, in Dimand, and Geanakoplos, (eds.), Celebrating Irving Fisher, pp. 125–68.Google Scholar
Pomini, M. and Spiller, C. N., ‘The revision of monetary theory in Fanno's analysis’, Riv. internazionale di scienze economiche e commerciali, 52/1, pp. 118.Google Scholar
Quattrone, P., ‘Is time spent, passed or counted? The missing link between time and accounting history’, Accounting Historians J., 32/1, pp. 185208.Google Scholar
Reuten, G., ‘Money as constituent of value’, in Moseley, (ed.), Marx's theory of money, pp. 7894.Google Scholar
Rust, J., ‘Comments on “Econometric analysis of Fisher's equation” by Peter C. B. Phillips’, in Dimand, and Geanakoplos, (eds.), Celebrating Irving Fisher, pp. 169–84.Google Scholar
Sarcinelli, M., ‘Politica bancaria e sviluppo economico: rileggendo l'era menichelliana e quella attuale’, Moneta e Credito, 58/229, pp. 328.Google Scholar
Shapiro, M. D., ‘Comment on W. Erwin Diewert's “Index number theory using differences rather than ratios”’, in Dimand, and Geanakoplos, (eds.), Celebrating Irving Fisher, pp. 361–6.Google Scholar
Shiller, R. J., ‘Comments on John Geanakoplos's “The ideal inflation-indexed bond and Irving Fisher's impatience theory of interest with overlapping generations”’, in Dimand, and Geanakoplos, (eds.), Celebrating Irving Fisher, pp. 307–10.Google Scholar
Shoven, J. B. and Whalley, J., ‘Irving Fisher's spendings (consumption) tax in retrospect’, in Dimand, and Geanakoplos, (eds.), Celebrating Irving Fisher, pp. 215–36.Google Scholar
Shubik, M., ‘Stable prices, money and the cost of living’, in Dimand, and Geanakoplos, (eds.), Celebrating Irving Fisher, pp. 117–24.Google Scholar
Sihag, B. S., ‘Kautilya on public goods and taxation’, History of Political Economy, 37/4, pp. 723–53.Google Scholar
Smith, T., ‘Towards a Marxian theory of world money’, in Moseley, (ed.), Marx's theory of money, pp. 222–38.Google Scholar
Srinivasan, T. N., ‘Comments on William D. Nordhaus's, “Irving Fisher and the contribution of improved longevity to living standards”’, in Dimand, and Geanakoplos, (eds.), Celebrating Irving Fisher, pp. 399406.Google Scholar
Stabile, D. R., Forerunners of modern financial economics. A random walk in the history of economic thought, Cheltenham: Elgar.Google Scholar
Steele, G. R., ‘Hayek's theory of money and cycles: retrospective and reappraisal’, Q. J. of Austrian Economics, 8/1, pp. 314.Google Scholar
Szakolczai, G., ‘Analysis of the equilibrium of the real and monetary economy’, Development and Finance/Fejlesztes es Finanszirozas: Q. Hungarian Economic Rev., 1, pp. 5665.Google Scholar
Szostak, R., ‘Evaluating the historiography of the great depression: explanation or single-theory driven?’, J. of Economic Methodology, 12/1, pp. 3563.Google Scholar
Tobin, J., ‘Comment on Robert E. Hall's “Controlling the price level”’, in Dimand, and Geanakoplos, (eds.), Celebrating Irving Fisher, pp. 113–16.Google Scholar
Tobin, J., ‘Fisher's introductory text’, in Dimand, and Geanakoplos, (eds.), Celebrating Irving Fisher, p. 201.Google Scholar
Tobin, J., ‘Fisher's “The nature of capital and income”’, in Dimand, and Geanakoplos, (eds.), Celebrating Irving Fisher, pp. 207–36.Google Scholar
Tobin, J., ‘Irving Fisher (1867–1947)’, in Dimand, and Geanakoplos, (eds.), Celebrating Irving Fisher, pp. 1942.Google Scholar
Toporowski, J., Theories of financial disturbance: an examination of critical theories of finance from Adam Smith to the present day, Cheltenham: Edward Elgar.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Trask, H. A. S., ‘William Graham Sumner: monetary theorist’, J. of Austrian Economics, 8/2, pp. 3554.Google Scholar
Tusset, G., ‘How the International Monetary Fund's policies change according to economic theory (1945–1973)’, Rivista internazionale di scienze economiche e commerciali, 52/4, pp. 483513.Google Scholar
Walker, S. P., ‘Accounting in history’, Accounting Historians J., 32/2, pp. 233–59.Google Scholar
Wennerlind, C., ‘David Hume's monetary theory revisited: was he really a quantity theorist and an inflationist?’, J. of Political Economy, 113/1, pp. 223–37.Google Scholar
Zarate, S. M., ‘Cambios en la estructura salarial: una historia desde la regresion Cuantilica’, Monetaria, 27/4, pp. 339–64.Google Scholar
Zarlenga, S., ‘Moving monetary reform to the “front burner”’, American Rev. of Political Economy, 3/1, pp. 3984.Google Scholar
Zeckhauser, R., ‘Irving Fisher, Victor Fuchs, and the health-government tangle’, in Dimand, and Geanakoplos, (eds.), Celebrating Irving Fisher, pp. 435–49.Google Scholar
Aliber, R. Z., ‘The 35 most tumultuous years in monetary history: shocks, the transfer problem, and financial trauma’, IMF Staff Papers, 52, pp. 142–59.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Aliber, R. Z. and Kindleberger, C. P., Manias, panics and crashes: a history of financial crises, 5th edn, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.Google Scholar
Ara, D., ‘Banking in Islam: genesis and development from historical perspective’, Hamdard Islamicus, 28/2, pp. 4551.Google Scholar
Armingeon, K., ‘Die Ausbreitung der Aktiengesellschaft und der Wandel des Wohlfahrtsstaates und der Arbeitsbeziehungen. Ein internationaler Vergleich’, in Windolf, (ed.), Finanzmarkt-Kapitalismus, pp. 441–59.Google Scholar
Bagchi, A. K., Perilous passage: mankind and the global ascendancy of capital, Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield.Google Scholar
Baucom, I., Specters of the Atlantic: finance capital, slavery and the philosophy of history. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.Google Scholar
Berghoff, H., ‘Markterschließung und Risikomanagement. die Rolle der Kreditauskunfteien und Rating-Agenturen im Industrialisierungs- und Globalisierungsprozess des 19. Jahrhunderts’, Vierteljahrschrift für sozial- und wirtschaftsgeschichte, 92/2, pp. 141–63.Google Scholar
Bernstein, P. L., Die Macht des Goldes. Auf den Spuren einer Faszination, Munich: FinanzBuch Verlag.Google Scholar
Best, J., The Limits of Transparency: Ambiguity and the History of International Finance. Ithaca: Cornell University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Beynet, P., Carnot, N. and Hagege, C., ‘La hausse récente des cours du pétrole: un troisième choc pétrolier pour nos économies’, Regards sur l'actualité, 314, pp. 5568.Google Scholar
Bootle, R. P., Money for nothing: real wealth, financial fantasies, and the economy of the future, London: Nicholas Brealey.Google Scholar
Bonin, H., ‘The Compagnie du canal de Suez and Transit Shipping, 1900–1956’, International J. of Maritime History, 27/2, pp. 87112.Google Scholar
Bordo, M. D. and MacDonald, R., ‘Interest rate interactions in the classical gold standard, 1880–1914: was there any monetary independence?’, J. of Monetary Economics, 52/2, pp. 307–27.Google Scholar
Bordo, M. D., Meissner, C. M. and Redish, A., ‘How original sin was overcome: the evolution of external debt denominated in domestic currencies in the United States and the British dominions, 1800–2000’, in Eichengreen, and Hausmann, (eds.), Other people's money, pp. 122–53.Google Scholar
Cassis, Y., Capitals of capital: a history of international financial centres, 1780–2005, Geneva: Pictet/Editions Slatkine.Google Scholar
Castiglione, D., ‘Blood and oil: eighteenth-century monetary anxieties’, Historical Reflections, 31/1, pp. 2748.Google Scholar
Cespedes, L. F., Chang, R. and Velasco, A., ‘Must original sin cause macroeconomic damnation?’, in Eichengreen, and Hausmann, (eds.), Other people's money, pp. 4867.Google Scholar
Chamon, M. and Hausmann, R., ‘Why do countries borrow the way they borrow?’, in Eichengreen, and Hausmann, (eds.), Other people's money, pp. 218–32.Google Scholar
Chibber, V., “Capital outbound”, New Left Review, 36, pp. 151–8.Google Scholar
Clavin, P. and Wessels, J.-W., ‘Transnationalism and the league of nations: understanding the work of its economic and financial organisation’, Contemporary European History, 14/4, pp. 465–92.Google Scholar
Clement, P. and Toniolo, G., Central bank cooperation at the bank for international settlements, 1930–1973, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Cohen, E., Le nouvel âge du capitalisme: bulles, krachs et rebonds, Paris: Fayard.Google Scholar
Corsetti, G. and Mackowiak, B., ‘A fiscal perspective on currency crises and original sin’, in Eichengreen, and Hausmann, (eds.), Other people's money, pp. 6894.Google Scholar
D'Adda, C., ‘Guardando al futuro del Sistema Monetario Internazionale’, Moneta e credito, 58/232, pp. 155–74.Google Scholar
Dailami, M., Masson, P. R. and Padou, J. J., Global monetary conditions versus country-specific factors in the determination of emerging market debt spreads, Washington, DC: World Bank, Development Prospects Group.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dale, R. S., ‘Financial markets can go mad: evidence of irrational behaviour during the South Sea bubble’, Economic History Rev., 58/2, pp. 233–71.Google Scholar
De Goede, M., Virtue, fortune, and faith: a genealogy of finance, Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.Google Scholar
Dupuis, F., Guide to monetary policies of the main industrialized and emerging countries, Montreal: Mouvement des caisses Desjardins.Google Scholar
Eichengreen, B., ‘Global dysequilibrium and the lessons of Bretton Woods’, Desarrollo Economico – Rev. de Ciencias Sociales, 44/176, pp. 619–44.Google Scholar
Eichengreen, B. and Hausmann, R. (eds.), Other people's money: debt denomination and financial instability in emerging market economies, Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Eichengreen, B. and Hausmann, R., ‘Introduction: debt denomination and financial instability in emerging market economies’, in Eichengreen, and Hausmann, (eds.), Other people's money, pp. 312.Google Scholar
Eichengreen, B. and Hausmann, R., ‘Original sin: the road to redemption’, in Eichengreen, and Hausmann, (eds.), Other people's money, pp. 266–82.Google Scholar
Eichengreen, B, Hausmann, R. and Panizza, U., ‘The pain of original sin’, in Eichengreen, and Hausmann, (eds.), Other people's money, pp. 1347.Google Scholar
Eichengreen, B., Hausmann, R. and Panizza, U., ‘The mystery of original sin’, in Eichengreen, and Hausmann, (eds.), Other people's money, pp. 233–65.Google Scholar
Endres, A. M., Architects of the international financial system, London: Routledge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Engel, J. A., ‘The SURIy Bonds: American Cold War constraints on British aviation’, Enterprise and Society, 6/1, pp. 144.Google Scholar
Fantacci, L., La moneta: storia di un'istituzione mancata, Padova: Marsilio.Google Scholar
Federico, G., ‘Not guilty? Agriculture in the 1920s and the great depression’, J. of Economic History, 65/4, pp. 949–77.Google Scholar
Feiertag, O., Mesurer la monnaie: banques centrales et construction de l'autorité monétaire, XIXe-XXe siècle, Paris: Albin Michel.Google Scholar
Feinstein, A. R., ‘Does “health promotion” really promote health?”’, in Dimand, and Geanakoplos, (eds.), Celebrating Irving Fisher, pp. 427–34.Google Scholar
Feldkamp, F. L., Jung, B. T. D. and Lane, P. J., The law and economics of financial markets: lessons of history that assure success in the future, Boston: Aspatore.Google Scholar
Feldman, G. D., ‘Banks, Bankenmacht, and financial institutions from 1900 to 1933’, in Windolf, (ed.), Finanzmarkt-Kapitalismus, pp. 316–30.Google Scholar
Fischer, G., Finanzierung der kirchlichen Sendung. Das kanonische Recht und die Kirchenfinanzierungssysteme in der Bundesrepublik Deutschland und den USA, Paderborn: Schöningh.Google Scholar
Flandreau, M. and Jobst, C., ‘The ties that divide: a network analysis of the international monetary system, 1890–1910’, J. of Economic History, 65/4, pp. 9771007.Google Scholar
Flandreau, M. and Sussman, N., ‘Old sins: exchange clauses and European foreign lending in the nineteenth century’, in Eichengreen, and Hausmann, (eds.), Other people's money, pp. 154–89.Google Scholar
Galbraith, J. K., Der große Crash 1929. Ursachen, Verlauf, Folgen, Munich: FinanzBuch-Verlag.Google Scholar
Garnot, B., ‘Introduction: justice, argent et société’, in Garnot, B. (ed.), Justice et argent: les crimes et les peines pécuniaires du XIIIe au XXIe siècle, Dijon: Editions universitaires de Dijon, pp. 714.Google Scholar
Glukhov, V. V., Vstuplenie Rossii v VTO kak ekonomicheskaia problema, St Petersburg: Peterburgskii gos. politekhnicheskii universitet.Google Scholar
Goetzmann, W. N. and Koll, E., ‘Paying in paper’, in Goetzmann, and Rouwenhorst, (eds.), The origins of value, pp. 91104.Google Scholar
Goetzmann, W. N. and Rouwenhorst, K. G., ‘Perpetuities in the stream of history’, in Goetzmann, and Rouwenhorst, (eds.), The origins of value, pp. 177–88.Google Scholar
Goetzmann, W. N. and Rouwenhorst, K. G., ‘Introduction: financial innovations in history’, in Goetzmann, and Rouwenhorst, (eds.), The origins of value, pp. 316.Google Scholar
Goetzmann, W. N. and Rouwenhorst, K. G. (eds.), The origins of value: the financial innovations that created modern capital markets, Oxford: Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gómez, A., El dinero y las palabras: conexiones insospechadas, Buenos Aires: Prometeo Libros.Google Scholar
Guinnane, T. W., ‘Trust: a concept too many’, Jahrbuch für Wirtschaftsgeschichte, 1, pp. 7792.Google Scholar
Halbeisen, P., ‘Goldstandard oder manipulierte Währung? Partikularinteressen und Währungspolitik in den 1930er-Jahren’, Traverse, 12/1, pp. 169–76.Google Scholar
Henisz, W. J., Guillén, M. F. and Zelner, B. A., ‘The worldwide diffusion of market-oriented infrastructure reform, 1977–1999’, American Sociological Rev., 70/6, pp. 871–97.Google Scholar
Hixson, W. F., Triumph of the bankers: money and banking in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, Montgomery: E-BookTime.Google Scholar
Hofinger, H. and Holger, B., ‘Reservefonds mit Fürsorgecharakter bei Vorschuss- und Kreditvereinen (Kreditgenossenschaften)’, Bankhistorisches Archiv, 31/2, pp. 134–43.Google Scholar
Höpner, M., ‘Sozialdemokratie, Gewerkschaften und organisierter Kapitalismus, 1880–2002’, in Windolf, (ed.), Finanzmarkt-Kapitalismus, pp. 196221.Google Scholar
Hou, J. and Zhao, W., ‘Gongyehuaqian zhong-ying xiangcun jiedai bijiao yanjiu’ [A comparative study of rural credit in preindustrial China and England], Shixue Yuekan, 2, pp. 7580.Google Scholar
Iqbal, M. and Molyneux, P., Thirty years of Islamic banking: history, performance, and prospects, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.Google Scholar
James, H., ‘Der Wettbewerb zwischen den Finanzzentren Europas und denen der USA’, in Merki, C. M. (ed.), Europas Finanzzentren. Geschichte und Bedeutung im 20. Jh., Frankfurt/M.: Campus Verlag, pp. 295304.Google Scholar
Jeanne, O., ‘Why do emerging economies borrow in foreign currency?’, in Eichengreen, and Hausmann, (eds.), Other people's money, pp. 190217.Google Scholar
Jeanne, O. and Zettelmeyer, J., ‘Original sin, balance-sheet crises, and the roles of international lending’, in Eichengreen, and Hausmann, (eds.), Other people's money, pp. 95121.Google Scholar
Jia-Ming, Z. and Morss, E., ‘The financial revolutions of the twentieth century’, in Chandler, A. D. and Mazlish, B. (eds.), Leviathans: multinational corporations and the new global history, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 203–18.Google Scholar
Jones, G., Multinationals and global capitalism: from the Nineteenth to the Twenty-first century, Oxford: Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kettell, S., The political economy of exchange rate policy-making: from the gold standard to the euro, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2004.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kim, N. and Wallis, J. J., ‘The market for American state government bonds in Britain and the United States, 1830–1843’, Economic History Rev., 58/4, pp. 736–64.Google Scholar
Kolm, E., ‘The emerging system of double taxation agreements in the late 19th and 20th centuries’, Development and Finance, 2, pp. 6675.Google Scholar
Le, M. V. and Suruga, T., ‘Foreign direct investment, public expenditure and economic growth: the empirical evidence for the period 1970–2001’, Applied Economics Letters, 12/1, pp. 45–9.Google Scholar
Leblang, D. and Mukherjee, B., ‘Government partisanship, elections, and the stock market: examining American and British stock returns, 1930–2000’, American J. of Political Science, 49/4, pp. 780802.Google Scholar
Lindert, P. H., Growing public: social spending and economic growth since the eighteenth century (vol. 1: The story; vol. 2: Further evidence), Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Malmendier, U., ‘Roman shares’, in Goetzmann, and Rouwenhorst, (eds.), The Origins of value, pp. 3142.Google Scholar
Manow, P., ‘Globalisierung, “Corporate Finance” und koordinierter Kapitalismus. Die Altersicherungssysteme als (versiegende) Quelle geduldigen Kapitals in Deutschland und Japan’, in Windolf, (ed.), Finanzmarkt-Kapitalismus, pp. 242–75.Google Scholar
Marcel, B. and Taïeb, J., Crises d'hier, crises d'aujourd'hui. Les grandes crises: 1873, 1929, 1973, Paris: A. Colin.Google Scholar
Marietta, M. and Perlman, M., ‘The politics of social accounting: public goals and the evolution of the national accounts in Germany, the United Kingdom and the United States’, Rev. of Political Economy, 17/2, pp. 211–30.Google Scholar
McCulley, P., ‘History lessons for 21st century investment managers’, Financial Analysts J., 61/2, pp. 1923.Google Scholar
Meissner, C. M., ‘A new world order: explaining the international diffusion of the gold standard, 1870–1913’, J. of International Economics, 66/2, pp. 385406.Google Scholar
Meissner, D. J., Chinese capitalists versus the American flour industry, 1890–1910: profit and patriotism in international trade, Lewiston: Edwin Mellen Press.Google Scholar
Menéndez Romero, F., El Banco de México y la reserva federal de Estados Unidos de América, FED, Mexico: Porrúa Hermanos.Google Scholar
Mooij, J., ‘Corporate culture of central banks: lessons from the past’, J. of European Economic History, 34/1, pp. 1142.Google Scholar
Moore, L. and Kaluzny, J., ‘Regime change and debt default: the case of Russia, Austro-Hungary, and the Ottoman empire following world war one’, Explorations in Economic History, 42/2, pp. 237–59.Google Scholar
Morck, R., A history of corporate governance around the world: family business groups to professional managers, Chicago: University of Chicago Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nemtsev, A. D., Problemy globalizatsii sovremennogo obshchestva: materialy Vserossiiskoi nauchno-prakticheskoi konferentsii, 21 oktiabria 2005 goda, Samara: Samarskii gos. ekonomicheskii universitet.Google Scholar
Nosova, G. V., ‘Poisk putei preodoleniia infliatsii v nachale XIX veka’ [Search for ways to overcome inflation at the beginning of the 19th century], Finansy, 7, pp. 65–7.Google Scholar
Rouwenhorst, G. K., ‘The origins of mutual funds’, in Goetzmann, and Rouwenhorst, (eds.), The origins of value, pp. 249–70.Google Scholar
Ruppert, K., ‘International financial history in the twentieth century: system and anarchy’, Historische Zeitschrift, 281/2, pp. 508–9.Google Scholar
Saager, H. and Vogt, W., Schweizer Geld am Tafelberg. Die Wirtschaftsbeziehungen zwischen der Schweiz und Südafrika zwischen 1948 und 1994, Zurich: Orell Füssli.Google Scholar
Schaffer, S., ‘L'inventaire de l'astronome. Le commerce d'instruments scientifiques au XVIIIe siècle (Angleterre-Chine-Pacifique)’, Annales, 60/4, pp. 791815.Google Scholar
Shaw, D. J., ‘Turning point in the evolution of soft financing: the united nations and the world bank’, Canadian J. of Development Studies, 26/1, pp. 4361.Google Scholar
Shirokorad, L. D., ‘V. M. Shtein o denezhnom obrashchenii v period Pervoi mirovoi voiny’ [Problems of money circulation during the first world war in V. M. Stein's early works], Vestnik Sankt Peterburgskogo universiteta, 2/13, pp. 7487.Google Scholar
Schulz, G., ‘Sparkassen in der Geschichte’, Bankhistorisches Archiv, 31/1, pp. 5767.Google Scholar
Schwinges, R. C. (ed.), Finanzierung von Universität und Wissenschaft in Vergangenheit und Gegenwart, Basel: Schwabe.Google Scholar
Soederberg, S., ‘The transnational debt architecture and emerging markets: the politics of paradoxes and punishment’, Third World Q., 26/6, pp. 927–49.Google Scholar
Solimano, A. and Watts, N., International migration, capital flows and the global economy: a long run view, Santiago de Chile: CEPAL, Economic Development Division.Google Scholar
Spraakman, G. and Margret, J., ‘The transfer of management accounting practices from London counting houses to the British North American fur trade’, Accounting, Business & Financial History, 15/2, pp. 101–19.Google Scholar
Surmann, J., ‘Raubgold und die Restitutionspolitik der USA gegenüber der neutralen Schweiz’, Sozial Geschichte, 20/1, pp. 5776.Google Scholar
Takahashi, H., ‘Tanki ichiba kinri seitei kodo: saiken kinhon isei shita no rondon to nyu yoku ichiba’ [Short-term interest rates and arbitrage: money markets in London and New York under the reconstructed gold standard], Shakai-Keizai Shigaku, 71/3, pp. 4966.Google Scholar
Tremblay, Y., ‘Controlled consumption: control of prices and rationing during the Second World War’, Rev. d'Histoire de l'Amérique Française, 58/4, pp. 569607.Google Scholar
Tschoegl, A. E., ‘The California subsidiaries of Japanese banks: a genealogical history’, J. of Asian Business, 20/2, pp. 5982.Google Scholar
Toms, S. and Wright, M., ‘Divergence and convergence within anglo-american corporate governance systems: evidence from the US and UK, 1950–2000’, Business History, 47/2, pp. 267–95.Google Scholar
Van de Mieroop, M., ‘The invention of interest’, in Goetzmann, and Rouwenhorst, (eds.), The origins of value, pp. 1730.Google Scholar
Vanoli, A., A history of national accounting, Amsterdam: IOS Press.Google Scholar
Villegas Revueltas, S., Deuda y diplomacia: la relación México-Gran Bretaña, 1824–1884, Mexico: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México.Google Scholar
Virén, M., Fiscal policy in the 1920s and 1930s: how much different is it from the post war period's policies?, Helsinki: Bank of Finland.Google Scholar
Von der Heydt Coca, M., ‘Andean silver and the rise of the western world’, Critical Sociology, 31/4, pp. 481514.Google Scholar
Weins, C., ‘Die Entwicklung der Lohnungleichheit in Deutschland und den USA zwischen 1980 und 2000’, in Windolf, (ed.), Finanzmarkt-Kapitalismus, pp. 484503.Google Scholar
Wenzel, E., ‘Conclusion: justice, argent et répression pénale’, in Garnot, B. (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 325–31.Google Scholar
Windolf, A. (ed.), Finanzmarkt-Kapitalismus. Analysen zum Wandel von Produktionsregimen, Wiesbaden: Verlag für Sozialwissenschaft.Google Scholar
Wood, J. H., A history of central banking in Great Britain and the United States, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Woodruff, D. M., ‘Boom, gloom, doom: balance sheets, monetary fragmentation, and the politics of financial crisis in Argentina and Russia’, Politics & Society, 33/1, pp. 345.Google Scholar
Zaballa Lazo, A., Economía de guerra: crisis de hegemonía mundial, La Paz, Bolivia: Facultad de Ciencias Económicas y Financieras, UMSA.Google Scholar

FINANCIAL HISTORY, CHRONOLOGICAL AND GEOGRAPHICAL CATEGORIES

Biget, J-L., ‘La gestion des impôts dans les villes (XIIIe-XVe siècles), essai de synthèse’, in Menjot, and Sanchez, Martinez (eds.), La fiscalité des villes au moyen âge, pp. 311–36.Google Scholar
Bordone, R. and Spinelli, F., Lombardi in Europa nel Medioevo, Milan: F. Angeli.Google Scholar
Denzel, M. A., ‘Bargeldloser Zahlungsverkehr italienischer Kaufleute im spätbyzantinischen Reich’, in Kolditz, S. (ed.), Geschehenes und Geschriebenes. Studien zu Ehren von Günther S. Henrich und Klaus-Peter Matschke, Leipzig, Eudora-Verlag, pp. 93102.Google Scholar
Depeyrot, G., Crises et inflation entre antiquité et Moyen Âge, Wetteren: Moneta.Google Scholar
Genet, J-P., ‘Villes et fiscalité: et l’État’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 571–8.Google Scholar
Gómez Biscarri, J., Pérez de Gracia, F. and Torres Sánchez, R., ‘Exchange rate behavior and exchange rate puzzles: why the 18th century might help’, Rev. de Historia Económica, 23/1, pp. 143–74.Google Scholar
Grubmüller, K., ‘Geld im Mittelalter: Kulturhistorische Perspektiven’, in Grubmüller, and Stock, (eds.), Geld im Mittelalter, pp. 917.Google Scholar
Grubmüller, K. and Stock, M. (eds.), Geld im Mittelalter: Wahrnehmung – Bewertung – Symbolik, Darmstadt: Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft.Google Scholar
Kartschoke, D., ‘“Regina pecunia, dominus nummus, her phenninc”, Geld und Satire oder die Macht der Tradition’, in Grubmüller, and Stock, (eds.), Geld im Mittelalter, pp. 182203.Google Scholar
Kluge, B., ‘Geld im Mittelalter. Numismatische Einführung’, in Grubmüller, and Stock, (eds.), Geld im Mittelalter, pp. 1833.Google Scholar
Le Goff, J., Kaufleute und Bankiers im Mittelalter, Berlin: Wagenbach.Google Scholar
Menjot, D. and Sánchez Martinez, M. (eds.), La fiscalité des villes au moyen âge. 4, La gestion de l'impôt: méthodes, moyens, résultats: Occident méditerranéen, Toulouse: privat.Google Scholar
Middleton, N., ‘Early medieval port customs, tolls and controls on foreign trade, Early Medieval Europe, 13/4, pp. 313–58.Google Scholar
Quaglioni, D., Todeschini, G. and Varanini, G. M., Credito e usura fra teologia, diritto e amministrazione: linguaggi a confronto, sec. XII-XVI, Rome: Ecole française de Rome.Google Scholar
Rehm, U., ‘“Avarus non implebitur pecunia”. Geldgier in Bildern des Mittelalters’, in Grubmüller, and Stock, (eds.), Geld im Mittelalter, pp. 135–81.Google Scholar
Schiffman, D. A., ‘The valuation of coins in medieval Jewish jurisprudence, J. of the History of Economic Thought, 27/2, pp. 141–60.Google Scholar
Schmidt, P., ‘Mittelalterliche Münzen und Herrscherporträt. Probleme der Bildnisforschung’, in Grubmüller, and Stock, (eds.), Geld im Mittelalter, pp. 5290.Google Scholar
Scordia, L., ‘Le roi doit vivre du sien’: la théorie de l'impôt en France, XIIIe-XVe siècles, Paris: Institut d'études augustiniennes.Google Scholar
Stock, M., ‘Von der Vergeltung zur Münze: zur mittelalterlichen Vorgeschichte des Wortes “Geld”’, in Grubmüller, and Stock, (eds.), Geld im Mittelalter, pp. 3451.Google Scholar
Waquet, J-C., ‘Le prix de la liberté, ou les dividendes de la servitude’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 579–82.Google Scholar
Gullbekk, S. H., ‘Natural and money economy in medieval Norway’, Scandinavian J. of History, 30/1, pp. 320.Google Scholar
Gullbekk, S. H., ‘The size of coinage in medieval Norway’, Historisk Tidsskrift, 84/4, pp. 551–.Google Scholar
Allen, M. R., ‘The interpretation of single finds of English coins, 1279–1544’, British Numismatic J., 75, pp. 5062.Google Scholar
Allen, M. R., ‘The quantity of money in England 1180–1247: new data’, British Numismatic J., 75, pp. 44–9.Google Scholar
Allen, M. R., ‘Salaries of mint and exchange officials in the long cross recoinage of 1247–50’, British Numismatic J., 75, pp. 173–5.Google Scholar
Briggs, C., ‘Taxation, warfare, and the early fourteenth century “crisis” in the North: Cumberland lay subsidies, 1332–1348’, Economic History Rev., 58/4, pp. 639–72.Google Scholar
Burrow, J. A., ‘Lady Meed and the power of money’, Medium Aevum, 74/1, pp. 113–18.Google Scholar
Dunn, P., ‘Financial reform in late medieval Norwich: evidence from an urban cartulary’, in Harper-Bill, C. (ed.), Medieval East Anglia, Woodbridge: Boydell, pp. 99114.Google Scholar
Faraday, M. A., Herefordshire taxes in the reign of Henry VIII, Herefordshire: Woolhope Naturalists' Field Club.Google Scholar
Gil-Alana, J. A., ‘A re-examination of historical real daily wages in England: 1260–1994’, J. of Policy Modeling, 27/7, pp. 829–38.Google Scholar
Hurst, D., Sheep in the Cotswolds: the medieval wool trade. Stroud: Tempus.Google Scholar
Liddy, C. D., War, politics and finance in late medieval English towns: Bristol, York and the Crown, 1350–1400. Woodbridge: Royal Historical Society.Google Scholar
McIntosh, M. K., ‘Women, credit, and family relationships in England, 1300–1620’, J. of Family History, 30/2, pp. 143–63.Google Scholar
Rigby, S. H. (ed.). The overseas trade of Boston in the reign of Richard II. Woodbridge: Boydell.Google Scholar
Stack, G., ‘A lost law of Henry II: the Assize of Oxford and monetary reform’, Haskins Society J., 16, pp. 95103.Google Scholar
Boone, M., ‘Les ducs, les villes et l'argent des contribuables: le rêve d'un impôt princier permanent en Flandres à l’époque bourguignonne', in Menjot, and Sánchez, Martinez (eds.), La fiscalité des villes au moyen âge. 4, La gestion de l'impôtGoogle Scholar
D'or et d'argent. La monnaie en France du Moyen Âge à nos jours. Cycle de conférences tenues à Bercy entre le 22 octobre 2001 et le 18 février 2002, Paris: Comité pour l'Histoire économique et financière de la France.Google Scholar
Biget, J-C., ‘Les résistances aux impôts communaux. Le cas d'Albi (XIIIe-XVIe siècle)’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 255–80.Google Scholar
Bochaca, M., ‘Exemples de résistance à la levée des tailles municipales à Saint-Émilion à la fin du Moyen Âge’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 281–90.Google Scholar
Bochaca, M. and Micheau, J., ‘Le recouvrement de la taille à Saint-Emilion d'après le compte de Ramon Fortz, trésorier de la ville (1470–1471)’, in Menjot, and Sánchez, Martinez (eds.), La fiscalité des villes au moyen âge, pp. 161–72.Google Scholar
Butaud, G., ‘La perception de l'impôt et le recouvrement des arrérages en Comtat Venaissin (fin XIVe-début XVe siècle)’, in Menjot, and Sánchez, Martinez (eds.), La fiscalité des villes au moyen âge, pp. 221–38.Google Scholar
Charbonnier, P., ‘La taille vue des collectes auvergnates: injuste? Oppressive?’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 335–78.Google Scholar
Claustre, J., ‘Le prisonnier pour dette et les officiers du Châtelet’, in Garnot, B. (ed.), Justice et argent: les crimes et les peines pécuniaires du XIIIe au XXIe siècle, Dijon: Editions universitaires de Dijon, pp. 131–41.Google Scholar
Cornu, L., ‘Naissance et premiers développements de la fiscalité royale et fouage ducal bourguignon au XVIe siècle’, in D'or et d'argent, pp. 111–18.Google Scholar
Cornu, L., ‘Naissance et premiers développements de la fiscalité royale en Languedoc septentrional: des “aides exceptionnelles” aux estimes, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 97118.Google Scholar
Darnis, J. M., ‘Glossaire des noms familiers de l'argent’, in D'or et d'argent, pp. 119–22.Google Scholar
Darnis, J. M., ‘Chronologie du franc’, in D'or et d'argent, pp. 123–34.Google Scholar
Favier, J., ‘5 décembre 1360: la naissance du franc’, in D'or et d'argent, pp. 116.Google Scholar
Follain, A. and Larguier, G. (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, fragile fondement de l'Etat dit moderne (XVe-XVIIIe siècles). Actes du Colloque tenu à Bercy, Paris: 2–3 décembre 2002, Paris: Comité pour l'histoire économique et financière de la France.Google Scholar
Furió, A., ‘Le crédit dans les registres notariaux de la région de Valence au bas Moyen Age’, Mélanges de l'Ecole française de Rome, 117/1, pp. 407–39.Google Scholar
Furió, A., ‘Impôt et dette publique. Système fiscal et stratégies financières à Valence à la fin du Moyen Âge’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 3962.Google Scholar
Garnier, F., ‘Transiger avec l'administration financière urbaine: l'exemple “d'accords” fiscaux à Millau, (XIVe-XVe siècles)’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes pp. 239–58.Google Scholar
Gouron, A., ‘De l'impôt communal à l'impôt royal. Le cas de Montpellier’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 291304.Google Scholar
Gressier, P., ‘Nature et montant des recettes forestières du comté de Bourgogne au XIVe siècle, d'après les comptes de gruerie’, in Corvol-Dessert, A. (ed.), Les forêts d'Occident du Moyen Age à nos jours. Actes des 24e journées internationales d'histoire de l'abbaue de Flaran, Gers, 6,7 et 8 septembre 2002, Toulouse: Presses Universitaires du Mirail, 2004, pp. 1338.Google Scholar
Guilleré, C., ‘Culture financière et fiscale en Savoie du XIIIe au XVe siècle’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 469–84.Google Scholar
Hoareau, J., ‘Argent et miséricorde. Les amendes dans les lettres de rémission des rois de France à la fin du Moyen Age’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 225–36.Google Scholar
Hébert, M., ‘“Bonnes villes” et capitales régionales: fiscalité d'Etat et identités urbaines en Provence autour de 1400’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 527–42.Google Scholar
Larguier, G., ‘Perception et gestion de l'impôt à Narbonne aux XIVe et XVe siècles’, in Menjot, and Sánchez, Martinez (eds.), La fiscalité des villes au moyen âge, pp. 145–60.Google Scholar
Larguier, G., ‘Impôt direct et ressources complémentaires. Système fiscal et politique fiscale à Narbonne, XIVe-XVe siècle’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 6382.Google Scholar
Lavigne, C., ‘Assigner et fiscaliser les terres au moyen age. Trois exemples’, Etudes rurales, 175–6, pp. 81107.Google Scholar
Le Page, D., ‘Le fouage en Bretagne au Moyen Age et aux débuts de l’époque moderne', in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 119–38.Google Scholar
Marandet, M-C., ‘La gestion de l'impôt direct en Lauragais au XVe siècle, à partir de quelques registres d'estimes et livres de taille’, in Menjot, and Sánchez, Martinez (eds.), La fiscalité des villes au moyen âge, pp. 109–44.Google Scholar
Mayade-Claustre, J., ‘Le corps lié de l'ouvrier. le travail et la dette à Paris au XVe siècle’, Annales. Histoire, Sciences Sociales, 60/2, pp. 383409.Google Scholar
Menjot, D. and Sánchez Martinez, M. (eds.), La fiscalité des villes au moyen âge. 4, La gestion de l'impôt: méthodes, moyens, résultats: Occident méditerranéen, Toulouse: privat, pp. 97118.Google Scholar
Reyerson, K., Jacques Coeur: entrepreneur and king's bursar, New York: Longman.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rigaudière, A., ‘Le contrôle de l'exercice comptable des consuls sanflorains pour l'année 1393–1394’, in Menjot, and Sánchez, Martinez (eds.), La fiscalité des villes au moyen âge, pp. 273309.Google Scholar
Rigaudière, A., ‘Les stratégies des bonnes villes d'Auvergne face à l'impôt royal aux XIVe et XVe siècles’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 353–98.Google Scholar
Sato, S., ‘À propos de la fiscalité et de l'Etat mérovingien aux VIe et VIIe siècles’, in Carozzi, C. and Taviani-Carozzi, H. (eds.), Le médiéviste devant ses sources: questions et méthodes. [Communications faites au séminaire de l'équipe de recherches sociétés, idéologies et croyances au moyen âge à l'université de Provence, en 2001 et 2002], Aix-en-Provence: Publications de l'université de Provence, 2004, pp. 171–83.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Yante, J-M., ‘Le contentieux économique et financier aux foires de Champagne (XIIIe-XIVe siècles)’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 1528.Google Scholar
Andermann, K., ‘Adel und finanzielle Mobilität im späten Mittelalter’, in Carl, and Sönke, (eds.), Gelungene Anpassung. Adelige Antworten auf gesellschaftliche Wandlungsvorgänge vom 14/16, Jh., Ostfildern: Thorbecke, pp. 1326.Google Scholar
Braun, R., Die älteste Rechnung des Bürgerspitals von 1495, Würzburg: Schöningh.Google Scholar
Emmerig, H., ‘Geld im frühmittelalterlichen Bayern’, in Vogeler, G. (ed.), Geschichte ‘in die Hand genommen’. Die geschichtlichen Hilfswissenschaften zwischen historischer Grundlagenforschung und methodischen Herausforderungen; Fortbildungsveranstaltung für Geschichtslehrer Ende September 2004 in München, Munich: Utz, pp. 195208.Google Scholar
Fouquet, G., ‘Die Finanzen der Bergenfahrer zu Lübeck – das Schüttingsrechnungsbuch (1469–1530)’, in Graßmann, A. (ed.), Das Hansische Kontor zu Bergen und die Lübecker Bergenfahrer. International Workshop Lübeck 2003, Lübeck: Schmidt-Römhild, pp. 140–62.Google Scholar
Görich, K., ‘Geld und Ehre. Friedrich Barbarossa’, in Grubmüller, and Stock, (eds.), Geld im Mittelalter, pp. 113–34.Google Scholar
Graafen, T. and Pundt, M., ‘Der Metzer Bürger Philippe Le Gronnais (+ 1314). Zwischen Geld, Glaube und Gemeinde’, in Irsigler, F. and Minn, G. (eds.), Porträt einer europäischen Kernregion. Der Rhein-Maas-Raum in historischen Lebensbildern, Trier: Kliomedia, pp. 101–9.Google Scholar
Kamp, H. ‘Gutes Geld und böses Geld. Die Anfänge der Geldwirtschaft und der “Gabentausch” im hohen Mittelalter’, in Grubmüller, and Stock, (eds.), Geld im Mittelalter, pp. 91112.Google Scholar
Mäkeler, H., ‘Geldwertveränderungen als Auslöser innerstädtischer Konflikte im Spätmittelalter’, Bremer Beiträge zur Münz- und Geldgeschichte 4, pp. 81105.Google Scholar
Mentgen, G., ‘Die Straßburger Juden Vivelin der Rote und Simon von Deneuvre. Bankiers europäischer Fürsten im 14. Jh.’, in Irsigler, F. and Minn, G. (eds.), Porträt einer europäischen Kernregion. Der Rhein-Maas-Raum in historischen Lebensbildern, Trier: Kliomedia, pp. 131–7.Google Scholar
Petry, K., ‘Münzen machen Wirtschaftsgeschichte: zum Fund eines Trierer Pfennigs Königs Ottos III. (983–996) aus Trier’, Funde und Ausgrabungen im Bezirk Trier, 37, pp. 5862.Google Scholar
Reitemeier, A., Pfarrkirchen in der Stadt des späten Mittelalters: Politik, Wirtschaft und Verwaltung, Stuttgart: Franz Steiner Verlag.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schmidt, P. G., ‘Nummus vincit, regnat, imperat’. Caesarius von Heisterbach über zisterziensische “avaritia”, in Grubmüller, and Stock, (eds.), Geld im Mittelalter, pp. 204–15.Google Scholar
Stunz, H., ‘Hospitäler im deutschsprachigen Raum im Spätmittelalter als Unternehmen für die “caritas”. Typen und Phasen der Finanzierung’, in Matheus, M. (ed.), Funktions- und Strukturwandel spätmittelalterlicher Hospitäler im europäischen Vergleich, Stuttgart: Steiner, pp. 129–59.Google Scholar
Tewes, G. R., ‘Deutsches Geld und römische Kurie. Zur Problematik eines gefühlten Leides’, in Flug, B., Matheus, M. and Rehberg, A. (eds.), Kurie und Region. Festschrift für Brigide Schwarz zum 65. Geburtstag, Stuttgart: Steiner, pp. 209–39.Google Scholar
Vogeler, G., ‘Tax accounting in the late medieval German territorial states’, Accounting, Business and Financial History, 15/3, pp. 235–55.Google Scholar
Armstrong, L., Usury and public debt in early Renaissance Florence: Lorenzo Ridolfi on the Monte Comune, Toronto: Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, 2003.Google Scholar
Blomquist, T. W., Merchant families, banking and money in medieval Lucca, Aldershot: Ashgate.Google Scholar
Boucheron, P., ‘Fiscalités urbaines et fabriques de cathédrales en Italie (XIIIe-XVve siècle): remarques sur l'acculturation fiscale’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 543–62.Google Scholar
Chittolini, G., ‘La cité, le territoire, l'impôt. Quelques considérations sur la répartition des impositions directes dans le duché de Milan (de 1450 aux environs de 1500)’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 305–30.Google Scholar
Conte, E., ‘Fiscalité et droit savant: les rapports de l'Empire et des villes italiennes dans la Somme de Roland de Lucques (vers 1200)’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 485510.Google Scholar
Demo, E., ‘“Tengo dinari li quali trafego in lo me bancho”. L'attività di Giovanni Orsato, banchiere padovano del XV secolo’, Studi Storici Luigi Simeoni, 54 (2004), pp. 341–58.Google Scholar
Ginatempo, M., ‘Les transformations de la fiscalité dans l'Italie post-communale’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 193218.Google Scholar
Goetzmann, W. N., ‘Fibonacci and the financial revolution’, in Goetzmann, W. N. and Rouwenhorst, K. G. (eds.), The origins of value: the financial innovations that created modern capital markets, Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 123–44.Google Scholar
Lambertini, R., ‘Das Geld und sein Gebrauch. “Pecunia” im Streit zwischen Michael von Cesena und Papst Johannes XXII’, in Grubmüller, and Stock, (eds.), Geld im Mittelalter, pp. 216–44.Google Scholar
Märtl, C., ‘Der Papst und das Geld. Zum kurialen Rechnungswesen unter Pius II. (1458–1464)’, in Flug, B., Matheus, M., and Rehberg, A. (eds.), Kurie und Region. Festschrift für Brigide Schwarz zum 65. Geburtstag, Stuttgart: Steiner, pp. 175–95.Google Scholar
Mainoni, P., ‘La “révolution fiscale” dans l'Italie du Nord (XIIe-XIIIe siècle). Quelques considérations’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 219–54.Google Scholar
Parks, T., Medici money: banking, metaphysics, and art in fifteenth-century Florence, New York: W. W. Norton & Company.Google Scholar
Pezzolo, L., ‘Bonds and government debt in Italian city-states, 1250–1650’, in Goetzmann, W. N. and Rouwenhorst, K. G. (eds.), The origins of value: the financial innovations that created modern capital markets, Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 145–64.Google Scholar
Spicciani, A., L'ospedale lucchese di Altopascio: storia economica e finanziaria nei secoli XI-XII, Pisa: ETS.Google Scholar
Collantes Deterán Sánchez, A., ‘Les villes dans le système fiscal du royaume de Castille (XIIIe-Xve siècle)’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 331–52.Google Scholar
Carrasco, J., ‘Les imposiciones dans les “bonnes villes” du royaume de Navarre: Tudela au milieu du XVe siècle’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 173–92.Google Scholar
Galán Sánchez, A. and Peinado Santaella, R. G., ‘La communauté et le roi: formes de recouvrement et résistances fiscales à Grenade après la conquête’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 427–50.Google Scholar
Martín Escudero, F., El tesoro de Baena: reflexiones sobre circulación monetaria en época omeya, Madrid: Real Academia de la Historia.Google Scholar
Menjot, D., ‘Politiques et stratégies fiscales des élites urbaines castillanes (fin XIIIe siècle-1474)’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 123–52.Google Scholar
Morelló Baget, J., ‘Les résistances à l'impôt dans les municipalités catalanes (du XIIIe au XIVe siècle): tentative de synthèse', in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 399426.Google Scholar
Orti Gost, P., ‘Fiscalité et finances publiques dans les territoires de la couronne d'Aragon’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 453–68.Google Scholar
Sánchez Martínez, M., ‘“Defensar lo principat de Cathalunya” pendant la seconde moitié du XIVe siècle: du service militaire à l'impôt’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 83122.Google Scholar
Verdés I Pijuan, P., ‘Politiques fiscales et stratégies financières dans les municipalités catalanes (XIVe-XVe siècle)’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 153–72.Google Scholar
Potekhina, I. P., ‘St. Peter's qualification in the tax system of medieval papacy’, Klio, 1/28, pp. 65–8.Google Scholar
Adams, J., The familial state: ruling families and merchant capitalism in early modern Europe, Ithaca: Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Chor, D., ‘Institutions, wages, and inequality: the case of Europe and its periphery (1500–1899)’, Explorations in Economic History, 42/4, pp. 547–67.Google Scholar
Desmedt, L., ‘Money in the “body politick”: the analysis of trade and circulation in the writings of seventeenth-century political arithmeticians’, History of Political Economy, 37/1, pp. 79101.Google Scholar
Gordon, D., ‘Dematerialization principle: sociability, money and music in the eighteenth century’, Historical Reflections, 31/1, pp. 7192.Google Scholar
Goetzmann, W. N. and Rouwenhorst, K. G. (eds.), The origins of value: the financial innovations that created modern capital markets, Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 123–44.Google Scholar
Grech, I., ‘Flow of capital in the Mediterranean: financial connections between Genoa and hospitaller Malta in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries’, International J. of Maritime History, 17/2, pp. 193210.Google Scholar
Herre, F., Die Fugger in ihrer Zeit, Augsburg: Wissner.Google Scholar
Homburg, H., ‘Fortuna und Methode. Überlegungen zur Kulturgeschichte von Geld und Reichtum in der zweiten Halfte des 18. Jahrhunderts’, Vierteljahrschrift fur Sozial und Wirtschaftsgeschichte, 92/1, pp. 1630.Google Scholar
Kwass, M., ‘Spending and saving in the Enlightenment’, Historical Reflections, 31/1, pp. 4970.Google Scholar
MacKillop, A., ‘Accessing empire: Scotland, Europe, Britain, and the Asia trade, 1695 – c. 1750’, Itinerario, 29/3, pp. 730.Google Scholar
Ogilvie, S., ‘The use and abuse of trust: social capital and its deployment by early modern guilds’, Jahrbuch für Wirtschaftsgeschichte, 1, pp. 1552.Google Scholar
Poterba, J. M., ‘Annuities in early modern Europe’, in Goetzmann, and Rouwenhorst, (eds.), The origins of value, pp. 207–24.Google Scholar
Richard, J., ‘The concept of fair value in French and German accounting regulations from 1673 to 1914 and its consequences for the interpretation of the stages of development of capitalist accounting’, Critical Perspectives on Accounting, 16/6, pp. 825–50.Google Scholar
Van Zanden, J-L., ‘De timmerman, de boekdrukker en het ontstaan van de Europese kenniseconomie over de prijs en het aanbod van kennis voor de industriele revolutie’ [The carpenter, the printer and the genesis of the European knowledge economy. On the price and the supply of knowledge before the industrial revolution], Tijdschrift voor sociale en economische geschiedenis, 2/1, pp.105–20.Google Scholar
Weissen, K., ‘Fortschrittsverweigerung? Die Haltung der deutschen Handelsherren gegenüber der italienischen Banktechnik bis 1475’, in Schmidt, H. J. (ed.), Tradition, Innovation, Invention. Fortschrittsverweigerung und Fortschrittsbewußtsein im Mittelalter, Berlin: de Gruyter, pp. 161–78.Google Scholar
Westermann, E., ‘Gold, silver, and copper in the European economies and their external trade relations from the end of the 15th to the end of the 16th century’, in Kreiner, J. (ed.), The road to Japan: social and economic aspects of early European–Japanese contacts, Bonn: Bier, pp. 6390.Google Scholar
Edvinsson, R., ‘Den svenska konjunkturcykeln 1700–2000’, Ekonomisk debatt, 33/8, pp. 629.Google Scholar
Abramson, D. M., Building the Bank of England: money, architecture, society, 1694–1942, New York: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Baker, M. and Collins, M., ‘Audit and control in the not-for-profit sector: an endowed charity case 1739–1853’, Accounting and Business Research, 35/2, pp. 111–28.Google Scholar
Bogart, D., ‘Did turnpike trusts increase transportation investment in eighteenth-century England?’, J. of Economic History, 65/2, pp. 439–68.Google Scholar
Hutchings, H., Hoare bankers: a history of the Hoare banking dynasty, London: Constable.Google Scholar
Ingrassia, C., ‘Money and sexuality in the Enlightenment: George Lillo's “The London Merchant”’, Historical Reflections, 31/1, pp. 93116.Google Scholar
Morgan, K., ‘Remittance procedures in the eighteenth-century British slave trade’, Business History Rev., 79/4, pp. 715–50.Google Scholar
Murphy, A. J., ‘Lotteries in the 1690s: investment or gamble?’, Financial History Rev., 12/2, pp. 227–46.Google Scholar
Murphy, A. J., ‘John Law’, in Goetzmann, and Rouwenhorst, (eds.), The origins of value, pp. 225–38.Google Scholar
Nash, R. C., ‘The organization of trade and finance in the British-Atlantic economy, 1600–1830’, in Coclanis, P. A. (ed.), The Atlantic economy during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries: organization, operation, practice, and personnel, Columbia: University of South Carolina Press, pp. 95151.Google Scholar
Rogers, A., ‘Prosperous – but precarious: property deeds and mortgages in a small market town in the 18th and 19th centuries’, Family & Community History, 8/2, pp. 105–22.Google Scholar
Rorke, M., ‘The Scottish herring trade, 1470–1600’, Scottish Historical Rev., 84/2, pp. 149–65.Google Scholar
Sherman, S., Finance and fictionality in the early Eighteenth century: accounting for Defoe, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smail, John, ‘Credit, risk, and honor in eighteenth-century commerce’, J. of British Studies, 44/3, pp. 439–56.Google Scholar
Temin, P. and Voth, H. J., ‘Credit rationing and crowding out during the industrial revolution: evidence from Hoare's Bank, 1702–1862’, Explorations in Economic History, 42/3, pp. 325–48.Google Scholar
Thomas, J. H., ‘Devizes in the eighteenth century: the evidence from fire insurance records’, Archives, 113, pp. 7589.Google Scholar
Tiberi, M., Investimenti internazionali e sviluppo del sistema capitalistico: l'evoluzione degli scambi commerciali della Gran Bretagna (1700–1913), Rome: Edizioni Kappa.Google Scholar
Toms, S., ‘Financial control, managerial control and accountability: evidence from the British cotton industry, 1700–2000’, Accounting, Organizations and Society, 30/7–8, pp. 627–53.Google Scholar
Watt, D., ‘The management of capital by the Company of Scotland 1696–1707’, J. of Scottish Historical Studies, 25/2, pp. 97118.Google Scholar
Yeandle, L., ‘Sir Edward Dering of Surrenden Dering and his “Booke of expences”, 1617–1628’, Archaeologia Cantiana, 125, pp. 323–44.Google Scholar
Clinquart, J., ‘Les resources économiques de l'Intendance du Hainaut décrites par un contemporain dix ans avant la révolution’, Valentiana, 22, 2004, pp. 1132.Google Scholar
Gelderblom, O. and Jonker, J., ‘Amsterdam as the cradle of modern futures trading’, in Goetzmann, and Rouwenhorst, (eds.), The origins of value, pp. 189206.Google Scholar
Neal, L., ‘Venture shares of the Dutch East India Company’, in Goetzmann, and Rouwenhorst, (eds.), The origins of value, pp. 165–76.Google Scholar
Tracy, J. D., The Low Countries in the sixteenth century: Erasmus, religion and politics, trade and finance, Brookfield: Ashgate.Google Scholar
Van Nieuwkerk, M., Hollands gouden glorie: de financiëlkracht van Nederland door de eeuwen heen, Haarlem: Becht.Google Scholar
Antonetti, G., ‘Du louis à l'assignat’, D'or et d'argent. La monnaie en France du Moyen Âge à nos jours. Cycle de conférences tenues à Bercy entre le 22 octobre 2001 et le 18 février 2002, Paris, Comité pour l'Histoire économique et financière de la France, pp. 1734.Google Scholar
Banks, K. J., ‘Communications and “imperial overstretch”: lessons from the eighteenth-century French Atlantic’, French Colonial History, 6, pp. 1732.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bayard, F., ‘Collecter la taille en Lyonnais et Beaujolais au XVIIe siècle’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 379401.Google Scholar
Baron, I., ‘La répression des délits liés à la monnaie au XVIIIe siècle’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 179–88.Google Scholar
Bastien, P., ‘“La seconde puntion”: quelques remarques sur la confiscation des biens dans la Coutume de Paris au XVIIIe siècle’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 281–92.Google Scholar
Bayard, F., ‘Les financiers français devant la justice au XVIIe siècle’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 155–65.Google Scholar
Béguin, K., ‘La circulation des rentes constituées dans la France du XVIIe siècle. Une approche de l'incertitude économique’, Annales. Histoire, Sciences Sociales, 60/6, pp. 1229–45.Google Scholar
Bergier, J-F. and Lüthy, H., La banque protestante en France: de la révocation de l'Édit de Nantes à la Révolution, Zurich: Verlag Neue Zürcher Zeitung.Google Scholar
Blanchard, A., ‘Répartir les impôts entre les paroisses, une tâche difficile: l'exemple de la généralité de Soissons au XVIIIe siècle’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 435–81.Google Scholar
Blaufarb, R., ‘Vers une histoire de l'exemption fiscale nobiliaire la Provence des années 1530 à 1789’, Annales. Histoire, Sciences Sociales, 60/6, pp. 1203–28.Google Scholar
Brumont, F., ‘La répartition de la taille entre communautés: l’élection d'Armagnac aux XVIIe et XVIIIe siècles', in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 403–34.Google Scholar
Bugeaud, V., ‘Quand les bargers se font monnayeurs: une “aristocratie” chez les pêcheurs de l'estuaire de la Loire au XVIIIe siècle’, Annales de Bretagne et des Pays de l'Ouest, 112/4, pp. 4384.Google Scholar
Caillou, F., Une administration royale d'Ancien Régime: le bureau des finances de Tours, Tours: Presses universitaires François-Rabelais, 2 vols.Google Scholar
Carroll, S., ‘Acheter la grâce en France du XVe au XVIIe siècle’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 237–46.Google Scholar
Chantrel, L., ‘Une relecture des travaux de Jean Bodin sur la fiscalité à partir des comptes rendus des Etats Généraux de 1560 à 1588’, L'oeuvre de Jean Bodin. Actes du colloque tenu à Lyon à l'occasion du quatrième centenaire de sa mort, 11–13 janvier 1996, Paris: Champion, 2004, pp. 333–52.Google Scholar
Conchon, A., ‘Financer la construction d'infrastructures de transport: la concession au XVIIe et XVIIIe siècles’, in Barjot, D. and Berneron-Couvenhes, M-F. (eds.), ‘Concessions et optimisation des investissements publics’, Entreprises et histoire, 38, pp. 5570.Google Scholar
Coudray, J., ‘Les prévôts royaux’, Cahiers du Passé, 28, pp. 3448.Google Scholar
Coulomb, C., ‘Les parlementaires, banquiers et débiteurs de la société urbaine: l'exemple de Grenoble dans la seconde moitié du XVIIIe siècle’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 125–35.Google Scholar
Desan, P., ‘Jean Bodin et l'imaginaire de la monnaie’, L'oeuvre de Jean Bodin, pp. 293304.Google Scholar
Dessert, D., Les Daliès de Montauban: une dynastie protestante de financiers sous Louis XIV, Paris: Perrin.Google Scholar
Diedler, J-C., ‘Fiscalités et société rurale en Loraine méridionale: l'exemple de la prévôté de Bruyères, de René II à Stanislas (1473–1766)’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 139–98.Google Scholar
Dormard, S., ‘Le marché du crédit à Douai aux XVIIe et XVIIIe siècles’, Rev. du Nord, 87/362, pp. 803–33.Google Scholar
Dousset, C., ‘Des veuves spolliées? Conflits familiaux et justice civile dans le Midi de la France, XVIIe-XVIIIe siècles’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 5364.Google Scholar
Doyon, J., ‘“Ni clair ni liquide”: l'argent dans les conflits familiaux de 1686 à 1745’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 6576.Google Scholar
Follain, A., ‘La taille au village en régime de personnalité du XVIe au XVIIIe siècle: pièces justificatives’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 548642.Google Scholar
Follain, A. and Larguier, G., L'impôt des campagnes, fragile fondement de l'Etat dit moderne (XVe-XVIIIe siècles). Actes du Colloque tenu à Bercy, Paris: 2–3 décembre 2002, Paris: Comité pour l'histoire économique et financière de la France.Google Scholar
Fournier, P., ‘La fiscalité comtadine aux XVIe et XVIIIe siècles: histoire d'un déclin ou d'une mutation?’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 267309.Google Scholar
Fréger, L., ‘La répression des délits liés aux épices aux XVIIe-XVIIIe siècles (à travers les exemples breton et normand)’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 167–78.Google Scholar
Garnot, B. (ed.), Justice et argent, Dijon: Editions universitaires de Dijon, pp. 179–88.Google Scholar
Gay, J-P., ‘Réparation et restitution dans la théologie morale au XVIIe siècle en France: l'autre prix du crime et du délit’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 247–58.Google Scholar
Glineur, C., ‘Entre libéralisme et protectionnisme: la politique pré-libérale du contrôleur général Moreau de Séchelles’, La Rev. Administrative, 345, pp. 290302.Google Scholar
Hickey, D., ‘Le procès des tailles dans le Dauphiné: les cahiers des villages et l'intégration des communautés rurales au sein de la contestation du Tiers Etat (1591–1602)’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 199233.Google Scholar
Houllemare, M., ‘Les marchands étrangers et l'argent: procès économiques au parlement de Paris dans la seconde moitié du XVIe siècle’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 2940.Google Scholar
Larguier, G., ‘Le crédit en Catalogne au XVIIe siècle: les foires de change de Perpignan (1630–1651)’, Annales du Midi, 117/251, pp. 347–61.Google Scholar
Larguier, G., ‘Fraude et protection en Languedoc au XVIIe siècle: l'affaire Aoustenc’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 4152.Google Scholar
Larguier, G., ‘Les communautés, le roi, les États, la cour des Aides. La formation du système fiscal languedocien’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 6995.Google Scholar
Legay, M-L., ‘1775: l'abolition de la contrainte solidaire en France’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 189–98.Google Scholar
Legay, M-L., ‘Prélèvement de l'impôt direct et contrainte publique dans les Pays-Bas français au XVIIe siècle (1660–1715)’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 311–33.Google Scholar
Luckett, T. M., ‘Imaginary currency and real guillotines: the intellectual origins of the financial terror in France’, Historical Reflections, 31/1, pp. 117–39.Google Scholar
Maillard, B., ‘Les communautés des habitants et la perception de la taille aux XVIIe et XVIIIe siècles, en pays d’élections, (d'après l'exemple de la généralité de Tours)', in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 481510.Google Scholar
Ménard, O., ‘De la répression de la fausse monnaie en Bretagne au XVIIIe siècle’, Rev. numismatique, 2004, 160, pp. 321–42.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Montel, L. ‘Faire du crime organisé un objet d'histoire d'après le cas marseillais (XIXe et premier XXe siècle)’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 99106.Google Scholar
Paris, L., ‘Capitations de la communauté de Boissezon-de-Masciel, année 1698’, Cahiers de Rieumontagné, 55, pp. 6176.Google Scholar
Pascal, C., ‘Jean Bardon (1740–1815), dernier trésorier de France de Montpellier. Histoire d'une ascension sociale manquée’, Bulletin de la Société des Sciences et Lettres de Montpellier, 29, pp. 527.Google Scholar
Pichon, J., ‘La taille tarifée dans quatre paroisses du Haut-Poitou: approche statistique d'un essai de répartition de l'impôt au XVIIIe siècle’, Rev. Historique du Centre-Ouest, 2004, 3/1, pp. 129–74.Google Scholar
Spang, R. L., ‘The ghost of law: speculating on money, memory and Mississippi in the French constituent assembly’, Historical Reflections, 31/1, pp. 325.Google Scholar
Vester, M., ‘Perché l'autonomia istituzionale non significò meno tasse nella Bresse savoiarda (1560–1580)’, Quaderni storici, 118/1, pp. 4172.Google Scholar
Wenzel, E., ‘Plaie d'argent est-elle morte? Le problème du péculat dans la doctrine juridique d'Ancien Régime’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 143–54.Google Scholar
Brecht, M., ‘Erwerb und Finanzierung von Kunstwerken durch Erzbischof Albrecht von Mainz’, in Tacke, A. (ed.), Kontinuität und Zäsur. Ernst von Wettin und Albrecht von Brandenburg, Göttingen: Wallstein-Verlag, pp. 391–98.Google Scholar
Bünz, E., Das Mainzer Subsidienregister für Thüringen von 1506, Cologne: Böhlau.Google Scholar
Chocholac, B., ‘Güterpreise, Verschuldung und Ratensystem. Eine Fallstudie zu den finanziellen Transaktionen der Untertanen bei Besitzübertragungen in Westmähren im späten 16. und im 17. Jh.’, in Cerman, M. and Luft, R. (eds.), Untertanen, Herrschaft und Staat in Böhmen und im “Alten Reich”. Sozialgeschichtliche Studien zur Frühen Neuzeit, Munich: Oldenbourg, pp. 89125.Google Scholar
Cordes, A., ‘Kapital, Arbeit, Risiko, Gewinn. Aufgabenteilung in einer Lübecker Handelsgesellschaft des 16. Jh.’, in Hammel-Kiesow, R. and Hundt, M. (eds.), Das Gedächtnis der Hansestadt Lübeck. Festschrift für Antjekathrin Graßmann zum 65. Geburtstag, Lübeck, Schmidt-Römhild, pp. 517–34.Google Scholar
Homburg, H., ‘Fortuna und Methode. Überlegungen zur Kulturgeschichte von Geld und Reichtum in der zweiten Hälfte des 18. Jh’, Vierteljahrschrift für Sozial- und Wirtschaftsgeschichte, 92/1, pp. 1630.Google Scholar
Homering, L., ‘Freiheit, Frauen und Finanzen – Friedrich Schiller in Mannheim’, in Wieczorek, A. (ed.), Schiller Zeit in Mannheim, Mainz: von Zabern, pp. 103–18.Google Scholar
Jakubowski-Tiessen, M., ‘Woher nehmen wir geldt zu den Küsten her…?’ Eine frühneuzeitliche Flutkatastrophe und ihre finanziellen Folgen, Siedlungsforschung, 23, pp. 91100.Google Scholar
Janssen, W., ‘Beobachtungen zur Struktur und Finanzierung des kurkölnischen Hofes im späten 14. und frühen 15. J’, Rheinische Vierteljahrsblätter, 69, pp. 104–32.Google Scholar
Köhler, C., ‘Die Wirtschafts-, Finanz- und Sozialpolitik Ernsts II. von Sachsen-Gotha-Altenburg’, in Greiling, W., Klinger, A. and Köhler, C. (eds.), Ernst II. von Sachsen-Gotha-Altenburg. Ein Herrscher im Zeitalter der Aufklärung, Cologne: Böhlau, pp. 111–27.Google Scholar
Mauerer, E., ‘Geld, Reputation, Karriere im Haus Fürstenberg. Beobachtungen zu einigen Motiven adeligen Handelns im barocken Reich’, Zeitenblicke, 2/11, www.zeitenblicke.de/2005/2/mauerer/mauerer.pdf.Google Scholar
Münch, E., ‘Die Entwicklung der Rostocker Fahnenzahl und der Stadtbrand von 1677’, Beiträge zur Geschichte der Stadt Rostock, 27, pp. 5167.Google Scholar
Nadler, M., ‘Ein Fürstentum in Geld aufgewogen - das Territorium von Pfalz-Neuburg’, in Bäumler, S., Brockhoff, E. and Henker, M. (eds.), Von Kaisers Gnaden. 500 Jahre Pfalz-Neuburg. Katalog zur Bayerischen Landesausstellung 2005, Neuburg an der Donau, 3. Juni–16. Oktober 2005, Augsburg: Haus d. Bayerischen Geschichte, pp. 126–38.Google Scholar
Nagel, F., ‘Geld und Geist. Zwei unbekannte Texte Johann Bernoullis im Kontext einer mißglückten Intrige gegen Jacob Hermann’, in Splinter, S., Gerstengarbe, S. and Remane, H. (eds.), ‘Physica et historia’. Festschrift für Andreas Kleinert zum 65. Geburtstag, Halle/Saale, Deutsche Akademie d. Naturforscher Leopoldina, pp. 163–74.Google Scholar
Püschel, C., ‘Das städtische Finanzwesen’, in Blaschke, K. and John, U. (eds.), Geschichte der Stadt Dresden. Bd.1: Von den Anfängen bis zum Ende des Dreißigjährigen Krieges, Stuttgart: Theiss, pp. 365–91.Google Scholar
Rheinheimer, M., ‘The captains’ money: capital and credit on the North Frisian islands of Amrum and Föhr, 1763–1812', International J. of Maritime History, 17/2, pp. 141–65.Google Scholar
Schobel, E., ‘Benevolent governance and fiscal federalism in Veit Ludwig von Seckendorff's Teutscher Fursten Stat (1656): comment on Erik S. Reinert’, European J. of Law and Economics, 19/3, pp. 231–3.Google Scholar
Schneider, K., ‘Frankfurt am Main und die Geldkrise des 18. Jh.’, Scripta Mercaturae, 39/1, pp. 144.Google Scholar
Schneider, K., ‘Zum Frankfurter Geldhandel während des Siebenjährigen Krieges’, Scripta Mercaturae, 39/2, pp. 55147.Google Scholar
Speelman, P. J., War, society and enlightenment: the works of General Lloyd, Leiden: Brill.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Staudinger, B., ‘In puncto debiti. Prozesse jüdischer Geldleiherinnen am Reichshofrat’ in Westphal, S. (ed.), In eigener Sache. Frauen vor den höchsten Gerichten des Alten Reiches, Cologne: Böhlau, pp. 153–80.Google Scholar
Ullmann, H. P., Der deutsche Steuerstaat. Geschichte der öffentlichen Finanzen vom 18. Jh. bis heute, Munich: Beck.Google Scholar
Avallone, P., ‘Tra teoria e pratica. Il credito agrario nel regno di Napoli nella seconda metà del XVIII secolo’, Riv. di Storia dell' Agricoltura, 45/2, pp. 337.Google Scholar
Battistini, F., ‘La produzione, il commercio e i prezzi della seta grezza nello Stato di Firenze 1489–1859’, Riv. di Storia Economica, 21/3, pp. 233–72.Google Scholar
Boldizzoni, F., La rivoluzione dei prezzi rivisitata: moneta ed economia reale in Alta Italia (1550–1630)' Riv. Storica Italiana, 117/3, pp. 1002–36.Google Scholar
Cancila, O., ‘Alchimie finanziarie di una grande famiglia feudale nel primo secolo dell'età moderna’, Mediterranea Ricerche Storiche, 2006, 3/6, pp. 69136.Google Scholar
Carrotta, R., ‘Debito pubblico e mercati finanziari tra età moderna e contemporanea in Convegno sul debito pubblico e il mercato finanziario in età moderna e contemporanea, tenuto, a Cassino, il 7 e 8 ottobre 2005’, Riv. di Storia Finanziaria, 15, pp. 143–55, www.delpt.unina.it/stof/indice.html.Google Scholar
Cenni, F. and Tristano, C., Liber/libra: il mercato del libro manoscritto nel Medioevo italiano, Rome: Jouvence.Google Scholar
Chiese, V., ‘La ricchezza delle corporazioni e il suo utilizzo. (Il caso di Verona in età moderna)’, Studi Storici Luigi Simeoni, 55, pp. 215–34.Google Scholar
Chiese, V., ‘Proprietari ed inquilini a Verona a metà seicento’, Società e Storia, 109, pp. 477501.Google Scholar
Del Grosso, M. A., ‘Un banco ebraico a Salerno al tempo di Carlo V’, Rassegna Storica Salernitana, 43, pp. 8794.Google Scholar
Clerici, L., ‘Pagamenti in natura, velocita di circolazione della moneta e rivoluzione dei prezzi’, Riv. di Storia Economica, 21/2, pp. 155–80.Google Scholar
Colzi, F., Mercato finanziario e debito pubblico a Roma fra Cinque e Seicento in Seminario su Debito pubblico e formazione dei mercati finanziari fra età moderna e contemporaneatenuto, a Cassino, il 15 e 16 ottobre', Riv. di Storia Finanziaria, 15, pp. 4964, www.delpt.unina.it/stof/indice.html.Google Scholar
Di Taranto, G., ‘Finanze e debito pubblico in Italia tra età moderna e contemporanea in Seminario su Debito pubblico e formazione dei mercati finanziari fra età moderna e contemporanea, tenuto, a Cassino, il 15 e 16 ottobre 2004’, Riv. di Storia Finanziaria, 15, pp. 137–42, www.delpt.unina.it/stof/indice.html.Google Scholar
Fanfani, T., ‘Alle origini della banca. Il sentiero del credito in Italia tra il XVIII e il XX secolo’, Bancaria, 61/1, pp. 715.Google Scholar
Hocquet, J-C., ‘À Venise, dette publique et spéculations privées’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 1538.Google Scholar
Hollingsworth, M., The cardinal's hat: money, ambition, and everyday life in the court of a Borgia prince, Woodstock: Overlook Press.Google Scholar
Isenmann, M., Die Verwaltung der päpstlichen Staatsschuld in der Frühen Neuzeit: Sekretariat, Computisterie und Depositerie der Monti vom 16. bis zum ausgehenden 18. Jahrhundert, Stuttgart: Steiner.Google Scholar
Lentini, R., ‘Dal commercio alla finanza: i negozianti-banchieri inglesi nella Sicilia Occidentale tra XVIII e XIX secolo’, Mediterranea Ricerche Storiche, 2004, 1/2, pp. 105–22.Google Scholar
Marsilio, C., ‘Nel XVII secolo dei genovesi. La corrispondenza commerciale di Paolo Gerolamo Pallavicini nel triennio 1636–1638’, Storia Economica, 8/1, pp. 101–20.Google Scholar
Masini, R., Il debito pubblico pontificio a fine Seicento: i monti camerali, Città di Castello: Edimond.Google Scholar
Piola Caselli, F., ‘Note sul debito pubblico nello Stato Pontificio (secoli XVI-XVIII) in Seminario su Debito pubblico e formazione dei mercati finanziari fra età moderna e contemporanea, tenuto, a Cassino, il 15 e 16 ottobre 2004’, Riv. di Storia Finanziaria, 15, pp. 133–6, www.delpt.unina.it/stof/indice.html.Google Scholar
Silvano, G., A beneficio dei poveri: il Monte di pietà di Padova tra pubblico e privato, 1491–1600, Bologna: Il Mulino.Google Scholar
Stapelbroek, K., ‘The devaluation controversy in eighteenth-century Italy’, History of Economic Ideas, 13/2, pp. 79110.Google Scholar
Strangio, D., ‘Il sistema finanziario del debito pubblico pontificio tra età moderna e contemporanea’, Riv. di Storia Finanziaria, 14, pp. 742, www.delpt.unina.it/stof/indice.html.Google Scholar
Windler, C., ‘“Ohne Geld keine Schweizer”: Pensionen und Söldnerrekrutierung auf den eidgenössischen Patronagemärkten’, in von Thiessen, H. and Windler, C. (eds.), Nähe in der Ferne. Personale Verflechtung in den Außenbeziehungen der Frühen Neuzeit, Berlin: Duncker & Humblot, pp. 105–33.Google Scholar
Alonso García, D., Una corte en construcción: Madrid en la Hacienda Real de Castilla (1517–1556), Madrid: Miño y Dávila Editores.Google Scholar
Alvarez Nogal, C., ‘Las compañias bancarias genovesas en Madrid a comienzos del siglo XVII’, Hispania, 65/1, pp. 6790.Google Scholar
Alvarez-Nogal, C., ‘El transporte de moneda en la Espana del siglo XVII: mecanismos y costes’, Rev. de Istoria Economica, 23, pp. 379408.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Benavides, C., ‘Les peines pécuniaires: la législation espagnole et son application au XVIIe siècle’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 281–92.Google Scholar
De Francisco Olmos, J. M., ‘La moneda y su utilizacion como documento politico en la Cataluña de la “guerra dels segadors” (1640–1652)’, Rev. General de Informacion y Documentacion, 15/1, pp. 149–87.Google Scholar
Drelichman, M., ‘All that glitters: precious metals, rent seeking and the decline of Spain’, European Rev. of Economic History, 9/3, pp. 313–36.Google Scholar
Eiras Roel, A., ‘Deuda y fiscalidad de la Corona de Castilla en la epoca de los Austrias: evolucion e historiografia’, Obradoiro de Historia Moderna, 14, pp. 65107.Google Scholar
Fenech, F. C., Sanchez Matamoros, J. B., Hidalgo, F. G. and Espejo, C. A., ‘Govern(mentality) and accounting: the influence of different enlightenment discourses in two Spanish cases (1761–1777)’, Abacus, 41/2, pp. 181210.Google Scholar
Fernández Romero, C., Gastos, ingresos y ahorro familiar: Navarra, 1561–1820, Pamplona: Ediciones Universidad de Navarra.Google Scholar
Font de Villanueva, C., ‘Política monetaria y política fiscal en Castilla en el siglo XVII: un siglo de inestabilidades’, Rev. de Historia Económica, 23, pp. 329–47.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
González Arévalo, R., El Privilegio de Málaga de 1501, Malaga: Universidad de Malaga.Google Scholar
Gutiérrez, F., Larrinaga, C. and Núñez, M., ‘Cost and management accounting in pre-industrial revolution Spain’, Accounting Historians J., 32/1, pp. 111–48.Google Scholar
Hierro-Anibarro, S., ‘El asiento de averia y el origen de la compania privilegiada en Espana’, Rev. de Historia Economica, 23, pp. 181212.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jurado Sánchez, J., La economía de la Corte. El gasto de la Casa Real en la Edad Moderna, 1561–1808, Madrid, Instituto de Estudios Fiscales.Google Scholar
Lanza García, R., ‘Fiscalidad real en Cantabria: alcabalas, cientos y millones en la época de los Austrias’, Investigaciones de Historia Económica, 3, pp. 4372.Google Scholar
Llopis, E. and Sotoca, S., ‘Antes, bastante antes: la primera fase de la integracion del mercado Español de trigo, 1725–1808’, Historia Agraria, 36, pp. 225–62.Google Scholar
Martínez Guillén, J., ‘The Bordazar memorandum: cost calculation in Spanish printing during the 18th century’, Accounting Historians J., 32/2, pp. 81103.Google Scholar
Nogal, C. A., ‘Genoese banking companies in Madrid at the beginning of the 17th century’, in Hispania-Rev. Espanola De Historia, 219, pp. 6790.Google Scholar
Porras Arboledas, P. A., ‘Concursos de acreedores en el archivo historico provincial de Burgos (siglos XVI-XIX)’, Cuadernos de Historia del Derecho, 12, pp. 355–72.Google Scholar
Ruiz Rodríguez, J. I., Disputa y consenso en la administración fiscal castellana: Villanueva de los Infantes y el partido del Campo de Montiel c. 1600-c.1660, Alcalá de Henares: Universidad de Alcalá.Google Scholar
Sanchez Torres, R., ‘The failure of the Spanish crown's fiscal monopoly over Tobacco in Catalonia during the XVIIIth century’, J. of European Economic History, 34/3, pp. 721–62.Google Scholar
Sanz Ayán, C., ‘Presencia y fortuna de los hombres de negocios genoveses durante la crisis hispana de 1640’, Hispania, 65/1, pp. 91114.Google Scholar
Solbes Ferri, S., ‘Teoría y práctica de administración y cobranza de rentas reales en Navarra (siglo XVIII)’, Investigaciones de Historia Económica, 3, pp. 73100.Google Scholar
Thomas, H., Rivers of gold: the rise of the Spanish empire, from Columbus to Magellan, New York: Random House.Google Scholar
Turull Rubinat, M., ‘Un juriste du XVIIe siècle: Andreu Bosch et le droit d'imposer en Catalogne au Moyen Âge’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 511–26.Google Scholar
Villegas Ruiz, M., La aportación financiero-fiscal de Córdoba a la hacienda de Carlos I., Córdoba: Universidad de Córdoba/CajaSur Publicaciones.Google Scholar
Wohlfeil, R., ‘Währung, Wirtschaft, Arbeitsverträge, Lehrverträge, Dienstverträge, Preise, Kosten. Ein Beitrag zur Geschichte von Stadt und Region Málaga im 16. Jahrhundert. 2’, Jahrbuch für Geschichte Lateinamerikas, 42, pp. 185209.Google Scholar
Rizescu, O., ‘L'appropriation des sanctions pénales par le système fiscal. L'institution de la garantie personnelle en Valachie au XVIIe siècle’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 259–70.Google Scholar
Denzel, M. A., Die Bozner Messen und ihr Zahlungsverkehr, 1633–1850, Bozen: Athesia.Google Scholar
Denzel, M. A. and Gerhard, H. J., ‘Global and local aspects of pre-industrial inflations: new research on inflationary processes in XVIIIth century central Europe’, J. of European Economic History, 34/1, pp. 149–85.Google Scholar
Kenyeres, I., ‘Die Einkünfte und Reformen der Finanzverwaltung Ferdinands I. in Ungarn’, , in Fuchs, M., Oborni, T. and Ujváry, G. (eds.), Kaiser Ferdinand I. Ein mitteleuropäischer Herrscher, Münster: Aschendorff, pp. 111–46.Google Scholar
Nazarova, I. A., ‘Teoriia i praktika denezhnogo obrashcheniia i denezhnykh reform v Rossii (XVIII – pervaia polovina XIX v.)’ [Theory and practice of money circulation and restoration of currency in Russia (XVIII – first fifty years of XIX century)], Vestnik Moskovskogo Universiteta, 5, pp. 5470.Google Scholar
Berghoff, H., ‘Markterschliessung und Risikomanagement. die Rolle der Kreditauskunfteien und Rating-Agenturen im Industrialisierungs- und Globalisierungsprozess des 19. Jahrhunderts’, Vierteljahrschrift für Sozial- und Wirtschaftsgeschichte, 92/2, pp. 141–62.Google Scholar
Brambilla, C., ‘Grandi banche e modelli creditizi in Italia, Francia e Germania tra XIX e XX secolo’, Annali di Storia dell'Impresa, 15–16 (2004–5), pp. 425–54.Google Scholar
Brötel, D. and Hermann, W., ‘Von Pariser Banken zum Asiengeschäft der Deutschen Bank (1850–1889)’, in Van der Heyden, U. and Zeller, J. (eds.), ‘… Macht und Anteil an der Weltherrschaft’. Berlin und der deutsche Kolonialismus, Münster: Unrast Verl, pp. 7580.Google Scholar
Bussière, E. and Cassis, Y. (eds.), London and Paris as international financial centres in the twentieth century, Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Carnevali, F., Europe's advantage: banks and small firms in Britain, France, Germany, and Italy since 1918, Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Cassis, Y., ‘Introduction: comparative perspectives on London and Paris as international financial centres in the twentieth century’, in Bussière, and Cassis, (eds.), London and Paris, pp. 114.Google Scholar
Clement, P., ‘Central bank networking at the Bank for International Settlements, 1930–1960’, in Dumoulin, M. (ed.), Les réseaux économiques dans le processus de construction européenne, Brussels: P. Lang, 2004, pp. 445–60.Google Scholar
Di Martino, P., ‘Approaching disaster: personal bankruptcy legislation in Italy and England, c. 1880–1939’, Business History, 47/1, pp. 2343.Google Scholar
Eigner, P. and Köhler, I., ‘Einleitung: Privatbanken und Privatbankiers in der Zwischenkriegszeit: Eine untergehende Spezies?’, in Eigner, (ed.), Privatbankiers in Mitteleuropa zwischen den Weltkriegen, Stuttgart: Steiner.Google Scholar
Evans, L., ‘Editorial: accounting history in the German language area’, Accounting, Business and Financial History, 15/3, pp. 229–34.Google Scholar
Feiertag, O. ‘Pierre Quesnay et les réseaux de l'internationalisme monétaire en Europe, 1919–1937’, in Dumoulin, M. (ed.), Les réseaux économiques dans le processus de construction européenne, Brussels: P. Lang, 2004, pp. 331–50.Google Scholar
Feldman, G. D., ‘German banks and national socialist efforts to supply capital and support industrialization in newly annexed territories: the Austrian model’, Zeitschrift fur Unternehmensgeschichte, 50/1, pp. 516.Google Scholar
Feldman, G. D., ‘Finanzinstitutionen und “Arisierung”’in Deutschland und Österreich', in Baresel-Brand, A. (ed.), Entehrt. Ausgeplündert. Arisiert. Entrechtung und Enteignung der Juden, Magdeburg: Koordinierungsstelle für Kulturgutverluste Magdeburg, pp. 1740.Google Scholar
Flandreau, M. and Gallice, F., ‘Paris: London, and the international money market: lessons from Paribas, 1885–1913’, in Bussière, and Cassis, (eds.), London and Paris, pp. 78106.Google Scholar
Flandreau, M. and Maurel, M., ‘Monetary union, trade integration, and business cycles in 19th century Europe’, Open Economies Rev., 16/2, pp. 135–52.Google Scholar
Hertner, P., ‘Großmachtrivalität und -kooperation im Adriaraum. Italien, Österreich-Ungarn und das Projekt einer albanischen Staatsbank, 1913/14’, Quellen und Forschungen aus italienischen Archiven und Bibliotheken, 85, pp. 272317.Google Scholar
Horn, M., ‘J. P. Morgan & Co., the house of Morgan and Europe 1933–1939’, Contemporary European History, 14/4, pp. 519–38.Google Scholar
James, H., Familienunternehmen in Europa: Haniel, Wendel und Falck, Munich: C. H. Beck.Google Scholar
Kalinski, J., ‘Austrian banks in Poland up to 1948’, in Rathkolb, O. (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt. 150 Jahre österreichische Bankengeschichte im Zentrum Europa, Vienna: Zsolnay, pp. 253–67.Google Scholar
Klüßendorf, N., ‘Kriegsfinanzierung und Edelmetallsammlungen am Ende des Ancien Régime’, in Alfaro, C., Marcos, C. and Paloma, O. (eds.), XIII Congreso Internacional de Numismática, Madrid, 2003, Actas-Proceedings-Actes, Madrid: Ministerio de Cultura, Secretaría General Técnica, pp. 1477–82.Google Scholar
Kostov, A., ‘Dutch capital and the Balkan states (in the 19th and the early 20th century)’, Etudes Balkaniques, 41/1, pp. 3750.Google Scholar
Kreutzmüller, C., Händler und Handlungsgehilfen, Der Finanzplatz Amsterdam und die deutschen Großbanken (1918–1945), Stuttgart: Steiner.Google Scholar
Kupper, H. U. and Mattessich, R., ‘Twentieth century accounting research in the German language area’, Accounting, Business and Financial History, 15/3, pp. 345410.Google Scholar
Leonardi, A., Una stagione ‘nera’ per il credito cooperativo: casse rurali e Raiffeisenkassen tra 1919 e 1945, Bologna: Il Mulino.Google Scholar
Özen, C., ‘Neogramsiyan hegemonya yaklasimi çerçevesinde güç ve global finans: pax britannica'daki büyük dönüsüm’, Uluslararasi iliskiler, 2/8, pp. 333.Google Scholar
Papp, J., ‘Quand le “bloc Chrétien” hongrois voulait ruiner le franc: l'affaire des faux billets (1925–1926)’, Gavroche, 24/140, pp. 17.Google Scholar
Petrov, J. A., ‘Rußlands finanzielle Verpflichtungen gegenüber Deutschland vor dem Ersten Weltkrieg und ihre Regulierung im Kontext des Friedens von Brest-Litovsk (1918)’, in Dahlmann, D., Heller, K. and Petrov, J. A. (eds.), Eisenbahnen und Motoren – Zucker und Schokolade. Deutsche im russischen Wirtschaftsleben vom 18. bis zum frühen 20. Jh., Berlin: Duncker u. Humblot, pp. 167–78.Google Scholar
Reis, J., ‘Los sistemas financieros de la periferia. Una comparacion entre Escandinavia y el sur de Europa durante el siglo XIX’, Papeles de economía española, 105–6, pp. 109–31.Google Scholar
Spufford, P., From Antwerp to London: the decline of financial centres in Europe, Wassenaar: NIAS.Google Scholar
Stöber, T., ‘Die Ökonomie der “Dépense”. Vitalistisches und ökonomisches Wissen im 19. Jahrhundert (Balzac, Zola, Bataille)’, Grenzgänge. Beiträge zu einer modernen Romanistik, 12/23, pp. 2238.Google Scholar
Tilly, R., ‘Die Entwicklung der europäischen Wertpapierbörsen seit dem ausgehenden 19. Jh. Einige vergleichende Betrachtungen’, in Merki, C. M. (ed.), Europas Finanzzentren. Geschichte und Bedeutung im 20. Jh., Frankfurt/M: Campus Verlag, pp. 223–44.Google Scholar
Zilch, R., ‘Neue Staaten – neues Geld: Brüche und Kontinuitäten in der numismatischen Symbolik osteuropäischer Staaten während und nach dem Ersten Weltkrieg’, in Bartetzky, A. (ed.), Neue Staaten – neue Bilder? Visuelle Kultur im Dienst staatlicher Selbstdarstellung in Zentral- und Osteuropa seit 1918, Cologne: Böhlau, pp. 99106.Google Scholar
Abildgren, K., ‘Interest-rate development in Denmark 1875–2003’, Nationallkonomisk tidsskrift, 143/2, pp. 153–68.Google Scholar
Ahlström, G., Hammarskjöld, Sverige och Bretton Woods, Stockholm: Sveriges riksbank.Google Scholar
Appelqvist, , Ö, ., Ämbetsman eller politiker? Om Dag Hammarskjölds roll i fyrtiotalets svenska regeringspolitik, Stockholm: Sveriges riksbank.Google Scholar
Edvinsson, R., Growth, accumulation, crisis: with new macroeconomic data for Sweden 1800–2000, Stockholm: Almqvist & Wiksell.Google Scholar
Eitrheim, O. and Qvigstad, J. F., Tilbakeblikk på norsk pengehistorie: konferanse 7. juni 2005 på Bogstad gård: historisk-monetær statistikk for Norge, Oslo: Norges Bank.Google Scholar
Eitrheim, O., Klovland, J. T. and Qvigstad, J. F., Historical monetary statistics for Norway, 1819–2003, Oslo: Norges Bank, 2004.Google Scholar
Hallberg, H., Ivetofta sparbank 1905–2005, Bromölla: Ivetofta sparbank.Google Scholar
Järvi, M. J., Längelmäen Säästöpankki 1905–2005: 100 vuotta Längelmäen Säästöpankki, Längelmäki: Längelmäen Säästöpankki.Google Scholar
Kuokkanen, E., Se pikkuusen paree pankki: Töysän Säästöpankin historiaa sadan vuoden ajalta, 1905–2005, Töysä: Töysän säästöpankki/Otavan kirjap.Google Scholar
Landberg, H., I växelbruk: Dag Hammarskjöld mellan arbetslöshetsutredningen, riksbanken och finansdepartementet under 1930-talet, Stockholm: Sveriges riksbank.Google Scholar
Larsson, U., Sveriges finansministrar 1840–2005, Stockholm: Finansdepartementet, Regeringskansliet.Google Scholar
Nilsson, G. B., The founder, Andre Oscar Wallenberg (1816–1886). Swedish banker, politician and journalist, Stockholm: Almqvist & Wiksell International.Google Scholar
Perlinge, A., Sockenbankirerna: kreditrelationer och tidig bankverksamhet: Vånga socken i Skåne 1840–1900, Stockholm: Nordiska museets förlag.Google Scholar
Sandberg, N. E., Vad kan vi lära av kraschen? Bank- och fastighetskrisen 1990–1993, Stockholm: SNS förlag.Google Scholar
Wiséhn, E., Mynt till ära och minne: svenska jubileums- och minnesmynt, Stockholm: Sveriges riksbank.Google Scholar
Hoare's: a very private bank, London: Constable.Google Scholar
Aiken, M. and Ardern, D., ‘An accounting history of capital maintenance: legal precedents for managerial autonomy in the United Kingdom’, Accounting Historians J., 32/1, pp. 2360.Google Scholar
Altorfer, S., ‘Die Kanalinseln Jersey und Guernsey: im Windschatten der “City of London”’, in Merki, C. M. (ed.), Europas Finanzzentren. Geschichte und Bedeutung im 20. Jh., Frankfurt/M: Campus Verlag, pp. 197220.Google Scholar
Anderson, M., Edwards, J. R. and Chandler, R. A., ‘Constructing the “well qualified” chartered accountant in England and Wales’, Accounting Historians J., 32/2, pp. 554.Google Scholar
Ashford, Z., ‘From James Mansfield to Ramsays, Bonars & Company: some notes on the story of a private bank’, Book of the Old Edinburgh Club, 6, pp. 2539.Google Scholar
Atkin, J., The foreign exchange market of London: development since 1900, London: Routledge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baker, M. and Collins, M., ‘English bank business loans, 1920–1968: transaction bank characteristics and small firm discrimination’, Financial History Rev., 12/2, pp. 135–71.Google Scholar
Barnes, P., ‘A Victorian financial crisis: the scandalous implications of the case of Overend Gurney’, in Rowbotham, J. and Stevenson, K. (eds.), Criminal conversations: Victorian crimes, social panic, and moral outrage, Columbus: Ohio State University Press, pp. 5569.Google Scholar
Blaazer, D. P., ‘Finance and the end of appeasement: the Bank of England, the national government and the Czech Gold’, J. of Contemporary History, 40/1, pp. 2539.Google Scholar
Cassis, Y., ‘London banks and international finance, 1890–1914’, in Bussière, and Cassis, (eds.), London and Paris, pp. 107–18.Google Scholar
Combs, M. B., ‘“A measure of legal independence”: the 1870 Married Women's Property Act and the portfolio allocations of British wives’, J. of Economic History, 65/4, pp. 1028–57.Google Scholar
Cottrell, P. L., ‘Established connections and new opportunities: London as an international financial centre, 1914–1958’, in Bussière, and Cassis, (eds.), London and Paris, pp. 153–82.Google Scholar
Cox, J., ‘Railway contractor becomes railway financier: Peto in the 1850s’, J. of the Railway & Canal Historical Society, 191, pp. 20–5.Google Scholar
Davie, S. S. K., ‘Accounting's uses in exploitative human engineering: theorizing citizenship, indirect rule and Britain's imperial expansion’, Accounting Historians J., 32/2, pp. 5580.Google Scholar
Dykes, D. W., ‘The Sherborne bank tokens’, British Numismatic J., 75, pp. 132–41.Google Scholar
Ferguson, N., ‘The city of London and British imperialism: new light on an old question’, in Bussière, and Cassis, (eds.), London and Paris, pp. 5777.Google Scholar
Ferguson, N., ‘A bolt from the blue? The City of London and the outbreak of the First World War’, in Louis, W. R. (ed.), Yet more adventures with Britannia: personalities, politics, and culture in Britain, London: I. B. Tauris, pp. 133–47.Google Scholar
Fleischman, R. K., Oldroyd, D. and Tyson, T. N.Accounting, coercion and social control during apprenticeship: converting slave workers to wage workers in the British West Indies c. 1834–1838’, Accounting Historians J., 32/2, pp. 201–31.Google Scholar
Flynn, D. T., ‘The duration of book credit in colonial New England’, Historical Methods, 38/4, pp. 168–77.Google Scholar
Hamilton, C. I., ‘British naval policy, policy-makers and financial control, 1860–1945’, War in History, 12/4, pp. 371–95.Google Scholar
Hickson, C. R., Turner, J. D. and McCann, C., ‘“Much ado about nothing”: the limitation of liability and the market for 19th century Irish bank stock’, Explorations in Economic History, 42/3, pp. 459–76.Google Scholar
Hickson, C. R. and Turner, J. D., ‘The genesis of corporate governance: nineteenth-century Irish joint-stock banks’, Business History, 47/2, pp. 174–89.Google Scholar
Hickson, C. R. and Turner, J. D., ‘The rise and decline of the Irish stock market, 1865–1913’, European Rev. of Economic History, 9/1, pp. 333.Google Scholar
Jarvie, P., Ready to trample on all human law: financial capitalism in the fiction of Charles Dickens, New York: Routledge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kaplan, H. H., Nathan Mayer Rothschild and the creation of a dynasty: the critical years 1806–1816, Stanford: Stanford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lawrence, C., Rockefeller money, the laboratory, and medicine in Edinburgh, 1919–1930: new science in an old country, Rochester NY: University of Rochester Press.Google Scholar
Lawson, Z., ‘Save the pennies! Savings banks and the working class in mid nineteenth-century Lancashire’, Local Historian, 35/3, pp. 168–84.Google Scholar
Levene, A., Powell, M. and Stewart, J., ‘Investment choices? County borough health expenditure in inter-war England and Wales’, Urban History, 32/3, pp. 434–58.Google Scholar
LLoyd-Jones, R., Lewis, M. J., Matthews, M. D. and Maltby, J., ‘Control, conflict and concession: corporate governance, accounting and accountability at Birmingham Small Arms, 1906–1933’, Accounting Historians J., 32/1, pp. 149–84.Google Scholar
McGowen, R., ‘The Bank of England and the policing of forgery 1797–1821’, Past & Present, 186, pp. 81116.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Madsen, J. B., A century of economic growth: the social returns to investment in equipment and structures', Manchester School, 73/1, pp. 101–22.Google Scholar
Matthews, S., ‘Cattle clubs, insurance and plague in the mid-nineteenth century’, Agricultural History Rev., 53/2, pp. 192211.Google Scholar
Michie, R., ‘A financial phoenix: the city of London in the twentieth century’, in Bussière, and Cassis, (eds.), London and Paris, pp. 1541.Google Scholar
Moore, S., ‘“Our Irish copper-farthen dean”: Swift's “Drapier's letters”, the “forging” of a modernist Anglo-Irish literature and the Atlantic world of paper credit’, Atlantic Studies, 2/1, pp. 6592.Google Scholar
Morris, R. J., Men, women, and property in England, 1780–1870: a social and economic history of family strategies amongst the Leeds middle classes. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Oakley, G., ‘The people's budget in the North and Squire Thelluson of Brodsworth Hall’, Northern History, 42/2, pp. 329–47.Google Scholar
O'Connell, S. and Reid, C., ‘Working-class consumer credit in the UK, 1925–60: the role of the check trader’, Economic History Rev., 58/2, pp. 378405.Google Scholar
Poole, A. G., ‘Conspicuous presumption: the treasury and the trustees of the national gallery, 1890–1939’, Twentieth Century British History, 16/1, pp. 128.Google Scholar
Ross, D. M., ‘Pobreza y cajas de ahorros en Escocia a mediados del siglo XIX’, Papeles de economía española, 105–6, pp. 8292.Google Scholar
Selgin, G., ‘Charles Wyatt, manager of the Parys mine mint: a study in ingratitude', British Numismatic J., 75, pp. 113–20.Google Scholar
Slinn, J., ‘Price controls or control through prices? Regulating the cost and consumption of prescription pharmaceuticals in the UK, 1948–67’, Business History, 47/3, pp. 352–66.Google Scholar
Solomou, S. and Vartis, D., ‘Effective exchange rates in Britain, 19201930’, J. of Economic History, 65/3, pp. 850–9.Google Scholar
Taylor, J., ‘Commercial fraud and public men in Victorian Britain’, Historical Research, 78/200, pp. 230–52.Google Scholar
Tiberi, M., The accounts of the British empire: capital flows from 1799 to 1914, Aldershot: Ashgate.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tribe, K., ‘Constructing national income in Britain, 19071941’, History of Economic Thought, 47/1, pp. 117.Google Scholar
Williams, S., ‘Poor relief, labourer's households and living standards in rural England c.1770–1834: a Bedfordshire case study’, Economic History Rev., 58/3, pp. 485519.Google Scholar
Williams, S., ‘Earnings, poor relief and the economy of makeshifts: Bedfordshire in the early years of the new poor law’, Rural History, 16/1, pp. 2152.Google Scholar
Woodall, A-M., What price the poor? William Booth, Karl Marx and the London residuum, Aldershot: Ashgate.Google Scholar
Buyst, E., The Bank, the franc and the euro: a history of the National Bank of Belgium, Tielt: Lannoo.Google Scholar
Buyst, E., La Banque nationale de Belgique, du franc belge à l'euro: un siècle et demi d'histoire, Brussels: Editions Racine.Google Scholar
Clesse, R., ‘Kooperative Bonnweg – ein Relikt der Arbeiterbewegung’, Ons Stad Luxembourg, 79, pp. 26–9.Google Scholar
Harms, R., ‘King Leopold's bonds’, in Goetzmann, and Rouwenhorst, (eds.), The origins of value, pp. 343–64.Google Scholar
Grapperhaus, F. H. M., Over de loden last van het koperen fietsplaatje: de Nederlandse rijwielbelasting 1924–1941, Deventer: Kluwer.Google Scholar
Hardewyn, A., ‘Les déterminants politiques, économiques et idéologiques du systême fiscal belge au XXe siècle’, Histoire, Economie et Société, 24/2, pp. 279302.Google Scholar
Meyers, P-H., ‘Caisse rurale Raiffeisenkasse Binsfeld: 1942 – 2004’, Bihob: Bulletin vam Syndicat d'intérêts Benzelt-Holler-Breidelt, 1, pp. 412,Google Scholar
Peeters, S., Goosens, M. and Buyst, E., Belgian national income during the interwar period: reconstruction of the database, Leuven: Leuven University Press.Google Scholar
Seil, G., ‘Das schwierige Geschäft mit den Geschäften: eine Tour durch die Escher Geschäftswelt’, 100 Joer Esch: 1906 – 2006, Luxembourg: Binsfeld, pp. 264–73.Google Scholar
Van Liempt, A., Kopfgeld. Bezahlte Denunziation von Juden in den besetzten Niederlanden, Munich: Siedler.Google Scholar
Aggius, J., ‘Du cadastre napoléonien du canton de Tournon-d'Agenais à nos jours’, Rev. de l'Agenais, 132/2, pp. 767–75.Google Scholar
Américi, L., ‘Détournement de fonds dans les caisses d’épargne françaises au XIXe siècle. Quelle justice entre philanthropie, professionnalisation et pédagogie de l'argent?', in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 199210.Google Scholar
Asselain, J-C., ‘Le siècle des dévaluations: du franc Poincaré au “franc fort” des années 1980’, in D'or et d'argent, pp. 6586.Google Scholar
Bonin, H., ‘Des archives du groupe de la Société générale à l'histoire des banques françaises pendant la Seconde Guerre mondiale’, in Joly, H. (ed.), Faire l'histoire des entreprises sous l'occupation: les acteurs économiques et leurs archives, Paris: Comité des travaux historiques et scientifiques, 2004, pp. 293306.Google Scholar
Bonin, H., ‘French banking and innovation, c. 1850–1970: did imaginative bankers exist?’, in Bruland, K. and Olivier, J-M. (eds.), Essays on Industrialisation in France, Norway and Spain, Oslo: Unipub forlag-Oslo Academic Press, pp. 113–33.Google Scholar
Bonin, H., ‘The challenged competitiveness of the Paris banking and finance markets, 1914–1958’, in Bussière, and Cassis, (eds.), London and Paris, pp. 183206.Google Scholar
Bonin, H., ‘Marque et image de marque bancaires. L'enjeu de la confiance, xixe-xxe siècles’, A nos marques, Horizons bancaires, 325, pp. 724.Google Scholar
Bonin, H., ‘Las estrategias de expansion de las cajas de ahorros francesas durante los siglos XIX y XX’, Papeles de economía española, 105–6, pp. 93108.Google Scholar
Bordas, J., Les directeurs généraux des douanes: l'administration et la politique douanière, 1801–1939, Paris: Comité pour l'histoire économique et financière de la France, 2004.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bouchardeau, P., ‘Grand argentier protestant et pasteur de laïcité: Auguste Giraud’, Rev. drômoise, 516, pp. 163–8.Google Scholar
Boulat, R., ‘Caisses d’épargne et protection sociale, 1818–1914: bonne affaire ou bonne action?', in Aubin, G. and Gallinato, B. (eds.), Les espaces locaux de la protection sociale: études offertes au professeur Pierre Guillaume: colloque de Bordeaux, février 2003, Paris: Association pour l'étude de l'histoire de la sécurité sociale, 2004, pp. 507–33.Google Scholar
Boyé, M., ‘Une “horreur” heureusement sauvegardée: la Banque de France d'Arcachon’, Bulletin de la société historique et archéologique d'Arcachon, 126, pp. 5166.Google Scholar
Branda, P., ‘Les finances et le budget de la France napoléonienne. 1: Qu'est-ce que le budget de l'Etat sous Napoléon?’, Souvenirs napoléoniens, 67/455–6, pp. 5568.Google Scholar
Branda, P., ‘Les finances et le budget de la France napoléonienne. 2: La guerre a-t-elle payé la guerre?’, Souvenirs napoléoniens, 68/457, pp. 2535.Google Scholar
Branda, P., ‘Les finances et le budget de la France napoléonienne. 3: La dynamique des budgets impériaux de 1805 à 1814 et le bilan de la première abdication’, Souvenirs napoléoniens, 68/458, pp. 1427.Google Scholar
Capitanio, S., Currencies: fiscal fortunes and cultural capital in nineteenth century France, New York: Peter Lang.Google Scholar
Christen-Lécuyer, C., ‘La mesure de l'efficacité sociale des caisses d’épargne françaises au XIXe siècle', Histoire & Mesure, 20/3, pp. 139–75.Google Scholar
Conreur, G., De l'assignat à l'euro: deux siècles d'histoire du franc, Paris: L'Harmattan.Google Scholar
De Blic, D., ‘Moraliser l'argent. Ce que Panama a changé dans la société française, 1889–1897’, Politix, 18/71, pp. 6182.Google Scholar
De Olivera, M., ‘Corruption, malversation et détournement. Les fonctionnaires des finances face à la tentation (première moitié du XIXe)’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 8798.Google Scholar
Dreyfus, J. M., ‘Die Privatbanken in Frankreich – 1918–1945’, in Eigner, P. (ed.), Privatbankiers in Mitteleuropa zwischen den Weltkriegen, Stuttgart: Steiner.Google Scholar
Duret, J., ‘Les inventaires de 1906 dans le pays mareuillais. Les protestations’, Au fil du Lay, 46, pp. 4490.Google Scholar
Fouqué, G., ‘Le Crédit mutuel: “une histoire des origines du Crédit Mutuel”’, Société des lettres, sciences et arts du Saumurois, 96/154, pp. 6785.Google Scholar
Gallarotti, G. M., ‘Hegemons of a lesser God: the bank of France and monetary leadership under the classical gold standard’, Oxford Rev. of Economic Policy, 12/4, pp. 624–46.Google Scholar
Gattellier, M., ‘L'or, la marine et la guerre’, Académie de Marine. Communications et mémoires, 1, pp. 83110.Google Scholar
Genevée, F., ‘Le PCF face aux amendes et à la “justice de classe”, 1920–1940’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 307–18.Google Scholar
de Gmeline, P., La banque Hervet: depuis 1830, de Bourges à Paris et dans la région du Centre, Paris: Editions de Venise.Google Scholar
de Gmeline, P., Depuis 1845, Dupuy de Parseval: quatre familles, une région, un groupe: une banque ouverte sur le monde, Paris: Editions de Venise.Google Scholar
Horn, M. and Imlay, T., ‘Money in wartime: France's financial preparations for the two World Wars’, International History Rev., 27/4, pp. 709–53.Google Scholar
Kamoun, P., ‘Financement du logement social et évolutions de ses missions: de 1894 (loi Siegfried) à nos jours; logement, habitat, cadre de vie’, Informations-sociales, 123, pp. 2033.Google Scholar
Karila-Cohen, P., ‘Les fonds secrets ou la méfiance legitime: l'invention paradoxale d'une “tradition républicaine” sous la restauration et la monarchie de juillet’, Rev. Historique, 307/4, pp. 731–66.Google Scholar
Kott, S., Le contrôle des dépenses engagées. Evolutions d'une fonction, Paris: Comité pour l'histoire économique et financière de la France, 2004.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mastin, J-L., ‘Stratégies du capitalisme familial lillois et autonomie financière régionale: le financement des filatures Julien Le Blan, 1858–1914’, Rev. d'histoire moderne et contemporaine, 52/4, pp. 74105.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Plessis, A., ‘Le franc au XIXe siècle’, in D'or et d'argent, pp. 4564.Google Scholar
Plessis, A., ‘When Paris dreamed of competing with the city…’, in Bussière, and Cassis, (eds.), London and Paris, pp. 4256.Google Scholar
Praquin, N., ‘La comptabilité aux frontières de l'organisation: un instrument de la stratégie entrepreneuriale. Le cas du crédit Lyonnais sous Henri Germain (1864–1905)’, Entreprises et histoire, 39, pp. 4558.Google Scholar
Regnard-Drouot, C., ‘La justice et les peines pécuniaires à Marseilles de 1851 à 1914’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 293306.Google Scholar
Rolland, D., ‘Les origines de la banque de Soissons’, Mémoires du Soissonnais, 20022005, 5/3, pp. 241–5.Google Scholar
Saul, S., ‘Banking alliances and international issues on the Paris capital market, 1890–1914’, in Bussière, and Cassis, (eds.), London and Paris, pp. 119–52.Google Scholar
Thomas, M., ‘Albert Sarraut, French colonial development, and the communist threat, 1919–1930’, J. of Modern History, 77/4, pp. 917–55.Google Scholar
Tulard, J., ‘Le franc germinal’, in D'or et d'argent, pp. 3544.Google Scholar
Vanoli, A., A history of national accounting, Amsterdam: IOS Press.Google Scholar
Viaene, A., L'efficience de la Bourse de Paris au XIXe siècle: une confrontation théorique face aux données empiriques des marchés à terme et à prime, Paris: Connaissances et Savoirs.Google Scholar
Yonnet, F., ‘Claude-Henri de Saint-Simon: l'industrialisation et les banquiers’, Cahiers d'économie politique, 46 (2004), pp. 147–74.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Abelshauser, W., ‘Die Wirtschaft des deutschen Kaiserreichs. Ein Treibhaus nachindustrieller Institutionen’, in Windolf, A. (ed.), Finanzmarkt-Kapitalismus. Analysen zum Wandel von Produktionsregimen, Wiesbaden: VS, Verlag f. Sozialwissenschaft, pp. 172–95.Google Scholar
Bähr, J., ‘Modernes Bankrecht und dirigistische Kapitallenkung. Die Ebenen der Steuerung im Finanzsektor des “Dritten Reichs”’, in Gosewinkel, D. (ed.), Wirtschaftskontrolle und Recht in der nationalsozialistischen Diktatur, Frankfurt/M: Klostermann, pp. 199224.Google Scholar
Barghorn, O., Auf dem Wege zur modernen Kleinstadt. Politik, Verwaltung und Finanzen norddeutscher Kleinstädte und Landgemeinden in der Zeit des Kaiserreiches 1871–1914, Taunusstein: Driesen Edition Wissenschaft.Google Scholar
Barkai, A., Oscar Wassermann und die Deutsche Bank. Bankier in schwieriger Zeit, Munich: Beck.Google Scholar
Baten, J., ‘Making profits in wartime: corporate profits, inequality, and GDP in Germany during the First World War’, Economic History Rev., 58/1, pp. 3456.Google Scholar
Beachy, R., The soul of commerce: credit, property, and politics in Leipzig, 1750–1840, Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Blisse, H., and Hofinger, H., ‘Reservefonds mit Fürsorgecharakter bei Vorschuss- und Kreditvereinen (Kreditgenossenschaften)’, Bankhistorisches Archiv, 31/2, pp. 134–43.Google Scholar
Boelcke, W. A., ‘Sparkassen im Königreich Württemberg und im Großherzogtum Baden. Ein Vergleich’, Zeitschrift für Württembergische Landesgeschichte, 64, pp. 283–92.Google Scholar
Boenke, K. C., Die Notgeldscheine aus Kolberg und Körlin. Zeugnisse aus der deutschen Geschichte zweier Städte in Pommern, Hamburg: Jancke.Google Scholar
Buchheim, C., ‘Die vielen Rechenfehler in der Abrechnung Götz Alys mit den Deutschen unter dem NS-Regime’, Sozial.Geschichte: Zeitschrift für Historische Analyse des 20. und 21. Jahrhunderts, 20/3, pp. 6776.Google Scholar
Burhop, C., ‘Die Vergütung des Führungspersonals deutscher Großbanken, 1871–1913’, Vierteljahrschrift für Sozial- und Wirtschaftsgeschichte, 92/3, pp. 281300.Google Scholar
Dohna, J. zu, Die “jüdischen Konten” der fürstlich Castell'schen Credit-Cassen und des Bankhauses Karl Meyer KG, Nuremberg: Gesellschaft für fränkische Geschichte.Google Scholar
Eierle, B., ‘Differential reporting in Germany: historical analysis’, Accounting, Business and Financial History, 15/3, pp. 279315.Google Scholar
Feldman, G. D., ‘The role of the Creditanstalt-Bankverein in the expansion of greater Germany, 1938–1945’, in Rathkolb, O. (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt. 150 Jahre österreichische Bankengeschichte im Zentrum Europa, Vienna: Zsolnay, pp. 317–34.Google Scholar
Gassert, P., ‘Men for all seasons? Die deutschen Unternehmer Hanns Martin Schleyer und Hermann Josef Abs’, Vorgange, 1/169, pp. 130–3.Google Scholar
Guinnane, T. W., ‘German debt in the twentieth century’, in Goetzmann, and Rouwenhorst, (eds.), The origins of value, pp. 327–42.Google Scholar
Jakubowski-Tiessen, M., ‘“Woher nehmen wir Geldt zu den Küsten her…?” Eine frühneuzeitliche Flutkatastrophe und ihre finanziellen Folgen’, Siedlungsforschung, 23, pp. 91100.Google Scholar
Klüßendorf, N., ‘“Pro deo et patria”. Das bischöfliche Tafelsilber und die Finanzen des Hochstifts Fulda im Ersten Koalitionskrieg’, Hessisches Jahrbuch für Landesgeschichte, 55, pp. 4771.Google Scholar
Köhler, I., Die ‘Arisierung’ der Privatbanken im Dritten Reich. Verdrängung, Ausschaltung und die Frage der Wiedergutmachung, Munich: Beck.Google Scholar
Köhler, I., ‘Zwischen wirtschaftlicher Marginalisierung und politischer Verdrängung. Die Privatbanken in Deutschland 1929–1935’, in Eigner, P. (ed.), Privatbankiers in Mitteleuropa zwischen den Weltkriegen, Stuttgart: Steiner, pp. 103–34.Google Scholar
Kopper, C., Bankiers unterm Hakenkreuz, Munich: Hanser.Google Scholar
Krause, D., Die Commerz- und Disconto-Bank 1870–1920/23, Stuttgart: Franz Steiner Verlag, 2004.Google Scholar
Kreutzmüller, C., Zum Umgang der Kaiser-Wilhelm-Gesellschaft mit Geld und Gut. Immobilientransfers und jüdische Stiftungen 1933–1945, Berlin, Forschungsprogramm Geschichte der Kaiser-Wilhelm-Gesellschaft im Nationalsozialismus.Google Scholar
Kreutzmüller, C. and Loose, I., ‘Die Bank der Deutschen Arbeit 1933–1945 – eine nationalsozialistische “Superbank”?’, Bankhistorisches Archiv, 31/1, pp. 132.Google Scholar
Mutschler, H., Vom ‘Soldaten Adolf Hitlers’ zum unabhängigen Organ der Steuerrechtspflege. Zur Frage der Unabhängigkeit der Steuerberater von der Finanzverwaltung in der Zeit zwischen 1919 und 1961, Stuttgart: Boorberg.Google Scholar
Pohl, H. R. and Bernd, S. G., Wirtschafts- und Sozialgeschichte der deutschen Sparkassen im 20. Jahrhundert, Stuttgart: Deutscher Sparkassenverlag.Google Scholar
Quick, R., ‘The formation and early development of German audit firms’, Accounting, Business and Financial History, 15/3, pp. 317–43.Google Scholar
Schulz, G. and Wysocki, J., Untersuchungen zur Wirtschafts- und Sozialgeschichte der deutschen Sparkassen im 19. Jh., Stuttgart: Deutscher Sparkassenverlag.Google Scholar
Schwanitz, W. G., ‘“Wir speisen im Adlon”: Herbert M. Gutmann und die Deutsche Orientbank’, in Heyden, U. and Van der Zeller, J. (eds.), ‘Macht und Anteil an der Weltherrschaft’. Berlin und der deutsche Kolonialismus, Münster: Unrast Verlag, pp. 81–6.Google Scholar
Scharwath, G., Vom Saarbrücker Groschen zur Deutschen Mark. Geldgeschichte der Saarregion, Saarbrücken: Staden-Verlag.Google Scholar
Steiner, A., ‘Zur Neuschatzung des Lebenshaltungskostenindex für die Vorkriegszeit des Nationalsozialismus’, Jahrbuch für Wirtschaftsgeschichte, 2, pp. 129–54.Google Scholar
Treisch, C., ‘Taxable treatment of the subsistence level of income in German natural law’, Accounting, Business and Financial History, 15/3, pp. 255–79.Google Scholar
Weidner, M., ‘Die Beschäftigung von Frauen in der Bankwirtschaft am Beispiel der Bayerischen Hypotheken- und Wechsel-Bank AG von 1835–1985 mit einem Ausblick auf die Bayerische Vereinsbank’, Bankhistorisches Archiv, 31/2, pp. 107–33.Google Scholar
Weschke, B. and Wöhnl, C., ‘Was mich interessiert ist Geld’ (Salvador Dali, Künstler 1904–1989): Geldgeschichte Geldpolitik, Geldtheorie von den Anfängen bis zur Gegenwart: anlässlich der gleichnamigen Wanderausstellung im Verbandsgebiet des Ostdeutschen Sparkassen- und Giroverbandes, eröffnet zum Weltspartag 2003, Berlin: Ostdeutscher Sparkassen- und Giroverband.Google Scholar
Ziegler, D., ‘“Aryanization” and the role of the German great banks, 1933–1938’, in Feldman, G. D. and Seibel, W. (eds.), Networks of Nazi persecution. bureaucracy, business and the organization of the Holocaust, Oxford: Berghahn, pp. 4468.Google Scholar
Ziegler, D., ‘Das deutsche Modell bankorientierter Finanzsysteme (1848–1957)’, in Windolf, (ed.), Finanzmarkt-Kapitalismus, pp. 276–93.Google Scholar
Ziegler, D., ‘Das deutsche Modell bankorientierter Finanzsysteme (1848–1957)’, Kölner Zeitschrift für Soziologie und Sozialpsychologie, 45, pp. 276–93.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zimmermann, N. M., Die veröffentlichten Bilanzen der Commerzbank 1870–1944. Eine Bilanzanalyse unter Einbeziehung der Bilanzdaten von Deutscher Bank und Dresdner Bank, Berlin: Frank & Timme.Google Scholar
Giovanni Malagodi banchiere, 1927–1952: atti del convegno: Fondazione Raffaele Mattioli, Milano, 20 ottobre 2004, Rome: Edizioni di storia e letteratura.Google Scholar
Artoni, R., ‘Note sul debito pubblico italiano dal 1885 al 2001’, Seminario su Debito pubblico e formazione dei mercati finanziari fra età moderna e contemporanea, tenuto, a Cassino, il 15 e 16 ottobre 2004 = Riv. di Storia Finanziaria, 15, pp. 6576, www.delpt.unina.it/stof/indice.Google Scholar
Canella, M. and Puccinelli, E. (eds.), Beneficenza a risparmio: i documenti preunitari della Cassa di risparmio delle Provincie lombarde, Cinisello Balsamo/Milan: Silvana/Banca Intesa.Google Scholar
Ceva, L., ‘Spese militari e industrie nell Italia liberale’, Italia contemporanea, 241.Google Scholar
Chiapparino, F., ‘La banca locale nelle Marche tra le due guerre mondiali’, Storia e problemi contemporanei, 2004, 17/37, pp. 73119.Google Scholar
Delli Gatti, D., Gallegati, M. and Gallegati, M., ‘On the nature and causes of business fluctuations in Italy, 1861–2000, Explorations in Economic History, 42/1, pp. 81100.Google Scholar
Ermice, M. C., Le origini del Gran libro del debito pubblico del Regno di Napoli e l'emergere di nuovi gruppi sociali, 1806–1815, Naples: Arte tipografica.Google Scholar
Fausto, D., ‘Lineamenti dell'evoluzione del debito pubblico in Italia (1861–1961)’, Seminario su Debito pubblico e formazione dei mercati finanziari fra età moderna e contemporanea, tenuto, a Cassino, il 15 e 16 ottobre 2004 = Riv. di Storia Finanziaria, 15, pp. 77110. www.delpt.unina.it/stof/indiceGoogle Scholar
Fornasari, M., ‘Un progetto bancario post-unitario: la Banca d'emissione per l'Alta Italia’, Studi Storici Luigi Simeoni, 55, pp. 243–73.Google Scholar
Fratianni, M. and Spinelli, F., A monetary history of Italy, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gagliardi, A., ‘Il ministero per gli Scambi e valute e la politica autarchica del fascismo’, Studi storici, 46, pp. 1033–71.Google Scholar
Garofalo, P., Exchange rate regimes and economic performance: the Italian experience, Rome: Banca d'Italia.Google Scholar
Magliani, S., Per la storia economica e sociale del territorio umbro: la prima Cassa di risparmio di Perugia dallo Stato pontificio allo Stato unitario, Rome: Edizioni dell'Ateneo.Google Scholar
Marongiu, G., La politica fiscale del fascismo, Lungro di Cosenza: Marco.Google Scholar
Martínez Oliva, J. C. and Schlitzer, G., Le battaglie della lira: moneta, finanza e relazioni internazionali dell'Italia dall'unità all'euro, Florence: Le Monnier.Google Scholar
Pagano, E., ‘Fisco e professioni durante il Regno d'Italia napoleonico’, Società e Storia, 2004, 27, pp. 531–57.Google Scholar
Pagano, E., ‘Le finanze comunali nel Regno d'Italia napoleonico. Il caso delle città lombarde’, Rassegna storica del Risorgimento, 92, pp. 507–38.Google Scholar
Patuelli, A., ‘Ricordi e considerazioni su Malagodi banchiere’, Giovanni Malagodi banchiere, 1927–1952, pp. 4756.Google Scholar
Pino, F., ‘Alla ricerca delle radici antiche di Banca Intesa’, in Canella, and Puccinelli, (eds.), Beneficenza a risparmio, pp. 89.Google Scholar
Pollard, J. F., Money and the rise of the modern papacy: financing the Vatican, 1850–1950, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Provvedi, R., ‘Le attività agricole, artigianali e professionali di Poggibonsi attraverso le analisi dei bilanci del Comune (1860–1880). I parte’, Miscellanea storica della Valdelsa, 111/1–3, p. 67131.Google Scholar
Rugafiori, P., ‘Gerolamo Gaslini: un imprenditore filantropo tra etica e politica’, Contemporanea, 8, pp. 447–84.Google Scholar
Sanseverino, T. S., ‘La vigilanza bancaria in Italia dal 1926 al 1960’, Riv. di storia finanziaria, 14/1, pp. 81146. www.delpt.unina.it/stof/indiceGoogle Scholar
Tuccimei, E., La ricerca economica a Via Nazionale: una storia degli ‘Studi’ da Canovai a Baffi (1894–1940), Rome: Banca d'Italia.Google Scholar
Volpi, A., Breve storia del mercato finanziario italiano: dal 1861 a oggi, Rome: Carocci.Google Scholar
Zanone, V., ‘Malagodi, dalla banca al servizio dello Stato’, Giovanni Malagodi banchiere, 1927–1952, pp. 5764.Google Scholar
Bazzocco, A., ‘1943–1947: à la recherche du précieux franc suisse: l'invasion des contrebandiers à la frontière suisse-italienne.’, Gavroche, 24/144, pp. 911.Google Scholar
De Lucia, M., Industrie, agricoltura e credito nello sviluppo economico della Svizzera, 1800–1940, Naples: Edizioni scientifiche italiane.Google Scholar
Gerlach, S., ‘Estimates of real economic activity in Switzerland, 1886–1930’, Empirical Economics, 30/3, pp. 763–83.Google Scholar
Mazbouri, M., L'émergence de la place financière suisse (1890–1913): itinéraire d'un grand banquier, Lausanne:Editions Antipodes.Google Scholar
Pictet 1805–2005. 200 years of history: one bank and the men who built it, Geneva: Pictet.Google Scholar
Schroeder, K. P., ‘“In diesem Kopfe geht immer etwas vor”. Die Heidelberger Jahre des Schweizer Rechtsgelehrten Johann Caspar Bluntschli (1808–1881)’, in Grupp, K. and Hufeld, U. (eds), Recht – Kultur – Finanzen. Festschrift für Reinhard Mußgnug zum 70. Geburtstag am 26. Oktober 2005, Heidelberg: Müller, pp. 377–98.Google Scholar
AA., VV., ‘Historia de las cajas de ahorros’, Papeles de economía española, 105–6, pp. 2335.Google Scholar
Bernal, M., Espejo, C. and Pinzón, P., ‘Accounting regulation, inertia and organisational self-perception: double-entry adoption in a Spanish Casa de Comercio (1829–1852)’, Accounting, Business and Financial History, 15/2, pp. 145–69.Google Scholar
Benaul Berenguer, J. M. and Sudria Triay, C., ‘Ahorro e industria. Burguesia industrial y politica inversora de la Caja de Ahorros de Sabadell, 1859–1913’, Papeles de economía española, 105–6, pp. 227–43.Google Scholar
Carnero, I., Crónica de una noble institución salmantina. Caja de Ahorros y Monte de Piedad de Salamanca, después llamada Caja de Salamanca y Soria o Caja Duero. Desde sus inicios hasta el 125 aniversario, Salamanca: Edifsa.Google Scholar
Comin-Comin, F. and Torres Villanueva, E., ‘La confederacion Espanola de cajas de ahorros y el desarrollo de la red de servicios financieros de las cajas en el siglo XX (1900–1976)’, Papeles de economía española, 105–6, pp. 4865.Google Scholar
Cuevas Casana, J., Hoyo Aparicio, A. and Martinez Soto, A. P., ‘La historia economica de las cajas de ahorros espanolas. Una perspectiva institucional y regional de ahorro, 1830–2004’, Papeles de economía española, 105–6, pp. 615.Google Scholar
Díaz Hernández, O., ‘Los hermanos Urquijo Ussía y la modernización española en el primer tercio del siglo XX’, International J. of Iberian Studies, 18–2, pp. 85101.Google Scholar
Díaz Morlán, P., ‘Capitalismo rentista y decadencia empresarial: la desaparicion de la casa Martinez Rivas (1913–1921)’, Rev. de Historia Industrial, 14/3, pp. 117–39.Google Scholar
Fernandez Clemente, E., ‘Las cajas de ahorros en la prensa economica (1923–1936). El Economista, el Financiero y la Revista Nacional de Economia’, Papeles de economía española, 105–6, pp. 6681.Google Scholar
Gallego Martínez, D., ‘La formacion de los precios del trigo en España (1820–1869): el mercado interior’, Historia Agraria, 36, pp. 263–85.Google Scholar
García-Iglesias Soto, M. C.Ventajas y riesgos del patrón oro para la economía española (1850–1913), Madrid: Banco de España.Google Scholar
Glendinning, N. and Medrano, J. M., Goya y el Banco Nacional de San Carlos, Madrid, Banco de España.Google Scholar
Grupo de Historia de los Precios en Andalucía, Estudio de los precios agrarios y de la formación del mercado regional en Andalucía en la segunda mitad del siglo XIX, Jaén: Universidad de Jaén.Google Scholar
Herranz-Loncán, A., ‘The Spanish infrastructure stock, 1844–1935’, Research in Economic History, 23, pp. 83126.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Maixe-Altes, J. C., ‘Cajas de ahorros y desarrollo regional. Aspectos diferenciales de los sistemas financieros gallego y asturiano’, Papeles de economía española, 105–6, pp. 254–73.Google Scholar
Manera, C., ‘Las cajas de ahorros y el crecimiento economico en Baleares, 1880–2000’, Papeles de economía española, 105–6, pp. 168–87.Google Scholar
Martín Aceña, P, and Pons, M. Á., ‘Sistema monetario y financiero’, in Carreras, A. and Tafunell, X. (eds.), Estadísticas históricas de España, Siglos XIX y XX, Bilbao, Fundación BBVA, vol. II, pp. 645706.Google Scholar
Martinez, M. T., ‘Las cajas de ahorros en la historia de Andalucia’, Papeles de economía española, 105–6, pp. 132–53.Google Scholar
Méndez, J. F. (ed.), 100 años CAI, 1905–2005, Zaragoza: Caja de Ahorros de la Inmaculada.Google Scholar
Planas, J. and Saguer, E., ‘Accounting records of large rural estates and the dynamics of agriculture in Catalonia, 1850–1950’, Accounting, Business and Financial History, 15/2, pp. 171–85.Google Scholar
Pons Pons, J., ‘Large American Corporations in the Spanish Life Insurance Market, 1880–1922’, J. of European Economic History, 34–2, pp. 467–81.Google Scholar
Prats Albentosa, M. A., ‘Innovacion y transformacion financiera: el papel de las cajas de ahorros en la region de Murcia’, Papeles de economía española, 105–6, pp. 295308.Google Scholar
Quintas Seoane, J. R., ‘Un breve recorrido por la historiografia reciente sobre la historia de las cajas de ahorros’, Papeles de economía española, 105–6, pp. 25.Google Scholar
Robledo Hernández, R., ‘Del diezmo al presupuesto: la financiación de la universidad española, 1800–1930’, Investigaciones de Historia Económica, 1, pp. 97130.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sabaté Sort, M., Gadea, M. D. and Serrano Sanz, J. M., ‘The Spanish peseta versus the pound sterling, the French franc and the US dollar, 1870–1935: a long floating experience’, Applied Financial Economics Letters, 1–2, pp. 95–9.Google Scholar
Zubero, L. G., ‘El creciente y superior protagonismo de las cajas de ahorros en el sistema financiero de Aragon durante el siglo XX’, Papeles de economía española, 105–6, pp. 154–67.Google Scholar
Aleksic, V., ‘The History of the Allgemeiner Jugoslawischer Bankverein AG in Belgrade in the context of Yugoslav Banking History after 1918’, in Lazaretou, S. (ed.), ‘The drachma, foreign creditors, and the international monetary system: tales of a currency during the 19th and the early 20th centuries’, Explorations in economic history, 42/2, pp. 202–36.Google Scholar
Bozic, T., ‘Krcke kreditne zadruge i gospodarski list “pucki prijatelj” u prvom desetljecu 20. stoljeca’ [Credit cooperatives on the island of Krk and the economic journal Pucki Prijatelj during the first decade of the 20th century], Casopis za Suvremenu Povijest, 37/1, pp. 129–54.Google Scholar
Jelic, D., ‘Die Privatbanken in Jugoslawien zwischen den Weltkriegen’, in Eigner, P. (ed.), Privatbankiers in Mitteleuropa zwischen den Weltkriegen, Stuttgart: Steiner.Google Scholar
Lory, B., ‘Un grand chantier communautaire en Macédoine: l'eglise Saint-Demetre de Bitola-Manastir (1830)’, Rev. des Mondes Musulmans et de la Méditerranée, 107, pp. 245–57.Google Scholar
Prodanovic, M., Dreimal Jugoslawien auf Banknoten, In Bartetzky, A. (ed.) Neue Staaten – neue Bilder? Visuelle Kultur im Dienst staatlicher Selbstdarstellung in Zentral- und Osteuropa seit 1918, Cologne: Böhlau, pp. 291300.Google Scholar
Rathkolb, O. (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt. 150 Jahre österreichische Bankengeschichte im Zentrum Europ, Vienna: Zsolnay, pp. 226–38Google Scholar
Albert, S. D., ‘“One gypsy, one king”: the Austro-Hungarian bank competition’, Centropa, 5/2, pp. 92103.Google Scholar
Baltzarek, F., ‘Finanzrevolutionen, Industrialisierung und Credit-Mobilier-Banken in der Habsburgermonarchie’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 1236.Google Scholar
Bazantová, I., Centrální bankovnictví v ceské historii po soucasnost: institucionální pohled, Prague: Národohospodárský ústav Josefa Hlávky.Google Scholar
Berend, I. T., ‘Banking and the Hungarian Economy in the 20th Century’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 212–25.Google Scholar
Bohr, P., Österreichs genialster Geldfälscher und seine Zeit, Regensburg, Roderer.Google Scholar
Brandt, H. H., ‘Die Wiener Rothschilds seit 1820 und die Gründung der Credit-Anstalt 1855’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 3755.Google Scholar
Ciara, S., ‘Finansowe klopoty Galicyjskich uczonych na przelomie XIX i XX w’ [The financial problems of Galician men of science at the turn of the 19th century], Przeglad Historyczny, 96/4, pp. 573–86.Google Scholar
Denzel, M. A., Die Bozner Messen und ihr Zahlungsverkehr (1633–1850), Bozen: Athesia Verlagsanstalt.Google Scholar
Eigner, P., ‘Ein Schritt nach vorne, zwei Schritte zurück – die wechselhafte Geschichte des Finanzplatzes Wien im 20. Jh.’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 482501.Google Scholar
Eigner, P. (ed.), Privatbankiers in Mitteleuropa zwischen den Weltkriegen, Stuttgart: Steiner.Google Scholar
Feldman, G. D., ‘German banks and National Socialist Efforts to supply capital and support industrialization in newly annexed territories: the Austrian model’, Zeitschrift für Unternehmensgeschichte, 50/1, pp. 516.Google Scholar
Geschwandtner, M. and Auguste, C. L., ‘Die tragische Geschichte der bisher einzigen Bankgründerin Österreich’, Mitteilungen der Gesellschaft für Salzburger Landeskunde, 145, pp. 227–64.Google Scholar
Hampel, E., ‘Die Bank Austria Creditanstalt im erweiterten Europa – von den historischen Wurzeln bis heute’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 502–15.Google Scholar
Hallon, L., ‘Úloha Milana Hodzu v komercnom bankovníctve Slovenska v rokoch 1918–1938’ [Milan Hodza and his role in the Slovak commercial banking sector 1918–38], Historický Casopis, 53/1, pp. 5770.Google Scholar
Kämpken, N. and Ladenburger, M., ‘Alle Noten bringen mich nicht aus den Nöthen!!’ Beethoven und das Geld. Begleitbuch zu einer Ausstellung des Beethoven-Hauses in Zusammenarbeit mit dem Archiv der Gesellschaft der Musikfreunde in Wien und der Österreichischen Nationalbank', Bonn: Verlag Beethoven-Haus.Google Scholar
Klausinger, H., ‘Misguided monetary messages: the Austrian case,1931–34’, European J. of the History of Economic Thought, 12/1, pp. 2545.Google Scholar
Kövér, G., ‘Osztrák credit – Magyar hitel: az Osztrák Creditanstalt és a Magyar általános Hitelbank kartellje (1871–1900)’ [Austrian credit – Hungarian loan: the Austrian Creditanstalt and the cartel of the Hungarian General Credit Bank, 1871–1900], Századok, 139/5, pp. 1261–83.Google Scholar
Köhler, I., ‘Zwischen wirtschaftlicher Marginalisierung und politischer Verdrängung: Die Privatbanken in Deutschland 1929–1935’, in Eigner, (ed.), Privatbankiers in Mitteleuropa.Google Scholar
Kučera, J., ‘Der zögerliche Expansionist. Die Commerzbank in den böhmischen Ländern 1938–1945’, Bankhistorisches Archiv, 31/1, pp. 3356.Google Scholar
Hallon, L., ‘Uloha Milana Hodzu v komercnom bankovnictve Slovenska v rokoch 1918–1938’ [Milan Hodza and his role in the Slovak commercial banking sector from 1918 until 1938], Historicky casopis, 53/1, pp. 5770.Google Scholar
Hájek, J. P. R., ‘180 let ceského sporitelnictví: Ceská sporitelna 1825–2005’ [180 years of the Czech Savings System - 180 Jahre des Tschechischen Sparkassenwesens], Prague: Vysoká skola financní a správní/Ceská sporitelna.Google Scholar
Kubik, F., ‘Creditanstalt-Bankverein: Von der führenden Bank des Landes zur internationalen monetären Visitenkarte Österreichs’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 415–36.Google Scholar
Lussy, H. and López Rodrigo, P., Finanzbeziehungen Liechtensteins zur Zeit des Nationalsozialismus: Studie im Auftrag der Unabhängigen Historikerkommission Liechtenstein Zweiter Weltkrieg, Vaduz: Historischer Verein für das Fürstentum Liechtenstein.Google Scholar
Matis, H., ‘Österreichs Wirtschaft in der Zwischenkriegszeit: Desintegration, Neustrukturierung und Stagnation’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 124–47.Google Scholar
Matis, H., Die Schwarzenberg-Bank. Kapitalbildung und Industriefinanzierung in den habsburgischen Erblanden 1787–1830, Vienna: Verlag des Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften.Google Scholar
Mattl, S., ‘Die Finanzdiktatur’, in Tálos, E. (ed.), Austrofaschismus. Politik - Ökonomie – Kultur 1933–1938, Vienna: Lit, 5th edition, pp. 202–21.Google Scholar
Melichar, M., ‘Bankiers in der Krise: Der österreichische Privatbankensektor 1928–1938’, in Eigner, (ed.), Privatbankiers in Mitteleuropa.Google Scholar
Michel, B., ‘Von der k.k. privilegierten Österreichischen Länderbank zur Banque des Pays de l'Europe Centrale 1880–1938’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 7390.Google Scholar
Natmeßnig, C., ‘Wege zur Währungssanierung und Beginn der Bankenkonzentration auf dem Wiener Platz’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 162–79.Google Scholar
Novotny, J. and Sousa, J., ‘Die Struktur der Privatbankhäuser in den Böhmischen Ländern – 1918–1938’, in Eigner, (ed.), Privatbankiers in Mitteleuropa.Google Scholar
Rapp, C. K. and Rapp-Wimberger, N., Arbeite, sammle, vermehre. Von der Ersten Oesterreichischen Spar-Casse zur Erste Bank, Vienna: Brandstätter.Google Scholar
Rathkolb, O. (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt. 150 Jahre österreichische Bankengeschichte im Zentrum Europa, Vienna: Zsolnay.Google Scholar
Rumpier, H., ‘Die Gründung der Credit-Anstalt im Kontext der Neupositionierung von Österreichs Wirtschafts- und Außenhandelspolitik durch Karl Ludwig Freiherrn von Bruck’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 5672.Google Scholar
Seidel, H., ‘Von der Schalteröffnung bis zum Staatsvertrag. Die Creditanstalt-Bankverein im ersten Nachkriegsjahrzehnt’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 335–49.Google Scholar
Stiefel, D., ‘Die Sanierung und Konsolidierung der österreichischen Banken 1931–1934’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 196211.Google Scholar
Teichova, A., ‘Banking and industry in Central-East Europe in the first decades of the 20th century’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 148–61.Google Scholar
Venus, T., ‘Freiheit und Vereinnahmung. Über das schwierige Verhältnis zwischen Banken und Journalistik (1855–1938)’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 268–86.Google Scholar
Weber, F., ‘Große Hoffnungen und k(l)eine Erfolge. Zur Vorgeschichte der österreichischen Finanzkrise von 1931’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 180–95.Google Scholar
Weigt, A., Der deutsche Kapitalmarkt vor dem Ersten Weltkrieg. Gründerboom, Gründerkrise und Effizienz des deutschen Aktienmarktes bis 1914, Frankfurt/M: Knapp.Google Scholar
Wixforth, H., ‘Das polnische Bankwesen und die Privatbankiers in der Zwischenkriegszeit’, in Eigner, (ed.), Privatbankiers in MitteleuropaGoogle Scholar
Bazulin, I. U. V., Dvoistvennaia priroda deneg: russkaia ekonomicheskaia mysl' na rubezhe XIX-XX vekov: monografiia, St Petersburg: Russkaia simfoniia.Google Scholar
Beljaev, S. G., ‘Petr L. Bark - Bankier und russischer Finanzminister. Stationen seiner Karriere’, in Dahlmann, D., Heller, K. and Petrov, J. A. (eds.), Eisenbahnen und Motoren – Zucker und Schokolade. Deutsche im russischen Wirtschaftsleben vom 18. bis zum frühen 20. Jh., Berlin: Duncker u. Humblot, pp. 143–66.Google Scholar
Chernik, I. D., ‘Regulirovaniie dokhodov gorodskikh biudzhetov v Rossii v XIX stoletii’ [Regulating income of municipal budgets in Russia in the 19th century], Finansy, 6, pp. 75–6.Google Scholar
Frolov, S. A. and Esikov, S. A., Krest'ianskii pozemel'nyi bank v Tambovskoi gubernii (1884–1917 gg.), Tambov: Izd-vo TGTU.Google Scholar
Golovko, A. N., Finansova administratsiia Rosiis'koï imperiï v Ukraïni (kinets' XVIII–pochatok XX st.): istoryko-pravove doslidzhennia, Kharkiv: SIM.Google Scholar
Gruzitï, I. U. L., Banki Belarusi, 70-e gody XIX-nachalo XX veka, Minsk: Ekoperspektiva.Google Scholar
McCaffray, S. P., ‘Capital, industriousness, and private banks in the economic imagination of a nineteenth-century statesman’, in McCaffray, S. P. and Melancon, M. (eds.), Russia in the European context, 1789–1914: a member of the family, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 3348.Google Scholar
Owen, T. C., Dilemmas of Russian capitalism: Fedor Chizhov and corporate enterprise in the railroad age, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
P'iatacheko, H. O. and Kukharets', L. V., Stanovlennia ta rozvytok finansiv Ukraïny, 1917–2003, Kyïv: Naukovo-doslidnyi finansovyi instytut pry Ministerstvi finansiv Ukraïny.Google Scholar
Polikarpov, V. V., ‘Ob otnoshenii tsarskogo pravitel'stva k evreiskomu kapitalu v 1916 godu’ [On the relationship of the tsarist government toward Jewish capital in 1916], Voprosy Istorii, 2, pp. 110–15.Google Scholar
Valge, J., ‘Es ist nicht alles Gold, was glänzt. Das Gold der Bolschewiki in Estland 1920–1922 und die Folgen’, in Mertelsmann, O. (ed.), Estland und Russland. Aspekte der Beziehungen beider Länder, Hamburg: Kovac, pp. 157–92.Google Scholar
Zaitsev, M. V., ‘Finansovoe polozhenie saratovskogo gorodskogo samoupravleniia v 1892–1913 gg.’ [Financial position of Saratov municipal self-management in 1892–1913], Klio, 2/29, pp. 162–71.Google Scholar
Zalogov, N. A., ‘Finansovye osnovy gorodskogo samoupravleniia v Rossii (1785–1870 gg.)’ [The financial basis of urban self-government in Russia, 1785–1870], Finansy, 2, pp. 77–8.Google Scholar
Bähr, J. and Gravey, M., ‘Les grandes banques allemandes et leurs activités dans l'Europe occidentale occupée, 1940–1944’, Histoire, Economie et Société, 24/4, pp. 495511.Google Scholar
Banken, R. and Gravey, M., ‘Les activités métaux précieux de la Degussa dans l'Europe occupée, 1939–1945’, Histoire, Economie et Société, 24/4, pp. 473–93.Google Scholar
Barendregt, J., ‘Zwischen London und Deutschland: Das Finanzzentrum Amsterdam im 20. Jh.’, in Merki, (ed.), Europas Finanzzentren Jh., pp. 97123.Google Scholar
Eichengreen, B., ‘The great detour: European money and banking in the second half of the 20th century’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 384400.Google Scholar
Landesmann, M. A., ‘Globalisation today and 100 years ago: European banks and the transformation of central and eastern Europe’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 456–81.Google Scholar
Mathis, F., ‘Vom Zweiten Weltkrieg zum Wirtschaftswunder. Unterbrechung und Fortsetzung der Industrialisierung in Europa’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 288316.Google Scholar
Meier, R. T., ‘Vom Boten zum Bit: Zur Geschichte der Technologien an den Wertpapierbörsen’, in Merki, (ed.), Europas Finanzzentren, pp. 269–93.Google Scholar
Merki, C. M. (ed.), Europas Finanzzentren. Geschichte und Bedeutung im 20. Jh., Frankfurt/M: Campus Verlag.Google Scholar
Paulet, E., European banking: historical roots and modern challenges, Paris: Hermès science/Lavoisier.Google Scholar
Posner, E., ‘Sources of institutional change: the supranational origins of Europe's new stock markets’, World Politics, 58/1, pp. 140.Google Scholar
Jensen-Eriksen, N., ‘Just rhetoric? The United Kingdom and the question of Western economic aid to Finland, 1950–1962’, in Eloranta, J. and Ojala, J. (eds.), East-West Trade and the Cold War, Jyväskylä: University of Jyväskylä, pp. 93111.Google Scholar
Adam, C., Cobham, D. and Girardin, E., ‘Monetary frameworks and institutional constraints: UK monetary policy reaction functions, 1985–2003’, Oxford Bulletin of Economics and Statistics, 67/4, pp. 497516.Google Scholar
Baker, M. and Collins, M., ‘London as an international banking centre, 1958–1980’, in Bussière, and Cassis, (eds.), London and Paris as international financial centres in the twentieth century, Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 247–64.Google Scholar
Budd, A., Black Wednesday: a re-examination of Britain's experience in the exchange rate mechanism, London: Institute of Economic Affairs.Google Scholar
Bull, H. W., To their credit: a history of the Association of Banking Teachers, Birmingham: Tudor Rose.Google Scholar
Bussière, E. and Cassis, Y. (eds.), London and Paris as international financial centres in the twentieth century, Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Consoli, D., ‘The dynamics of technological change in UK retail banking services: an evolutionary perspective’, Research Policy, 34/4, pp. 461–80.Google Scholar
Cutler, T., ‘“Managerialism avant la lettre?” The debate on accounting in the NHS hospitals in the 1950s’, in Berridge, V. and Loughlin, K. (eds.), Medicine, the market and the mass media: producing health in the Twentieth century, New York: Routledge, pp. 125–45.Google Scholar
Finlay, S., Consumer credit fundamentals, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.Google Scholar
Gorsky, M., Mohan, J. and Willis, T., ‘From hospital contributory schemes to health cash plans: the mutual ideal in British health care after 1948’, J. of Social Policy, 34/3, pp. 447–67.Google Scholar
Gorsky, M., Mohan, J. and Willis, T., ‘Hospital contributory schemes and the NHS debates 1937–1946: the rejection of social insurance in the British welfare state?’, 20th Century British History, 16/2, pp. 170–92.Google Scholar
Hickson, K., The IMF crisis of 1976 and British politics, New York: I. B. Tauris.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jack, L., ‘Stocks of knowledge, simplification and unintended consequences: the persistence of post-war accounting practices in UK agriculture’, Management Accounting Research, 16/1, pp. 5979.Google Scholar
King, M. R., ‘Epistemic communities and the diffusion of ideas: central bank reform in the United Kingdom’, West European Politics, 28/1, pp. 94123.Google Scholar
Matthews, D., ‘London and county securities: a case study in audit and regulatory failure’, Accounting Auditing & Accountability J., 18/4, pp. 518–36.Google Scholar
Michie, R. C., ‘Der Aufstieg der “City of London” als Finanzplatz: vom Inlandsgeschäft zum “Offshore”-Zentrum?’, in Merki, (ed.), Europas Finanzzentren, pp. 2351.Google Scholar
Mitchell, F. and Pong, C., ‘Accounting for a disappearance: a contribution to the history of the value added statement in the UK’, Accounting Historians J., 32/2, pp. 173–99.Google Scholar
Murphy, C. J., ‘SOE's foreign currency transactions’, Intelligence and National Security, 20/1, pp. 191208.Google Scholar
Roberts, R., ‘London as an international financial centre, 1980–2000: global powerhouse or Wimbledon EC2?’, in Bussière, and Cassis, (eds.), London and Paris, pp. 287312.Google Scholar
Robertson, F., ‘The aesthetics of authenticity. Printed Banknotes as industrial currency’, Technology and Culture, 46/1, pp. 3150.Google Scholar
Schenk, C., ‘Crisis and opportunity: the policy environment of international banking in the city of London, 1958–1980’, in Bussière, and Cassis, (eds.), London and Paris, pp. 207–28.Google Scholar
Soroka, S. N. and Wlezien, C., ‘Opinion-policy dynamics: public preferences and public expenditure in the United Kingdom’, British J. of Political Science, 47/4, pp. 569–93.Google Scholar
Stanton, J., ‘Intensive care: Measurement and audit in an expensive growth area of medicine’, in Berridge, V. (ed.), Making health policy: Networks in research and policy after 1945, Amsterdam: Rodopi, 243–73.Google Scholar
Treadgold, M., ‘Colonial currency boards: the seigniorage issue’, History of Economics Rev., 41, pp. 126–41.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Abe de Jong, A .R. and Hogfeldt, P., ‘Financing and control in the Netherlands: a historical perspective, in Morck, R. (ed.), A history of corporate governance around the world: family business groups to professional managers. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, pp. 467516.Google Scholar
Arnoldus, D. and Dankers, J., ‘Management consultancies in the Dutch banking sector, 1960s and 1970s’, Business History, 47/4, pp. 553–68.Google Scholar
Van Tielhof, M., ‘The predecessors of ABN AMRO and the expropriation of Jewish assets in the Netherlands’, Financial History Rev., 12/1, pp. 87108.Google Scholar
‘La politique économique et financière du général de Gaulle 1958–1969’, Cahiers de la Fondation Charles de Gaulle, 15, pp. 7158.Google Scholar
Aglan, A., ‘François Bloch-Lainé, un fonctionnaire résistant’, in Margairaz, (ed.), François Bloch-Lainé, pp. 118.Google Scholar
Andrieu, C., ‘François Bloch-Lainé, acteur et penseur critique du mouvement’, in Margairaz, (ed.), François Bloch-Lainé, pp. 1934.Google Scholar
Auger, V. (ed.), ‘Table ronde: Des années soixante à aujourd'hui, la marche vers l'euro’, D'or et d'argent, pp. 8798.Google Scholar
Barjot, D. and Berneron-Couvenhes, M-F. (eds.), ‘Concessions et optimisation des investissements publics’, Entreprises et histoire, 38, pp. 5138.Google Scholar
Bensadon, D., ‘La frontière comptable de l'entité groupe: évolution du concept de périmètre de consolidation des comptes du milieu des années 1960 a la loi du 3 janvier 1985’, Entreprises et Histoire, 39, pp. 822.Google Scholar
Berthereau, D., ‘Le contrôle d'une entreprise concessionnaire par la Commission de vérification des comptes des entreprises publiques: le cas du tunnel du Mont-Blanc, 1965–1971’, in Barjot, and Berneron-Couvenhes, (eds.), ‘Concessions et optimisation des investissements publics’, Entreprises et histoire, 38, pp. 8495.Google Scholar
Blondeau, C., ‘Banque, assurance, bancassurance, assurfinance, lignes de partages: une specificité française?’, Entreprises et histoire, 39, pp. 91114.Google Scholar
Bussière, E., ‘French banks and the Eurobonds issue market during the 1960s’, in Bussière, and Cassis, (eds.), London and Paris, pp. 265–86.Google Scholar
Bussière, E. (ed.), Michel Debré, un réformateur aux Finances 1966–1968. Journée d'études tenue à Bercy le 8 janvier 2004, Paris: Comité pour l'histoire économique et financière de la France.Google Scholar
Casanova, J-C., ‘Jean Monnet, un visionnaire pragmatique: “ouverture, échange, communication?”’, in Le Roy Ladurie, E., and Bourgeois, G. (eds.), Ouverture, société, pouvoir: de l'Edit de Nantes à la chute du communisme, Paris: Fayard, pp. 151–71.Google Scholar
Cortesse, P., ‘La politique budgétaire de Michel Debré’, in Bussière, (ed.), Michel Debré, pp. 2536.Google Scholar
Descamps, F., ‘Michel Debré et la réforme du ministère des Finances: continuités et innovations 1938–1968’, in Bussière, (ed.), Michel Debré, pp. 145–82.Google Scholar
Descamps, F., ‘François Bloch-Lainé et la réforme de l'Etat: de l'action au magistère moral 1946–1996’, in Margairaz, (ed.), François Bloch-Lainé, pp. 157232.Google Scholar
Dupont-Fauville, A., ‘Michel Debré ministre de l'Economie et des Finances’, in Bussière, (ed.), Michel Debré, pp. 512.Google Scholar
Feiertag, O., ‘The international opening-up of the Paris Bourse: overdraft-economy curbs and market dynamics’, in Bussière, and Cassis, (eds.), London and Paris, pp. 229–46.Google Scholar
Fridenson, P. and Sardais, C., ‘L'Etat actionnaire, banquier et consultant: François Bloch-Lainé et le double problème de financement de la Régie Renault de 1947 à 1952’, in Margairaz, (ed.), François Bloch-Lainé, pp. 5172.Google Scholar
Godefroy, T. and Lacoumes, P., ‘Justice et argent sale. De la non-ingérence à l'auto-contrôle, l’évolution des responsabilités du banquier', in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 211–23.Google Scholar
Karfakis, C., Sidiropoulos, M., and Trabelsi, J., ‘Has the ‘franc fort’ exchange rate policy affected the inflationary dynamics? Theory and new evidence', International Economic J., 19/3, pp. 379–96.Google Scholar
Kocher-Marboeuf, E., ‘Les combats de Michel Debré pour le rayonnement économique et financier de la France dans le monde’, in Bussière, (ed.), Michel Debré, pp. 127–46.Google Scholar
Lambert, C., Once a dealer. 50 years of ACI, The Financial Markets Association, Paris: P&L Services Ltd.Google Scholar
Levy, J., ‘La CGT au Crédit du Nord, 1949–1974’, in Bressol, E., Dreyfus, M. and Hedde, J. (eds.), La CGT dans les années 1950: Actes du colloque tenu à Montreuil au siège de la CGT les 20 et 21 novembre 2003, Rennes: Presses universitaires de Rennes, pp. 279–86.Google Scholar
Margairaz, M. (ed.), François Bloch-Lainé, fonctionnaire, financier, citoyen. Journée d'études tenue à Bercy le 25 février 2003, Paris: Comité pour l'histoire économique et financière de la France.Google Scholar
Margairaz, M., ‘Les deux septennats à la tête de la Caisse des dépôts et consignations (1953–1967): François Bloch-Lainé, acteur principal d'une mutation réussie?’, in Margairaz, (ed.), François Bloch-Lainé, pp. 103–26.Google Scholar
de Montricher, N., and Lascoumes, P., ‘Problèmes de construction juridique et judiciaire du profit légitime: le cas du délit d'initié’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 117–29.Google Scholar
Nougaret, R. and Plessis, A., ‘Réformer l'entreprise: François Bloch-Lainé au Crédit lyonnais (1967–1974)’, in Margairaz, (ed.), François Bloch-Lainé, pp. 127–56.Google Scholar
Quenouëlle-Corre, L., ‘The state, banks and financing of investments in France from World War II to the 1970s’, Financial History Rev., 12/1, pp. 6386.Google Scholar
Quenouëlle-Corre, L., ‘Le directeur du Trésor et le financement des entreprises (1947–1952)’, in Margairaz, (ed.), François Bloch-Lainé, pp. 73102.Google Scholar
Quenouëlle-Corre, L., ‘Les réformes financières et bancaires de 1966–1967’, in Bussière, (ed.), Michel Debré, pp. 85118.Google Scholar
Rouvillois, P., ‘La politique fiscale de Michel Debré, ministre de l'Economie et des Finances, de janvier 1966 à mai 1968’, in Bussière, (ed.), Michel Debré, pp. 6778.Google Scholar
Samuel, P., ‘Regards sur Michel Debré’, in Bussière, (ed.), Michel Debré, pp. 119–26.Google Scholar
Straus, A., ‘The future of the Paris market as an international financial centre from the point of view of European integration’, in Bussière, and Cassis, (eds.), London and Paris, pp. 313–22.Google Scholar
Straus, A., ‘Auf, Ab, Auf: Der Finanzplatz Paris im 20. Jh’, in Merki, (ed.), Europas Finanzzentren. Geschichte und Bedeutung im 20. Jh., Frankfurt/M: Campus Verlag, pp. 8396.Google Scholar
Tertrais, H., ‘Le rétablissement de la souveraineté financière de la France en Indochine’, in Margairaz, (ed.), François Bloch-Lainé, pp. 3550.Google Scholar
Touchelay, B., ‘Les professionnels de la comptabilité vus par les administrations fiscales françaises des années 1920 à la fin des années 1960: experts, faussaires ou charlatans?’, Entreprises et histoire, 39, pp. 5976.Google Scholar
Tristram, F., Une fiscalité pour la croissance: la direction générale des impôts et la politique fiscale en France de 1948 à la fin des années 1960, Paris, Comité pour l'Histoire économique et financière de la France, www.minefi.gouv.fr/notes_bleues/nbb/nbb298/fisca1.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tristram, F., ‘Contexte politique et conjoncture économique lors du passage de Michel debré, au ministère de l’Économie et des Finances, janvier 1966-mai 1968', in Bussière, (ed.), Michel Debré, pp. 1324.Google Scholar
Die Deutsche Bank in Frankfurt am Main, Munich: Piper.Google Scholar
Adams, K. H., Parteienfinanzierung in Deutschland. Entwicklung der Einnahmestrukturen politischer Parteien oder eine Sittengeschichte über Parteien, Geld und Macht, Marburg: Tectum Verl.Google Scholar
Clark, G. L. and Wójcik, D., ‘Financial valuation of the German model: the negative relationship between ownership concentration and stock market returns, 1997–2001’, Economic Geography, 81/1, pp. 1129.Google Scholar
Corneo, G., ‘The rise and likely fall of the German income tax, 1958–2005’, CESifo Economic Studies, 51/1, pp. 159–86.Google Scholar
Dohna, J., Die ‘Jüdischen Konten’ der Fürstlich Castell'schen Credit-Cassen und des Bankhauses Karl Meyer KG, Neustadt/Aisch: Kommissionsverlag Degener.Google Scholar
Fiedler, M., ‘Zur Rolle des Vertrauens in der ‘Deutschland AG’: Verflechtungen zwischen Finanz- und Nichtfinanzunternehmen im 20. Jh.', Jahrbuch für Wirtschaftsgeschichte, 1, pp. 93106.Google Scholar
Fitzenberger, B. and Kohn, K., ‘Gleicher Lohn fur gleiche Arbeit? Zum Zusammenhang zwischen Gewerkschaftsmitgliedschaft und Lohnstruktur in Westdeutschland 1985–1997’, Zeitschrift f. Arbeitsmarktforschung, 38/2–3, pp. 125–46.Google Scholar
Gebauer, H. J., Als die Calwer Handelsherren Geld verliehen. Geschichte der Calwer Banken, Calw: Stadtarchiv.Google Scholar
Gersch, T., Klinke, S. and Weschke, B., ‘Diawerbung der Sparkassen’, Archiv und Wirtschaft, 38/1, pp. 2637.Google Scholar
Hammerschmidt, P., Wohlfahrtsverbände in der Nachkriegszeit. Reorganisation und Finanzierung der Spitzenverbände der freien Wohlfahrtspflege 1945–1961, Weinheim: Juventa Verl.Google Scholar
Heske, G., ‘Die gesamtwirtschaftliche Entwicklung in Ostdeutschland 1970 bis 2000 – neue Ergebnisse einer volkswirtschaftlichen Gesamtrechnung’, Historical Social Research, 30/2, pp. 238–28.Google Scholar
Hilger, S., ‘Zur Genese des “German model”. Die Bedeutung des Ordoliberalismus für die Ausgestaltung der bundesdeutschen Wettbewerbsordnung nach dem Zweiten Weltkrieg’, in Windolf, A. (ed.), Finanzmarkt-Kapitalismus. Analysen zum Wandel von Produktionsregimen, Wiesbaden: VS, Verlag f. Sozialwissenschaft, pp. 222–41.Google Scholar
Jurk, G., ‘Als Berater der Bank von Mosambik’, in Voß, M. (ed.), Wir haben Spuren hinterlassen! Die DDR in Mosambik. Erlebnisse, Erfahrungen und Erkenntnisse aus drei Jahrzehnten, Münster: Lit, pp. 328–87.Google Scholar
Löffler, B., ‘Währungsrecht, Bundesbank und deutsche “Stabilitätskultur” nach 1945. Überlegungen zu mentalitätsgeschichtlichen Dimensionen normativ-institutioneller Regelungen’, in Seifert, M. and Helm, W. (eds.), Recht und Religion im Alltagsleben. Perspektiven der Kulturforschung. Festschrift für Walter Hartinger zum 65. Geburtstag, Passau: Klinger, pp. 6182.Google Scholar
Ochsen, C. and Welsch, H., ‘Technology, trade, and income distribution in West Germany: a factor-share analysis, 1976–1994’, J. of Applied Economics, 8/2, pp. 321345.Google Scholar
Plumpe, W., ‘Das Ende des deutschen Kapitalismus’, West End, 2/2, pp. 123.Google Scholar
Robert, C. and Valentin, J-M., Le commerce de l'esprit: économie et culture en Allemagne aujourd'hui, Paris: Presses de l'Université de Paris-Sorbonne.Google Scholar
Roesler, J., ‘Die Wirtschafts- und Finanzbeziehungen der DDR zum Westen in den 70er und 80er Jahren’, in Timmermann, H. (ed.), Die DDR in Europa – zwischen Isolation und Öffnung, Münster: Lit, pp. 134–52.Google Scholar
Schlegelmilch, C., ‘“Und da kann man nicht plotzlich volkseigen umdenken.” Wirtschaften zwischen Gewinnorientierung und Verstaatlichung. Firmengeschichte eines Mittelstandlers in der DDR’, Historical Social Research, 30/2, pp. 96129.Google Scholar
Tilly, R. H., ‘Trust and mistrust: banks, giant debtors, and enterprise crises in Germany, 1960–2002’, Jahrbuch für Wirtschaftsgeschichte, 1, pp. 107–38.Google Scholar
Ullrich, A.Finanzplatz Berlin. Entstehung und Entwicklung. Eine theoriengeleitete historisch-empirische Analyse, Sternenfels: Verlag Wissenschaft und Praxis.Google Scholar
Waesche, N., ‘“Rational exuberance”. Wirtschaftsgeschichtliche Kommentare zu Finanzeuphorie und Gründeroptimismus während der New Economy’, Jahrbuch für Wirtschaftsgeschichte, 1, pp. 165–80.Google Scholar
Weidner, M., ‘Die Beschäftigung von Frauen in der Bankwirtschaft am Beispiel der Bayerischen Hypotheken- und Wechsel-Bank AG von 1835 bis 1985 mit einem Ausblick auf die Bayerische Vereinsbank’, Bankhistorisches Archiv, 31/2, pp. 107–33.Google Scholar
Storie di Resistenza: il contributo delle lavoratrici e dei lavoratori del settore creditizio e finanziario, Rome: Fondazione Giuseppe Di Vittorio/Ediesse.Google Scholar
A'Hearn, B., ‘Finance-led divergence in the regions of Italy’, Financial History Rev., 12/1, pp. 741.Google Scholar
Antonelli, F., ‘Il denaro dello straniero’, Sociologia, 39/2, pp. 91–6.Google Scholar
Belli, F. and Mazzini, F. (eds.), I primi dieci anni della Fondazione Monte dei Paschi di Siena, Ospedaletto: Pacini.Google Scholar
Belli, F. and Mazzini, F., ‘Le fondazioni di origine bancaria: il quadro generale’, in Belli, and Mazzini, (eds.), I primi dieci, pp. 984.Google Scholar
Boccia, E., ‘Freno o acceleratore. Sul mercato finanziario italiano negli anni “40 e”’, Riv. di Storia Finanziaria, 15, pp. 3348. www.delpt.unina.it/stof/indiceGoogle Scholar
Borelli, V., Banca padrona, Milan: Rizzoli.Google Scholar
Botarelli, S., ‘Le scelte di politica tributaria negli anni delle riforme (1948–1971)’, Riv. di diritto finanziario e scienza delle finanze, 64/1, pp. 5486.Google Scholar
Capece, S., ‘Il non profit. L'interpretazione del fenomeno: spunti di riflessione sul rapporto tra le fondazioni di origine bancaria e il non profit italiano’, in Belli, and Mazzini, (eds.), I primi dieci, pp. 213–32.Google Scholar
Chiapparono, F., ‘Spunti e tracce di ricerca sulla storia della banca nelle Marche e nell’ Umbria del secondo dopoguerra', Proposte e ricerche, 28/55, p. 132–55.Google Scholar
Carboni, M., Muzzarelli, M. G. and Zamagni, V., Sacri recinti del credito. Sedi e storie dei Monti di Pietà in Emilia-Romagna, Venice: Marsiglio.Google Scholar
Cibej, N., ‘Poslovanje denarnih zavodov v coni B svobodnega trzaskega ozemlja’ [The functioning of monetary institutions in zone B of the free territory of Triest], Acta Histriae, 13/2, pp. 423–46.Google Scholar
De Luca, G. and Pizzorni, G., Storie Incrociate. Banca, imprese, territorio, Legnano: Banca di Legnano.Google Scholar
Dimitri, N. and Sani, L., ‘L'impatto economico dell'attività erogativi della Fondazione MPS: un'analisi aggregata’, in Belli, and Mazzini, (eds.), I primi dieci, pp. 177–88.Google Scholar
Di Pietra, R., Cocci, M., Lopane, T. and Ruggieri, A., ‘Le dimensioni economico-aziendali della Fondazione MPS. I primi dieci anni di una solida storia’, in Belli, and Mazzini, (eds.), I primi dieci, pp. 85150.Google Scholar
Felice, E., ‘Il reddito delle regioni italiane nel 1938 e nel 1951. una stima basata sul costo del lavoro’, Riv. di Storia Economica, 21/1, pp. 330.Google Scholar
Finzi, D., Un paese e la sua banca: storia della Cassa rurale di Anghiari, Città di Castello: Petruzzi.Google Scholar
Gabbi, G., ‘La gestione finanziaria del portafoglio di proprietà della Fondazione MPS’, in Belli, and Mazzini, (eds.), I primi dieci, pp. 151–76.Google Scholar
Kuder, M., ‘Portare i soldi in Svizzera: contrabbando di capitali ed evasione fiscale nell'Italia del boom’, Contemporanea, 2004, 7, pp. 609–21.Google Scholar
Marinello, A., ‘Il regime tributario applicabile alle fondazioni bancarie: profili evolutivi e rilievi critici’, in Belli, and Mazzini, (eds.), I primi dieci, pp. 189212.Google Scholar
Maccaglia, F., ‘L'espace économique mafieux au tournant du siècle: entre mutations structurelles et dynamiques conjoncturelles’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 107–16.Google Scholar
Mazzoni, M., ‘La deriva del capitalismo finanziario italiano: dalla cronaca giornalistica alla ricostruzione storica’, Passato e Presente, 2004, 22/63, pp. 124–39.Google Scholar
Montini, M., ‘Le fondazioni di origine bancaria nel quadro giuridico europeo’, in Belli, and Mazzini, (eds.), I primi dieci, pp. 233–48.Google Scholar
Oddo, G. and Pons, G., L'intrigo: banche e risparmiatori nell'era Fazio, Milan: Feltrinelli.Google Scholar
Rinaldi, A. and Vasta, M., ‘The structure of Italian capitalism, 1952–1972: new evidence using the interlocking directorates technique’, Financial History Rev., 12/1, pp. 173–98.Google Scholar
Piluso, G., Mediobanca: tra regole e mercato, Milan: Egea.Google Scholar
Romani, M. A., La banca dei milanesi: storia della Banca popolare di Milano, Rome: Laterza.Google Scholar
Spadavecchia, A., ‘State subsidies and the sources of company finance in Italian industrial districts, 1951–1991’, Enterprise and Society, 6/4, pp. 571–80.Google Scholar
Spadavecchia, A., ‘Financing industrial districts in Italy, 1971–91: a private venture?’, Business History, 47/4, pp. 569–93.Google Scholar
Tedesco, L., ‘Einaudi, la Banca d'Italia e la stretta creditizia. L'operato dell'istituto di emissione negli anni della ricostruzione’, Nuova Storia Contemporanea, 8/2 (2004), pp. 159–62.Google Scholar
Turani, G., I quattro dell'OPA selvaggia, Milan: Sperling & Kupfer.Google Scholar
Varni, A., Storia dell'Associazione fra le casse di risparmio italiane: 1951–1990, Rome: Laterza.Google Scholar
Charguéraud, M-A., La Suisse lynchée par l'Amérique: lettre ouverte au juge Korman, 1998–2004, Geneva: Labor et Fides.Google Scholar
Kienast, L. and Stutzer, A., ‘Demokratische Beteiligung und Staatsausgaben: die Auswirkungen des Frauenstimmrechts’, Schweizerische Zeitschrift fur Volkswirtschaft und Statistik, 141/4, pp. 617–50.Google Scholar
Maissen, T., Verweigerte Erinnerung: Nachrichtenlose Vermögen und die Schweizer Weltkriegsdebatte 1989–2004, Zurich: Neue Zürcher Zeitung.Google Scholar
Rüegg, E. and Widmer, T., ‘Konsequenzen von Staatsreformen für die demokratische Steuerungsfähigkeit. Vergleichende Analyse zu vier Schweizer Kantonen’, Politische Vierteljahresschrift, 46/1, pp. 86109.Google Scholar
Tanner, J., ‘Der diskrete Charme der Gnomen: Entwicklung und Perspektiven des Finanzplatzes Schweiz’, in Merki, (ed.), Europas Finanzzentren, pp. 127–47.Google Scholar
AA, VV., ‘Historia de las cajas de ahorros: nuevas perspectivas’, Papeles de Economía Española, 105–6, Madrid: Fundación de las Cajas de Ahorros.Google Scholar
Asensio del Arco, E. and Hernández Andreu, J., ‘España y el Sistema Monetario de Bretton Woods’, Información Comercial Española, 827, pp. 2543.Google Scholar
Banco de España Servicio de Estudios, El análisis de la economía española, Madrid: Banco de España.Google Scholar
Bernabe Perez, M. M. and Marin Hernandez, S., ‘Un analisis economico-contable de la actividad de las cajas de ahorros espanolas (1975–2000)’, Papeles de economía española, 105–6, pp. 309–28.Google Scholar
Carnero Lorenzo, F. and Nuez-Yanez, J. S., ‘La implicacion de las cajas de ahorros en la economia Canaria’, Papeles de economía española, 105–6, pp. 188206.Google Scholar
Coronas Vida, L. J., ‘Las cajas de ahorros de Castilla y Leon y su influencia en el desarrollo economico regional’, Papeles de economía española, 105–6, pp. 207–26.Google Scholar
Del Arco, E. A. and Gonzalez, N. C. (eds.), Espana y Bretton Woods, Madrid: Delta Publicaciones Universitarias.Google Scholar
Gutierrez Nieto, B., ‘Antecedentes del microcredito. Lecciones del pasado para las experiencias actuales’, CIRIEC Espana, Rev. de Economia Publica, Social y Cooperativa, 51, pp. 2550.Google Scholar
Hernangomez Cristobal, F., ‘La solvencia de las cajas de ahorros: 1994–2004’, Papeles de economía española, 105–6, pp. 329–37.Google Scholar
Ledesma-Rodríguez, F. J., Navarro-Ibáñez, M., Pérez-Rodríguez, J. V. and Sosvilla-Rivero, S., ‘Regímenes cambiarios de iure y de facto. El caso de la peseta/dólar, 1965–1998’, Rev. de Historia Económica, 23-3, pp. 541–61.Google Scholar
Parache, F. V. and Álvarez, G. J. (eds.), Crisis cambiarias y financieras: una comparación de dos crisis, Madrid: Ediciones Pirámide, 2003.Google Scholar
Rubio Lara, J., ‘Les peines pécuniaires dans le nouveau Code Pénal espagnol’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 319–24.Google Scholar
Rojo Duque, L. Á., ‘El largo camino de la política monetaria española hacia el euro’, Información Comercial Española, 826, pp. 7384.Google Scholar
Sánchez Soler, M., Los banqueros de Franco, Madrid: Oberón.Google Scholar
Torres-Villanueva, E., ‘Intervencionismo estatal y cambios en el marco regulador de las cajas de ahorros durante el primer franquismo (1939–1957)’, Papeles de economía española, 105–6, pp. 1626.Google Scholar
Varela Parache, F. and Varela Parache, M., ‘España y los organismos económicos internacionales’, Información Comercial Española, 826, pp. 167–77.Google Scholar
Avramov, I., Silata na parite: istoriia na parite i kredita po bulgarskite zemi, Sofia: Siela.Google Scholar
Tsaliki, P. and Tsoulfidis, L., ‘Marxian theory of competition and the concept of regulating capital: evidence from Greek manufacturing’, Rev. of Radical Political Economics, 37/1, pp. 522.Google Scholar
Chudják, F., ‘Menová reforma v ceskoslovensku roku 1945 (slovenské predstavy a poziadavky)’ [The 1945 monetary reform in Czechoslovakia and related Slovak demands], Historický Casopis, 53/1, pp. 7192.Google Scholar
Cechlovska, S., ‘Historie a soucasny stav ceskeho hypotecniho bankovnictvi’ [The history and the present state of Czech mortgage banking], Ekonomie a management, 1, pp. 2632.Google Scholar
Hanousek, J. and Filer, R. K., ‘Consumers’ opinion of inflation bias due to quality improvements', Economic Development and Cultural Change, 53/1, pp. 235–54.Google Scholar
Jancik, D. and Kubu, E., t‘Arizace’ a arizátori: drobný a strední zidovský majetek v úverech Kreditanstalt der Deutschen (1939–45), Prague: Nakl. Karolinum.Google Scholar
Karlen, S., Versicherungen in Liechtenstein zur Zeit des, Nationalsozialismus. Untersuchungen zu nachrichtenlosen Vermögenswerten bei liechtensteinischen Banken in der NS-Zeit: Bericht der Ernst & Young AG gemäss Mandatsverträgen vom 9. Juli 2002 und 5. Mai 2003 zwischen der Unabhängigen Historikerkommission Liechtenstein Zweiter Weltkrieg und der Ernst & Young AG, Vaduz: Historischer Verein für das Fürstentum Liechtenstein.Google Scholar
Kössner, B., ‘Kunstsponsoringkonzeptionen am Beispiel von Österreichischer Länderbank, Creditanstalt und Bank Austria Creditanstalt’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 368–82.Google Scholar
Lacina, V., ‘Tschechische Banken und ihre Verbindungen zum österreichischen Bankwesen bis 1945’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 239–52.Google Scholar
Merki, C., ‘Der Finanzplatz Liechtenstein: Zürichs attraktive Außenstelle’, in Merki, (ed.), Europas Finanzzentren, pp. 167–95.Google Scholar
Mooslechner, P., ‘Vom “ruinösen Wettbewerb” zur wettbewerbsfähigen Position auf einem um Osteuropa erweiterten Heimmarkt. Banken und Bankenpolitik in Österreich seit den 1970er Jahren’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 401–14.Google Scholar
Randa, G., ‘Die Integration von Bank Austria und Creditanstalt’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 437–54.Google Scholar
Sandgruber, R., ‘Banken und Sparkassen im Wiederaufbauboom der 1960er Jahre und die Philosophie des Sparen’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 350–67.Google Scholar
Sárközi, Z. and Katz, V., Magyar Általános Hitelbank RT, Budapest: Magyar Országos Levéltár.Google Scholar
Stintzky, O., ‘Une lecture institutionnelle de la construction des systèmes monétaires et bancaires dans les économies en transition d'Europe Centrale: Hongrie, Pologne, République tchèque’, Rev. des Etudes Slaves, 76/1, pp. 159–62.Google Scholar
Anan'ich, B. V., Kredit i banki v Rossii do nachala XX veka: Sankt-Peterburg i Moskva, St Petersburg: Izd-vo S.-Peterburgskogo universiteta.Google Scholar
Andresen, N. A., ‘Sikker som banken? Tillit og spareadferd i Russland 1991–1998’ [Safe as the bank? Trust and patterns of saving in Russia,1991–98], Nordisk Ost-Forum, 19/3, pp. 307–28.Google Scholar
Barnett, V., ‘Diskussiia o politicheskoi i ekonomicheskoi roli zolotovaliutnykh rezervov Rossii v gody Pervoi mirovoi voiny’, Vestnik Sankt Peterburgskogo universiteta, 4, pp. 4869.Google Scholar
Borodkin, L. and Ertz, S., ‘Forced labour and the need for motivation: wages and bonuses in the Stalinist camp system’, Comparative Economic Studies, 47/2, pp. 418–36.Google Scholar
Cherniavskii, A. and Vartapetov, K., ‘Fiscal decentralization and local government in the reform period’, Problems of Economic Transition, 47/11, pp. 1836.Google Scholar
Dudakov, A. P., ‘Rabotniki finansovoi sistemy v Velikoi Otechestvennoi Voine’ [Financial system employees during the Great Patriotic War], Finansy, 5, pp. 710.Google Scholar
Ertz, S., ‘Trading effort for freedom: workday credits in the Stalinist camp system’, Comparative Economic Studies, 47/2, pp. 476–91.Google Scholar
Ivanenko, V., ‘The statutory tax burden and its avoidance in transitional Russia’, Europe-Asia Studies, 57/7, pp. 1021–45.Google Scholar
Ivanovskii, Z. V. and Tychinina, L. V., Rossiia i mir–vchera, segodnia, zavtra: otechestvennyi i zarubezhnyi opyt ekonomicheskoi deiatel'nosti, Moscow: MGI im. E. R. Dashkovoi.Google Scholar
Kargin, V., Nauda un cilveki, Riga: Atena.Google Scholar
Kovalev, V. V., ‘Sushchnost’ i funktsii finansov firmy' [Finance of a firm: essence and functions], Vestnik Sankt Peterburgskogo universiteta, 1/5, pp. 61–9.Google Scholar
Kudrin, A. L., ‘Finansovaia sistema strany v gody Velikoi Otechestvennoi Voiny’ [The country's financial system during the Great Patriotic War], Finansy, 5, pp. 36.Google Scholar
Kuz'mich, S. A. I. and Shirokov, G., ‘Lishnie den'gi: k prichinam zamedleniia tempov razvitiia’ [Extra money: examining the rationale for slowing down the rate of development], Vostok, 1, pp. 91102.Google Scholar
Millar, J., ‘Bergson's Structure of Soviet Wages’, Comparative Economic Studies, 47/2, pp. 289–95.Google Scholar
Ogushi, A., ‘Money, property and the demise of the CPSU’, J. of Communist Studies and Transition Politics, 21/2, pp. 268–95.Google Scholar
Raev, V. M., ‘Chtoby imet’ boesposobnye vooruzhennye sily, nuzhno umet' schitat' i ekonomno raskhodovat' denezhnye sredstva' [In order to have efficient armed forces, it is necessary to be able to calculate and disburse funds economically], Voenno Istoricheskii Zhurnal, 1, pp. 34–8.Google Scholar
Auberg, V., ‘Le groupe de Bilderberg et l'intégration européenne jusqu'au milieu des années 1960. Une influence complexe', in Dumoulin, M. (ed.), Réseaux économiques et construction européenne / Economic networks and European integration, Brussels: PIE–P. Lang, 2004, pp. 411–30.Google Scholar
Beaverstock, J. V., ‘Demystifying the euro in European Financial Centre relations: London and Frankfurt, 2000–2001’, J. of Contemporary European Studies, 13/2, pp. 143–58.Google Scholar
Comin-Comin, F., ‘El nuevo papel de la CECA y las cajas ante las mayores exigencias de financiacion del estado (1957–1963)’, Papeles de economía española, 105–106, pp. 2747.Google Scholar
Ferguson, N., ‘The first “Eurobonds”’, in Goetzmann, and Rouwenhorst, (eds.), The origins of value, pp. 313–26.Google Scholar
Fiorentini, R., ‘The international role of the euro and the relationship between EU and IMF’, Politico, 70/1, pp. 3555.Google Scholar
Franz, N., ‘Der Finanzplatz Luxemburg als Ergebnis wirtschaftlichen Bedarfs, politischen Willens und europäischer Integration’, in Merki, (ed.), Europas Finanzzentren, pp. 149–65.Google Scholar
Gutnik, V., ‘Evropeiskii Ekonomicheskii i valiutnyi soiuz: predvaritel'nye itogi I perspektiviy razvitiia’ [European Economic and Monetary Union: preliminary results and prospects], Mirovaia ekonomika i mezhdunarodnye otnosheniia, 5, pp. 315.Google Scholar
Holtfrerich, C. L., ‘Frankfurts Weg zu einem europäischen Finanzzentrum’, in Merki, (ed.), Europas Finanzzentren, pp. 5381.Google Scholar
Kaplan, J. J., ‘Networks and institutions in the origins and operations of the European payments Union’, in Dumoulin, (ed.), Réseaux économiques et construction européenne, pp. 381–90.Google Scholar
Knudsen, A. C. L., ‘The politics of financing the community and the fate of the first British membership application’, J. of European Integration History, 11/2, pp. 1130Google Scholar
Magnifico, G., L'euro: ragioni e lezioni di un successo sofferto, Rome: Luiss University Press.Google Scholar
Merki, C. M. (ed.) Europas Finanzzentren. Geschichte und Bedeutung im 20. Jh., Frankfurt/M: Campus Verlag.Google Scholar
Mittag, J., ‘Integration durch Kommunikation: der Bankier Friedrich Carl von Oppenheim und die Europäische Integration’, in Mittag, J. and Wessels, W. (eds.), ‘Der kölsche Europäer’. Friedrich Carl von Oppenheim und die europäische Einigung, Münster, Aschendorff, pp. 31183.Google Scholar
Straumann, T., ‘Finanzplatz und Pfadabhängigkeit: die Bundesrepublik, die Schweiz und die Vertreibung der Euromärkte (1955–1980)’, in Merki, (ed.), Europas Finanzzentren, pp. 245–68.Google Scholar
Wilson, J., ‘Le groupe de Bellagio: origines et premiers pas’, in Dumoulin, (ed.), Réseaux économiques et construction européenne, pp. 381410.Google Scholar
Khan, S., Islam, F. and Ahmed, S., ‘The Asian crisis: an economic analysis of the causes’, J. of Developing Areas, 39/1, pp. 169–90.Google Scholar
Ahmadjian, C. and Robbins, G. E., ‘A clash of capitalisms: foreign shareholders and corporate restructuring in 1990s Japan’, American Sociological Rev., 70/3, pp. 451–71.Google Scholar
Bytheway, S. J., Nihon keizai to gaikoku shihon: 1858–1939 [Foreign capital and the Japanese economy, 1858–1939], Tokyo: Tosui Shobo.Google Scholar
Hara, Y., Oguri, T., Tinker, T., Jinnai, Y., Ishikawa, J. and Yamaji, H., ‘Japanese critical accounting’, Critical Perspectives on Accounting, 16/2, pp. 73150.Google Scholar
Hotori, E., ‘Senji taisei shita ni okeru okurasho ginko kensa: purudensu kisei toshite no sokumen o chushin ni’ [The wartime inspection of banks by the Ministry of Finance: focus on the “prudence” regulation], Shakai-Keizai Shigaku, 70/6, pp. 324.Google Scholar
Ishii, K., ‘Reconsideration of the financial history of Japan: from moneychangers to banks’, J. of Tokyo Keizai University, 242, pp. 5584.Google Scholar
Kato, K., ‘Senkan-ki nihon denki no kigyo baishu: kabushiki shutoku o chushin ni’ [Corporate acquisition in the electric power industry during the interwar period: stock acquisition], Shakai-Keizai Shigaku, 71/3, pp. 2547.Google Scholar
Konishi, M., ‘Bond underwriting syndicates organized by commercial banks: evidence from prewar Japan’, J. of the Japanese and International Economies, 19/3, pp. 303–21.Google Scholar
Okawa, H., ‘Kindai nihon ni okeru “jizen” to “fuon”: 1890 nen no akita shi ni okeru beika toki e no taio o chushin ni’ [‘Charity’ and ‘unrest’ in modern Japan: reactions to the inflation of rice prices in Akita in 1890], Rekishigaku Kenkyu, 8, pp. 119.Google Scholar
Okazaki, T., Sawada, M. and Yokoyama, K., ‘Measuring the extent and implications of director interlocking in the prewar Japanese banking industry’, J. of Economic History, 65/4, pp. 1082–115.Google Scholar
Saito, O., ‘Zenkindai keizai seicho no futatsu no patan: tokugawa nihon no hikaku shiteki itchi’ [Two patterns in premodern economic growth: Tokugawa Japan's place in historical comparison], Shakai-Keizai Shigaku, 70/5, pp. 323.Google Scholar
Sato, M. and Yago, K., ‘L’élite managériale au Japon: le cas des banques', in Godelier, E. (ed.), Entreprises et histoire, 41, pp. 7188.Google Scholar
Shirai, S., ‘Growing problems in the local public finance system of Japan’, Social Science Japan J., 8/2, pp. 213–38.Google Scholar
Shiratori, K., ‘Hosho hoko tokuyu no kaishu shori to nihon ginko, okurasho, 1927–1936 nen’ [The Ministry of Finance, the Bank of Japan, and the recovery of special compensatory loans,1927–36], Shakai-Keizai Shigaku, 70/6, pp. 7190.Google Scholar
Sugiyama, H., ‘Tekkogyo ni okeru shokumu kyu donyu to sono henyo: yahata seitetsu, shin nippon seitetsu, 1960–1971 nen’ [The introduction and transformation of job-based wages in the steel industry: a case study of Yahata Steel and Nippon Steel,1960–71], Shakai-Keizai Shigaku, 71/4, pp. 7190.Google Scholar
Tachibanaki, T., Confronting Income Inequality in Japan: A Comparative Analysis of Causes, Consequences, and Reform, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Yasuba, Y., ‘Sangyo kakumei no jidai no nihon no jisshitsu chingin: hikaku keizaishiteki apurochi’ [Real wages in the period of the Industrial Revolution in Japan: a comparative economic history approach], Shakai-Keizai Shigaku, 71/1, pp. 4960.Google Scholar
Atwell, W. S., ‘Another look at silver imports into China, ca. 1635–1644’, J. of World History, 16/4, pp. 467–90.Google Scholar
Benjamin, D., Brandt, L. and Giles, J., ‘The evolution of income inequality in rural China’, Economic Development and Cultural Change, 53/4, pp. 769824.Google Scholar
Bernhardt, K. L. F., Chang jiang xia you di qu de di zu, fu shui yu nong min de fan kang dou zheng, 1840–1950 [Rents, taxes, and peasant resistance], Shanghai: Shanghai shu dian chu ban she.Google Scholar
Bian, M. L., ‘Mingqing diandang he jiedai falü guifan de tiaozheng yu xiangcun shehui de wending’ [Readjustments of laws and regulations on pawning and loan activities and social stability of rural areas in the Ming-Qing period], Zhongguo Nongshi, 24/4, pp. 6675.Google Scholar
Bian, M. L., ‘A history of modern Shanghai banking: the rise and decline of China's finance capitalism’, Enterprise & Society, 6/2, pp. 305–8.Google Scholar
Bian, M. L., The making of the state enterprise system in modern China: the dynamics of institutional change, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cai, Q. and Hou, D., ‘20–30 Niandai hua yang yi zhen hui de xinyong hezuo shiyan’ [Experimentation with rural credit cooperatives by the China International Famine Relief Commission from the 1920s to the early 1930s], Zhongguo Nongshi, 24/1, pp. 7987.Google Scholar
Chao, K., ‘Yongdian zhi xia de tian pi jiage’ [The prices of land under the permanent tenancy system], Zhongguo Nongshi, 24/3, pp. 43–8.Google Scholar
Chen, H., ‘Qingdai de hegong yu caizheng’ [River engineering projects and public finance in the Qing dynasty], Qing Shi Yanjiu, 3, pp. 3342.Google Scholar
Chen, Y., Shanghai yin hang jiu shi nian [The ninety years of the Shanghai Commercial & Saving Bank, Ltd], Taibei Shi: Shanghai shang ye chu xu yin hang.Google Scholar
Cheng, L., Banking in modern China: entrepreneurs, professional managers, and the development of Chinese banks, 1897–1937, New York: Cambridge University Press, 2003.Google Scholar
Cho, H., Chinas langer Marsch in den Kapitalismus, Münster: Westfälisches Dampfboot.Google Scholar
Cui, H., ‘Qingdai baqi guanbing hongbai shi shangci yinliang shiliao’ [Resources on monetary allotments to the Eight Banners for weddings and funerals], Lishi Dang'an (Historical Archives), 1, pp. 812.Google Scholar
Ge, F., ‘Zhong-fa geng kuan an zhong de wuli zhaiquan wenti’ [The issue of interest-free bonds in the Sino-French dispute over Boxer indemnities], Jindaishi Yanjiu, 2, pp. 123–41.Google Scholar
Gong, G., ‘20 shijichu tianjin de jinrong fengchao jiqi yingdui jizhi’ [The Tianjin financial panic and response mechanisms in the early 20th century], Shixue Yueka, 2, pp. 111–22.Google Scholar
Goodstadt, L. F., Uneasy partners: the conflict between public interest and private profit in Hong Kong, Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press.Google Scholar
Hansen, V. and Mata-Fink, A., ‘How business was conducted on the Chinese silk road during the Tang dynasty, 618–907’, in Goetzmann, and Rouwenhorst, (eds.), The origins of value, pp. 4364.Google Scholar
Heilmann, S, ‘Regulatory innovation by Leninist means: communist party supervision in China's financial industry’, China Q., 181, pp. 121.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hui, Q., ‘Tax and fee reform, village autonomy, and central and local finance historical experience and realistic options’, Chinese Economy, 38/6, pp. 335.Google Scholar
Huppatz, D. J., ‘Globalizing corporate identity in Hong Kong: rebranding two banks’, J. of Design History, 18/4, pp. 357–69.Google Scholar
Kanada, S., ‘Honkon ni okeru shoki kabushiki kaisha to kajin toshi’ [Early joint-stock companies in Hong Kong and Chinese investment], Rekishigaku Kenkyu, 3, pp. 958.Google Scholar
Khan, A .R. and Riskin, C., ‘China's household income and its distribution, 1995 and 2002’, China Q., 182, pp. 356–84.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Koo, B., ‘Jingqi de bizhi gaige fang'an yu wan Qing bizhi wenti’ [J. W. Jenks's program for currency reform and the currency problem in late Qing China], Jindaishi Yanjiu, 3, pp. 117–43.Google Scholar
Lewis, T., In partnership: KPMG'S 60 years in Hong Kong and 20 years in China, Hong Kong: KPMG.Google Scholar
Li, H., ‘Family life cycle and peasant income in socialist China: evidence from Qin village’, J. of Family History, 30/1, pp. 121–38.Google Scholar
Liang, L., ‘Rejection or acceptance: finding reasons for the late Qing magistrate's comments on land and debt petitions’, Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, 68/2, pp. 276–94.Google Scholar
Ma, C., ‘1920 dao 1930 niandai Shanghai jinrongye dui xinyong guanli de tichang he zheng xin jiguo zhi chuxian’ [The promotion of credit management and the emergence of credit information services in Shanghai during the 1920s–30s], J. of Oriental Studies, 39/1, pp. 7991.Google Scholar
Ma, L., ‘Jindai zhongguo jingji minzu zhuyi de duozhixing: yi tielu waizhai guan kaocha dian’ [The multidimensionality of modern Chinese economic nationalism: the foreign railway loan as a case study], Shixue Lilun Yanjiu, 2, pp. 3443.Google Scholar
Marchisio, J., Les chemins de fer chinois: finance et diplomatie, 1860–1914, Paris: You-Feng.Google Scholar
Nishimura, S., ‘The foreign and native banks in China: chop loans in Shanghai and Hankow before 1914’, Modern Asian Studies, 39/1, pp. 109–32.Google Scholar
Pang, K. T. W., The history of rates in Hong Kong: a brief rev. of 160 years of rating in Hong Kong, Hong Kong: Rating and Valuation Dept.Google Scholar
Ren, Z., ‘Shishu wanzing hubu yinku zhidu yu gengzi zhi hou de biange’ [The Ministry of Revenue's silver reserve in the late Qing and its reform after the Boxer Rebellion], Qing Shi Yanjiu, 2, pp. 4450.Google Scholar
Sheehan, B., Trust in troubled times: money, banks, and state-society relations in republican Tianjin, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2003.Google Scholar
Sheehan, B., ‘Myth and reality in Chinese financial cliques in 1936’, Enterprise and Society, 6/3, pp. 452–91.Google Scholar
Von Glahn, R., ‘The origins of paper money in China’, in Goetzmann, and Rouwenhorst, (eds.), The origins of value, pp. 6590.Google Scholar
Wang, Y., ‘Yinhang xuehui kaolun (1932–1950)’ [History of the Bank Academy,1932–50]', Shixue Yuekan, 8, pp. 61–5.Google Scholar
Wu, J., ‘Shanghai jinrongye yu jinyuanquan zhengce de tuixing’ [The financial sector in Shanghai and the issuance of paper money by the Guomindang government in 1948], Shixue Yuekan, 1, pp. 6982.Google Scholar
Xu, C., ‘Nongjia fu zhai yu diquan yidong: yi 20 shiji 30 niandai qianqi chang jiang zhong xialiu diqu nongcun wei zhongxin’ [Peasant household debt and shifts in landownership: rural areas along the lower Yangtze in the early 1930s], Jindaishi Yanjiu, 2, pp. 78122.Google Scholar
Yang, Y., ‘Jindai jiangxi difang huobi yu xiangcun jinrong zhuanxing’ [Local currency and financial transition in modern Jiangxi], Zhongguo Nongshi, 24/4, pp. 5865.Google Scholar
Zhang, N., ‘Lun woguo xiandai huobi danwei “yuan, jiao, fen” tixi de queli’ [The establishment of the Chinese modern monetary unit system: ‘yuan, jiao, and fen’], Shixue Yuekan, 2, pp. 43–8.Google Scholar
Zhang, Q., ‘Beiyang zhengfu shiqi de jiu liu gongzhai shuping’ [Commentary on the ‘jiuliu’ bond of Beiyang government], Shixue Yuekan, 6, pp. 4456.Google Scholar
Zhang, Y., ‘Cong shulu xian zhang min jiazu qiyue wenshu kan qingdai zhili nongcun de yinqian liutong’ [The circulation of money in rural Zhili Province during the Qing dynasty as seen from official documents pertaining to the Zhang family of Shulu County], Zhongguo Nongshi, 24/1, pp. 109–15.Google Scholar
Zheng, C., ‘Shanghai yinhang gonghui yu jindai zhongguo bizhi gaige shuping’ [The Shanghai Bankers' Association and reform of the monetary system in modern China], Shixue Yuekan, 2, pp. 3742.Google Scholar
The Reserve Bank of India, 1967–1981, vol. 3, Mumbai/Delhi: Central Office/Reserve Bank of India.Google Scholar
Ways and means for replenishing the Indian exchequer, Kurrachi: Sindian Press.Google Scholar
Bhattacharya, S., The financial foundations of the British Raj: ideas and interests in the reconstruction of Indian public finance 1858–1872, Hyderabad: Orient Longman.Google Scholar
Kawamura, T., ‘Higashi indo kaisha kaisan izen no isutan banku mondai, 1847–1857-nen’ [Problems surrounding the establishment of Eastern banks before the demise of the East India Company, 1847–57], Shakai-Keizai Shigaku, 71/2, pp. 2547.Google Scholar
Kirk, J. A., ‘Banking on India's states: the politics of World Bank reform programs in Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka’, India Rev., 4/3, pp. 287325.Google Scholar
Mathiyazhagan, M. K. and Parida, P. C., ‘An empirical analysis of exchange rate and trade balance and the balance of payments adjustment in India’, Asian Profile, 33/5, pp. 481–94.Google Scholar
McGuire, J., ‘Exchange banks, India and the world economy: 1850–1914’, Asian Studies Rev., 29/2, pp. 143–63.Google Scholar
Mohanty, B. K. and Tripathy, T., ‘Money, output and price behavior in India under reforms: some empirical evidence’, ICFAI J. of Monetary Economics, 3/4, pp. 5670.Google Scholar
Muirhead, B., ‘Differing perspectives: India, the World Bank and the 1963 aid-India negotiations’, India Rev., 4/1, pp. 122.Google Scholar
Sah, A. N. and Sivaram, Y-G., ‘Money demand function in India before and after liberalization’, ICFAI J. of Monetary Economics, 3/4, pp. 615.Google Scholar
Sury, M. M., Finance Commissions of India, I to XI, 1952–57 to 2005–10, New Delhi: New Century Publications.Google Scholar
Borensztein, E. and Lee, J-W., ‘Financial reform and the efficiency of credit allocation in Korea’, J. of Policy Reform, 8/1, pp. 5568.Google Scholar
Kwon, H. Y., ‘Targeting public spending in a new democracy: evidence from South Korea’, British J. of Political Science, 35/2, pp. 321–41.Google Scholar
Pirie, I., ‘Better by design: Korea's neoliberal economy’, Pacific Rev., 18/3, pp. 355–74.Google Scholar
Zhang, X., ‘The changing politics of central banking in Taiwan and Thailand’, Pacific Affairs, 78/3, pp. 377401.Google Scholar
Zhang, X., ‘Political institutions and central bank autonomy in Taiwan’, European J. of East Asian Studies, 4/1, pp. 87113.Google Scholar
Gorodzeisky, A. and Semyonov, M., ‘Labor migration, remittances and household income: a comparison between Filipino and Filipina overseas workers’, International Migration Rev., 39/1, pp. 4568.Google Scholar
Hillman, J., ‘Australian capital and South-East Asian tin mining, 1906–40’, Australian Economic History Rev., 45/2, pp. 161–85.Google Scholar
Islam, K. N., ‘Pro-cyclicality of consumer spending and the financial crisis of Thailand’, J. of Developing Areas, 38/2, pp. 4154.Google Scholar
Nepal Rastra Bank in 50 years, Kathmandu: Nepal Rastra Bank.Google Scholar
Jalali-Naini, A. R., ‘Capital accumulation and economic growth in Iran: past experience and future prospects’, Iranian Studies, 38/1, pp. 91116.Google Scholar
Stephens, M., ‘A critical analysis of housing finance reform in a “super” home-ownership state: the case of Armenia’, Urban Studies, 42/10, pp. 1795–815.Google Scholar
Kuran, T., ‘The logic of financial westernization in the Middle East’, J. of Economic Behavior and Organization, 56/4, pp. 593615.Google Scholar
Besirli, M., ‘Tokat voyvodaligi (1774–1842)’ [Estate management in Tokat, 1774–1842], Belleten, 69/254, pp. 161215.Google Scholar
Cosgel, M. M, ‘Efficiency and continuity in public finance: the Ottoman system of taxation’, International journal of Middle East studies, 37/4, pp. 567586.Google Scholar
Cosgel, M. M. and Miceli, T. J., ‘Risk, transaction costs, and tax assignment: government finance in the Ottoman Empire’, J. of Economic History, 65/3, pp. 806–21.Google Scholar
Karaman, D., ‘Ser'iye sicillerine gore XVIII. Yuzyilda Ankara damga mukataasi’ [The Ankara damga mukataasi (stamp tax) in the 18th century], Bilig, 32, pp. 179222.Google Scholar
Kazgan, H., Galata bankerleri, Istanbul: Orion Yayinevi.Google Scholar
Orbay, K., ‘Detailed tax farm registers and arrears registers as sources of the Waqfs’ financial analyses', Acta Orientalia Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae, 58/4, pp. 331–47.Google Scholar
Pamuk, S., ‘Urban real wages around the eastern Mediterranean in comparative perspective, 1100–2000’, Research in Economic History, 23, pp. 209–28.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Petmezas, S. D., ‘Christian communities in eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century Ottoman Greece: their fiscal functions’, Princeton Papers: Interdisciplinary J. of Middle Eastern Studies, 12, pp. 71127.Google Scholar
Dogruel, F. and Dogruel, A. S., Türkiye'de enflasyonun tarihi, Ankara: Türkiye Cumhuriyet Merkez Bankasi.Google Scholar
Eres, B., ‘Capital accumulation and the development of a financial system: the Turkish example’, Rev. of Radical Political Economics, 37/3, pp. 320–28.Google Scholar
Kazgan, G., Türkiye ekonomisinde krizler, 1929–2001: ‘ekonomi politik’ açisindan bir irdeleme, Istanbul: Istanbul Bilgi Universitesi.Google Scholar
Parvus, S. M., Türkiye'nin mali tutsakligi, Istanbul: Ileri yayinlari.Google Scholar
Tabakoglu, A., Toplu makaleler, Istanbul: Kitabevi.Google Scholar
Awran, A. A. and Farhan, U. A., ‘Determinants of interest rates in the Jordanian economy: an analytical study for the period 1990 to 2002’, J. of the Social Sciences, 33/2, pp. 337–76. (In Hebrew)Google Scholar
Looney, R., ‘Postwar Iraq's financial system: building from scratch’, Middle East policy, 12/1, pp. 134–49.Google Scholar
Nadan, A., ‘The competitive advantage of moneylenders over banks in rural Palestine’, J. of the Economic and Social History of the Orient, 1, pp. 140.Google Scholar
Nassar, M. H. A. and Shbaitah, M. F., ‘Accounting earnings and cash flows as a measure of performance in business: an applied study on Amman stock exchange’, Dirasat, 32/2, pp. 279–97.Google Scholar
Tuten, E. E., Between capital and land: the Jewish National Fund's finances and land-purchase priorities in Palestine, 1939–45, London: Routledge Curzon.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bellamy, M. J. and Bryce, R. B., Canada and the cost of World War II: the international operations of Canada's Department of Finance, 1939–1947, Montreal: McGill-Queens University Press.Google Scholar
Dimand, R. W., ‘David Hume on Canadian paper money: an overlooked contribution’, J. of Money, Credit and Banking, 37/4, pp. 783–7.Google Scholar
Di Matteo, L., ‘Wealth and inequality on Ontario's Northwestern frontier: evidence from probate’, Histoire Sociale – Social history, 38/75, pp. 79105.Google Scholar
Laieunesse, M., ‘Le financement des bibliothèques publiques du Québec depuis 1960’, Argus: Montreal, 34/3, pp. 1118.Google Scholar
Poulin, P. and Tremblay, B., Desjardins en mouvement: comment une grande coopérative de services financiers s'adapte aux transformations du secteur bancaire, Montreal: Presses HEC.Google Scholar
Powell, J., A history of the Canadian dollar, Ottawa: Bank of Canada.Google Scholar
Powell, J., Le dollar canadien: une perspective historique, Ottawa: Banque du Canada.Google Scholar
Sargent, J., The 1975–78 anti-inflation program in retrospect, Ottawa: Bank of Canada.Google Scholar
Vardy, J., The Bank of Canada: an illustrated history – La Banque du Canada: une histoire en images, Ottawa: Bank of Canada – Banque du Canada.Google Scholar
History of tax rates, Sacramento: California State Legislature, Assembly Committee on Revenue and Taxation.Google Scholar
[Ned Davis Research Inc.], Markets in motion: [a financial market history, 1900 to 2004], Chichester: Wiley.Google Scholar
Wachovia completes research of predecessor companies: apologizes for historical ties to slavery and plans to work with community partners to increase education and awareness of African-American history, Charlotte, NC: Wachovia Corporation.Google Scholar
Adams, E. H. and Handy, S. G., A century of putting people first: accuracy, fairness, and a concern for the welfare of the customer, Layton: First National Bank of Layton.Google Scholar
Adamson, M. R., ‘“Must we overlook all impairment of our interests?” debating the foreign aid role of the export-import bank, 1934–1941’, Diplomatic History, 29, pp. 589623.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Anari, A., Kolari, J. and Mason, J., ‘Bank asset liquidation and the propagation of the U.S. Great Depression’, J. of Money, Credit and Banking, 37/4, pp. 753–73.Google Scholar
Apfelbaum, J., Without compromise, fear or favor: the first century of the Texas Department of Banking, Austin: Texas Department of Banking.Google Scholar
Atack, J., ‘Capital deepening and the rise of the factory: the American experience during the nineteenth century’, Economic History Rev., 58/3, pp. 586–95.Google Scholar
Baranoff, D., ‘Shaped by risk: the American fire insurance industry, 1790–1920’, Enterprise and Society, 6/4, pp. 561–70.Google Scholar
Bernstein, P. L., Capital ideas: the improbable origins of modern Wall Street, Hoboken: Wiley.Google Scholar
Bordo, M. D. and Wheelock, D. C., ‘Politica monetaria y precios de activos: una mirada retrospectiva a los momentos de auge en los mercados de valores de Estados Unidos en el pasado’, Boletín, Centro de estudios monetarios latinoamericanos, 51/1, pp. 1234.Google Scholar
Brainard, W. C. and Scarf, H. E., ‘How to compute equilibrium prices in 1891’, in Dimand, and Geanakoplos, (eds.), Celebrating Irving Fisher, pp. 5784.Google Scholar
Broome, L. L., The first one hundred years of banking in North Carolina, Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina School of Law Banking Institute.Google Scholar
Brown, D. and Kubler, F., ‘Comment on William C. Brainard and Herbert E. Scarf's “How to compute equilibrium prices in 1891”’, in Dimand, and Geanakoplos, (eds.), Celebrating Irving Fisher, pp. 85–8.Google Scholar
Bullard, J. and Eusepi, S., ‘Did the great inflation occur despite policymaker commitment to a Taylor rule?’, Rev. of Economic Dynamics, 8/2, pp. 324–59.Google Scholar
Carlson, M., ‘Causes of bank suspensions in the panic of 1893’, Explorations in Economic History, 42/1, pp. 5680.Google Scholar
Clark, G., ‘The efficiency gains from site value taxes: the Tithe commutation act of 1836’, Explorations in economic history, 42/2, pp. 282310.Google Scholar
Cohen, J. P. and Coughlin, C. C., ‘An introduction to two-rate taxation of land and buildings’, Federal Reserve Bank of St Louis Rev., 87/3, pp. 359–74.Google Scholar
Cruson, D., The Newtown savings bank: one hundred fifty years of service, Newtown: Newtown Savings Bank.Google Scholar
Derks, S. and Smith, T., The value of a dollar: colonial era to the Civil War, 1600–1865, Millerton: Grey House.Google Scholar
Desan, C., ‘The market as a matter of money: Denaturalizing economic currency in American constitutional history’, Law and Social Inquiry J. of the American Bar Foundation, 30/1, pp. 160.Google Scholar
Downing, N. W., Transatlantic paper and the emergence of the American capital market, in Goetzmann, and Rouwenhorst, (eds.), The origins of value, pp. 271–98.Google Scholar
Duncan, R., The dollar crisis: causes, consequences, cures, Singapore: J. Wiley & Sons.Google Scholar
Fishback, P. V., ‘Did new deal grant programs stimulate local economies? A study of federal grants and retail sales during the great depression’, J. of Economic History, 65/1, pp. 3672.Google Scholar
Friedberg, A. L. and Friedberg, I. S., A guide book of United States paper money: complete source for history, grading, and prices, Atlanta: Whitman.Google Scholar
Giedeman, D. C., ‘Branch banking restrictions and Finance constraints in early-twentieth century America’, J. of Economic History, 65/1, pp. 129–51.Google Scholar
Gordon, J. S., Wei da de bo yi: Huàerjie jin rong di guo de ju qi [The great game: the emergence of Wall Street as a world power (1653–2000)], Beijing: Zhong xin chu ban she.Google Scholar
Hewett, R. S., ‘Taxation and the American Revolution’, J. of Economics (MVEA), 31/1, pp. 115.Google Scholar
Kanazawa, M., ‘Immigration, exclusion, and taxation: anti-Chinese legislation in gold rush California’, J. of Economic History, 65/3, pp. 779805.Google Scholar
Kennan, G., E. H. Harriman: railroad czar, New York: Cosimo Classics.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kenneth, D., The gold ring: Jim Fisk, Jay Gould, and Black Friday, 1869, New York: Carroll & Graf.Google Scholar
Klotter, J. C., A 100-year partnership: Hyden Citizens Bank and Leslie County, 1904–2004, Hyden, KY: Hyden Citizens Bank.Google Scholar
Körnert, J., ‘Analyse der Finanzmärkte der USA in den fünf Bankenkrisen der National Banking-Ära’, Bankhistorisches Archiv, 31/2, pp. 87106.Google Scholar
Kopfensteiner, D. and Ottenweller, C., The Houston branch of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas: financial crises and banking timeline, 1919–1979, Houston: Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, Houston Branch.Google Scholar
Lange, D. W. and Mead, M. J., History of the United States Mint and its coinage, Atlanta: Whitman.Google Scholar
Lee, R. A., Farmers vs. wage earners: organized labor in Kansas, 1860–1960, University of Nebraska Press.Google Scholar
Loeb, S. E. and Miranti, P. J., The Institute of Accounts: nineteenth-century origins of accounting professionalism in the United States, London: Routledge, 2004.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Love, P. H., Andrew W. Mellon: the man and his work, Whitefish, MT: Kessinger.Google Scholar
Mehrling, P., Fischer Black and the revolutionary idea of finance: John Wiley & Sons, Hoboken: Perry Mehrling.Google Scholar
Meissner, C. M., ‘Voting rules and the success of connected lending in 19th century New England banks’, Explorations in Economic History, 42/4, pp. 509–28.Google Scholar
Michener, R. W. and Wright, R. E., ‘State “currencies” and the transition to the US dollar: clarifying some confusions’, American Economic Rev., 95/3, pp. 682703.Google Scholar
Mitchener, K. J., ‘Bank supervision, regulation, and instability during the Great Depression’, J. of Economic History, 65/1, pp. 152–85.Google Scholar
Mitchener, K. J. and Weidenmier, M., ‘Empire, public goods, and the Roosevelt corollary’, J. of Economic History, 65/3, pp. 658–92.Google Scholar
Officer, L. H., ‘The quantity theory in New England, 1703–1749: new data to analyze an old question’, Explorations in Economic History, 42/1, pp. 101–22.Google Scholar
Pratt, J. A., ‘From buildings and loans to bail-outs: a history of the American savings and loan industry’, J. of American History, 92/2, pp. 701–2.Google Scholar
Robertson, F., ‘The aesthetics of authenticity: printed banknotes as industrial currency’, Technology and Culture, 46/1, pp. 3151.Google Scholar
Rogers, A., ‘Prosperous but precarious: property deeds and mortgages in a small market town in the 18th and 19th centuries’, Family and Community History, 8/2, pp. 105–22.Google Scholar
Roth, R., ‘American Civil War: financial support of Frankfurt bankers for the United States’, in Adam, T. (ed.), Germany and the Americas: culture, politics, and history: a multidisciplinary encyclopedia, Santa Barbara: ABC-CLIO, Vol.1, pp. 61–2.Google Scholar
Rothbard, M. N., A history of money and banking in the United States: the colonial era to World War II, Auburn: Ludwig von Mises Institute.Google Scholar
Rousseau, P. L. and Sylla, R., ‘Emerging Financial Markets and Early US Growth’, Explorations in Economic History, 42/1, pp. 126.Google Scholar
Rutherford, M., ‘“Who's afraid of Arthur Burns?” The NBER and the foundations’, J. of the History of Economic Thought, 27/2, pp. 109–41.Google Scholar
Sexton, J., Debtor diplomacy: finance and American foreign relations in the Civil War era, 1837–1873, Oxford: Clarendon Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shiller, R. J., ‘The invention of inflation-indexed bonds in early America’, in Goetzmann, and Rouwenhorst, (eds.), The origins of value, pp. 239–48.Google Scholar
Slade, G. R., Banking in the Great Northern Territory: an illustrated history, Afton: Afton Historical Society Press.Google Scholar
Solakoglu, E. G. and Goodwin, B. K., ‘The effects of railroad development on price convergence among the states of the USA from 1866 to 1906’, Applied Economics, 37/15, pp. 1747–61.Google Scholar
Sreenivasan, K. R., ‘Comment on William C. Brainard and Herbert E. Scarf's “How to compute equilibrium prices in 1891”’, in Dimand, and Geanakoplos, (eds.), Celebrating Irving Fisher, pp. 8992.Google Scholar
Sylla, R., ‘The origins of the New York Stock Exchange’, in Goetzmann, and Rouwenhorst, (eds.), The origins of value, pp. 299312.Google Scholar
Thompson, E. L., The reconstruction of southern debtors: bankruptcy after the civil war, Athens: University of Georgia Press, 2004.Google Scholar
Thies, C. F., ‘Money and the adoption of the US Constitution’, J. of Private Enterprise, 20/2, pp. 147–64.Google Scholar
Toma, M., Competition and monopoly in the Federal Reserve System, 1914–1951: a microeconomics approach to monetary history, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Valentine, P., Tax revolt: the rebellion against an overbearing, bloated, arrogant, and abusive government, Nashville: Nelson Current.Google Scholar
Vangermeersch, R., One hundred year selective history of the Rhode Island Society of Certified Public Accountants: 1905–2005, with chronologies and memorabilia, Rhode Island: Rhode Island Society of Certified Public Accountants.Google Scholar
Walter, J. R., ‘Depression-era bank failures: the great contagion or the great shakeout?’, Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond Economic Q., 91/1, pp. 3954.Google Scholar
Weber, W. E., Were U.S. state banknotes priced as securities?, Minneapolis: Federal Reserve Bank of Minnesota.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
West, G. M., Historical perspective of tax collecting in New Hampshire, Concord: New Hampshire Tax Collectors Association.Google Scholar
Wicker, E., The great debate on banking reform: Nelson Aldrich and the origins of the Fed., Columbus: Ohio State University Press.Google Scholar
Wright, R. E., The first Wall Street: Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, and the birth of American finance, Chicago: University of Chicago Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wright, R. E., The US national debt, 1787–1900, London: Pickering & Chatto.Google Scholar
Aho, J. A., Confession and bookkeeping: the religious, moral, and rhetorical roots of modern accounting, Albany: State University of New York Press.Google Scholar
Aitken, R., ‘“A direct personal stake”: cultural economy, mass investment and the New York Stock Exchange’, Rev. of International Political Economy, 12/2, pp. 334–63.Google Scholar
Askew, R. and Browne, I., ‘Race, ethnicity, and wage inequality among women: what happened in the 1990s and early 21st century?’, American Behavioral Scientist, 48/9, pp. 1275–92.Google Scholar
Avi-Yonah, R. S., ‘Story of the separate corporate income tax: a vehicle for regulating corporate managers’, in Bank, and Stark, (eds.), Business tax stories.Google Scholar
Bank, S. A., ‘Story of double taxation: a clash over the control of corporate earnings’, in Bank, and Stark, (eds.), Business tax stories.Google Scholar
Bank, S. A. and Stark, K. J. (eds.), Business tax stories, New York: Foundation Press.Google Scholar
Bank, S. A. and Stark, K. J., ‘Evolutionary perspective on the history of US business taxation’, in Bank, and Stark, (eds.), Business tax stories.Google Scholar
Bremner, R. P., Chairman of the Fed: William McChesney Martin Jr. and the creation of the modern federal reserve, New Haven: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Cogley, T. and Sargent, T. J., ‘The conquest of US inflation: learning and robustness to model uncertainty’, Rev. of Economic Dynamics, 8/2, pp. 528–63.Google Scholar
Cogley, T. and Sargent, T. J., ‘Drifts and volatilities: monetary policies and outcomes in the post WWII US’, Rev. of Economic Dynamics, 8/2, pp. 262302.Google Scholar
Dealey, H., Gossy, A., Kronowitz, D., Rodengen, J. L. and Shockley, D., New horizons: the story of Federated Investors, Fort Lauderdale: Write Stuff Enterprises.Google Scholar
Dobson, A. P., ‘The export-import bank and US foreign economic relations’, Diplomatic History, 29/2, pp. 375–78.Google Scholar
Fraser, S., Every man a speculator: a history of Wall Street in American life, New York: Harper Collins.Google Scholar
Garrison, J. C., The new income tax scandal: how Congress hijacked the sixteenth amendment, Philadelphia: Xlibris.Google Scholar
Geck, C., ‘What goes up: the uncensored history of modern Wall Street as told by the bankers, brokers, CEOs, and scoundrels who made it happen’, Library J., 130/14, pp. 156–66.Google Scholar
Hamill, S. P., ‘Story of LLCs: combining the best features of a flawed business tax structure’, in Bank, and Stark, (eds.), Business tax stories.Google Scholar
Higgs, R., ‘La transizione americana. Dalla pianificazione centralizzata al mercato,1945–47’, 900, 12, pp. 6782.Google Scholar
Hsu, D. H. and Kenney, M., ‘Organizing venture capital: the rise and demise of American research and development corporation, 1946–1973’, Industrial and Corporate Change, 14/4, pp. 579616.Google Scholar
Jensen, S., ‘A legislative history of the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of 2005’, American Bankruptcy Law J., 79/3, pp. 485569.Google Scholar
Kenneson, C., The Lewis State Bank of Tallahassee, Florida and the family who made it possible, Tallahassee: The Compiler.Google Scholar
Koegel, J. K., History of Women's Fund of Central Indiana, Indianapolis: Women's Fund of Central Indiana, Central Indiana Community Foundation.Google Scholar
Krippner, G. R., ‘The financialization of the American economy’, Socio-Economic Rev., 3/2, pp. 173208.Google Scholar
Leyden, D. P., Adequacy, accountability, and the future of public education funding, New York: Springer.Google Scholar
Light, A., ‘Job mobility and wage growth: evidence from the NLSY79’, Monthly Labor Rev., 128/2, pp. 33–9.Google Scholar
Lindsey, D. E., Orphanides, A. and Rasche, R. H., The reform of October 1979: how it happened and why, Washington: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System.Google Scholar
Lowenstein, R., Origins of the crash: the great bubble and its undoing, New York: Penguin Books.Google Scholar
Mann, G, ‘What's a penny worth? Wages, prices, and the American working man’, Ethnography, 6/3, pp. 315–56.Google Scholar
Marrero, G. A., ‘An active public investment rule and the downsizing experience in the US: 1960–2000’, Topics in Macroeconomics, 5/1, pp. 126.Google Scholar
Montagne, S., ‘Pouvoir financier vs. pouvoir salarial les fonds de pension américains: contribution du droit a la légitimité financière’, Annales. Histoire, Sciences Sociales, 60/6, pp. 1299–325.Google Scholar
Schlunk, H. J., ‘Story of General Utilities and its repeal: much ado about nothing?’, in Bank, and Stark, (eds.), Business tax stories.Google Scholar
Smeeding, T. M., ‘Public policy, economic inequality, and poverty: the United States in comparative perspective’, Social Science Q., 86, pp. 955–83.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Urofsky, M. I., Money and free speech: campaign finance reform and the courts, Lawrence: University Press of Kansas.Google Scholar
Twyman, T. R., Solomon's treasure: the magic and mystery of America's money, Portland: Dragon Key Press.Google Scholar
Wilkinson, R., Aiding students, buying students: financial aid in America, Nashville Vanderbilt University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Williams, B., Debt for sale: a social history of the credit trap, Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2004.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Woodward, B., Maestro: Greenspan's Fed and the American boom, New York: Simon & Schuster Paperbacks.Google Scholar
Zelenak, L., ‘Tax or welfare? The administration of the earned income tax credit’, UCLA Law Rev., 52/6, pp. 1867–916.Google Scholar
Eltis, D., Lewis, F. D. and Richardson, D., ‘Slave prices, the African slave trade, and productivity in the Caribbean, 1674–1807’, Economic History Rev., 58/4, pp. 673700.Google Scholar
Minda, A. and Truquin, S., ‘International regulation and supervision: a solution to bank failure in Latin America?’, Ibero Americana, 35/1, pp. 935.Google Scholar
Neiburg, F., ‘Inflacion y crisis nacional. culturas economicas y espacios publicos en la Argentina y Brasil’, Anuario de Estudios Americanos, 62/1, pp. 113138.Google Scholar
Santillan Salgado, R. J, Coiteux, M., Brandl, M. W., Garrido, C., Roy, J. and Hebb, G. M., ‘Banking, capital markets and monetary policy in the NAFTA countries: a recent survey’, Latin American Business Review, 6/1, pp. 1123.Google Scholar
Aboites, L. and Jáuregui, L., Penuria sin fin: historia de los impuestos en México siglos XVIII-XX, Mexico: Instituto Mora.Google Scholar
Amuedo-Dorantes, C. and Pozo, S., ‘On the use of differing money transmission methods by Mexican immigrants’, International Migration Rev., 39/3, pp. 554–76.Google Scholar
Baskes, J., ‘Colonial institutions and cross-cultural trade: “repartimiento” credit and indigenous production of cochineal in eighteenth-century Oaxaca, Mexico’, J. of Economic History, 65/1, pp. 186210.Google Scholar
Bátiz Vázquez, J. A., ‘El archivo historico Banamex: su genesis’, América Latina en la Historia Económica. Boletín de Fuentes, 23, pp. 95104.Google Scholar
Blázquez Domínguez, C. and Ordóñez López, C. A., La sucursal del Banco Mercantil de Veracruz en Xalapa, 1904–1910, Veracruz: Instituto Veracruzano de Cultura.Google Scholar
Del Angel-Mobarak, G. A., Bazdresch Paradan, C. and Suárez Dávila, F. (eds.), Cuando el Estado se hizo banquero: consecuencias de la nacionalización bancaria en México, Mexico, DF: Fondo de Cultura Económica.Google Scholar
Huybens, E., Jordan, A. L. and Pratap, S., ‘Financial market discipline in early-twentieth-century Mexico’, J. of Economic History, 65/3, pp. 757–78.Google Scholar
Marichal, C., ‘Crisis bancarias en América Latina: Perspectiva histórica’, in del Ángel, G. A. (ed.), La banca en América Latina: lecciones del pasado. Retos al futuro, Mexico: Centro de Investigación y Docencia Económicas, 2004, pp. 41–5.Google Scholar
Marichal, C., ‘Una historia de la banca de desarrollo en México’, Crisis y alternativas de la banca de desarrollo en México, Mexico: Memoria del primer foro de reflexión de los trabajadores de Bancomext, 2004, pp. 2330.Google Scholar
Marichal, C., ‘Influences françaises sur la formation de la Banque Mexicaine: le Banco Nacional de México, 1884–1914’, Economies et Sociétés, 2004, 31, pp. 1097–118.Google Scholar
Miranda, J., El tributo indígena en la Nueva España durante el siglo XVI, Mexico: Colegio de Mexico.Google Scholar
Moreno Acevedo, E. and Quezada, S., ‘Del deficit a la insolvencia. finanzas y real hacienda en Yucatan, 1760–1816’, Mexican Studies, 21/2, pp. 307–31.Google Scholar
Nuñez Estrada, H., Reforma y crisis del sistema bancario, 1990–2000: quiebra de Banca Serfin: enfoque organizacional, Mexico: Plaza y Valdés.Google Scholar
Quiroz, E., Entre el lujo y la subsistencia: mercado, abastecimiento y precios de la carne en la ciudad de México, 1750–1812, Mexico: Colegio de Mexico: Instituto de Investigaciones Dr. José María Luis Mora.Google Scholar
Richardson, J. W., ‘Toward democracy: a critique of a World Bank loan to the united Mexican states’, Rev. of Policy Research, 22/4, pp. 473–82.Google Scholar
Riguzzi, P., ‘Sistema financiero, banca privada y credito agricola en Mexico, 1897–1913: un desencuentro anunciado?’, Mexican Studies, 21/2, pp. 333–67.Google Scholar
Rodríguez, M. G., La nostalgia y la modernidad, empresarios y empresas regionales en México, siglos XIX y XX, Durango: Instituto de Investigaciones Históricas de la Universidad Juárez del Estado de Durango.Google Scholar
Ruiz Gomez, J. J., ‘Sistema bancario mexicano: regreso al futuro’, Información comercial espanola, 821, pp. 191212.Google Scholar
Tortolero, A., ‘Moneda, credito y exposiciones: el inasible triangulo de la modernidad en la agricultura mexicana, 1876–1920’, Jahrbuch fur Geschichte Lateinamerikas, 42, pp. 115–44.Google Scholar
Turrent-Diaz, E., ‘Las tres etapas de la autonomia del banco central en Mexico’, Analisis Economico, 20/43, p. 4781.Google Scholar
Alacevich, M., ‘Post-war economic policies for development: Lauchlin B. Currie and the World Bank in Colombia’, Storia del pensiero economico, 34/1, pp. 7392.Google Scholar
Barriga del Diestro, F., ‘La moneda que vio nacer, crecer y morir a Colombia 1813–1836’, Boletín de Historia y Antigüedades, 92/831, pp. 809–44.Google Scholar
Caballero, A. C., ‘Las crisis financieras del ultimo cuarto del siglo XX’, Coyuntura economica, 35/2, pp. 195206.Google Scholar
Fernandez, M. C., ‘La politica monetaria y los ciclos economicos en Colombia en los ultimos 35 anos’, Coyuntura economica, 35/2, pp. 101–8.Google Scholar
Renteria-R, C., ‘El presupuesto de 1970 y el presupuesto de 2005: evidencia de decisiones economicas y fiscales de los ultimos 35 anos’, Coyuntura economica, 35/2, pp. 135–48.Google Scholar
Restrepo Salazar, J. C., Finanzas y financistas, Bucaramanga: Sic Editorial.Google Scholar
Sanchez, F., ‘Desigualdad del ingreso 1976–2004’, Coyuntura economica, 35/2, pp. 289–94.Google Scholar
Urrutia, M. M., ‘Cambio en los instrumentos de politica monetaria’, Coyuntura economica, 35/2, pp. 93100.Google Scholar
Villar, G. L, ‘Flujos de capital privado en Colombia 1970–2005’, Coyuntura economica, 35/2, pp. 159–66.Google Scholar
Abreu Bolzan, M., Tribunal de Contas do Estado: Estado do Rio Grande do Sul: 70 anos, 1935–2005, Porto Alegre: Tribunal de Contas do Estado do Rio Grande do Sul.Google Scholar
Aldrighi, D. M. and De Saes, F. A. M., ‘Financing pioneering railways in Sao Paulo: the idiosyncratic case of the Estrada de Ferro Sorocabana (1872–1919)’, Estudos Economicos, 35/1, pp. 133–68.Google Scholar
Barros Leite, C. E., A evolução das ciências contábeis no Brasil, Rio de Janeiro: FGV.Google Scholar
Cassiano, K. M. and Cribri Neto, F., ‘Uma analise da dinamica inflacionaria Brasileira’, Rev. brasileira de economia, 59/4, pp. 535–66.Google Scholar
Hanley, A. G., Native capital: financial institutions and economic development in Sao Paulo, Brazil, 1850–1920, Stanford: Stanford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lima De Cerqueira, F. C. G., ‘Uma analise critica da literatura sobre a oferta e a circulacao de moeda metalica no Brasil nos seculos XVI e XVII’, Estudos Economicos, 35/1, pp. 169201.Google Scholar
Moreira Sindeaux de Oliveira, C. and Ramos Vianna, P. J., Desenvolvimento regiona: 50 anos do BNB, Fortaleza: Banco do Nordeste.Google Scholar
Triner, G. D. and Wandschneider, K., ‘The Baring crisis and the Brazilian Encilhamento, 1889–1891: an early example of contagion among emerging capital markets’, Financial History Rev., 12/2, pp. 199225.Google Scholar
Villela, A., ‘Política tarifária no II reinado: evoluçao e impactos, 1850–1889’, Nova economia. Rev. do departamento de ciências econômicas da universidade federal de Minas Gerais, 15/1, pp. 3573.Google Scholar
Blustein, P., And the money kept rolling in (and out): Wall Street, the IMF, and the bankrupting of Argentina, New York: Public Affairs.Google Scholar
Bragoni, B., ‘Mercados, monedas y credito a la luz del funcionamiento de una entidad bancaria (Mendoza, 1866–1879)’, Desarrollo economico, 44/177, pp. 5574.Google Scholar
Brunet, I. and Schilman, F., ‘Modelo de valorizacion financiera (Argentina, 1976–2001)’, Sistema, 188, pp. 97112.Google Scholar
Campos, M., ‘El cierre de la caja de conversion en 1929: una decision de politica economica’, Desarrollo Económico, 44/176, pp. 537–66.Google Scholar
Curia, E. L., Macroeconomía del desarrollo: ensayos sobre política monetaria y cambiaria e inflación en Argentina, Buenos Aires: Realidad Argentina.Google Scholar
Groisman, F. and Marshall, A., ‘Determinantes del grado de desigualdad salarial en la Argentina: un estudio interurbano’, Desarrollo Económico, 45/178, pp. 281301.Google Scholar
Halperín Donghi, T., Guerra y finanzas en los orígines del Estado argentino (1791–185, Buenos Aires: Prometeo Libros.Google Scholar
Hora, R., Del comercio a la tierra y mas alla: los negocios de Juan Jose y Nicolas de Anchorena (1810–1856)', Desarrollo Económico, 44/176, pp. 567600.Google Scholar
Marti, G. M., ‘Argentina y su insercion en el mundo financiero a fines de 1890. El sistema de bancos garantizados’, Trimestre economico, 77/285, pp. 55112.Google Scholar
Rougier, M., ‘Estado, empresas y credito en la Argentina: los origenes del Banco Nacional de Desarrollo, 1967–1973’, Desarrollo Económico, 43/172, 2004, pp. 515–44.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Weber, G., La conexión alemana: el lavado del dinero nazi en Argentina, Buenos Aires: Edhasa.Google Scholar
Un decenio de cambios, 1995–2005, La Paz: Banco Central de Bolivia.Google Scholar
Bakre, O. M., ‘First attempt at localising imperial accountancy: the case of the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Jamaica (ICAJ) (1950s-1970s’, Critical Perspectives on Accounting, 16/8, pp. 9951018.Google Scholar
Craigwell, R., Moore, W. and Coppin, K., ‘Financial innovation and efficiency in the Barbadian banking industry’, Money-affairs, 18/2, pp. 83100.Google Scholar
Crespo, A., Alfonso Gumucio Reyes: la pasión creadora, La Paz: Centro de Estudios Sociales.Google Scholar
Gavira Marquez, M. C., ‘Produccion de plata en el mineral de San Agustin de Huantajaya (Chile) 1750 –1804’, Chungara, 37/1, pp. 3758.Google Scholar
Higman, B. W., Plantation Jamaica, 1750–1850: capital and control in a colonial economy, Kingston: University of the West Indies Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lasso Valdés, E., Anécdotas y testimonios sobre la crisis bancaria en Panamá, 1987–1990, Panama: Universal Books.Google Scholar
Marchán R, C., Historia del Banco Central del Ecuador: de banco de gobierno a banco emisor y vuelta al pasado (1927–2000), Quito: Banco Central del Ecuador.Google Scholar
Medina-Smith, E. J., La fuga de capitales en Venezuela, 1950–1999, Caracas: Banco Central de Venezuela.Google Scholar
Petro, G., El caso del Banco del Pacífico, Bogota: Intermedio.Google Scholar
Proctor, J. A., The forgotten mint of colonial Panama: a look into the production of coins in America during the 16th century and Panma's Spanish royal house for minting coins, Laguna Hills: Jorge A. Proctor.Google Scholar
Rivarola Paoli, J. B., La Real Hacienda: la fiscalidad colonial, siglos XVI al XIX., Asunción: Ediciones y Arte.Google Scholar
Sanchez Fung, J. R., ‘Exchange rates, monetary policy and interest rates in the Dominican Republic during the 1990s boom and new millennium crisis’, J. of Latin American Studies, 37/4, pp. 727–38.Google Scholar
Sigala Venegas, L. H. and Sigala Paparella, L. E., ‘La rentabilidad del negocio azucarero en Venezuela. el caso de los precios y los productores del rio turbio’, Rev. de Indias, 65/233, pp. 271–81.Google Scholar
Winkelried-Quezada, D., ‘Tendencias comunes y analisis de la politica monetaria en el Peru’, Monetaria. 283, pp. 279317.Google Scholar
Boone, C., ‘State, capital, and the politics of banking reform in Sub-Saharan Africa’, Comparative Politics, 37/4, pp. 401–20.Google Scholar
Cresti, F., ‘Scambi e commerci tra la Libia mediterranea e l'Africa subsahariana secondo i documenti europei (XVIII - metà XIX secolo)’, Africa, 60/1, pp. 115–42.Google Scholar
Gordon, D., ‘Growth without capital: a renascent fishery in Zambia and Katanga, 1960s to recent times’, J. of Southern African Studies, 31/3, pp. 495511.Google Scholar
Ghazaleh, P., ‘Commis, artisans, ouvriers. Les métamorphoses du salariat dans l'Egypte du XIXe siècle’, Rev. du monde musulman et de la Mediterranée, 105–6, pp. 4768.Google Scholar
Funnell, W., ‘Accounting on the frontline: cost accounting, military efficiency and the South African war’, Accounting and Business Research, 35/4, pp. 307–26.Google Scholar
Gidlow, R., ‘South African gold sales policies during the 1980s’, South African J. of Economic History, 20/1, pp. 117.Google Scholar
Mokoena, T. M., Rangasamy, L., Swanepoel, J. A. and Visser, F. J., ‘South African consumer price inflation in a historical and global context’, South African J. of Economic History, 20/1, pp. 109–30.Google Scholar
Okeahalam, C. C., ‘Strategic alliances and mergers of financial exchanges: the case of the SADC’, J. of Southern African Studies, 31/1, pp. 7593.Google Scholar
Austin, G., Labour, land, and capital in Ghana: from slavery to free labour in Asante, 1807–1956, Rochester, NY: University of Rochester Press.Google Scholar
Decker, S., ‘Decolonising Barclays Bank DCO? Corporate Africanisation in Nigeria, 1945–69’, J. of Imperial and Commonwealth History, 33/3, pp. 419–40.Google Scholar
Deveau, J-M., L'or et les esclaves: histoire des forts du Ghana du XVIe au XVIIIe siècle, Paris: UNESCO/Karthala.Google Scholar
Gharbi, M. L., Crédit et discrédit de la banque d'Algérie: seconde moitié du XIXème siècle, Paris: L'Harmattan.Google Scholar
Giurovich, D. and Keenan, J., ‘The UNDP, the World Bank and biodiversity in the Algerian Sahara’, J. of North African Studies, 10/3–4, pp. 593604.Google Scholar
Jurk, G., ‘Als Berater der Bank von Mosambik’, Wir haben Spuren hinterlassen!, Münster: LIT-Verlag.Google Scholar
Muhumuza, W., ‘Unfulfilled promises? NGOs’ micro-credit programmes and poverty reduction in Uganda', J. of Contemporary African Studies, 23/3, pp. 391416.Google Scholar
Nzenguet, I. and Gilchrist, A., Colonisation, fiscalité et mutations au Gabon, 1910–1947, Paris: L'Harmattan.Google Scholar
Vahed, G., ‘Passengers, partnerships, and promissory notes: Gujarati traders in colonial Natal, 1870–1920’, International J. of African Historical Studies, 38/3, pp. 449–79.Google Scholar
Van der Heyden, U., ‘Es darf nichts passieren! Entwicklungspolitisches Engagement der DDR in Mosambik. Zwischen Solidaritat und Risiko’, Wir haben Spuren hinterlassen!, Münster: LIT-Verlag.Google Scholar
Zaccaria, M., ‘L'oro dell'Eritrea, 1897–1914’, Africa, 60/1, pp. 65114.Google Scholar
Tschoegl, A. E., ‘Foreign banks in the Pacific: a note’, J. of Pacific History, 60/2, pp. 223–35.Google Scholar
Bakir, C., ‘The exoteric politics of bank mergers in Australia’, Australian J. of Politics and History, 51/2, pp. 235–56.Google Scholar
Berry, M. and Hall, J., ‘Institutional investment in rental housing in Australia: a policy framework and two models’, Urban Studies, 42/1, pp. 91111.Google Scholar
Birkett, W-P. and Evans, E., ‘Control of accounting education within Australian universities and technical colleges 1944–1951: a uni-dimensional consideration of professionalism’, Accounting, Business and Financial History, 15/2, pp. 121–43.Google Scholar
Boyce, G., Over half a million careful owners: a 75 year history of PSIS, 1928–2003, Wellington: Dunmore Publishing for PSIS.Google Scholar
Boyce, S., ‘“In spite of Tooley Street, Montagu Norman, and the reserve bank's governor”: recolonization or the eclipse of colonial financial ties with Britain in the 1930s?’, New Zealand J. of History, 39/1.Google Scholar
Crawford, R., ‘Supporting banks, liberals and the “Australian way”: the freelands and the 1949 election’, History Australia, 2/3.Google Scholar
Davidson, L. S., Australia's first bank: fifty years from the Wales to Westpac, Sydney: New South Wales University Press.Google Scholar
Gruen, D. and Sayegh, A., ‘The evolution of fiscal policy in Australia’, Oxford Rev. of Economic Policy, 21/4, pp. 618–35.Google Scholar
Keneley, M., ‘Control of the Australian life insurance industry: an example of regulatory externalities within the Australian financial sector 1870–1945’, Australian Economic History Rev. 451, pp. 122.Google Scholar
Oats, L., ‘Distinguishing closely held companies for taxation purposes: the Australian experience 1930–1972’, Accounting, Business and Financial History, 15/1, pp. 3561.Google Scholar
Biget, J-L., ‘La gestion des impôts dans les villes (XIIIe-XVe siècles), essai de synthèse’, in Menjot, and Sanchez, Martinez (eds.), La fiscalité des villes au moyen âge, pp. 311–36.Google Scholar
Bordone, R. and Spinelli, F., Lombardi in Europa nel Medioevo, Milan: F. Angeli.Google Scholar
Denzel, M. A., ‘Bargeldloser Zahlungsverkehr italienischer Kaufleute im spätbyzantinischen Reich’, in Kolditz, S. (ed.), Geschehenes und Geschriebenes. Studien zu Ehren von Günther S. Henrich und Klaus-Peter Matschke, Leipzig, Eudora-Verlag, pp. 93102.Google Scholar
Depeyrot, G., Crises et inflation entre antiquité et Moyen Âge, Wetteren: Moneta.Google Scholar
Genet, J-P., ‘Villes et fiscalité: et l’État’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 571–8.Google Scholar
Gómez Biscarri, J., Pérez de Gracia, F. and Torres Sánchez, R., ‘Exchange rate behavior and exchange rate puzzles: why the 18th century might help’, Rev. de Historia Económica, 23/1, pp. 143–74.Google Scholar
Grubmüller, K., ‘Geld im Mittelalter: Kulturhistorische Perspektiven’, in Grubmüller, and Stock, (eds.), Geld im Mittelalter, pp. 917.Google Scholar
Grubmüller, K. and Stock, M. (eds.), Geld im Mittelalter: Wahrnehmung – Bewertung – Symbolik, Darmstadt: Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft.Google Scholar
Kartschoke, D., ‘“Regina pecunia, dominus nummus, her phenninc”, Geld und Satire oder die Macht der Tradition’, in Grubmüller, and Stock, (eds.), Geld im Mittelalter, pp. 182203.Google Scholar
Kluge, B., ‘Geld im Mittelalter. Numismatische Einführung’, in Grubmüller, and Stock, (eds.), Geld im Mittelalter, pp. 1833.Google Scholar
Le Goff, J., Kaufleute und Bankiers im Mittelalter, Berlin: Wagenbach.Google Scholar
Menjot, D. and Sánchez Martinez, M. (eds.), La fiscalité des villes au moyen âge. 4, La gestion de l'impôt: méthodes, moyens, résultats: Occident méditerranéen, Toulouse: privat.Google Scholar
Middleton, N., ‘Early medieval port customs, tolls and controls on foreign trade, Early Medieval Europe, 13/4, pp. 313–58.Google Scholar
Quaglioni, D., Todeschini, G. and Varanini, G. M., Credito e usura fra teologia, diritto e amministrazione: linguaggi a confronto, sec. XII-XVI, Rome: Ecole française de Rome.Google Scholar
Rehm, U., ‘“Avarus non implebitur pecunia”. Geldgier in Bildern des Mittelalters’, in Grubmüller, and Stock, (eds.), Geld im Mittelalter, pp. 135–81.Google Scholar
Schiffman, D. A., ‘The valuation of coins in medieval Jewish jurisprudence, J. of the History of Economic Thought, 27/2, pp. 141–60.Google Scholar
Schmidt, P., ‘Mittelalterliche Münzen und Herrscherporträt. Probleme der Bildnisforschung’, in Grubmüller, and Stock, (eds.), Geld im Mittelalter, pp. 5290.Google Scholar
Scordia, L., ‘Le roi doit vivre du sien’: la théorie de l'impôt en France, XIIIe-XVe siècles, Paris: Institut d'études augustiniennes.Google Scholar
Stock, M., ‘Von der Vergeltung zur Münze: zur mittelalterlichen Vorgeschichte des Wortes “Geld”’, in Grubmüller, and Stock, (eds.), Geld im Mittelalter, pp. 3451.Google Scholar
Waquet, J-C., ‘Le prix de la liberté, ou les dividendes de la servitude’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 579–82.Google Scholar
Gullbekk, S. H., ‘Natural and money economy in medieval Norway’, Scandinavian J. of History, 30/1, pp. 320.Google Scholar
Gullbekk, S. H., ‘The size of coinage in medieval Norway’, Historisk Tidsskrift, 84/4, pp. 551–.Google Scholar
Allen, M. R., ‘The interpretation of single finds of English coins, 1279–1544’, British Numismatic J., 75, pp. 5062.Google Scholar
Allen, M. R., ‘The quantity of money in England 1180–1247: new data’, British Numismatic J., 75, pp. 44–9.Google Scholar
Allen, M. R., ‘Salaries of mint and exchange officials in the long cross recoinage of 1247–50’, British Numismatic J., 75, pp. 173–5.Google Scholar
Briggs, C., ‘Taxation, warfare, and the early fourteenth century “crisis” in the North: Cumberland lay subsidies, 1332–1348’, Economic History Rev., 58/4, pp. 639–72.Google Scholar
Burrow, J. A., ‘Lady Meed and the power of money’, Medium Aevum, 74/1, pp. 113–18.Google Scholar
Dunn, P., ‘Financial reform in late medieval Norwich: evidence from an urban cartulary’, in Harper-Bill, C. (ed.), Medieval East Anglia, Woodbridge: Boydell, pp. 99114.Google Scholar
Faraday, M. A., Herefordshire taxes in the reign of Henry VIII, Herefordshire: Woolhope Naturalists' Field Club.Google Scholar
Gil-Alana, J. A., ‘A re-examination of historical real daily wages in England: 1260–1994’, J. of Policy Modeling, 27/7, pp. 829–38.Google Scholar
Hurst, D., Sheep in the Cotswolds: the medieval wool trade. Stroud: Tempus.Google Scholar
Liddy, C. D., War, politics and finance in late medieval English towns: Bristol, York and the Crown, 1350–1400. Woodbridge: Royal Historical Society.Google Scholar
McIntosh, M. K., ‘Women, credit, and family relationships in England, 1300–1620’, J. of Family History, 30/2, pp. 143–63.Google Scholar
Rigby, S. H. (ed.). The overseas trade of Boston in the reign of Richard II. Woodbridge: Boydell.Google Scholar
Stack, G., ‘A lost law of Henry II: the Assize of Oxford and monetary reform’, Haskins Society J., 16, pp. 95103.Google Scholar
Boone, M., ‘Les ducs, les villes et l'argent des contribuables: le rêve d'un impôt princier permanent en Flandres à l’époque bourguignonne', in Menjot, and Sánchez, Martinez (eds.), La fiscalité des villes au moyen âge. 4, La gestion de l'impôtGoogle Scholar
D'or et d'argent. La monnaie en France du Moyen Âge à nos jours. Cycle de conférences tenues à Bercy entre le 22 octobre 2001 et le 18 février 2002, Paris: Comité pour l'Histoire économique et financière de la France.Google Scholar
Biget, J-C., ‘Les résistances aux impôts communaux. Le cas d'Albi (XIIIe-XVIe siècle)’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 255–80.Google Scholar
Bochaca, M., ‘Exemples de résistance à la levée des tailles municipales à Saint-Émilion à la fin du Moyen Âge’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 281–90.Google Scholar
Bochaca, M. and Micheau, J., ‘Le recouvrement de la taille à Saint-Emilion d'après le compte de Ramon Fortz, trésorier de la ville (1470–1471)’, in Menjot, and Sánchez, Martinez (eds.), La fiscalité des villes au moyen âge, pp. 161–72.Google Scholar
Butaud, G., ‘La perception de l'impôt et le recouvrement des arrérages en Comtat Venaissin (fin XIVe-début XVe siècle)’, in Menjot, and Sánchez, Martinez (eds.), La fiscalité des villes au moyen âge, pp. 221–38.Google Scholar
Charbonnier, P., ‘La taille vue des collectes auvergnates: injuste? Oppressive?’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 335–78.Google Scholar
Claustre, J., ‘Le prisonnier pour dette et les officiers du Châtelet’, in Garnot, B. (ed.), Justice et argent: les crimes et les peines pécuniaires du XIIIe au XXIe siècle, Dijon: Editions universitaires de Dijon, pp. 131–41.Google Scholar
Cornu, L., ‘Naissance et premiers développements de la fiscalité royale et fouage ducal bourguignon au XVIe siècle’, in D'or et d'argent, pp. 111–18.Google Scholar
Cornu, L., ‘Naissance et premiers développements de la fiscalité royale en Languedoc septentrional: des “aides exceptionnelles” aux estimes, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 97118.Google Scholar
Darnis, J. M., ‘Glossaire des noms familiers de l'argent’, in D'or et d'argent, pp. 119–22.Google Scholar
Darnis, J. M., ‘Chronologie du franc’, in D'or et d'argent, pp. 123–34.Google Scholar
Favier, J., ‘5 décembre 1360: la naissance du franc’, in D'or et d'argent, pp. 116.Google Scholar
Follain, A. and Larguier, G. (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, fragile fondement de l'Etat dit moderne (XVe-XVIIIe siècles). Actes du Colloque tenu à Bercy, Paris: 2–3 décembre 2002, Paris: Comité pour l'histoire économique et financière de la France.Google Scholar
Furió, A., ‘Le crédit dans les registres notariaux de la région de Valence au bas Moyen Age’, Mélanges de l'Ecole française de Rome, 117/1, pp. 407–39.Google Scholar
Furió, A., ‘Impôt et dette publique. Système fiscal et stratégies financières à Valence à la fin du Moyen Âge’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 3962.Google Scholar
Garnier, F., ‘Transiger avec l'administration financière urbaine: l'exemple “d'accords” fiscaux à Millau, (XIVe-XVe siècles)’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes pp. 239–58.Google Scholar
Gouron, A., ‘De l'impôt communal à l'impôt royal. Le cas de Montpellier’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 291304.Google Scholar
Gressier, P., ‘Nature et montant des recettes forestières du comté de Bourgogne au XIVe siècle, d'après les comptes de gruerie’, in Corvol-Dessert, A. (ed.), Les forêts d'Occident du Moyen Age à nos jours. Actes des 24e journées internationales d'histoire de l'abbaue de Flaran, Gers, 6,7 et 8 septembre 2002, Toulouse: Presses Universitaires du Mirail, 2004, pp. 1338.Google Scholar
Guilleré, C., ‘Culture financière et fiscale en Savoie du XIIIe au XVe siècle’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 469–84.Google Scholar
Hoareau, J., ‘Argent et miséricorde. Les amendes dans les lettres de rémission des rois de France à la fin du Moyen Age’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 225–36.Google Scholar
Hébert, M., ‘“Bonnes villes” et capitales régionales: fiscalité d'Etat et identités urbaines en Provence autour de 1400’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 527–42.Google Scholar
Larguier, G., ‘Perception et gestion de l'impôt à Narbonne aux XIVe et XVe siècles’, in Menjot, and Sánchez, Martinez (eds.), La fiscalité des villes au moyen âge, pp. 145–60.Google Scholar
Larguier, G., ‘Impôt direct et ressources complémentaires. Système fiscal et politique fiscale à Narbonne, XIVe-XVe siècle’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 6382.Google Scholar
Lavigne, C., ‘Assigner et fiscaliser les terres au moyen age. Trois exemples’, Etudes rurales, 175–6, pp. 81107.Google Scholar
Le Page, D., ‘Le fouage en Bretagne au Moyen Age et aux débuts de l’époque moderne', in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 119–38.Google Scholar
Marandet, M-C., ‘La gestion de l'impôt direct en Lauragais au XVe siècle, à partir de quelques registres d'estimes et livres de taille’, in Menjot, and Sánchez, Martinez (eds.), La fiscalité des villes au moyen âge, pp. 109–44.Google Scholar
Mayade-Claustre, J., ‘Le corps lié de l'ouvrier. le travail et la dette à Paris au XVe siècle’, Annales. Histoire, Sciences Sociales, 60/2, pp. 383409.Google Scholar
Menjot, D. and Sánchez Martinez, M. (eds.), La fiscalité des villes au moyen âge. 4, La gestion de l'impôt: méthodes, moyens, résultats: Occident méditerranéen, Toulouse: privat, pp. 97118.Google Scholar
Reyerson, K., Jacques Coeur: entrepreneur and king's bursar, New York: Longman.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rigaudière, A., ‘Le contrôle de l'exercice comptable des consuls sanflorains pour l'année 1393–1394’, in Menjot, and Sánchez, Martinez (eds.), La fiscalité des villes au moyen âge, pp. 273309.Google Scholar
Rigaudière, A., ‘Les stratégies des bonnes villes d'Auvergne face à l'impôt royal aux XIVe et XVe siècles’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 353–98.Google Scholar
Sato, S., ‘À propos de la fiscalité et de l'Etat mérovingien aux VIe et VIIe siècles’, in Carozzi, C. and Taviani-Carozzi, H. (eds.), Le médiéviste devant ses sources: questions et méthodes. [Communications faites au séminaire de l'équipe de recherches sociétés, idéologies et croyances au moyen âge à l'université de Provence, en 2001 et 2002], Aix-en-Provence: Publications de l'université de Provence, 2004, pp. 171–83.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Yante, J-M., ‘Le contentieux économique et financier aux foires de Champagne (XIIIe-XIVe siècles)’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 1528.Google Scholar
Andermann, K., ‘Adel und finanzielle Mobilität im späten Mittelalter’, in Carl, and Sönke, (eds.), Gelungene Anpassung. Adelige Antworten auf gesellschaftliche Wandlungsvorgänge vom 14/16, Jh., Ostfildern: Thorbecke, pp. 1326.Google Scholar
Braun, R., Die älteste Rechnung des Bürgerspitals von 1495, Würzburg: Schöningh.Google Scholar
Emmerig, H., ‘Geld im frühmittelalterlichen Bayern’, in Vogeler, G. (ed.), Geschichte ‘in die Hand genommen’. Die geschichtlichen Hilfswissenschaften zwischen historischer Grundlagenforschung und methodischen Herausforderungen; Fortbildungsveranstaltung für Geschichtslehrer Ende September 2004 in München, Munich: Utz, pp. 195208.Google Scholar
Fouquet, G., ‘Die Finanzen der Bergenfahrer zu Lübeck – das Schüttingsrechnungsbuch (1469–1530)’, in Graßmann, A. (ed.), Das Hansische Kontor zu Bergen und die Lübecker Bergenfahrer. International Workshop Lübeck 2003, Lübeck: Schmidt-Römhild, pp. 140–62.Google Scholar
Görich, K., ‘Geld und Ehre. Friedrich Barbarossa’, in Grubmüller, and Stock, (eds.), Geld im Mittelalter, pp. 113–34.Google Scholar
Graafen, T. and Pundt, M., ‘Der Metzer Bürger Philippe Le Gronnais (+ 1314). Zwischen Geld, Glaube und Gemeinde’, in Irsigler, F. and Minn, G. (eds.), Porträt einer europäischen Kernregion. Der Rhein-Maas-Raum in historischen Lebensbildern, Trier: Kliomedia, pp. 101–9.Google Scholar
Kamp, H. ‘Gutes Geld und böses Geld. Die Anfänge der Geldwirtschaft und der “Gabentausch” im hohen Mittelalter’, in Grubmüller, and Stock, (eds.), Geld im Mittelalter, pp. 91112.Google Scholar
Mäkeler, H., ‘Geldwertveränderungen als Auslöser innerstädtischer Konflikte im Spätmittelalter’, Bremer Beiträge zur Münz- und Geldgeschichte 4, pp. 81105.Google Scholar
Mentgen, G., ‘Die Straßburger Juden Vivelin der Rote und Simon von Deneuvre. Bankiers europäischer Fürsten im 14. Jh.’, in Irsigler, F. and Minn, G. (eds.), Porträt einer europäischen Kernregion. Der Rhein-Maas-Raum in historischen Lebensbildern, Trier: Kliomedia, pp. 131–7.Google Scholar
Petry, K., ‘Münzen machen Wirtschaftsgeschichte: zum Fund eines Trierer Pfennigs Königs Ottos III. (983–996) aus Trier’, Funde und Ausgrabungen im Bezirk Trier, 37, pp. 5862.Google Scholar
Reitemeier, A., Pfarrkirchen in der Stadt des späten Mittelalters: Politik, Wirtschaft und Verwaltung, Stuttgart: Franz Steiner Verlag.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schmidt, P. G., ‘Nummus vincit, regnat, imperat’. Caesarius von Heisterbach über zisterziensische “avaritia”, in Grubmüller, and Stock, (eds.), Geld im Mittelalter, pp. 204–15.Google Scholar
Stunz, H., ‘Hospitäler im deutschsprachigen Raum im Spätmittelalter als Unternehmen für die “caritas”. Typen und Phasen der Finanzierung’, in Matheus, M. (ed.), Funktions- und Strukturwandel spätmittelalterlicher Hospitäler im europäischen Vergleich, Stuttgart: Steiner, pp. 129–59.Google Scholar
Tewes, G. R., ‘Deutsches Geld und römische Kurie. Zur Problematik eines gefühlten Leides’, in Flug, B., Matheus, M. and Rehberg, A. (eds.), Kurie und Region. Festschrift für Brigide Schwarz zum 65. Geburtstag, Stuttgart: Steiner, pp. 209–39.Google Scholar
Vogeler, G., ‘Tax accounting in the late medieval German territorial states’, Accounting, Business and Financial History, 15/3, pp. 235–55.Google Scholar
Armstrong, L., Usury and public debt in early Renaissance Florence: Lorenzo Ridolfi on the Monte Comune, Toronto: Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, 2003.Google Scholar
Blomquist, T. W., Merchant families, banking and money in medieval Lucca, Aldershot: Ashgate.Google Scholar
Boucheron, P., ‘Fiscalités urbaines et fabriques de cathédrales en Italie (XIIIe-XVve siècle): remarques sur l'acculturation fiscale’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 543–62.Google Scholar
Chittolini, G., ‘La cité, le territoire, l'impôt. Quelques considérations sur la répartition des impositions directes dans le duché de Milan (de 1450 aux environs de 1500)’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 305–30.Google Scholar
Conte, E., ‘Fiscalité et droit savant: les rapports de l'Empire et des villes italiennes dans la Somme de Roland de Lucques (vers 1200)’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 485510.Google Scholar
Demo, E., ‘“Tengo dinari li quali trafego in lo me bancho”. L'attività di Giovanni Orsato, banchiere padovano del XV secolo’, Studi Storici Luigi Simeoni, 54 (2004), pp. 341–58.Google Scholar
Ginatempo, M., ‘Les transformations de la fiscalité dans l'Italie post-communale’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 193218.Google Scholar
Goetzmann, W. N., ‘Fibonacci and the financial revolution’, in Goetzmann, W. N. and Rouwenhorst, K. G. (eds.), The origins of value: the financial innovations that created modern capital markets, Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 123–44.Google Scholar
Lambertini, R., ‘Das Geld und sein Gebrauch. “Pecunia” im Streit zwischen Michael von Cesena und Papst Johannes XXII’, in Grubmüller, and Stock, (eds.), Geld im Mittelalter, pp. 216–44.Google Scholar
Märtl, C., ‘Der Papst und das Geld. Zum kurialen Rechnungswesen unter Pius II. (1458–1464)’, in Flug, B., Matheus, M., and Rehberg, A. (eds.), Kurie und Region. Festschrift für Brigide Schwarz zum 65. Geburtstag, Stuttgart: Steiner, pp. 175–95.Google Scholar
Mainoni, P., ‘La “révolution fiscale” dans l'Italie du Nord (XIIe-XIIIe siècle). Quelques considérations’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 219–54.Google Scholar
Parks, T., Medici money: banking, metaphysics, and art in fifteenth-century Florence, New York: W. W. Norton & Company.Google Scholar
Pezzolo, L., ‘Bonds and government debt in Italian city-states, 1250–1650’, in Goetzmann, W. N. and Rouwenhorst, K. G. (eds.), The origins of value: the financial innovations that created modern capital markets, Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 145–64.Google Scholar
Spicciani, A., L'ospedale lucchese di Altopascio: storia economica e finanziaria nei secoli XI-XII, Pisa: ETS.Google Scholar
Collantes Deterán Sánchez, A., ‘Les villes dans le système fiscal du royaume de Castille (XIIIe-Xve siècle)’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 331–52.Google Scholar
Carrasco, J., ‘Les imposiciones dans les “bonnes villes” du royaume de Navarre: Tudela au milieu du XVe siècle’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 173–92.Google Scholar
Galán Sánchez, A. and Peinado Santaella, R. G., ‘La communauté et le roi: formes de recouvrement et résistances fiscales à Grenade après la conquête’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 427–50.Google Scholar
Martín Escudero, F., El tesoro de Baena: reflexiones sobre circulación monetaria en época omeya, Madrid: Real Academia de la Historia.Google Scholar
Menjot, D., ‘Politiques et stratégies fiscales des élites urbaines castillanes (fin XIIIe siècle-1474)’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 123–52.Google Scholar
Morelló Baget, J., ‘Les résistances à l'impôt dans les municipalités catalanes (du XIIIe au XIVe siècle): tentative de synthèse', in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 399426.Google Scholar
Orti Gost, P., ‘Fiscalité et finances publiques dans les territoires de la couronne d'Aragon’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 453–68.Google Scholar
Sánchez Martínez, M., ‘“Defensar lo principat de Cathalunya” pendant la seconde moitié du XIVe siècle: du service militaire à l'impôt’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 83122.Google Scholar
Verdés I Pijuan, P., ‘Politiques fiscales et stratégies financières dans les municipalités catalanes (XIVe-XVe siècle)’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 153–72.Google Scholar
Potekhina, I. P., ‘St. Peter's qualification in the tax system of medieval papacy’, Klio, 1/28, pp. 65–8.Google Scholar
Biget, J-L., ‘La gestion des impôts dans les villes (XIIIe-XVe siècles), essai de synthèse’, in Menjot, and Sanchez, Martinez (eds.), La fiscalité des villes au moyen âge, pp. 311–36.Google Scholar
Bordone, R. and Spinelli, F., Lombardi in Europa nel Medioevo, Milan: F. Angeli.Google Scholar
Denzel, M. A., ‘Bargeldloser Zahlungsverkehr italienischer Kaufleute im spätbyzantinischen Reich’, in Kolditz, S. (ed.), Geschehenes und Geschriebenes. Studien zu Ehren von Günther S. Henrich und Klaus-Peter Matschke, Leipzig, Eudora-Verlag, pp. 93102.Google Scholar
Depeyrot, G., Crises et inflation entre antiquité et Moyen Âge, Wetteren: Moneta.Google Scholar
Genet, J-P., ‘Villes et fiscalité: et l’État’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 571–8.Google Scholar
Gómez Biscarri, J., Pérez de Gracia, F. and Torres Sánchez, R., ‘Exchange rate behavior and exchange rate puzzles: why the 18th century might help’, Rev. de Historia Económica, 23/1, pp. 143–74.Google Scholar
Grubmüller, K., ‘Geld im Mittelalter: Kulturhistorische Perspektiven’, in Grubmüller, and Stock, (eds.), Geld im Mittelalter, pp. 917.Google Scholar
Grubmüller, K. and Stock, M. (eds.), Geld im Mittelalter: Wahrnehmung – Bewertung – Symbolik, Darmstadt: Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft.Google Scholar
Kartschoke, D., ‘“Regina pecunia, dominus nummus, her phenninc”, Geld und Satire oder die Macht der Tradition’, in Grubmüller, and Stock, (eds.), Geld im Mittelalter, pp. 182203.Google Scholar
Kluge, B., ‘Geld im Mittelalter. Numismatische Einführung’, in Grubmüller, and Stock, (eds.), Geld im Mittelalter, pp. 1833.Google Scholar
Le Goff, J., Kaufleute und Bankiers im Mittelalter, Berlin: Wagenbach.Google Scholar
Menjot, D. and Sánchez Martinez, M. (eds.), La fiscalité des villes au moyen âge. 4, La gestion de l'impôt: méthodes, moyens, résultats: Occident méditerranéen, Toulouse: privat.Google Scholar
Middleton, N., ‘Early medieval port customs, tolls and controls on foreign trade, Early Medieval Europe, 13/4, pp. 313–58.Google Scholar
Quaglioni, D., Todeschini, G. and Varanini, G. M., Credito e usura fra teologia, diritto e amministrazione: linguaggi a confronto, sec. XII-XVI, Rome: Ecole française de Rome.Google Scholar
Rehm, U., ‘“Avarus non implebitur pecunia”. Geldgier in Bildern des Mittelalters’, in Grubmüller, and Stock, (eds.), Geld im Mittelalter, pp. 135–81.Google Scholar
Schiffman, D. A., ‘The valuation of coins in medieval Jewish jurisprudence, J. of the History of Economic Thought, 27/2, pp. 141–60.Google Scholar
Schmidt, P., ‘Mittelalterliche Münzen und Herrscherporträt. Probleme der Bildnisforschung’, in Grubmüller, and Stock, (eds.), Geld im Mittelalter, pp. 5290.Google Scholar
Scordia, L., ‘Le roi doit vivre du sien’: la théorie de l'impôt en France, XIIIe-XVe siècles, Paris: Institut d'études augustiniennes.Google Scholar
Stock, M., ‘Von der Vergeltung zur Münze: zur mittelalterlichen Vorgeschichte des Wortes “Geld”’, in Grubmüller, and Stock, (eds.), Geld im Mittelalter, pp. 3451.Google Scholar
Waquet, J-C., ‘Le prix de la liberté, ou les dividendes de la servitude’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 579–82.Google Scholar
Gullbekk, S. H., ‘Natural and money economy in medieval Norway’, Scandinavian J. of History, 30/1, pp. 320.Google Scholar
Gullbekk, S. H., ‘The size of coinage in medieval Norway’, Historisk Tidsskrift, 84/4, pp. 551–.Google Scholar
Allen, M. R., ‘The interpretation of single finds of English coins, 1279–1544’, British Numismatic J., 75, pp. 5062.Google Scholar
Allen, M. R., ‘The quantity of money in England 1180–1247: new data’, British Numismatic J., 75, pp. 44–9.Google Scholar
Allen, M. R., ‘Salaries of mint and exchange officials in the long cross recoinage of 1247–50’, British Numismatic J., 75, pp. 173–5.Google Scholar
Briggs, C., ‘Taxation, warfare, and the early fourteenth century “crisis” in the North: Cumberland lay subsidies, 1332–1348’, Economic History Rev., 58/4, pp. 639–72.Google Scholar
Burrow, J. A., ‘Lady Meed and the power of money’, Medium Aevum, 74/1, pp. 113–18.Google Scholar
Dunn, P., ‘Financial reform in late medieval Norwich: evidence from an urban cartulary’, in Harper-Bill, C. (ed.), Medieval East Anglia, Woodbridge: Boydell, pp. 99114.Google Scholar
Faraday, M. A., Herefordshire taxes in the reign of Henry VIII, Herefordshire: Woolhope Naturalists' Field Club.Google Scholar
Gil-Alana, J. A., ‘A re-examination of historical real daily wages in England: 1260–1994’, J. of Policy Modeling, 27/7, pp. 829–38.Google Scholar
Hurst, D., Sheep in the Cotswolds: the medieval wool trade. Stroud: Tempus.Google Scholar
Liddy, C. D., War, politics and finance in late medieval English towns: Bristol, York and the Crown, 1350–1400. Woodbridge: Royal Historical Society.Google Scholar
McIntosh, M. K., ‘Women, credit, and family relationships in England, 1300–1620’, J. of Family History, 30/2, pp. 143–63.Google Scholar
Rigby, S. H. (ed.). The overseas trade of Boston in the reign of Richard II. Woodbridge: Boydell.Google Scholar
Stack, G., ‘A lost law of Henry II: the Assize of Oxford and monetary reform’, Haskins Society J., 16, pp. 95103.Google Scholar
Boone, M., ‘Les ducs, les villes et l'argent des contribuables: le rêve d'un impôt princier permanent en Flandres à l’époque bourguignonne', in Menjot, and Sánchez, Martinez (eds.), La fiscalité des villes au moyen âge. 4, La gestion de l'impôtGoogle Scholar
D'or et d'argent. La monnaie en France du Moyen Âge à nos jours. Cycle de conférences tenues à Bercy entre le 22 octobre 2001 et le 18 février 2002, Paris: Comité pour l'Histoire économique et financière de la France.Google Scholar
Biget, J-C., ‘Les résistances aux impôts communaux. Le cas d'Albi (XIIIe-XVIe siècle)’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 255–80.Google Scholar
Bochaca, M., ‘Exemples de résistance à la levée des tailles municipales à Saint-Émilion à la fin du Moyen Âge’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 281–90.Google Scholar
Bochaca, M. and Micheau, J., ‘Le recouvrement de la taille à Saint-Emilion d'après le compte de Ramon Fortz, trésorier de la ville (1470–1471)’, in Menjot, and Sánchez, Martinez (eds.), La fiscalité des villes au moyen âge, pp. 161–72.Google Scholar
Butaud, G., ‘La perception de l'impôt et le recouvrement des arrérages en Comtat Venaissin (fin XIVe-début XVe siècle)’, in Menjot, and Sánchez, Martinez (eds.), La fiscalité des villes au moyen âge, pp. 221–38.Google Scholar
Charbonnier, P., ‘La taille vue des collectes auvergnates: injuste? Oppressive?’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 335–78.Google Scholar
Claustre, J., ‘Le prisonnier pour dette et les officiers du Châtelet’, in Garnot, B. (ed.), Justice et argent: les crimes et les peines pécuniaires du XIIIe au XXIe siècle, Dijon: Editions universitaires de Dijon, pp. 131–41.Google Scholar
Cornu, L., ‘Naissance et premiers développements de la fiscalité royale et fouage ducal bourguignon au XVIe siècle’, in D'or et d'argent, pp. 111–18.Google Scholar
Cornu, L., ‘Naissance et premiers développements de la fiscalité royale en Languedoc septentrional: des “aides exceptionnelles” aux estimes, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 97118.Google Scholar
Darnis, J. M., ‘Glossaire des noms familiers de l'argent’, in D'or et d'argent, pp. 119–22.Google Scholar
Darnis, J. M., ‘Chronologie du franc’, in D'or et d'argent, pp. 123–34.Google Scholar
Favier, J., ‘5 décembre 1360: la naissance du franc’, in D'or et d'argent, pp. 116.Google Scholar
Follain, A. and Larguier, G. (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, fragile fondement de l'Etat dit moderne (XVe-XVIIIe siècles). Actes du Colloque tenu à Bercy, Paris: 2–3 décembre 2002, Paris: Comité pour l'histoire économique et financière de la France.Google Scholar
Furió, A., ‘Le crédit dans les registres notariaux de la région de Valence au bas Moyen Age’, Mélanges de l'Ecole française de Rome, 117/1, pp. 407–39.Google Scholar
Furió, A., ‘Impôt et dette publique. Système fiscal et stratégies financières à Valence à la fin du Moyen Âge’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 3962.Google Scholar
Garnier, F., ‘Transiger avec l'administration financière urbaine: l'exemple “d'accords” fiscaux à Millau, (XIVe-XVe siècles)’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes pp. 239–58.Google Scholar
Gouron, A., ‘De l'impôt communal à l'impôt royal. Le cas de Montpellier’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 291304.Google Scholar
Gressier, P., ‘Nature et montant des recettes forestières du comté de Bourgogne au XIVe siècle, d'après les comptes de gruerie’, in Corvol-Dessert, A. (ed.), Les forêts d'Occident du Moyen Age à nos jours. Actes des 24e journées internationales d'histoire de l'abbaue de Flaran, Gers, 6,7 et 8 septembre 2002, Toulouse: Presses Universitaires du Mirail, 2004, pp. 1338.Google Scholar
Guilleré, C., ‘Culture financière et fiscale en Savoie du XIIIe au XVe siècle’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 469–84.Google Scholar
Hoareau, J., ‘Argent et miséricorde. Les amendes dans les lettres de rémission des rois de France à la fin du Moyen Age’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 225–36.Google Scholar
Hébert, M., ‘“Bonnes villes” et capitales régionales: fiscalité d'Etat et identités urbaines en Provence autour de 1400’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 527–42.Google Scholar
Larguier, G., ‘Perception et gestion de l'impôt à Narbonne aux XIVe et XVe siècles’, in Menjot, and Sánchez, Martinez (eds.), La fiscalité des villes au moyen âge, pp. 145–60.Google Scholar
Larguier, G., ‘Impôt direct et ressources complémentaires. Système fiscal et politique fiscale à Narbonne, XIVe-XVe siècle’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 6382.Google Scholar
Lavigne, C., ‘Assigner et fiscaliser les terres au moyen age. Trois exemples’, Etudes rurales, 175–6, pp. 81107.Google Scholar
Le Page, D., ‘Le fouage en Bretagne au Moyen Age et aux débuts de l’époque moderne', in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 119–38.Google Scholar
Marandet, M-C., ‘La gestion de l'impôt direct en Lauragais au XVe siècle, à partir de quelques registres d'estimes et livres de taille’, in Menjot, and Sánchez, Martinez (eds.), La fiscalité des villes au moyen âge, pp. 109–44.Google Scholar
Mayade-Claustre, J., ‘Le corps lié de l'ouvrier. le travail et la dette à Paris au XVe siècle’, Annales. Histoire, Sciences Sociales, 60/2, pp. 383409.Google Scholar
Menjot, D. and Sánchez Martinez, M. (eds.), La fiscalité des villes au moyen âge. 4, La gestion de l'impôt: méthodes, moyens, résultats: Occident méditerranéen, Toulouse: privat, pp. 97118.Google Scholar
Reyerson, K., Jacques Coeur: entrepreneur and king's bursar, New York: Longman.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rigaudière, A., ‘Le contrôle de l'exercice comptable des consuls sanflorains pour l'année 1393–1394’, in Menjot, and Sánchez, Martinez (eds.), La fiscalité des villes au moyen âge, pp. 273309.Google Scholar
Rigaudière, A., ‘Les stratégies des bonnes villes d'Auvergne face à l'impôt royal aux XIVe et XVe siècles’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 353–98.Google Scholar
Sato, S., ‘À propos de la fiscalité et de l'Etat mérovingien aux VIe et VIIe siècles’, in Carozzi, C. and Taviani-Carozzi, H. (eds.), Le médiéviste devant ses sources: questions et méthodes. [Communications faites au séminaire de l'équipe de recherches sociétés, idéologies et croyances au moyen âge à l'université de Provence, en 2001 et 2002], Aix-en-Provence: Publications de l'université de Provence, 2004, pp. 171–83.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Yante, J-M., ‘Le contentieux économique et financier aux foires de Champagne (XIIIe-XIVe siècles)’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 1528.Google Scholar
Andermann, K., ‘Adel und finanzielle Mobilität im späten Mittelalter’, in Carl, and Sönke, (eds.), Gelungene Anpassung. Adelige Antworten auf gesellschaftliche Wandlungsvorgänge vom 14/16, Jh., Ostfildern: Thorbecke, pp. 1326.Google Scholar
Braun, R., Die älteste Rechnung des Bürgerspitals von 1495, Würzburg: Schöningh.Google Scholar
Emmerig, H., ‘Geld im frühmittelalterlichen Bayern’, in Vogeler, G. (ed.), Geschichte ‘in die Hand genommen’. Die geschichtlichen Hilfswissenschaften zwischen historischer Grundlagenforschung und methodischen Herausforderungen; Fortbildungsveranstaltung für Geschichtslehrer Ende September 2004 in München, Munich: Utz, pp. 195208.Google Scholar
Fouquet, G., ‘Die Finanzen der Bergenfahrer zu Lübeck – das Schüttingsrechnungsbuch (1469–1530)’, in Graßmann, A. (ed.), Das Hansische Kontor zu Bergen und die Lübecker Bergenfahrer. International Workshop Lübeck 2003, Lübeck: Schmidt-Römhild, pp. 140–62.Google Scholar
Görich, K., ‘Geld und Ehre. Friedrich Barbarossa’, in Grubmüller, and Stock, (eds.), Geld im Mittelalter, pp. 113–34.Google Scholar
Graafen, T. and Pundt, M., ‘Der Metzer Bürger Philippe Le Gronnais (+ 1314). Zwischen Geld, Glaube und Gemeinde’, in Irsigler, F. and Minn, G. (eds.), Porträt einer europäischen Kernregion. Der Rhein-Maas-Raum in historischen Lebensbildern, Trier: Kliomedia, pp. 101–9.Google Scholar
Kamp, H. ‘Gutes Geld und böses Geld. Die Anfänge der Geldwirtschaft und der “Gabentausch” im hohen Mittelalter’, in Grubmüller, and Stock, (eds.), Geld im Mittelalter, pp. 91112.Google Scholar
Mäkeler, H., ‘Geldwertveränderungen als Auslöser innerstädtischer Konflikte im Spätmittelalter’, Bremer Beiträge zur Münz- und Geldgeschichte 4, pp. 81105.Google Scholar
Mentgen, G., ‘Die Straßburger Juden Vivelin der Rote und Simon von Deneuvre. Bankiers europäischer Fürsten im 14. Jh.’, in Irsigler, F. and Minn, G. (eds.), Porträt einer europäischen Kernregion. Der Rhein-Maas-Raum in historischen Lebensbildern, Trier: Kliomedia, pp. 131–7.Google Scholar
Petry, K., ‘Münzen machen Wirtschaftsgeschichte: zum Fund eines Trierer Pfennigs Königs Ottos III. (983–996) aus Trier’, Funde und Ausgrabungen im Bezirk Trier, 37, pp. 5862.Google Scholar
Reitemeier, A., Pfarrkirchen in der Stadt des späten Mittelalters: Politik, Wirtschaft und Verwaltung, Stuttgart: Franz Steiner Verlag.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schmidt, P. G., ‘Nummus vincit, regnat, imperat’. Caesarius von Heisterbach über zisterziensische “avaritia”, in Grubmüller, and Stock, (eds.), Geld im Mittelalter, pp. 204–15.Google Scholar
Stunz, H., ‘Hospitäler im deutschsprachigen Raum im Spätmittelalter als Unternehmen für die “caritas”. Typen und Phasen der Finanzierung’, in Matheus, M. (ed.), Funktions- und Strukturwandel spätmittelalterlicher Hospitäler im europäischen Vergleich, Stuttgart: Steiner, pp. 129–59.Google Scholar
Tewes, G. R., ‘Deutsches Geld und römische Kurie. Zur Problematik eines gefühlten Leides’, in Flug, B., Matheus, M. and Rehberg, A. (eds.), Kurie und Region. Festschrift für Brigide Schwarz zum 65. Geburtstag, Stuttgart: Steiner, pp. 209–39.Google Scholar
Vogeler, G., ‘Tax accounting in the late medieval German territorial states’, Accounting, Business and Financial History, 15/3, pp. 235–55.Google Scholar
Armstrong, L., Usury and public debt in early Renaissance Florence: Lorenzo Ridolfi on the Monte Comune, Toronto: Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, 2003.Google Scholar
Blomquist, T. W., Merchant families, banking and money in medieval Lucca, Aldershot: Ashgate.Google Scholar
Boucheron, P., ‘Fiscalités urbaines et fabriques de cathédrales en Italie (XIIIe-XVve siècle): remarques sur l'acculturation fiscale’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 543–62.Google Scholar
Chittolini, G., ‘La cité, le territoire, l'impôt. Quelques considérations sur la répartition des impositions directes dans le duché de Milan (de 1450 aux environs de 1500)’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 305–30.Google Scholar
Conte, E., ‘Fiscalité et droit savant: les rapports de l'Empire et des villes italiennes dans la Somme de Roland de Lucques (vers 1200)’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 485510.Google Scholar
Demo, E., ‘“Tengo dinari li quali trafego in lo me bancho”. L'attività di Giovanni Orsato, banchiere padovano del XV secolo’, Studi Storici Luigi Simeoni, 54 (2004), pp. 341–58.Google Scholar
Ginatempo, M., ‘Les transformations de la fiscalité dans l'Italie post-communale’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 193218.Google Scholar
Goetzmann, W. N., ‘Fibonacci and the financial revolution’, in Goetzmann, W. N. and Rouwenhorst, K. G. (eds.), The origins of value: the financial innovations that created modern capital markets, Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 123–44.Google Scholar
Lambertini, R., ‘Das Geld und sein Gebrauch. “Pecunia” im Streit zwischen Michael von Cesena und Papst Johannes XXII’, in Grubmüller, and Stock, (eds.), Geld im Mittelalter, pp. 216–44.Google Scholar
Märtl, C., ‘Der Papst und das Geld. Zum kurialen Rechnungswesen unter Pius II. (1458–1464)’, in Flug, B., Matheus, M., and Rehberg, A. (eds.), Kurie und Region. Festschrift für Brigide Schwarz zum 65. Geburtstag, Stuttgart: Steiner, pp. 175–95.Google Scholar
Mainoni, P., ‘La “révolution fiscale” dans l'Italie du Nord (XIIe-XIIIe siècle). Quelques considérations’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 219–54.Google Scholar
Parks, T., Medici money: banking, metaphysics, and art in fifteenth-century Florence, New York: W. W. Norton & Company.Google Scholar
Pezzolo, L., ‘Bonds and government debt in Italian city-states, 1250–1650’, in Goetzmann, W. N. and Rouwenhorst, K. G. (eds.), The origins of value: the financial innovations that created modern capital markets, Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 145–64.Google Scholar
Spicciani, A., L'ospedale lucchese di Altopascio: storia economica e finanziaria nei secoli XI-XII, Pisa: ETS.Google Scholar
Collantes Deterán Sánchez, A., ‘Les villes dans le système fiscal du royaume de Castille (XIIIe-Xve siècle)’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 331–52.Google Scholar
Carrasco, J., ‘Les imposiciones dans les “bonnes villes” du royaume de Navarre: Tudela au milieu du XVe siècle’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 173–92.Google Scholar
Galán Sánchez, A. and Peinado Santaella, R. G., ‘La communauté et le roi: formes de recouvrement et résistances fiscales à Grenade après la conquête’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 427–50.Google Scholar
Martín Escudero, F., El tesoro de Baena: reflexiones sobre circulación monetaria en época omeya, Madrid: Real Academia de la Historia.Google Scholar
Menjot, D., ‘Politiques et stratégies fiscales des élites urbaines castillanes (fin XIIIe siècle-1474)’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 123–52.Google Scholar
Morelló Baget, J., ‘Les résistances à l'impôt dans les municipalités catalanes (du XIIIe au XIVe siècle): tentative de synthèse', in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 399426.Google Scholar
Orti Gost, P., ‘Fiscalité et finances publiques dans les territoires de la couronne d'Aragon’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 453–68.Google Scholar
Sánchez Martínez, M., ‘“Defensar lo principat de Cathalunya” pendant la seconde moitié du XIVe siècle: du service militaire à l'impôt’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 83122.Google Scholar
Verdés I Pijuan, P., ‘Politiques fiscales et stratégies financières dans les municipalités catalanes (XIVe-XVe siècle)’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 153–72.Google Scholar
Potekhina, I. P., ‘St. Peter's qualification in the tax system of medieval papacy’, Klio, 1/28, pp. 65–8.Google Scholar
Adams, J., The familial state: ruling families and merchant capitalism in early modern Europe, Ithaca: Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Chor, D., ‘Institutions, wages, and inequality: the case of Europe and its periphery (1500–1899)’, Explorations in Economic History, 42/4, pp. 547–67.Google Scholar
Desmedt, L., ‘Money in the “body politick”: the analysis of trade and circulation in the writings of seventeenth-century political arithmeticians’, History of Political Economy, 37/1, pp. 79101.Google Scholar
Gordon, D., ‘Dematerialization principle: sociability, money and music in the eighteenth century’, Historical Reflections, 31/1, pp. 7192.Google Scholar
Goetzmann, W. N. and Rouwenhorst, K. G. (eds.), The origins of value: the financial innovations that created modern capital markets, Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 123–44.Google Scholar
Grech, I., ‘Flow of capital in the Mediterranean: financial connections between Genoa and hospitaller Malta in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries’, International J. of Maritime History, 17/2, pp. 193210.Google Scholar
Herre, F., Die Fugger in ihrer Zeit, Augsburg: Wissner.Google Scholar
Homburg, H., ‘Fortuna und Methode. Überlegungen zur Kulturgeschichte von Geld und Reichtum in der zweiten Halfte des 18. Jahrhunderts’, Vierteljahrschrift fur Sozial und Wirtschaftsgeschichte, 92/1, pp. 1630.Google Scholar
Kwass, M., ‘Spending and saving in the Enlightenment’, Historical Reflections, 31/1, pp. 4970.Google Scholar
MacKillop, A., ‘Accessing empire: Scotland, Europe, Britain, and the Asia trade, 1695 – c. 1750’, Itinerario, 29/3, pp. 730.Google Scholar
Ogilvie, S., ‘The use and abuse of trust: social capital and its deployment by early modern guilds’, Jahrbuch für Wirtschaftsgeschichte, 1, pp. 1552.Google Scholar
Poterba, J. M., ‘Annuities in early modern Europe’, in Goetzmann, and Rouwenhorst, (eds.), The origins of value, pp. 207–24.Google Scholar
Richard, J., ‘The concept of fair value in French and German accounting regulations from 1673 to 1914 and its consequences for the interpretation of the stages of development of capitalist accounting’, Critical Perspectives on Accounting, 16/6, pp. 825–50.Google Scholar
Van Zanden, J-L., ‘De timmerman, de boekdrukker en het ontstaan van de Europese kenniseconomie over de prijs en het aanbod van kennis voor de industriele revolutie’ [The carpenter, the printer and the genesis of the European knowledge economy. On the price and the supply of knowledge before the industrial revolution], Tijdschrift voor sociale en economische geschiedenis, 2/1, pp.105–20.Google Scholar
Weissen, K., ‘Fortschrittsverweigerung? Die Haltung der deutschen Handelsherren gegenüber der italienischen Banktechnik bis 1475’, in Schmidt, H. J. (ed.), Tradition, Innovation, Invention. Fortschrittsverweigerung und Fortschrittsbewußtsein im Mittelalter, Berlin: de Gruyter, pp. 161–78.Google Scholar
Westermann, E., ‘Gold, silver, and copper in the European economies and their external trade relations from the end of the 15th to the end of the 16th century’, in Kreiner, J. (ed.), The road to Japan: social and economic aspects of early European–Japanese contacts, Bonn: Bier, pp. 6390.Google Scholar
Edvinsson, R., ‘Den svenska konjunkturcykeln 1700–2000’, Ekonomisk debatt, 33/8, pp. 629.Google Scholar
Abramson, D. M., Building the Bank of England: money, architecture, society, 1694–1942, New York: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Baker, M. and Collins, M., ‘Audit and control in the not-for-profit sector: an endowed charity case 1739–1853’, Accounting and Business Research, 35/2, pp. 111–28.Google Scholar
Bogart, D., ‘Did turnpike trusts increase transportation investment in eighteenth-century England?’, J. of Economic History, 65/2, pp. 439–68.Google Scholar
Hutchings, H., Hoare bankers: a history of the Hoare banking dynasty, London: Constable.Google Scholar
Ingrassia, C., ‘Money and sexuality in the Enlightenment: George Lillo's “The London Merchant”’, Historical Reflections, 31/1, pp. 93116.Google Scholar
Morgan, K., ‘Remittance procedures in the eighteenth-century British slave trade’, Business History Rev., 79/4, pp. 715–50.Google Scholar
Murphy, A. J., ‘Lotteries in the 1690s: investment or gamble?’, Financial History Rev., 12/2, pp. 227–46.Google Scholar
Murphy, A. J., ‘John Law’, in Goetzmann, and Rouwenhorst, (eds.), The origins of value, pp. 225–38.Google Scholar
Nash, R. C., ‘The organization of trade and finance in the British-Atlantic economy, 1600–1830’, in Coclanis, P. A. (ed.), The Atlantic economy during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries: organization, operation, practice, and personnel, Columbia: University of South Carolina Press, pp. 95151.Google Scholar
Rogers, A., ‘Prosperous – but precarious: property deeds and mortgages in a small market town in the 18th and 19th centuries’, Family & Community History, 8/2, pp. 105–22.Google Scholar
Rorke, M., ‘The Scottish herring trade, 1470–1600’, Scottish Historical Rev., 84/2, pp. 149–65.Google Scholar
Sherman, S., Finance and fictionality in the early Eighteenth century: accounting for Defoe, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smail, John, ‘Credit, risk, and honor in eighteenth-century commerce’, J. of British Studies, 44/3, pp. 439–56.Google Scholar
Temin, P. and Voth, H. J., ‘Credit rationing and crowding out during the industrial revolution: evidence from Hoare's Bank, 1702–1862’, Explorations in Economic History, 42/3, pp. 325–48.Google Scholar
Thomas, J. H., ‘Devizes in the eighteenth century: the evidence from fire insurance records’, Archives, 113, pp. 7589.Google Scholar
Tiberi, M., Investimenti internazionali e sviluppo del sistema capitalistico: l'evoluzione degli scambi commerciali della Gran Bretagna (1700–1913), Rome: Edizioni Kappa.Google Scholar
Toms, S., ‘Financial control, managerial control and accountability: evidence from the British cotton industry, 1700–2000’, Accounting, Organizations and Society, 30/7–8, pp. 627–53.Google Scholar
Watt, D., ‘The management of capital by the Company of Scotland 1696–1707’, J. of Scottish Historical Studies, 25/2, pp. 97118.Google Scholar
Yeandle, L., ‘Sir Edward Dering of Surrenden Dering and his “Booke of expences”, 1617–1628’, Archaeologia Cantiana, 125, pp. 323–44.Google Scholar
Clinquart, J., ‘Les resources économiques de l'Intendance du Hainaut décrites par un contemporain dix ans avant la révolution’, Valentiana, 22, 2004, pp. 1132.Google Scholar
Gelderblom, O. and Jonker, J., ‘Amsterdam as the cradle of modern futures trading’, in Goetzmann, and Rouwenhorst, (eds.), The origins of value, pp. 189206.Google Scholar
Neal, L., ‘Venture shares of the Dutch East India Company’, in Goetzmann, and Rouwenhorst, (eds.), The origins of value, pp. 165–76.Google Scholar
Tracy, J. D., The Low Countries in the sixteenth century: Erasmus, religion and politics, trade and finance, Brookfield: Ashgate.Google Scholar
Van Nieuwkerk, M., Hollands gouden glorie: de financiëlkracht van Nederland door de eeuwen heen, Haarlem: Becht.Google Scholar
Antonetti, G., ‘Du louis à l'assignat’, D'or et d'argent. La monnaie en France du Moyen Âge à nos jours. Cycle de conférences tenues à Bercy entre le 22 octobre 2001 et le 18 février 2002, Paris, Comité pour l'Histoire économique et financière de la France, pp. 1734.Google Scholar
Banks, K. J., ‘Communications and “imperial overstretch”: lessons from the eighteenth-century French Atlantic’, French Colonial History, 6, pp. 1732.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bayard, F., ‘Collecter la taille en Lyonnais et Beaujolais au XVIIe siècle’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 379401.Google Scholar
Baron, I., ‘La répression des délits liés à la monnaie au XVIIIe siècle’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 179–88.Google Scholar
Bastien, P., ‘“La seconde puntion”: quelques remarques sur la confiscation des biens dans la Coutume de Paris au XVIIIe siècle’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 281–92.Google Scholar
Bayard, F., ‘Les financiers français devant la justice au XVIIe siècle’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 155–65.Google Scholar
Béguin, K., ‘La circulation des rentes constituées dans la France du XVIIe siècle. Une approche de l'incertitude économique’, Annales. Histoire, Sciences Sociales, 60/6, pp. 1229–45.Google Scholar
Bergier, J-F. and Lüthy, H., La banque protestante en France: de la révocation de l'Édit de Nantes à la Révolution, Zurich: Verlag Neue Zürcher Zeitung.Google Scholar
Blanchard, A., ‘Répartir les impôts entre les paroisses, une tâche difficile: l'exemple de la généralité de Soissons au XVIIIe siècle’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 435–81.Google Scholar
Blaufarb, R., ‘Vers une histoire de l'exemption fiscale nobiliaire la Provence des années 1530 à 1789’, Annales. Histoire, Sciences Sociales, 60/6, pp. 1203–28.Google Scholar
Brumont, F., ‘La répartition de la taille entre communautés: l’élection d'Armagnac aux XVIIe et XVIIIe siècles', in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 403–34.Google Scholar
Bugeaud, V., ‘Quand les bargers se font monnayeurs: une “aristocratie” chez les pêcheurs de l'estuaire de la Loire au XVIIIe siècle’, Annales de Bretagne et des Pays de l'Ouest, 112/4, pp. 4384.Google Scholar
Caillou, F., Une administration royale d'Ancien Régime: le bureau des finances de Tours, Tours: Presses universitaires François-Rabelais, 2 vols.Google Scholar
Carroll, S., ‘Acheter la grâce en France du XVe au XVIIe siècle’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 237–46.Google Scholar
Chantrel, L., ‘Une relecture des travaux de Jean Bodin sur la fiscalité à partir des comptes rendus des Etats Généraux de 1560 à 1588’, L'oeuvre de Jean Bodin. Actes du colloque tenu à Lyon à l'occasion du quatrième centenaire de sa mort, 11–13 janvier 1996, Paris: Champion, 2004, pp. 333–52.Google Scholar
Conchon, A., ‘Financer la construction d'infrastructures de transport: la concession au XVIIe et XVIIIe siècles’, in Barjot, D. and Berneron-Couvenhes, M-F. (eds.), ‘Concessions et optimisation des investissements publics’, Entreprises et histoire, 38, pp. 5570.Google Scholar
Coudray, J., ‘Les prévôts royaux’, Cahiers du Passé, 28, pp. 3448.Google Scholar
Coulomb, C., ‘Les parlementaires, banquiers et débiteurs de la société urbaine: l'exemple de Grenoble dans la seconde moitié du XVIIIe siècle’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 125–35.Google Scholar
Desan, P., ‘Jean Bodin et l'imaginaire de la monnaie’, L'oeuvre de Jean Bodin, pp. 293304.Google Scholar
Dessert, D., Les Daliès de Montauban: une dynastie protestante de financiers sous Louis XIV, Paris: Perrin.Google Scholar
Diedler, J-C., ‘Fiscalités et société rurale en Loraine méridionale: l'exemple de la prévôté de Bruyères, de René II à Stanislas (1473–1766)’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 139–98.Google Scholar
Dormard, S., ‘Le marché du crédit à Douai aux XVIIe et XVIIIe siècles’, Rev. du Nord, 87/362, pp. 803–33.Google Scholar
Dousset, C., ‘Des veuves spolliées? Conflits familiaux et justice civile dans le Midi de la France, XVIIe-XVIIIe siècles’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 5364.Google Scholar
Doyon, J., ‘“Ni clair ni liquide”: l'argent dans les conflits familiaux de 1686 à 1745’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 6576.Google Scholar
Follain, A., ‘La taille au village en régime de personnalité du XVIe au XVIIIe siècle: pièces justificatives’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 548642.Google Scholar
Follain, A. and Larguier, G., L'impôt des campagnes, fragile fondement de l'Etat dit moderne (XVe-XVIIIe siècles). Actes du Colloque tenu à Bercy, Paris: 2–3 décembre 2002, Paris: Comité pour l'histoire économique et financière de la France.Google Scholar
Fournier, P., ‘La fiscalité comtadine aux XVIe et XVIIIe siècles: histoire d'un déclin ou d'une mutation?’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 267309.Google Scholar
Fréger, L., ‘La répression des délits liés aux épices aux XVIIe-XVIIIe siècles (à travers les exemples breton et normand)’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 167–78.Google Scholar
Garnot, B. (ed.), Justice et argent, Dijon: Editions universitaires de Dijon, pp. 179–88.Google Scholar
Gay, J-P., ‘Réparation et restitution dans la théologie morale au XVIIe siècle en France: l'autre prix du crime et du délit’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 247–58.Google Scholar
Glineur, C., ‘Entre libéralisme et protectionnisme: la politique pré-libérale du contrôleur général Moreau de Séchelles’, La Rev. Administrative, 345, pp. 290302.Google Scholar
Hickey, D., ‘Le procès des tailles dans le Dauphiné: les cahiers des villages et l'intégration des communautés rurales au sein de la contestation du Tiers Etat (1591–1602)’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 199233.Google Scholar
Houllemare, M., ‘Les marchands étrangers et l'argent: procès économiques au parlement de Paris dans la seconde moitié du XVIe siècle’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 2940.Google Scholar
Larguier, G., ‘Le crédit en Catalogne au XVIIe siècle: les foires de change de Perpignan (1630–1651)’, Annales du Midi, 117/251, pp. 347–61.Google Scholar
Larguier, G., ‘Fraude et protection en Languedoc au XVIIe siècle: l'affaire Aoustenc’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 4152.Google Scholar
Larguier, G., ‘Les communautés, le roi, les États, la cour des Aides. La formation du système fiscal languedocien’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 6995.Google Scholar
Legay, M-L., ‘1775: l'abolition de la contrainte solidaire en France’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 189–98.Google Scholar
Legay, M-L., ‘Prélèvement de l'impôt direct et contrainte publique dans les Pays-Bas français au XVIIe siècle (1660–1715)’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 311–33.Google Scholar
Luckett, T. M., ‘Imaginary currency and real guillotines: the intellectual origins of the financial terror in France’, Historical Reflections, 31/1, pp. 117–39.Google Scholar
Maillard, B., ‘Les communautés des habitants et la perception de la taille aux XVIIe et XVIIIe siècles, en pays d’élections, (d'après l'exemple de la généralité de Tours)', in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 481510.Google Scholar
Ménard, O., ‘De la répression de la fausse monnaie en Bretagne au XVIIIe siècle’, Rev. numismatique, 2004, 160, pp. 321–42.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Montel, L. ‘Faire du crime organisé un objet d'histoire d'après le cas marseillais (XIXe et premier XXe siècle)’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 99106.Google Scholar
Paris, L., ‘Capitations de la communauté de Boissezon-de-Masciel, année 1698’, Cahiers de Rieumontagné, 55, pp. 6176.Google Scholar
Pascal, C., ‘Jean Bardon (1740–1815), dernier trésorier de France de Montpellier. Histoire d'une ascension sociale manquée’, Bulletin de la Société des Sciences et Lettres de Montpellier, 29, pp. 527.Google Scholar
Pichon, J., ‘La taille tarifée dans quatre paroisses du Haut-Poitou: approche statistique d'un essai de répartition de l'impôt au XVIIIe siècle’, Rev. Historique du Centre-Ouest, 2004, 3/1, pp. 129–74.Google Scholar
Spang, R. L., ‘The ghost of law: speculating on money, memory and Mississippi in the French constituent assembly’, Historical Reflections, 31/1, pp. 325.Google Scholar
Vester, M., ‘Perché l'autonomia istituzionale non significò meno tasse nella Bresse savoiarda (1560–1580)’, Quaderni storici, 118/1, pp. 4172.Google Scholar
Wenzel, E., ‘Plaie d'argent est-elle morte? Le problème du péculat dans la doctrine juridique d'Ancien Régime’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 143–54.Google Scholar
Brecht, M., ‘Erwerb und Finanzierung von Kunstwerken durch Erzbischof Albrecht von Mainz’, in Tacke, A. (ed.), Kontinuität und Zäsur. Ernst von Wettin und Albrecht von Brandenburg, Göttingen: Wallstein-Verlag, pp. 391–98.Google Scholar
Bünz, E., Das Mainzer Subsidienregister für Thüringen von 1506, Cologne: Böhlau.Google Scholar
Chocholac, B., ‘Güterpreise, Verschuldung und Ratensystem. Eine Fallstudie zu den finanziellen Transaktionen der Untertanen bei Besitzübertragungen in Westmähren im späten 16. und im 17. Jh.’, in Cerman, M. and Luft, R. (eds.), Untertanen, Herrschaft und Staat in Böhmen und im “Alten Reich”. Sozialgeschichtliche Studien zur Frühen Neuzeit, Munich: Oldenbourg, pp. 89125.Google Scholar
Cordes, A., ‘Kapital, Arbeit, Risiko, Gewinn. Aufgabenteilung in einer Lübecker Handelsgesellschaft des 16. Jh.’, in Hammel-Kiesow, R. and Hundt, M. (eds.), Das Gedächtnis der Hansestadt Lübeck. Festschrift für Antjekathrin Graßmann zum 65. Geburtstag, Lübeck, Schmidt-Römhild, pp. 517–34.Google Scholar
Homburg, H., ‘Fortuna und Methode. Überlegungen zur Kulturgeschichte von Geld und Reichtum in der zweiten Hälfte des 18. Jh’, Vierteljahrschrift für Sozial- und Wirtschaftsgeschichte, 92/1, pp. 1630.Google Scholar
Homering, L., ‘Freiheit, Frauen und Finanzen – Friedrich Schiller in Mannheim’, in Wieczorek, A. (ed.), Schiller Zeit in Mannheim, Mainz: von Zabern, pp. 103–18.Google Scholar
Jakubowski-Tiessen, M., ‘Woher nehmen wir geldt zu den Küsten her…?’ Eine frühneuzeitliche Flutkatastrophe und ihre finanziellen Folgen, Siedlungsforschung, 23, pp. 91100.Google Scholar
Janssen, W., ‘Beobachtungen zur Struktur und Finanzierung des kurkölnischen Hofes im späten 14. und frühen 15. J’, Rheinische Vierteljahrsblätter, 69, pp. 104–32.Google Scholar
Köhler, C., ‘Die Wirtschafts-, Finanz- und Sozialpolitik Ernsts II. von Sachsen-Gotha-Altenburg’, in Greiling, W., Klinger, A. and Köhler, C. (eds.), Ernst II. von Sachsen-Gotha-Altenburg. Ein Herrscher im Zeitalter der Aufklärung, Cologne: Böhlau, pp. 111–27.Google Scholar
Mauerer, E., ‘Geld, Reputation, Karriere im Haus Fürstenberg. Beobachtungen zu einigen Motiven adeligen Handelns im barocken Reich’, Zeitenblicke, 2/11, www.zeitenblicke.de/2005/2/mauerer/mauerer.pdf.Google Scholar
Münch, E., ‘Die Entwicklung der Rostocker Fahnenzahl und der Stadtbrand von 1677’, Beiträge zur Geschichte der Stadt Rostock, 27, pp. 5167.Google Scholar
Nadler, M., ‘Ein Fürstentum in Geld aufgewogen - das Territorium von Pfalz-Neuburg’, in Bäumler, S., Brockhoff, E. and Henker, M. (eds.), Von Kaisers Gnaden. 500 Jahre Pfalz-Neuburg. Katalog zur Bayerischen Landesausstellung 2005, Neuburg an der Donau, 3. Juni–16. Oktober 2005, Augsburg: Haus d. Bayerischen Geschichte, pp. 126–38.Google Scholar
Nagel, F., ‘Geld und Geist. Zwei unbekannte Texte Johann Bernoullis im Kontext einer mißglückten Intrige gegen Jacob Hermann’, in Splinter, S., Gerstengarbe, S. and Remane, H. (eds.), ‘Physica et historia’. Festschrift für Andreas Kleinert zum 65. Geburtstag, Halle/Saale, Deutsche Akademie d. Naturforscher Leopoldina, pp. 163–74.Google Scholar
Püschel, C., ‘Das städtische Finanzwesen’, in Blaschke, K. and John, U. (eds.), Geschichte der Stadt Dresden. Bd.1: Von den Anfängen bis zum Ende des Dreißigjährigen Krieges, Stuttgart: Theiss, pp. 365–91.Google Scholar
Rheinheimer, M., ‘The captains’ money: capital and credit on the North Frisian islands of Amrum and Föhr, 1763–1812', International J. of Maritime History, 17/2, pp. 141–65.Google Scholar
Schobel, E., ‘Benevolent governance and fiscal federalism in Veit Ludwig von Seckendorff's Teutscher Fursten Stat (1656): comment on Erik S. Reinert’, European J. of Law and Economics, 19/3, pp. 231–3.Google Scholar
Schneider, K., ‘Frankfurt am Main und die Geldkrise des 18. Jh.’, Scripta Mercaturae, 39/1, pp. 144.Google Scholar
Schneider, K., ‘Zum Frankfurter Geldhandel während des Siebenjährigen Krieges’, Scripta Mercaturae, 39/2, pp. 55147.Google Scholar
Speelman, P. J., War, society and enlightenment: the works of General Lloyd, Leiden: Brill.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Staudinger, B., ‘In puncto debiti. Prozesse jüdischer Geldleiherinnen am Reichshofrat’ in Westphal, S. (ed.), In eigener Sache. Frauen vor den höchsten Gerichten des Alten Reiches, Cologne: Böhlau, pp. 153–80.Google Scholar
Ullmann, H. P., Der deutsche Steuerstaat. Geschichte der öffentlichen Finanzen vom 18. Jh. bis heute, Munich: Beck.Google Scholar
Avallone, P., ‘Tra teoria e pratica. Il credito agrario nel regno di Napoli nella seconda metà del XVIII secolo’, Riv. di Storia dell' Agricoltura, 45/2, pp. 337.Google Scholar
Battistini, F., ‘La produzione, il commercio e i prezzi della seta grezza nello Stato di Firenze 1489–1859’, Riv. di Storia Economica, 21/3, pp. 233–72.Google Scholar
Boldizzoni, F., La rivoluzione dei prezzi rivisitata: moneta ed economia reale in Alta Italia (1550–1630)' Riv. Storica Italiana, 117/3, pp. 1002–36.Google Scholar
Cancila, O., ‘Alchimie finanziarie di una grande famiglia feudale nel primo secolo dell'età moderna’, Mediterranea Ricerche Storiche, 2006, 3/6, pp. 69136.Google Scholar
Carrotta, R., ‘Debito pubblico e mercati finanziari tra età moderna e contemporanea in Convegno sul debito pubblico e il mercato finanziario in età moderna e contemporanea, tenuto, a Cassino, il 7 e 8 ottobre 2005’, Riv. di Storia Finanziaria, 15, pp. 143–55, www.delpt.unina.it/stof/indice.html.Google Scholar
Cenni, F. and Tristano, C., Liber/libra: il mercato del libro manoscritto nel Medioevo italiano, Rome: Jouvence.Google Scholar
Chiese, V., ‘La ricchezza delle corporazioni e il suo utilizzo. (Il caso di Verona in età moderna)’, Studi Storici Luigi Simeoni, 55, pp. 215–34.Google Scholar
Chiese, V., ‘Proprietari ed inquilini a Verona a metà seicento’, Società e Storia, 109, pp. 477501.Google Scholar
Del Grosso, M. A., ‘Un banco ebraico a Salerno al tempo di Carlo V’, Rassegna Storica Salernitana, 43, pp. 8794.Google Scholar
Clerici, L., ‘Pagamenti in natura, velocita di circolazione della moneta e rivoluzione dei prezzi’, Riv. di Storia Economica, 21/2, pp. 155–80.Google Scholar
Colzi, F., Mercato finanziario e debito pubblico a Roma fra Cinque e Seicento in Seminario su Debito pubblico e formazione dei mercati finanziari fra età moderna e contemporaneatenuto, a Cassino, il 15 e 16 ottobre', Riv. di Storia Finanziaria, 15, pp. 4964, www.delpt.unina.it/stof/indice.html.Google Scholar
Di Taranto, G., ‘Finanze e debito pubblico in Italia tra età moderna e contemporanea in Seminario su Debito pubblico e formazione dei mercati finanziari fra età moderna e contemporanea, tenuto, a Cassino, il 15 e 16 ottobre 2004’, Riv. di Storia Finanziaria, 15, pp. 137–42, www.delpt.unina.it/stof/indice.html.Google Scholar
Fanfani, T., ‘Alle origini della banca. Il sentiero del credito in Italia tra il XVIII e il XX secolo’, Bancaria, 61/1, pp. 715.Google Scholar
Hocquet, J-C., ‘À Venise, dette publique et spéculations privées’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 1538.Google Scholar
Hollingsworth, M., The cardinal's hat: money, ambition, and everyday life in the court of a Borgia prince, Woodstock: Overlook Press.Google Scholar
Isenmann, M., Die Verwaltung der päpstlichen Staatsschuld in der Frühen Neuzeit: Sekretariat, Computisterie und Depositerie der Monti vom 16. bis zum ausgehenden 18. Jahrhundert, Stuttgart: Steiner.Google Scholar
Lentini, R., ‘Dal commercio alla finanza: i negozianti-banchieri inglesi nella Sicilia Occidentale tra XVIII e XIX secolo’, Mediterranea Ricerche Storiche, 2004, 1/2, pp. 105–22.Google Scholar
Marsilio, C., ‘Nel XVII secolo dei genovesi. La corrispondenza commerciale di Paolo Gerolamo Pallavicini nel triennio 1636–1638’, Storia Economica, 8/1, pp. 101–20.Google Scholar
Masini, R., Il debito pubblico pontificio a fine Seicento: i monti camerali, Città di Castello: Edimond.Google Scholar
Piola Caselli, F., ‘Note sul debito pubblico nello Stato Pontificio (secoli XVI-XVIII) in Seminario su Debito pubblico e formazione dei mercati finanziari fra età moderna e contemporanea, tenuto, a Cassino, il 15 e 16 ottobre 2004’, Riv. di Storia Finanziaria, 15, pp. 133–6, www.delpt.unina.it/stof/indice.html.Google Scholar
Silvano, G., A beneficio dei poveri: il Monte di pietà di Padova tra pubblico e privato, 1491–1600, Bologna: Il Mulino.Google Scholar
Stapelbroek, K., ‘The devaluation controversy in eighteenth-century Italy’, History of Economic Ideas, 13/2, pp. 79110.Google Scholar
Strangio, D., ‘Il sistema finanziario del debito pubblico pontificio tra età moderna e contemporanea’, Riv. di Storia Finanziaria, 14, pp. 742, www.delpt.unina.it/stof/indice.html.Google Scholar
Windler, C., ‘“Ohne Geld keine Schweizer”: Pensionen und Söldnerrekrutierung auf den eidgenössischen Patronagemärkten’, in von Thiessen, H. and Windler, C. (eds.), Nähe in der Ferne. Personale Verflechtung in den Außenbeziehungen der Frühen Neuzeit, Berlin: Duncker & Humblot, pp. 105–33.Google Scholar
Alonso García, D., Una corte en construcción: Madrid en la Hacienda Real de Castilla (1517–1556), Madrid: Miño y Dávila Editores.Google Scholar
Alvarez Nogal, C., ‘Las compañias bancarias genovesas en Madrid a comienzos del siglo XVII’, Hispania, 65/1, pp. 6790.Google Scholar
Alvarez-Nogal, C., ‘El transporte de moneda en la Espana del siglo XVII: mecanismos y costes’, Rev. de Istoria Economica, 23, pp. 379408.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Benavides, C., ‘Les peines pécuniaires: la législation espagnole et son application au XVIIe siècle’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 281–92.Google Scholar
De Francisco Olmos, J. M., ‘La moneda y su utilizacion como documento politico en la Cataluña de la “guerra dels segadors” (1640–1652)’, Rev. General de Informacion y Documentacion, 15/1, pp. 149–87.Google Scholar
Drelichman, M., ‘All that glitters: precious metals, rent seeking and the decline of Spain’, European Rev. of Economic History, 9/3, pp. 313–36.Google Scholar
Eiras Roel, A., ‘Deuda y fiscalidad de la Corona de Castilla en la epoca de los Austrias: evolucion e historiografia’, Obradoiro de Historia Moderna, 14, pp. 65107.Google Scholar
Fenech, F. C., Sanchez Matamoros, J. B., Hidalgo, F. G. and Espejo, C. A., ‘Govern(mentality) and accounting: the influence of different enlightenment discourses in two Spanish cases (1761–1777)’, Abacus, 41/2, pp. 181210.Google Scholar
Fernández Romero, C., Gastos, ingresos y ahorro familiar: Navarra, 1561–1820, Pamplona: Ediciones Universidad de Navarra.Google Scholar
Font de Villanueva, C., ‘Política monetaria y política fiscal en Castilla en el siglo XVII: un siglo de inestabilidades’, Rev. de Historia Económica, 23, pp. 329–47.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
González Arévalo, R., El Privilegio de Málaga de 1501, Malaga: Universidad de Malaga.Google Scholar
Gutiérrez, F., Larrinaga, C. and Núñez, M., ‘Cost and management accounting in pre-industrial revolution Spain’, Accounting Historians J., 32/1, pp. 111–48.Google Scholar
Hierro-Anibarro, S., ‘El asiento de averia y el origen de la compania privilegiada en Espana’, Rev. de Historia Economica, 23, pp. 181212.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jurado Sánchez, J., La economía de la Corte. El gasto de la Casa Real en la Edad Moderna, 1561–1808, Madrid, Instituto de Estudios Fiscales.Google Scholar
Lanza García, R., ‘Fiscalidad real en Cantabria: alcabalas, cientos y millones en la época de los Austrias’, Investigaciones de Historia Económica, 3, pp. 4372.Google Scholar
Llopis, E. and Sotoca, S., ‘Antes, bastante antes: la primera fase de la integracion del mercado Español de trigo, 1725–1808’, Historia Agraria, 36, pp. 225–62.Google Scholar
Martínez Guillén, J., ‘The Bordazar memorandum: cost calculation in Spanish printing during the 18th century’, Accounting Historians J., 32/2, pp. 81103.Google Scholar
Nogal, C. A., ‘Genoese banking companies in Madrid at the beginning of the 17th century’, in Hispania-Rev. Espanola De Historia, 219, pp. 6790.Google Scholar
Porras Arboledas, P. A., ‘Concursos de acreedores en el archivo historico provincial de Burgos (siglos XVI-XIX)’, Cuadernos de Historia del Derecho, 12, pp. 355–72.Google Scholar
Ruiz Rodríguez, J. I., Disputa y consenso en la administración fiscal castellana: Villanueva de los Infantes y el partido del Campo de Montiel c. 1600-c.1660, Alcalá de Henares: Universidad de Alcalá.Google Scholar
Sanchez Torres, R., ‘The failure of the Spanish crown's fiscal monopoly over Tobacco in Catalonia during the XVIIIth century’, J. of European Economic History, 34/3, pp. 721–62.Google Scholar
Sanz Ayán, C., ‘Presencia y fortuna de los hombres de negocios genoveses durante la crisis hispana de 1640’, Hispania, 65/1, pp. 91114.Google Scholar
Solbes Ferri, S., ‘Teoría y práctica de administración y cobranza de rentas reales en Navarra (siglo XVIII)’, Investigaciones de Historia Económica, 3, pp. 73100.Google Scholar
Thomas, H., Rivers of gold: the rise of the Spanish empire, from Columbus to Magellan, New York: Random House.Google Scholar
Turull Rubinat, M., ‘Un juriste du XVIIe siècle: Andreu Bosch et le droit d'imposer en Catalogne au Moyen Âge’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 511–26.Google Scholar
Villegas Ruiz, M., La aportación financiero-fiscal de Córdoba a la hacienda de Carlos I., Córdoba: Universidad de Córdoba/CajaSur Publicaciones.Google Scholar
Wohlfeil, R., ‘Währung, Wirtschaft, Arbeitsverträge, Lehrverträge, Dienstverträge, Preise, Kosten. Ein Beitrag zur Geschichte von Stadt und Region Málaga im 16. Jahrhundert. 2’, Jahrbuch für Geschichte Lateinamerikas, 42, pp. 185209.Google Scholar
Rizescu, O., ‘L'appropriation des sanctions pénales par le système fiscal. L'institution de la garantie personnelle en Valachie au XVIIe siècle’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 259–70.Google Scholar
Denzel, M. A., Die Bozner Messen und ihr Zahlungsverkehr, 1633–1850, Bozen: Athesia.Google Scholar
Denzel, M. A. and Gerhard, H. J., ‘Global and local aspects of pre-industrial inflations: new research on inflationary processes in XVIIIth century central Europe’, J. of European Economic History, 34/1, pp. 149–85.Google Scholar
Kenyeres, I., ‘Die Einkünfte und Reformen der Finanzverwaltung Ferdinands I. in Ungarn’, , in Fuchs, M., Oborni, T. and Ujváry, G. (eds.), Kaiser Ferdinand I. Ein mitteleuropäischer Herrscher, Münster: Aschendorff, pp. 111–46.Google Scholar
Nazarova, I. A., ‘Teoriia i praktika denezhnogo obrashcheniia i denezhnykh reform v Rossii (XVIII – pervaia polovina XIX v.)’ [Theory and practice of money circulation and restoration of currency in Russia (XVIII – first fifty years of XIX century)], Vestnik Moskovskogo Universiteta, 5, pp. 5470.Google Scholar
Adams, J., The familial state: ruling families and merchant capitalism in early modern Europe, Ithaca: Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Chor, D., ‘Institutions, wages, and inequality: the case of Europe and its periphery (1500–1899)’, Explorations in Economic History, 42/4, pp. 547–67.Google Scholar
Desmedt, L., ‘Money in the “body politick”: the analysis of trade and circulation in the writings of seventeenth-century political arithmeticians’, History of Political Economy, 37/1, pp. 79101.Google Scholar
Gordon, D., ‘Dematerialization principle: sociability, money and music in the eighteenth century’, Historical Reflections, 31/1, pp. 7192.Google Scholar
Goetzmann, W. N. and Rouwenhorst, K. G. (eds.), The origins of value: the financial innovations that created modern capital markets, Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 123–44.Google Scholar
Grech, I., ‘Flow of capital in the Mediterranean: financial connections between Genoa and hospitaller Malta in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries’, International J. of Maritime History, 17/2, pp. 193210.Google Scholar
Herre, F., Die Fugger in ihrer Zeit, Augsburg: Wissner.Google Scholar
Homburg, H., ‘Fortuna und Methode. Überlegungen zur Kulturgeschichte von Geld und Reichtum in der zweiten Halfte des 18. Jahrhunderts’, Vierteljahrschrift fur Sozial und Wirtschaftsgeschichte, 92/1, pp. 1630.Google Scholar
Kwass, M., ‘Spending and saving in the Enlightenment’, Historical Reflections, 31/1, pp. 4970.Google Scholar
MacKillop, A., ‘Accessing empire: Scotland, Europe, Britain, and the Asia trade, 1695 – c. 1750’, Itinerario, 29/3, pp. 730.Google Scholar
Ogilvie, S., ‘The use and abuse of trust: social capital and its deployment by early modern guilds’, Jahrbuch für Wirtschaftsgeschichte, 1, pp. 1552.Google Scholar
Poterba, J. M., ‘Annuities in early modern Europe’, in Goetzmann, and Rouwenhorst, (eds.), The origins of value, pp. 207–24.Google Scholar
Richard, J., ‘The concept of fair value in French and German accounting regulations from 1673 to 1914 and its consequences for the interpretation of the stages of development of capitalist accounting’, Critical Perspectives on Accounting, 16/6, pp. 825–50.Google Scholar
Van Zanden, J-L., ‘De timmerman, de boekdrukker en het ontstaan van de Europese kenniseconomie over de prijs en het aanbod van kennis voor de industriele revolutie’ [The carpenter, the printer and the genesis of the European knowledge economy. On the price and the supply of knowledge before the industrial revolution], Tijdschrift voor sociale en economische geschiedenis, 2/1, pp.105–20.Google Scholar
Weissen, K., ‘Fortschrittsverweigerung? Die Haltung der deutschen Handelsherren gegenüber der italienischen Banktechnik bis 1475’, in Schmidt, H. J. (ed.), Tradition, Innovation, Invention. Fortschrittsverweigerung und Fortschrittsbewußtsein im Mittelalter, Berlin: de Gruyter, pp. 161–78.Google Scholar
Westermann, E., ‘Gold, silver, and copper in the European economies and their external trade relations from the end of the 15th to the end of the 16th century’, in Kreiner, J. (ed.), The road to Japan: social and economic aspects of early European–Japanese contacts, Bonn: Bier, pp. 6390.Google Scholar
Edvinsson, R., ‘Den svenska konjunkturcykeln 1700–2000’, Ekonomisk debatt, 33/8, pp. 629.Google Scholar
Abramson, D. M., Building the Bank of England: money, architecture, society, 1694–1942, New York: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Baker, M. and Collins, M., ‘Audit and control in the not-for-profit sector: an endowed charity case 1739–1853’, Accounting and Business Research, 35/2, pp. 111–28.Google Scholar
Bogart, D., ‘Did turnpike trusts increase transportation investment in eighteenth-century England?’, J. of Economic History, 65/2, pp. 439–68.Google Scholar
Hutchings, H., Hoare bankers: a history of the Hoare banking dynasty, London: Constable.Google Scholar
Ingrassia, C., ‘Money and sexuality in the Enlightenment: George Lillo's “The London Merchant”’, Historical Reflections, 31/1, pp. 93116.Google Scholar
Morgan, K., ‘Remittance procedures in the eighteenth-century British slave trade’, Business History Rev., 79/4, pp. 715–50.Google Scholar
Murphy, A. J., ‘Lotteries in the 1690s: investment or gamble?’, Financial History Rev., 12/2, pp. 227–46.Google Scholar
Murphy, A. J., ‘John Law’, in Goetzmann, and Rouwenhorst, (eds.), The origins of value, pp. 225–38.Google Scholar
Nash, R. C., ‘The organization of trade and finance in the British-Atlantic economy, 1600–1830’, in Coclanis, P. A. (ed.), The Atlantic economy during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries: organization, operation, practice, and personnel, Columbia: University of South Carolina Press, pp. 95151.Google Scholar
Rogers, A., ‘Prosperous – but precarious: property deeds and mortgages in a small market town in the 18th and 19th centuries’, Family & Community History, 8/2, pp. 105–22.Google Scholar
Rorke, M., ‘The Scottish herring trade, 1470–1600’, Scottish Historical Rev., 84/2, pp. 149–65.Google Scholar
Sherman, S., Finance and fictionality in the early Eighteenth century: accounting for Defoe, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smail, John, ‘Credit, risk, and honor in eighteenth-century commerce’, J. of British Studies, 44/3, pp. 439–56.Google Scholar
Temin, P. and Voth, H. J., ‘Credit rationing and crowding out during the industrial revolution: evidence from Hoare's Bank, 1702–1862’, Explorations in Economic History, 42/3, pp. 325–48.Google Scholar
Thomas, J. H., ‘Devizes in the eighteenth century: the evidence from fire insurance records’, Archives, 113, pp. 7589.Google Scholar
Tiberi, M., Investimenti internazionali e sviluppo del sistema capitalistico: l'evoluzione degli scambi commerciali della Gran Bretagna (1700–1913), Rome: Edizioni Kappa.Google Scholar
Toms, S., ‘Financial control, managerial control and accountability: evidence from the British cotton industry, 1700–2000’, Accounting, Organizations and Society, 30/7–8, pp. 627–53.Google Scholar
Watt, D., ‘The management of capital by the Company of Scotland 1696–1707’, J. of Scottish Historical Studies, 25/2, pp. 97118.Google Scholar
Yeandle, L., ‘Sir Edward Dering of Surrenden Dering and his “Booke of expences”, 1617–1628’, Archaeologia Cantiana, 125, pp. 323–44.Google Scholar
Clinquart, J., ‘Les resources économiques de l'Intendance du Hainaut décrites par un contemporain dix ans avant la révolution’, Valentiana, 22, 2004, pp. 1132.Google Scholar
Gelderblom, O. and Jonker, J., ‘Amsterdam as the cradle of modern futures trading’, in Goetzmann, and Rouwenhorst, (eds.), The origins of value, pp. 189206.Google Scholar
Neal, L., ‘Venture shares of the Dutch East India Company’, in Goetzmann, and Rouwenhorst, (eds.), The origins of value, pp. 165–76.Google Scholar
Tracy, J. D., The Low Countries in the sixteenth century: Erasmus, religion and politics, trade and finance, Brookfield: Ashgate.Google Scholar
Van Nieuwkerk, M., Hollands gouden glorie: de financiëlkracht van Nederland door de eeuwen heen, Haarlem: Becht.Google Scholar
Antonetti, G., ‘Du louis à l'assignat’, D'or et d'argent. La monnaie en France du Moyen Âge à nos jours. Cycle de conférences tenues à Bercy entre le 22 octobre 2001 et le 18 février 2002, Paris, Comité pour l'Histoire économique et financière de la France, pp. 1734.Google Scholar
Banks, K. J., ‘Communications and “imperial overstretch”: lessons from the eighteenth-century French Atlantic’, French Colonial History, 6, pp. 1732.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bayard, F., ‘Collecter la taille en Lyonnais et Beaujolais au XVIIe siècle’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 379401.Google Scholar
Baron, I., ‘La répression des délits liés à la monnaie au XVIIIe siècle’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 179–88.Google Scholar
Bastien, P., ‘“La seconde puntion”: quelques remarques sur la confiscation des biens dans la Coutume de Paris au XVIIIe siècle’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 281–92.Google Scholar
Bayard, F., ‘Les financiers français devant la justice au XVIIe siècle’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 155–65.Google Scholar
Béguin, K., ‘La circulation des rentes constituées dans la France du XVIIe siècle. Une approche de l'incertitude économique’, Annales. Histoire, Sciences Sociales, 60/6, pp. 1229–45.Google Scholar
Bergier, J-F. and Lüthy, H., La banque protestante en France: de la révocation de l'Édit de Nantes à la Révolution, Zurich: Verlag Neue Zürcher Zeitung.Google Scholar
Blanchard, A., ‘Répartir les impôts entre les paroisses, une tâche difficile: l'exemple de la généralité de Soissons au XVIIIe siècle’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 435–81.Google Scholar
Blaufarb, R., ‘Vers une histoire de l'exemption fiscale nobiliaire la Provence des années 1530 à 1789’, Annales. Histoire, Sciences Sociales, 60/6, pp. 1203–28.Google Scholar
Brumont, F., ‘La répartition de la taille entre communautés: l’élection d'Armagnac aux XVIIe et XVIIIe siècles', in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 403–34.Google Scholar
Bugeaud, V., ‘Quand les bargers se font monnayeurs: une “aristocratie” chez les pêcheurs de l'estuaire de la Loire au XVIIIe siècle’, Annales de Bretagne et des Pays de l'Ouest, 112/4, pp. 4384.Google Scholar
Caillou, F., Une administration royale d'Ancien Régime: le bureau des finances de Tours, Tours: Presses universitaires François-Rabelais, 2 vols.Google Scholar
Carroll, S., ‘Acheter la grâce en France du XVe au XVIIe siècle’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 237–46.Google Scholar
Chantrel, L., ‘Une relecture des travaux de Jean Bodin sur la fiscalité à partir des comptes rendus des Etats Généraux de 1560 à 1588’, L'oeuvre de Jean Bodin. Actes du colloque tenu à Lyon à l'occasion du quatrième centenaire de sa mort, 11–13 janvier 1996, Paris: Champion, 2004, pp. 333–52.Google Scholar
Conchon, A., ‘Financer la construction d'infrastructures de transport: la concession au XVIIe et XVIIIe siècles’, in Barjot, D. and Berneron-Couvenhes, M-F. (eds.), ‘Concessions et optimisation des investissements publics’, Entreprises et histoire, 38, pp. 5570.Google Scholar
Coudray, J., ‘Les prévôts royaux’, Cahiers du Passé, 28, pp. 3448.Google Scholar
Coulomb, C., ‘Les parlementaires, banquiers et débiteurs de la société urbaine: l'exemple de Grenoble dans la seconde moitié du XVIIIe siècle’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 125–35.Google Scholar
Desan, P., ‘Jean Bodin et l'imaginaire de la monnaie’, L'oeuvre de Jean Bodin, pp. 293304.Google Scholar
Dessert, D., Les Daliès de Montauban: une dynastie protestante de financiers sous Louis XIV, Paris: Perrin.Google Scholar
Diedler, J-C., ‘Fiscalités et société rurale en Loraine méridionale: l'exemple de la prévôté de Bruyères, de René II à Stanislas (1473–1766)’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 139–98.Google Scholar
Dormard, S., ‘Le marché du crédit à Douai aux XVIIe et XVIIIe siècles’, Rev. du Nord, 87/362, pp. 803–33.Google Scholar
Dousset, C., ‘Des veuves spolliées? Conflits familiaux et justice civile dans le Midi de la France, XVIIe-XVIIIe siècles’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 5364.Google Scholar
Doyon, J., ‘“Ni clair ni liquide”: l'argent dans les conflits familiaux de 1686 à 1745’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 6576.Google Scholar
Follain, A., ‘La taille au village en régime de personnalité du XVIe au XVIIIe siècle: pièces justificatives’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 548642.Google Scholar
Follain, A. and Larguier, G., L'impôt des campagnes, fragile fondement de l'Etat dit moderne (XVe-XVIIIe siècles). Actes du Colloque tenu à Bercy, Paris: 2–3 décembre 2002, Paris: Comité pour l'histoire économique et financière de la France.Google Scholar
Fournier, P., ‘La fiscalité comtadine aux XVIe et XVIIIe siècles: histoire d'un déclin ou d'une mutation?’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 267309.Google Scholar
Fréger, L., ‘La répression des délits liés aux épices aux XVIIe-XVIIIe siècles (à travers les exemples breton et normand)’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 167–78.Google Scholar
Garnot, B. (ed.), Justice et argent, Dijon: Editions universitaires de Dijon, pp. 179–88.Google Scholar
Gay, J-P., ‘Réparation et restitution dans la théologie morale au XVIIe siècle en France: l'autre prix du crime et du délit’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 247–58.Google Scholar
Glineur, C., ‘Entre libéralisme et protectionnisme: la politique pré-libérale du contrôleur général Moreau de Séchelles’, La Rev. Administrative, 345, pp. 290302.Google Scholar
Hickey, D., ‘Le procès des tailles dans le Dauphiné: les cahiers des villages et l'intégration des communautés rurales au sein de la contestation du Tiers Etat (1591–1602)’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 199233.Google Scholar
Houllemare, M., ‘Les marchands étrangers et l'argent: procès économiques au parlement de Paris dans la seconde moitié du XVIe siècle’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 2940.Google Scholar
Larguier, G., ‘Le crédit en Catalogne au XVIIe siècle: les foires de change de Perpignan (1630–1651)’, Annales du Midi, 117/251, pp. 347–61.Google Scholar
Larguier, G., ‘Fraude et protection en Languedoc au XVIIe siècle: l'affaire Aoustenc’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 4152.Google Scholar
Larguier, G., ‘Les communautés, le roi, les États, la cour des Aides. La formation du système fiscal languedocien’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 6995.Google Scholar
Legay, M-L., ‘1775: l'abolition de la contrainte solidaire en France’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 189–98.Google Scholar
Legay, M-L., ‘Prélèvement de l'impôt direct et contrainte publique dans les Pays-Bas français au XVIIe siècle (1660–1715)’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 311–33.Google Scholar
Luckett, T. M., ‘Imaginary currency and real guillotines: the intellectual origins of the financial terror in France’, Historical Reflections, 31/1, pp. 117–39.Google Scholar
Maillard, B., ‘Les communautés des habitants et la perception de la taille aux XVIIe et XVIIIe siècles, en pays d’élections, (d'après l'exemple de la généralité de Tours)', in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 481510.Google Scholar
Ménard, O., ‘De la répression de la fausse monnaie en Bretagne au XVIIIe siècle’, Rev. numismatique, 2004, 160, pp. 321–42.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Montel, L. ‘Faire du crime organisé un objet d'histoire d'après le cas marseillais (XIXe et premier XXe siècle)’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 99106.Google Scholar
Paris, L., ‘Capitations de la communauté de Boissezon-de-Masciel, année 1698’, Cahiers de Rieumontagné, 55, pp. 6176.Google Scholar
Pascal, C., ‘Jean Bardon (1740–1815), dernier trésorier de France de Montpellier. Histoire d'une ascension sociale manquée’, Bulletin de la Société des Sciences et Lettres de Montpellier, 29, pp. 527.Google Scholar
Pichon, J., ‘La taille tarifée dans quatre paroisses du Haut-Poitou: approche statistique d'un essai de répartition de l'impôt au XVIIIe siècle’, Rev. Historique du Centre-Ouest, 2004, 3/1, pp. 129–74.Google Scholar
Spang, R. L., ‘The ghost of law: speculating on money, memory and Mississippi in the French constituent assembly’, Historical Reflections, 31/1, pp. 325.Google Scholar
Vester, M., ‘Perché l'autonomia istituzionale non significò meno tasse nella Bresse savoiarda (1560–1580)’, Quaderni storici, 118/1, pp. 4172.Google Scholar
Wenzel, E., ‘Plaie d'argent est-elle morte? Le problème du péculat dans la doctrine juridique d'Ancien Régime’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 143–54.Google Scholar
Brecht, M., ‘Erwerb und Finanzierung von Kunstwerken durch Erzbischof Albrecht von Mainz’, in Tacke, A. (ed.), Kontinuität und Zäsur. Ernst von Wettin und Albrecht von Brandenburg, Göttingen: Wallstein-Verlag, pp. 391–98.Google Scholar
Bünz, E., Das Mainzer Subsidienregister für Thüringen von 1506, Cologne: Böhlau.Google Scholar
Chocholac, B., ‘Güterpreise, Verschuldung und Ratensystem. Eine Fallstudie zu den finanziellen Transaktionen der Untertanen bei Besitzübertragungen in Westmähren im späten 16. und im 17. Jh.’, in Cerman, M. and Luft, R. (eds.), Untertanen, Herrschaft und Staat in Böhmen und im “Alten Reich”. Sozialgeschichtliche Studien zur Frühen Neuzeit, Munich: Oldenbourg, pp. 89125.Google Scholar
Cordes, A., ‘Kapital, Arbeit, Risiko, Gewinn. Aufgabenteilung in einer Lübecker Handelsgesellschaft des 16. Jh.’, in Hammel-Kiesow, R. and Hundt, M. (eds.), Das Gedächtnis der Hansestadt Lübeck. Festschrift für Antjekathrin Graßmann zum 65. Geburtstag, Lübeck, Schmidt-Römhild, pp. 517–34.Google Scholar
Homburg, H., ‘Fortuna und Methode. Überlegungen zur Kulturgeschichte von Geld und Reichtum in der zweiten Hälfte des 18. Jh’, Vierteljahrschrift für Sozial- und Wirtschaftsgeschichte, 92/1, pp. 1630.Google Scholar
Homering, L., ‘Freiheit, Frauen und Finanzen – Friedrich Schiller in Mannheim’, in Wieczorek, A. (ed.), Schiller Zeit in Mannheim, Mainz: von Zabern, pp. 103–18.Google Scholar
Jakubowski-Tiessen, M., ‘Woher nehmen wir geldt zu den Küsten her…?’ Eine frühneuzeitliche Flutkatastrophe und ihre finanziellen Folgen, Siedlungsforschung, 23, pp. 91100.Google Scholar
Janssen, W., ‘Beobachtungen zur Struktur und Finanzierung des kurkölnischen Hofes im späten 14. und frühen 15. J’, Rheinische Vierteljahrsblätter, 69, pp. 104–32.Google Scholar
Köhler, C., ‘Die Wirtschafts-, Finanz- und Sozialpolitik Ernsts II. von Sachsen-Gotha-Altenburg’, in Greiling, W., Klinger, A. and Köhler, C. (eds.), Ernst II. von Sachsen-Gotha-Altenburg. Ein Herrscher im Zeitalter der Aufklärung, Cologne: Böhlau, pp. 111–27.Google Scholar
Mauerer, E., ‘Geld, Reputation, Karriere im Haus Fürstenberg. Beobachtungen zu einigen Motiven adeligen Handelns im barocken Reich’, Zeitenblicke, 2/11, www.zeitenblicke.de/2005/2/mauerer/mauerer.pdf.Google Scholar
Münch, E., ‘Die Entwicklung der Rostocker Fahnenzahl und der Stadtbrand von 1677’, Beiträge zur Geschichte der Stadt Rostock, 27, pp. 5167.Google Scholar
Nadler, M., ‘Ein Fürstentum in Geld aufgewogen - das Territorium von Pfalz-Neuburg’, in Bäumler, S., Brockhoff, E. and Henker, M. (eds.), Von Kaisers Gnaden. 500 Jahre Pfalz-Neuburg. Katalog zur Bayerischen Landesausstellung 2005, Neuburg an der Donau, 3. Juni–16. Oktober 2005, Augsburg: Haus d. Bayerischen Geschichte, pp. 126–38.Google Scholar
Nagel, F., ‘Geld und Geist. Zwei unbekannte Texte Johann Bernoullis im Kontext einer mißglückten Intrige gegen Jacob Hermann’, in Splinter, S., Gerstengarbe, S. and Remane, H. (eds.), ‘Physica et historia’. Festschrift für Andreas Kleinert zum 65. Geburtstag, Halle/Saale, Deutsche Akademie d. Naturforscher Leopoldina, pp. 163–74.Google Scholar
Püschel, C., ‘Das städtische Finanzwesen’, in Blaschke, K. and John, U. (eds.), Geschichte der Stadt Dresden. Bd.1: Von den Anfängen bis zum Ende des Dreißigjährigen Krieges, Stuttgart: Theiss, pp. 365–91.Google Scholar
Rheinheimer, M., ‘The captains’ money: capital and credit on the North Frisian islands of Amrum and Föhr, 1763–1812', International J. of Maritime History, 17/2, pp. 141–65.Google Scholar
Schobel, E., ‘Benevolent governance and fiscal federalism in Veit Ludwig von Seckendorff's Teutscher Fursten Stat (1656): comment on Erik S. Reinert’, European J. of Law and Economics, 19/3, pp. 231–3.Google Scholar
Schneider, K., ‘Frankfurt am Main und die Geldkrise des 18. Jh.’, Scripta Mercaturae, 39/1, pp. 144.Google Scholar
Schneider, K., ‘Zum Frankfurter Geldhandel während des Siebenjährigen Krieges’, Scripta Mercaturae, 39/2, pp. 55147.Google Scholar
Speelman, P. J., War, society and enlightenment: the works of General Lloyd, Leiden: Brill.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Staudinger, B., ‘In puncto debiti. Prozesse jüdischer Geldleiherinnen am Reichshofrat’ in Westphal, S. (ed.), In eigener Sache. Frauen vor den höchsten Gerichten des Alten Reiches, Cologne: Böhlau, pp. 153–80.Google Scholar
Ullmann, H. P., Der deutsche Steuerstaat. Geschichte der öffentlichen Finanzen vom 18. Jh. bis heute, Munich: Beck.Google Scholar
Avallone, P., ‘Tra teoria e pratica. Il credito agrario nel regno di Napoli nella seconda metà del XVIII secolo’, Riv. di Storia dell' Agricoltura, 45/2, pp. 337.Google Scholar
Battistini, F., ‘La produzione, il commercio e i prezzi della seta grezza nello Stato di Firenze 1489–1859’, Riv. di Storia Economica, 21/3, pp. 233–72.Google Scholar
Boldizzoni, F., La rivoluzione dei prezzi rivisitata: moneta ed economia reale in Alta Italia (1550–1630)' Riv. Storica Italiana, 117/3, pp. 1002–36.Google Scholar
Cancila, O., ‘Alchimie finanziarie di una grande famiglia feudale nel primo secolo dell'età moderna’, Mediterranea Ricerche Storiche, 2006, 3/6, pp. 69136.Google Scholar
Carrotta, R., ‘Debito pubblico e mercati finanziari tra età moderna e contemporanea in Convegno sul debito pubblico e il mercato finanziario in età moderna e contemporanea, tenuto, a Cassino, il 7 e 8 ottobre 2005’, Riv. di Storia Finanziaria, 15, pp. 143–55, www.delpt.unina.it/stof/indice.html.Google Scholar
Cenni, F. and Tristano, C., Liber/libra: il mercato del libro manoscritto nel Medioevo italiano, Rome: Jouvence.Google Scholar
Chiese, V., ‘La ricchezza delle corporazioni e il suo utilizzo. (Il caso di Verona in età moderna)’, Studi Storici Luigi Simeoni, 55, pp. 215–34.Google Scholar
Chiese, V., ‘Proprietari ed inquilini a Verona a metà seicento’, Società e Storia, 109, pp. 477501.Google Scholar
Del Grosso, M. A., ‘Un banco ebraico a Salerno al tempo di Carlo V’, Rassegna Storica Salernitana, 43, pp. 8794.Google Scholar
Clerici, L., ‘Pagamenti in natura, velocita di circolazione della moneta e rivoluzione dei prezzi’, Riv. di Storia Economica, 21/2, pp. 155–80.Google Scholar
Colzi, F., Mercato finanziario e debito pubblico a Roma fra Cinque e Seicento in Seminario su Debito pubblico e formazione dei mercati finanziari fra età moderna e contemporaneatenuto, a Cassino, il 15 e 16 ottobre', Riv. di Storia Finanziaria, 15, pp. 4964, www.delpt.unina.it/stof/indice.html.Google Scholar
Di Taranto, G., ‘Finanze e debito pubblico in Italia tra età moderna e contemporanea in Seminario su Debito pubblico e formazione dei mercati finanziari fra età moderna e contemporanea, tenuto, a Cassino, il 15 e 16 ottobre 2004’, Riv. di Storia Finanziaria, 15, pp. 137–42, www.delpt.unina.it/stof/indice.html.Google Scholar
Fanfani, T., ‘Alle origini della banca. Il sentiero del credito in Italia tra il XVIII e il XX secolo’, Bancaria, 61/1, pp. 715.Google Scholar
Hocquet, J-C., ‘À Venise, dette publique et spéculations privées’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 1538.Google Scholar
Hollingsworth, M., The cardinal's hat: money, ambition, and everyday life in the court of a Borgia prince, Woodstock: Overlook Press.Google Scholar
Isenmann, M., Die Verwaltung der päpstlichen Staatsschuld in der Frühen Neuzeit: Sekretariat, Computisterie und Depositerie der Monti vom 16. bis zum ausgehenden 18. Jahrhundert, Stuttgart: Steiner.Google Scholar
Lentini, R., ‘Dal commercio alla finanza: i negozianti-banchieri inglesi nella Sicilia Occidentale tra XVIII e XIX secolo’, Mediterranea Ricerche Storiche, 2004, 1/2, pp. 105–22.Google Scholar
Marsilio, C., ‘Nel XVII secolo dei genovesi. La corrispondenza commerciale di Paolo Gerolamo Pallavicini nel triennio 1636–1638’, Storia Economica, 8/1, pp. 101–20.Google Scholar
Masini, R., Il debito pubblico pontificio a fine Seicento: i monti camerali, Città di Castello: Edimond.Google Scholar
Piola Caselli, F., ‘Note sul debito pubblico nello Stato Pontificio (secoli XVI-XVIII) in Seminario su Debito pubblico e formazione dei mercati finanziari fra età moderna e contemporanea, tenuto, a Cassino, il 15 e 16 ottobre 2004’, Riv. di Storia Finanziaria, 15, pp. 133–6, www.delpt.unina.it/stof/indice.html.Google Scholar
Silvano, G., A beneficio dei poveri: il Monte di pietà di Padova tra pubblico e privato, 1491–1600, Bologna: Il Mulino.Google Scholar
Stapelbroek, K., ‘The devaluation controversy in eighteenth-century Italy’, History of Economic Ideas, 13/2, pp. 79110.Google Scholar
Strangio, D., ‘Il sistema finanziario del debito pubblico pontificio tra età moderna e contemporanea’, Riv. di Storia Finanziaria, 14, pp. 742, www.delpt.unina.it/stof/indice.html.Google Scholar
Windler, C., ‘“Ohne Geld keine Schweizer”: Pensionen und Söldnerrekrutierung auf den eidgenössischen Patronagemärkten’, in von Thiessen, H. and Windler, C. (eds.), Nähe in der Ferne. Personale Verflechtung in den Außenbeziehungen der Frühen Neuzeit, Berlin: Duncker & Humblot, pp. 105–33.Google Scholar
Alonso García, D., Una corte en construcción: Madrid en la Hacienda Real de Castilla (1517–1556), Madrid: Miño y Dávila Editores.Google Scholar
Alvarez Nogal, C., ‘Las compañias bancarias genovesas en Madrid a comienzos del siglo XVII’, Hispania, 65/1, pp. 6790.Google Scholar
Alvarez-Nogal, C., ‘El transporte de moneda en la Espana del siglo XVII: mecanismos y costes’, Rev. de Istoria Economica, 23, pp. 379408.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Benavides, C., ‘Les peines pécuniaires: la législation espagnole et son application au XVIIe siècle’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 281–92.Google Scholar
De Francisco Olmos, J. M., ‘La moneda y su utilizacion como documento politico en la Cataluña de la “guerra dels segadors” (1640–1652)’, Rev. General de Informacion y Documentacion, 15/1, pp. 149–87.Google Scholar
Drelichman, M., ‘All that glitters: precious metals, rent seeking and the decline of Spain’, European Rev. of Economic History, 9/3, pp. 313–36.Google Scholar
Eiras Roel, A., ‘Deuda y fiscalidad de la Corona de Castilla en la epoca de los Austrias: evolucion e historiografia’, Obradoiro de Historia Moderna, 14, pp. 65107.Google Scholar
Fenech, F. C., Sanchez Matamoros, J. B., Hidalgo, F. G. and Espejo, C. A., ‘Govern(mentality) and accounting: the influence of different enlightenment discourses in two Spanish cases (1761–1777)’, Abacus, 41/2, pp. 181210.Google Scholar
Fernández Romero, C., Gastos, ingresos y ahorro familiar: Navarra, 1561–1820, Pamplona: Ediciones Universidad de Navarra.Google Scholar
Font de Villanueva, C., ‘Política monetaria y política fiscal en Castilla en el siglo XVII: un siglo de inestabilidades’, Rev. de Historia Económica, 23, pp. 329–47.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
González Arévalo, R., El Privilegio de Málaga de 1501, Malaga: Universidad de Malaga.Google Scholar
Gutiérrez, F., Larrinaga, C. and Núñez, M., ‘Cost and management accounting in pre-industrial revolution Spain’, Accounting Historians J., 32/1, pp. 111–48.Google Scholar
Hierro-Anibarro, S., ‘El asiento de averia y el origen de la compania privilegiada en Espana’, Rev. de Historia Economica, 23, pp. 181212.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jurado Sánchez, J., La economía de la Corte. El gasto de la Casa Real en la Edad Moderna, 1561–1808, Madrid, Instituto de Estudios Fiscales.Google Scholar
Lanza García, R., ‘Fiscalidad real en Cantabria: alcabalas, cientos y millones en la época de los Austrias’, Investigaciones de Historia Económica, 3, pp. 4372.Google Scholar
Llopis, E. and Sotoca, S., ‘Antes, bastante antes: la primera fase de la integracion del mercado Español de trigo, 1725–1808’, Historia Agraria, 36, pp. 225–62.Google Scholar
Martínez Guillén, J., ‘The Bordazar memorandum: cost calculation in Spanish printing during the 18th century’, Accounting Historians J., 32/2, pp. 81103.Google Scholar
Nogal, C. A., ‘Genoese banking companies in Madrid at the beginning of the 17th century’, in Hispania-Rev. Espanola De Historia, 219, pp. 6790.Google Scholar
Porras Arboledas, P. A., ‘Concursos de acreedores en el archivo historico provincial de Burgos (siglos XVI-XIX)’, Cuadernos de Historia del Derecho, 12, pp. 355–72.Google Scholar
Ruiz Rodríguez, J. I., Disputa y consenso en la administración fiscal castellana: Villanueva de los Infantes y el partido del Campo de Montiel c. 1600-c.1660, Alcalá de Henares: Universidad de Alcalá.Google Scholar
Sanchez Torres, R., ‘The failure of the Spanish crown's fiscal monopoly over Tobacco in Catalonia during the XVIIIth century’, J. of European Economic History, 34/3, pp. 721–62.Google Scholar
Sanz Ayán, C., ‘Presencia y fortuna de los hombres de negocios genoveses durante la crisis hispana de 1640’, Hispania, 65/1, pp. 91114.Google Scholar
Solbes Ferri, S., ‘Teoría y práctica de administración y cobranza de rentas reales en Navarra (siglo XVIII)’, Investigaciones de Historia Económica, 3, pp. 73100.Google Scholar
Thomas, H., Rivers of gold: the rise of the Spanish empire, from Columbus to Magellan, New York: Random House.Google Scholar
Turull Rubinat, M., ‘Un juriste du XVIIe siècle: Andreu Bosch et le droit d'imposer en Catalogne au Moyen Âge’, in Follain, and Larguier, (eds.), L'impôt des campagnes, pp. 511–26.Google Scholar
Villegas Ruiz, M., La aportación financiero-fiscal de Córdoba a la hacienda de Carlos I., Córdoba: Universidad de Córdoba/CajaSur Publicaciones.Google Scholar
Wohlfeil, R., ‘Währung, Wirtschaft, Arbeitsverträge, Lehrverträge, Dienstverträge, Preise, Kosten. Ein Beitrag zur Geschichte von Stadt und Region Málaga im 16. Jahrhundert. 2’, Jahrbuch für Geschichte Lateinamerikas, 42, pp. 185209.Google Scholar
Rizescu, O., ‘L'appropriation des sanctions pénales par le système fiscal. L'institution de la garantie personnelle en Valachie au XVIIe siècle’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 259–70.Google Scholar
Denzel, M. A., Die Bozner Messen und ihr Zahlungsverkehr, 1633–1850, Bozen: Athesia.Google Scholar
Denzel, M. A. and Gerhard, H. J., ‘Global and local aspects of pre-industrial inflations: new research on inflationary processes in XVIIIth century central Europe’, J. of European Economic History, 34/1, pp. 149–85.Google Scholar
Kenyeres, I., ‘Die Einkünfte und Reformen der Finanzverwaltung Ferdinands I. in Ungarn’, , in Fuchs, M., Oborni, T. and Ujváry, G. (eds.), Kaiser Ferdinand I. Ein mitteleuropäischer Herrscher, Münster: Aschendorff, pp. 111–46.Google Scholar
Nazarova, I. A., ‘Teoriia i praktika denezhnogo obrashcheniia i denezhnykh reform v Rossii (XVIII – pervaia polovina XIX v.)’ [Theory and practice of money circulation and restoration of currency in Russia (XVIII – first fifty years of XIX century)], Vestnik Moskovskogo Universiteta, 5, pp. 5470.Google Scholar
Berghoff, H., ‘Markterschliessung und Risikomanagement. die Rolle der Kreditauskunfteien und Rating-Agenturen im Industrialisierungs- und Globalisierungsprozess des 19. Jahrhunderts’, Vierteljahrschrift für Sozial- und Wirtschaftsgeschichte, 92/2, pp. 141–62.Google Scholar
Brambilla, C., ‘Grandi banche e modelli creditizi in Italia, Francia e Germania tra XIX e XX secolo’, Annali di Storia dell'Impresa, 15–16 (2004–5), pp. 425–54.Google Scholar
Brötel, D. and Hermann, W., ‘Von Pariser Banken zum Asiengeschäft der Deutschen Bank (1850–1889)’, in Van der Heyden, U. and Zeller, J. (eds.), ‘… Macht und Anteil an der Weltherrschaft’. Berlin und der deutsche Kolonialismus, Münster: Unrast Verl, pp. 7580.Google Scholar
Bussière, E. and Cassis, Y. (eds.), London and Paris as international financial centres in the twentieth century, Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Carnevali, F., Europe's advantage: banks and small firms in Britain, France, Germany, and Italy since 1918, Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Cassis, Y., ‘Introduction: comparative perspectives on London and Paris as international financial centres in the twentieth century’, in Bussière, and Cassis, (eds.), London and Paris, pp. 114.Google Scholar
Clement, P., ‘Central bank networking at the Bank for International Settlements, 1930–1960’, in Dumoulin, M. (ed.), Les réseaux économiques dans le processus de construction européenne, Brussels: P. Lang, 2004, pp. 445–60.Google Scholar
Di Martino, P., ‘Approaching disaster: personal bankruptcy legislation in Italy and England, c. 1880–1939’, Business History, 47/1, pp. 2343.Google Scholar
Eigner, P. and Köhler, I., ‘Einleitung: Privatbanken und Privatbankiers in der Zwischenkriegszeit: Eine untergehende Spezies?’, in Eigner, (ed.), Privatbankiers in Mitteleuropa zwischen den Weltkriegen, Stuttgart: Steiner.Google Scholar
Evans, L., ‘Editorial: accounting history in the German language area’, Accounting, Business and Financial History, 15/3, pp. 229–34.Google Scholar
Feiertag, O. ‘Pierre Quesnay et les réseaux de l'internationalisme monétaire en Europe, 1919–1937’, in Dumoulin, M. (ed.), Les réseaux économiques dans le processus de construction européenne, Brussels: P. Lang, 2004, pp. 331–50.Google Scholar
Feldman, G. D., ‘German banks and national socialist efforts to supply capital and support industrialization in newly annexed territories: the Austrian model’, Zeitschrift fur Unternehmensgeschichte, 50/1, pp. 516.Google Scholar
Feldman, G. D., ‘Finanzinstitutionen und “Arisierung”’in Deutschland und Österreich', in Baresel-Brand, A. (ed.), Entehrt. Ausgeplündert. Arisiert. Entrechtung und Enteignung der Juden, Magdeburg: Koordinierungsstelle für Kulturgutverluste Magdeburg, pp. 1740.Google Scholar
Flandreau, M. and Gallice, F., ‘Paris: London, and the international money market: lessons from Paribas, 1885–1913’, in Bussière, and Cassis, (eds.), London and Paris, pp. 78106.Google Scholar
Flandreau, M. and Maurel, M., ‘Monetary union, trade integration, and business cycles in 19th century Europe’, Open Economies Rev., 16/2, pp. 135–52.Google Scholar
Hertner, P., ‘Großmachtrivalität und -kooperation im Adriaraum. Italien, Österreich-Ungarn und das Projekt einer albanischen Staatsbank, 1913/14’, Quellen und Forschungen aus italienischen Archiven und Bibliotheken, 85, pp. 272317.Google Scholar
Horn, M., ‘J. P. Morgan & Co., the house of Morgan and Europe 1933–1939’, Contemporary European History, 14/4, pp. 519–38.Google Scholar
James, H., Familienunternehmen in Europa: Haniel, Wendel und Falck, Munich: C. H. Beck.Google Scholar
Kalinski, J., ‘Austrian banks in Poland up to 1948’, in Rathkolb, O. (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt. 150 Jahre österreichische Bankengeschichte im Zentrum Europa, Vienna: Zsolnay, pp. 253–67.Google Scholar
Klüßendorf, N., ‘Kriegsfinanzierung und Edelmetallsammlungen am Ende des Ancien Régime’, in Alfaro, C., Marcos, C. and Paloma, O. (eds.), XIII Congreso Internacional de Numismática, Madrid, 2003, Actas-Proceedings-Actes, Madrid: Ministerio de Cultura, Secretaría General Técnica, pp. 1477–82.Google Scholar
Kostov, A., ‘Dutch capital and the Balkan states (in the 19th and the early 20th century)’, Etudes Balkaniques, 41/1, pp. 3750.Google Scholar
Kreutzmüller, C., Händler und Handlungsgehilfen, Der Finanzplatz Amsterdam und die deutschen Großbanken (1918–1945), Stuttgart: Steiner.Google Scholar
Kupper, H. U. and Mattessich, R., ‘Twentieth century accounting research in the German language area’, Accounting, Business and Financial History, 15/3, pp. 345410.Google Scholar
Leonardi, A., Una stagione ‘nera’ per il credito cooperativo: casse rurali e Raiffeisenkassen tra 1919 e 1945, Bologna: Il Mulino.Google Scholar
Özen, C., ‘Neogramsiyan hegemonya yaklasimi çerçevesinde güç ve global finans: pax britannica'daki büyük dönüsüm’, Uluslararasi iliskiler, 2/8, pp. 333.Google Scholar
Papp, J., ‘Quand le “bloc Chrétien” hongrois voulait ruiner le franc: l'affaire des faux billets (1925–1926)’, Gavroche, 24/140, pp. 17.Google Scholar
Petrov, J. A., ‘Rußlands finanzielle Verpflichtungen gegenüber Deutschland vor dem Ersten Weltkrieg und ihre Regulierung im Kontext des Friedens von Brest-Litovsk (1918)’, in Dahlmann, D., Heller, K. and Petrov, J. A. (eds.), Eisenbahnen und Motoren – Zucker und Schokolade. Deutsche im russischen Wirtschaftsleben vom 18. bis zum frühen 20. Jh., Berlin: Duncker u. Humblot, pp. 167–78.Google Scholar
Reis, J., ‘Los sistemas financieros de la periferia. Una comparacion entre Escandinavia y el sur de Europa durante el siglo XIX’, Papeles de economía española, 105–6, pp. 109–31.Google Scholar
Spufford, P., From Antwerp to London: the decline of financial centres in Europe, Wassenaar: NIAS.Google Scholar
Stöber, T., ‘Die Ökonomie der “Dépense”. Vitalistisches und ökonomisches Wissen im 19. Jahrhundert (Balzac, Zola, Bataille)’, Grenzgänge. Beiträge zu einer modernen Romanistik, 12/23, pp. 2238.Google Scholar
Tilly, R., ‘Die Entwicklung der europäischen Wertpapierbörsen seit dem ausgehenden 19. Jh. Einige vergleichende Betrachtungen’, in Merki, C. M. (ed.), Europas Finanzzentren. Geschichte und Bedeutung im 20. Jh., Frankfurt/M: Campus Verlag, pp. 223–44.Google Scholar
Zilch, R., ‘Neue Staaten – neues Geld: Brüche und Kontinuitäten in der numismatischen Symbolik osteuropäischer Staaten während und nach dem Ersten Weltkrieg’, in Bartetzky, A. (ed.), Neue Staaten – neue Bilder? Visuelle Kultur im Dienst staatlicher Selbstdarstellung in Zentral- und Osteuropa seit 1918, Cologne: Böhlau, pp. 99106.Google Scholar
Abildgren, K., ‘Interest-rate development in Denmark 1875–2003’, Nationallkonomisk tidsskrift, 143/2, pp. 153–68.Google Scholar
Ahlström, G., Hammarskjöld, Sverige och Bretton Woods, Stockholm: Sveriges riksbank.Google Scholar
Appelqvist, , Ö, ., Ämbetsman eller politiker? Om Dag Hammarskjölds roll i fyrtiotalets svenska regeringspolitik, Stockholm: Sveriges riksbank.Google Scholar
Edvinsson, R., Growth, accumulation, crisis: with new macroeconomic data for Sweden 1800–2000, Stockholm: Almqvist & Wiksell.Google Scholar
Eitrheim, O. and Qvigstad, J. F., Tilbakeblikk på norsk pengehistorie: konferanse 7. juni 2005 på Bogstad gård: historisk-monetær statistikk for Norge, Oslo: Norges Bank.Google Scholar
Eitrheim, O., Klovland, J. T. and Qvigstad, J. F., Historical monetary statistics for Norway, 1819–2003, Oslo: Norges Bank, 2004.Google Scholar
Hallberg, H., Ivetofta sparbank 1905–2005, Bromölla: Ivetofta sparbank.Google Scholar
Järvi, M. J., Längelmäen Säästöpankki 1905–2005: 100 vuotta Längelmäen Säästöpankki, Längelmäki: Längelmäen Säästöpankki.Google Scholar
Kuokkanen, E., Se pikkuusen paree pankki: Töysän Säästöpankin historiaa sadan vuoden ajalta, 1905–2005, Töysä: Töysän säästöpankki/Otavan kirjap.Google Scholar
Landberg, H., I växelbruk: Dag Hammarskjöld mellan arbetslöshetsutredningen, riksbanken och finansdepartementet under 1930-talet, Stockholm: Sveriges riksbank.Google Scholar
Larsson, U., Sveriges finansministrar 1840–2005, Stockholm: Finansdepartementet, Regeringskansliet.Google Scholar
Nilsson, G. B., The founder, Andre Oscar Wallenberg (1816–1886). Swedish banker, politician and journalist, Stockholm: Almqvist & Wiksell International.Google Scholar
Perlinge, A., Sockenbankirerna: kreditrelationer och tidig bankverksamhet: Vånga socken i Skåne 1840–1900, Stockholm: Nordiska museets förlag.Google Scholar
Sandberg, N. E., Vad kan vi lära av kraschen? Bank- och fastighetskrisen 1990–1993, Stockholm: SNS förlag.Google Scholar
Wiséhn, E., Mynt till ära och minne: svenska jubileums- och minnesmynt, Stockholm: Sveriges riksbank.Google Scholar
Hoare's: a very private bank, London: Constable.Google Scholar
Aiken, M. and Ardern, D., ‘An accounting history of capital maintenance: legal precedents for managerial autonomy in the United Kingdom’, Accounting Historians J., 32/1, pp. 2360.Google Scholar
Altorfer, S., ‘Die Kanalinseln Jersey und Guernsey: im Windschatten der “City of London”’, in Merki, C. M. (ed.), Europas Finanzzentren. Geschichte und Bedeutung im 20. Jh., Frankfurt/M: Campus Verlag, pp. 197220.Google Scholar
Anderson, M., Edwards, J. R. and Chandler, R. A., ‘Constructing the “well qualified” chartered accountant in England and Wales’, Accounting Historians J., 32/2, pp. 554.Google Scholar
Ashford, Z., ‘From James Mansfield to Ramsays, Bonars & Company: some notes on the story of a private bank’, Book of the Old Edinburgh Club, 6, pp. 2539.Google Scholar
Atkin, J., The foreign exchange market of London: development since 1900, London: Routledge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baker, M. and Collins, M., ‘English bank business loans, 1920–1968: transaction bank characteristics and small firm discrimination’, Financial History Rev., 12/2, pp. 135–71.Google Scholar
Barnes, P., ‘A Victorian financial crisis: the scandalous implications of the case of Overend Gurney’, in Rowbotham, J. and Stevenson, K. (eds.), Criminal conversations: Victorian crimes, social panic, and moral outrage, Columbus: Ohio State University Press, pp. 5569.Google Scholar
Blaazer, D. P., ‘Finance and the end of appeasement: the Bank of England, the national government and the Czech Gold’, J. of Contemporary History, 40/1, pp. 2539.Google Scholar
Cassis, Y., ‘London banks and international finance, 1890–1914’, in Bussière, and Cassis, (eds.), London and Paris, pp. 107–18.Google Scholar
Combs, M. B., ‘“A measure of legal independence”: the 1870 Married Women's Property Act and the portfolio allocations of British wives’, J. of Economic History, 65/4, pp. 1028–57.Google Scholar
Cottrell, P. L., ‘Established connections and new opportunities: London as an international financial centre, 1914–1958’, in Bussière, and Cassis, (eds.), London and Paris, pp. 153–82.Google Scholar
Cox, J., ‘Railway contractor becomes railway financier: Peto in the 1850s’, J. of the Railway & Canal Historical Society, 191, pp. 20–5.Google Scholar
Davie, S. S. K., ‘Accounting's uses in exploitative human engineering: theorizing citizenship, indirect rule and Britain's imperial expansion’, Accounting Historians J., 32/2, pp. 5580.Google Scholar
Dykes, D. W., ‘The Sherborne bank tokens’, British Numismatic J., 75, pp. 132–41.Google Scholar
Ferguson, N., ‘The city of London and British imperialism: new light on an old question’, in Bussière, and Cassis, (eds.), London and Paris, pp. 5777.Google Scholar
Ferguson, N., ‘A bolt from the blue? The City of London and the outbreak of the First World War’, in Louis, W. R. (ed.), Yet more adventures with Britannia: personalities, politics, and culture in Britain, London: I. B. Tauris, pp. 133–47.Google Scholar
Fleischman, R. K., Oldroyd, D. and Tyson, T. N.Accounting, coercion and social control during apprenticeship: converting slave workers to wage workers in the British West Indies c. 1834–1838’, Accounting Historians J., 32/2, pp. 201–31.Google Scholar
Flynn, D. T., ‘The duration of book credit in colonial New England’, Historical Methods, 38/4, pp. 168–77.Google Scholar
Hamilton, C. I., ‘British naval policy, policy-makers and financial control, 1860–1945’, War in History, 12/4, pp. 371–95.Google Scholar
Hickson, C. R., Turner, J. D. and McCann, C., ‘“Much ado about nothing”: the limitation of liability and the market for 19th century Irish bank stock’, Explorations in Economic History, 42/3, pp. 459–76.Google Scholar
Hickson, C. R. and Turner, J. D., ‘The genesis of corporate governance: nineteenth-century Irish joint-stock banks’, Business History, 47/2, pp. 174–89.Google Scholar
Hickson, C. R. and Turner, J. D., ‘The rise and decline of the Irish stock market, 1865–1913’, European Rev. of Economic History, 9/1, pp. 333.Google Scholar
Jarvie, P., Ready to trample on all human law: financial capitalism in the fiction of Charles Dickens, New York: Routledge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kaplan, H. H., Nathan Mayer Rothschild and the creation of a dynasty: the critical years 1806–1816, Stanford: Stanford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lawrence, C., Rockefeller money, the laboratory, and medicine in Edinburgh, 1919–1930: new science in an old country, Rochester NY: University of Rochester Press.Google Scholar
Lawson, Z., ‘Save the pennies! Savings banks and the working class in mid nineteenth-century Lancashire’, Local Historian, 35/3, pp. 168–84.Google Scholar
Levene, A., Powell, M. and Stewart, J., ‘Investment choices? County borough health expenditure in inter-war England and Wales’, Urban History, 32/3, pp. 434–58.Google Scholar
LLoyd-Jones, R., Lewis, M. J., Matthews, M. D. and Maltby, J., ‘Control, conflict and concession: corporate governance, accounting and accountability at Birmingham Small Arms, 1906–1933’, Accounting Historians J., 32/1, pp. 149–84.Google Scholar
McGowen, R., ‘The Bank of England and the policing of forgery 1797–1821’, Past & Present, 186, pp. 81116.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Madsen, J. B., A century of economic growth: the social returns to investment in equipment and structures', Manchester School, 73/1, pp. 101–22.Google Scholar
Matthews, S., ‘Cattle clubs, insurance and plague in the mid-nineteenth century’, Agricultural History Rev., 53/2, pp. 192211.Google Scholar
Michie, R., ‘A financial phoenix: the city of London in the twentieth century’, in Bussière, and Cassis, (eds.), London and Paris, pp. 1541.Google Scholar
Moore, S., ‘“Our Irish copper-farthen dean”: Swift's “Drapier's letters”, the “forging” of a modernist Anglo-Irish literature and the Atlantic world of paper credit’, Atlantic Studies, 2/1, pp. 6592.Google Scholar
Morris, R. J., Men, women, and property in England, 1780–1870: a social and economic history of family strategies amongst the Leeds middle classes. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Oakley, G., ‘The people's budget in the North and Squire Thelluson of Brodsworth Hall’, Northern History, 42/2, pp. 329–47.Google Scholar
O'Connell, S. and Reid, C., ‘Working-class consumer credit in the UK, 1925–60: the role of the check trader’, Economic History Rev., 58/2, pp. 378405.Google Scholar
Poole, A. G., ‘Conspicuous presumption: the treasury and the trustees of the national gallery, 1890–1939’, Twentieth Century British History, 16/1, pp. 128.Google Scholar
Ross, D. M., ‘Pobreza y cajas de ahorros en Escocia a mediados del siglo XIX’, Papeles de economía española, 105–6, pp. 8292.Google Scholar
Selgin, G., ‘Charles Wyatt, manager of the Parys mine mint: a study in ingratitude', British Numismatic J., 75, pp. 113–20.Google Scholar
Slinn, J., ‘Price controls or control through prices? Regulating the cost and consumption of prescription pharmaceuticals in the UK, 1948–67’, Business History, 47/3, pp. 352–66.Google Scholar
Solomou, S. and Vartis, D., ‘Effective exchange rates in Britain, 19201930’, J. of Economic History, 65/3, pp. 850–9.Google Scholar
Taylor, J., ‘Commercial fraud and public men in Victorian Britain’, Historical Research, 78/200, pp. 230–52.Google Scholar
Tiberi, M., The accounts of the British empire: capital flows from 1799 to 1914, Aldershot: Ashgate.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tribe, K., ‘Constructing national income in Britain, 19071941’, History of Economic Thought, 47/1, pp. 117.Google Scholar
Williams, S., ‘Poor relief, labourer's households and living standards in rural England c.1770–1834: a Bedfordshire case study’, Economic History Rev., 58/3, pp. 485519.Google Scholar
Williams, S., ‘Earnings, poor relief and the economy of makeshifts: Bedfordshire in the early years of the new poor law’, Rural History, 16/1, pp. 2152.Google Scholar
Woodall, A-M., What price the poor? William Booth, Karl Marx and the London residuum, Aldershot: Ashgate.Google Scholar
Buyst, E., The Bank, the franc and the euro: a history of the National Bank of Belgium, Tielt: Lannoo.Google Scholar
Buyst, E., La Banque nationale de Belgique, du franc belge à l'euro: un siècle et demi d'histoire, Brussels: Editions Racine.Google Scholar
Clesse, R., ‘Kooperative Bonnweg – ein Relikt der Arbeiterbewegung’, Ons Stad Luxembourg, 79, pp. 26–9.Google Scholar
Harms, R., ‘King Leopold's bonds’, in Goetzmann, and Rouwenhorst, (eds.), The origins of value, pp. 343–64.Google Scholar
Grapperhaus, F. H. M., Over de loden last van het koperen fietsplaatje: de Nederlandse rijwielbelasting 1924–1941, Deventer: Kluwer.Google Scholar
Hardewyn, A., ‘Les déterminants politiques, économiques et idéologiques du systême fiscal belge au XXe siècle’, Histoire, Economie et Société, 24/2, pp. 279302.Google Scholar
Meyers, P-H., ‘Caisse rurale Raiffeisenkasse Binsfeld: 1942 – 2004’, Bihob: Bulletin vam Syndicat d'intérêts Benzelt-Holler-Breidelt, 1, pp. 412,Google Scholar
Peeters, S., Goosens, M. and Buyst, E., Belgian national income during the interwar period: reconstruction of the database, Leuven: Leuven University Press.Google Scholar
Seil, G., ‘Das schwierige Geschäft mit den Geschäften: eine Tour durch die Escher Geschäftswelt’, 100 Joer Esch: 1906 – 2006, Luxembourg: Binsfeld, pp. 264–73.Google Scholar
Van Liempt, A., Kopfgeld. Bezahlte Denunziation von Juden in den besetzten Niederlanden, Munich: Siedler.Google Scholar
Aggius, J., ‘Du cadastre napoléonien du canton de Tournon-d'Agenais à nos jours’, Rev. de l'Agenais, 132/2, pp. 767–75.Google Scholar
Américi, L., ‘Détournement de fonds dans les caisses d’épargne françaises au XIXe siècle. Quelle justice entre philanthropie, professionnalisation et pédagogie de l'argent?', in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 199210.Google Scholar
Asselain, J-C., ‘Le siècle des dévaluations: du franc Poincaré au “franc fort” des années 1980’, in D'or et d'argent, pp. 6586.Google Scholar
Bonin, H., ‘Des archives du groupe de la Société générale à l'histoire des banques françaises pendant la Seconde Guerre mondiale’, in Joly, H. (ed.), Faire l'histoire des entreprises sous l'occupation: les acteurs économiques et leurs archives, Paris: Comité des travaux historiques et scientifiques, 2004, pp. 293306.Google Scholar
Bonin, H., ‘French banking and innovation, c. 1850–1970: did imaginative bankers exist?’, in Bruland, K. and Olivier, J-M. (eds.), Essays on Industrialisation in France, Norway and Spain, Oslo: Unipub forlag-Oslo Academic Press, pp. 113–33.Google Scholar
Bonin, H., ‘The challenged competitiveness of the Paris banking and finance markets, 1914–1958’, in Bussière, and Cassis, (eds.), London and Paris, pp. 183206.Google Scholar
Bonin, H., ‘Marque et image de marque bancaires. L'enjeu de la confiance, xixe-xxe siècles’, A nos marques, Horizons bancaires, 325, pp. 724.Google Scholar
Bonin, H., ‘Las estrategias de expansion de las cajas de ahorros francesas durante los siglos XIX y XX’, Papeles de economía española, 105–6, pp. 93108.Google Scholar
Bordas, J., Les directeurs généraux des douanes: l'administration et la politique douanière, 1801–1939, Paris: Comité pour l'histoire économique et financière de la France, 2004.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bouchardeau, P., ‘Grand argentier protestant et pasteur de laïcité: Auguste Giraud’, Rev. drômoise, 516, pp. 163–8.Google Scholar
Boulat, R., ‘Caisses d’épargne et protection sociale, 1818–1914: bonne affaire ou bonne action?', in Aubin, G. and Gallinato, B. (eds.), Les espaces locaux de la protection sociale: études offertes au professeur Pierre Guillaume: colloque de Bordeaux, février 2003, Paris: Association pour l'étude de l'histoire de la sécurité sociale, 2004, pp. 507–33.Google Scholar
Boyé, M., ‘Une “horreur” heureusement sauvegardée: la Banque de France d'Arcachon’, Bulletin de la société historique et archéologique d'Arcachon, 126, pp. 5166.Google Scholar
Branda, P., ‘Les finances et le budget de la France napoléonienne. 1: Qu'est-ce que le budget de l'Etat sous Napoléon?’, Souvenirs napoléoniens, 67/455–6, pp. 5568.Google Scholar
Branda, P., ‘Les finances et le budget de la France napoléonienne. 2: La guerre a-t-elle payé la guerre?’, Souvenirs napoléoniens, 68/457, pp. 2535.Google Scholar
Branda, P., ‘Les finances et le budget de la France napoléonienne. 3: La dynamique des budgets impériaux de 1805 à 1814 et le bilan de la première abdication’, Souvenirs napoléoniens, 68/458, pp. 1427.Google Scholar
Capitanio, S., Currencies: fiscal fortunes and cultural capital in nineteenth century France, New York: Peter Lang.Google Scholar
Christen-Lécuyer, C., ‘La mesure de l'efficacité sociale des caisses d’épargne françaises au XIXe siècle', Histoire & Mesure, 20/3, pp. 139–75.Google Scholar
Conreur, G., De l'assignat à l'euro: deux siècles d'histoire du franc, Paris: L'Harmattan.Google Scholar
De Blic, D., ‘Moraliser l'argent. Ce que Panama a changé dans la société française, 1889–1897’, Politix, 18/71, pp. 6182.Google Scholar
De Olivera, M., ‘Corruption, malversation et détournement. Les fonctionnaires des finances face à la tentation (première moitié du XIXe)’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 8798.Google Scholar
Dreyfus, J. M., ‘Die Privatbanken in Frankreich – 1918–1945’, in Eigner, P. (ed.), Privatbankiers in Mitteleuropa zwischen den Weltkriegen, Stuttgart: Steiner.Google Scholar
Duret, J., ‘Les inventaires de 1906 dans le pays mareuillais. Les protestations’, Au fil du Lay, 46, pp. 4490.Google Scholar
Fouqué, G., ‘Le Crédit mutuel: “une histoire des origines du Crédit Mutuel”’, Société des lettres, sciences et arts du Saumurois, 96/154, pp. 6785.Google Scholar
Gallarotti, G. M., ‘Hegemons of a lesser God: the bank of France and monetary leadership under the classical gold standard’, Oxford Rev. of Economic Policy, 12/4, pp. 624–46.Google Scholar
Gattellier, M., ‘L'or, la marine et la guerre’, Académie de Marine. Communications et mémoires, 1, pp. 83110.Google Scholar
Genevée, F., ‘Le PCF face aux amendes et à la “justice de classe”, 1920–1940’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 307–18.Google Scholar
de Gmeline, P., La banque Hervet: depuis 1830, de Bourges à Paris et dans la région du Centre, Paris: Editions de Venise.Google Scholar
de Gmeline, P., Depuis 1845, Dupuy de Parseval: quatre familles, une région, un groupe: une banque ouverte sur le monde, Paris: Editions de Venise.Google Scholar
Horn, M. and Imlay, T., ‘Money in wartime: France's financial preparations for the two World Wars’, International History Rev., 27/4, pp. 709–53.Google Scholar
Kamoun, P., ‘Financement du logement social et évolutions de ses missions: de 1894 (loi Siegfried) à nos jours; logement, habitat, cadre de vie’, Informations-sociales, 123, pp. 2033.Google Scholar
Karila-Cohen, P., ‘Les fonds secrets ou la méfiance legitime: l'invention paradoxale d'une “tradition républicaine” sous la restauration et la monarchie de juillet’, Rev. Historique, 307/4, pp. 731–66.Google Scholar
Kott, S., Le contrôle des dépenses engagées. Evolutions d'une fonction, Paris: Comité pour l'histoire économique et financière de la France, 2004.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mastin, J-L., ‘Stratégies du capitalisme familial lillois et autonomie financière régionale: le financement des filatures Julien Le Blan, 1858–1914’, Rev. d'histoire moderne et contemporaine, 52/4, pp. 74105.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Plessis, A., ‘Le franc au XIXe siècle’, in D'or et d'argent, pp. 4564.Google Scholar
Plessis, A., ‘When Paris dreamed of competing with the city…’, in Bussière, and Cassis, (eds.), London and Paris, pp. 4256.Google Scholar
Praquin, N., ‘La comptabilité aux frontières de l'organisation: un instrument de la stratégie entrepreneuriale. Le cas du crédit Lyonnais sous Henri Germain (1864–1905)’, Entreprises et histoire, 39, pp. 4558.Google Scholar
Regnard-Drouot, C., ‘La justice et les peines pécuniaires à Marseilles de 1851 à 1914’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 293306.Google Scholar
Rolland, D., ‘Les origines de la banque de Soissons’, Mémoires du Soissonnais, 20022005, 5/3, pp. 241–5.Google Scholar
Saul, S., ‘Banking alliances and international issues on the Paris capital market, 1890–1914’, in Bussière, and Cassis, (eds.), London and Paris, pp. 119–52.Google Scholar
Thomas, M., ‘Albert Sarraut, French colonial development, and the communist threat, 1919–1930’, J. of Modern History, 77/4, pp. 917–55.Google Scholar
Tulard, J., ‘Le franc germinal’, in D'or et d'argent, pp. 3544.Google Scholar
Vanoli, A., A history of national accounting, Amsterdam: IOS Press.Google Scholar
Viaene, A., L'efficience de la Bourse de Paris au XIXe siècle: une confrontation théorique face aux données empiriques des marchés à terme et à prime, Paris: Connaissances et Savoirs.Google Scholar
Yonnet, F., ‘Claude-Henri de Saint-Simon: l'industrialisation et les banquiers’, Cahiers d'économie politique, 46 (2004), pp. 147–74.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Abelshauser, W., ‘Die Wirtschaft des deutschen Kaiserreichs. Ein Treibhaus nachindustrieller Institutionen’, in Windolf, A. (ed.), Finanzmarkt-Kapitalismus. Analysen zum Wandel von Produktionsregimen, Wiesbaden: VS, Verlag f. Sozialwissenschaft, pp. 172–95.Google Scholar
Bähr, J., ‘Modernes Bankrecht und dirigistische Kapitallenkung. Die Ebenen der Steuerung im Finanzsektor des “Dritten Reichs”’, in Gosewinkel, D. (ed.), Wirtschaftskontrolle und Recht in der nationalsozialistischen Diktatur, Frankfurt/M: Klostermann, pp. 199224.Google Scholar
Barghorn, O., Auf dem Wege zur modernen Kleinstadt. Politik, Verwaltung und Finanzen norddeutscher Kleinstädte und Landgemeinden in der Zeit des Kaiserreiches 1871–1914, Taunusstein: Driesen Edition Wissenschaft.Google Scholar
Barkai, A., Oscar Wassermann und die Deutsche Bank. Bankier in schwieriger Zeit, Munich: Beck.Google Scholar
Baten, J., ‘Making profits in wartime: corporate profits, inequality, and GDP in Germany during the First World War’, Economic History Rev., 58/1, pp. 3456.Google Scholar
Beachy, R., The soul of commerce: credit, property, and politics in Leipzig, 1750–1840, Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Blisse, H., and Hofinger, H., ‘Reservefonds mit Fürsorgecharakter bei Vorschuss- und Kreditvereinen (Kreditgenossenschaften)’, Bankhistorisches Archiv, 31/2, pp. 134–43.Google Scholar
Boelcke, W. A., ‘Sparkassen im Königreich Württemberg und im Großherzogtum Baden. Ein Vergleich’, Zeitschrift für Württembergische Landesgeschichte, 64, pp. 283–92.Google Scholar
Boenke, K. C., Die Notgeldscheine aus Kolberg und Körlin. Zeugnisse aus der deutschen Geschichte zweier Städte in Pommern, Hamburg: Jancke.Google Scholar
Buchheim, C., ‘Die vielen Rechenfehler in der Abrechnung Götz Alys mit den Deutschen unter dem NS-Regime’, Sozial.Geschichte: Zeitschrift für Historische Analyse des 20. und 21. Jahrhunderts, 20/3, pp. 6776.Google Scholar
Burhop, C., ‘Die Vergütung des Führungspersonals deutscher Großbanken, 1871–1913’, Vierteljahrschrift für Sozial- und Wirtschaftsgeschichte, 92/3, pp. 281300.Google Scholar
Dohna, J. zu, Die “jüdischen Konten” der fürstlich Castell'schen Credit-Cassen und des Bankhauses Karl Meyer KG, Nuremberg: Gesellschaft für fränkische Geschichte.Google Scholar
Eierle, B., ‘Differential reporting in Germany: historical analysis’, Accounting, Business and Financial History, 15/3, pp. 279315.Google Scholar
Feldman, G. D., ‘The role of the Creditanstalt-Bankverein in the expansion of greater Germany, 1938–1945’, in Rathkolb, O. (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt. 150 Jahre österreichische Bankengeschichte im Zentrum Europa, Vienna: Zsolnay, pp. 317–34.Google Scholar
Gassert, P., ‘Men for all seasons? Die deutschen Unternehmer Hanns Martin Schleyer und Hermann Josef Abs’, Vorgange, 1/169, pp. 130–3.Google Scholar
Guinnane, T. W., ‘German debt in the twentieth century’, in Goetzmann, and Rouwenhorst, (eds.), The origins of value, pp. 327–42.Google Scholar
Jakubowski-Tiessen, M., ‘“Woher nehmen wir Geldt zu den Küsten her…?” Eine frühneuzeitliche Flutkatastrophe und ihre finanziellen Folgen’, Siedlungsforschung, 23, pp. 91100.Google Scholar
Klüßendorf, N., ‘“Pro deo et patria”. Das bischöfliche Tafelsilber und die Finanzen des Hochstifts Fulda im Ersten Koalitionskrieg’, Hessisches Jahrbuch für Landesgeschichte, 55, pp. 4771.Google Scholar
Köhler, I., Die ‘Arisierung’ der Privatbanken im Dritten Reich. Verdrängung, Ausschaltung und die Frage der Wiedergutmachung, Munich: Beck.Google Scholar
Köhler, I., ‘Zwischen wirtschaftlicher Marginalisierung und politischer Verdrängung. Die Privatbanken in Deutschland 1929–1935’, in Eigner, P. (ed.), Privatbankiers in Mitteleuropa zwischen den Weltkriegen, Stuttgart: Steiner, pp. 103–34.Google Scholar
Kopper, C., Bankiers unterm Hakenkreuz, Munich: Hanser.Google Scholar
Krause, D., Die Commerz- und Disconto-Bank 1870–1920/23, Stuttgart: Franz Steiner Verlag, 2004.Google Scholar
Kreutzmüller, C., Zum Umgang der Kaiser-Wilhelm-Gesellschaft mit Geld und Gut. Immobilientransfers und jüdische Stiftungen 1933–1945, Berlin, Forschungsprogramm Geschichte der Kaiser-Wilhelm-Gesellschaft im Nationalsozialismus.Google Scholar
Kreutzmüller, C. and Loose, I., ‘Die Bank der Deutschen Arbeit 1933–1945 – eine nationalsozialistische “Superbank”?’, Bankhistorisches Archiv, 31/1, pp. 132.Google Scholar
Mutschler, H., Vom ‘Soldaten Adolf Hitlers’ zum unabhängigen Organ der Steuerrechtspflege. Zur Frage der Unabhängigkeit der Steuerberater von der Finanzverwaltung in der Zeit zwischen 1919 und 1961, Stuttgart: Boorberg.Google Scholar
Pohl, H. R. and Bernd, S. G., Wirtschafts- und Sozialgeschichte der deutschen Sparkassen im 20. Jahrhundert, Stuttgart: Deutscher Sparkassenverlag.Google Scholar
Quick, R., ‘The formation and early development of German audit firms’, Accounting, Business and Financial History, 15/3, pp. 317–43.Google Scholar
Schulz, G. and Wysocki, J., Untersuchungen zur Wirtschafts- und Sozialgeschichte der deutschen Sparkassen im 19. Jh., Stuttgart: Deutscher Sparkassenverlag.Google Scholar
Schwanitz, W. G., ‘“Wir speisen im Adlon”: Herbert M. Gutmann und die Deutsche Orientbank’, in Heyden, U. and Van der Zeller, J. (eds.), ‘Macht und Anteil an der Weltherrschaft’. Berlin und der deutsche Kolonialismus, Münster: Unrast Verlag, pp. 81–6.Google Scholar
Scharwath, G., Vom Saarbrücker Groschen zur Deutschen Mark. Geldgeschichte der Saarregion, Saarbrücken: Staden-Verlag.Google Scholar
Steiner, A., ‘Zur Neuschatzung des Lebenshaltungskostenindex für die Vorkriegszeit des Nationalsozialismus’, Jahrbuch für Wirtschaftsgeschichte, 2, pp. 129–54.Google Scholar
Treisch, C., ‘Taxable treatment of the subsistence level of income in German natural law’, Accounting, Business and Financial History, 15/3, pp. 255–79.Google Scholar
Weidner, M., ‘Die Beschäftigung von Frauen in der Bankwirtschaft am Beispiel der Bayerischen Hypotheken- und Wechsel-Bank AG von 1835–1985 mit einem Ausblick auf die Bayerische Vereinsbank’, Bankhistorisches Archiv, 31/2, pp. 107–33.Google Scholar
Weschke, B. and Wöhnl, C., ‘Was mich interessiert ist Geld’ (Salvador Dali, Künstler 1904–1989): Geldgeschichte Geldpolitik, Geldtheorie von den Anfängen bis zur Gegenwart: anlässlich der gleichnamigen Wanderausstellung im Verbandsgebiet des Ostdeutschen Sparkassen- und Giroverbandes, eröffnet zum Weltspartag 2003, Berlin: Ostdeutscher Sparkassen- und Giroverband.Google Scholar
Ziegler, D., ‘“Aryanization” and the role of the German great banks, 1933–1938’, in Feldman, G. D. and Seibel, W. (eds.), Networks of Nazi persecution. bureaucracy, business and the organization of the Holocaust, Oxford: Berghahn, pp. 4468.Google Scholar
Ziegler, D., ‘Das deutsche Modell bankorientierter Finanzsysteme (1848–1957)’, in Windolf, (ed.), Finanzmarkt-Kapitalismus, pp. 276–93.Google Scholar
Ziegler, D., ‘Das deutsche Modell bankorientierter Finanzsysteme (1848–1957)’, Kölner Zeitschrift für Soziologie und Sozialpsychologie, 45, pp. 276–93.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zimmermann, N. M., Die veröffentlichten Bilanzen der Commerzbank 1870–1944. Eine Bilanzanalyse unter Einbeziehung der Bilanzdaten von Deutscher Bank und Dresdner Bank, Berlin: Frank & Timme.Google Scholar
Giovanni Malagodi banchiere, 1927–1952: atti del convegno: Fondazione Raffaele Mattioli, Milano, 20 ottobre 2004, Rome: Edizioni di storia e letteratura.Google Scholar
Artoni, R., ‘Note sul debito pubblico italiano dal 1885 al 2001’, Seminario su Debito pubblico e formazione dei mercati finanziari fra età moderna e contemporanea, tenuto, a Cassino, il 15 e 16 ottobre 2004 = Riv. di Storia Finanziaria, 15, pp. 6576, www.delpt.unina.it/stof/indice.Google Scholar
Canella, M. and Puccinelli, E. (eds.), Beneficenza a risparmio: i documenti preunitari della Cassa di risparmio delle Provincie lombarde, Cinisello Balsamo/Milan: Silvana/Banca Intesa.Google Scholar
Ceva, L., ‘Spese militari e industrie nell Italia liberale’, Italia contemporanea, 241.Google Scholar
Chiapparino, F., ‘La banca locale nelle Marche tra le due guerre mondiali’, Storia e problemi contemporanei, 2004, 17/37, pp. 73119.Google Scholar
Delli Gatti, D., Gallegati, M. and Gallegati, M., ‘On the nature and causes of business fluctuations in Italy, 1861–2000, Explorations in Economic History, 42/1, pp. 81100.Google Scholar
Ermice, M. C., Le origini del Gran libro del debito pubblico del Regno di Napoli e l'emergere di nuovi gruppi sociali, 1806–1815, Naples: Arte tipografica.Google Scholar
Fausto, D., ‘Lineamenti dell'evoluzione del debito pubblico in Italia (1861–1961)’, Seminario su Debito pubblico e formazione dei mercati finanziari fra età moderna e contemporanea, tenuto, a Cassino, il 15 e 16 ottobre 2004 = Riv. di Storia Finanziaria, 15, pp. 77110. www.delpt.unina.it/stof/indiceGoogle Scholar
Fornasari, M., ‘Un progetto bancario post-unitario: la Banca d'emissione per l'Alta Italia’, Studi Storici Luigi Simeoni, 55, pp. 243–73.Google Scholar
Fratianni, M. and Spinelli, F., A monetary history of Italy, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gagliardi, A., ‘Il ministero per gli Scambi e valute e la politica autarchica del fascismo’, Studi storici, 46, pp. 1033–71.Google Scholar
Garofalo, P., Exchange rate regimes and economic performance: the Italian experience, Rome: Banca d'Italia.Google Scholar
Magliani, S., Per la storia economica e sociale del territorio umbro: la prima Cassa di risparmio di Perugia dallo Stato pontificio allo Stato unitario, Rome: Edizioni dell'Ateneo.Google Scholar
Marongiu, G., La politica fiscale del fascismo, Lungro di Cosenza: Marco.Google Scholar
Martínez Oliva, J. C. and Schlitzer, G., Le battaglie della lira: moneta, finanza e relazioni internazionali dell'Italia dall'unità all'euro, Florence: Le Monnier.Google Scholar
Pagano, E., ‘Fisco e professioni durante il Regno d'Italia napoleonico’, Società e Storia, 2004, 27, pp. 531–57.Google Scholar
Pagano, E., ‘Le finanze comunali nel Regno d'Italia napoleonico. Il caso delle città lombarde’, Rassegna storica del Risorgimento, 92, pp. 507–38.Google Scholar
Patuelli, A., ‘Ricordi e considerazioni su Malagodi banchiere’, Giovanni Malagodi banchiere, 1927–1952, pp. 4756.Google Scholar
Pino, F., ‘Alla ricerca delle radici antiche di Banca Intesa’, in Canella, and Puccinelli, (eds.), Beneficenza a risparmio, pp. 89.Google Scholar
Pollard, J. F., Money and the rise of the modern papacy: financing the Vatican, 1850–1950, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Provvedi, R., ‘Le attività agricole, artigianali e professionali di Poggibonsi attraverso le analisi dei bilanci del Comune (1860–1880). I parte’, Miscellanea storica della Valdelsa, 111/1–3, p. 67131.Google Scholar
Rugafiori, P., ‘Gerolamo Gaslini: un imprenditore filantropo tra etica e politica’, Contemporanea, 8, pp. 447–84.Google Scholar
Sanseverino, T. S., ‘La vigilanza bancaria in Italia dal 1926 al 1960’, Riv. di storia finanziaria, 14/1, pp. 81146. www.delpt.unina.it/stof/indiceGoogle Scholar
Tuccimei, E., La ricerca economica a Via Nazionale: una storia degli ‘Studi’ da Canovai a Baffi (1894–1940), Rome: Banca d'Italia.Google Scholar
Volpi, A., Breve storia del mercato finanziario italiano: dal 1861 a oggi, Rome: Carocci.Google Scholar
Zanone, V., ‘Malagodi, dalla banca al servizio dello Stato’, Giovanni Malagodi banchiere, 1927–1952, pp. 5764.Google Scholar
Bazzocco, A., ‘1943–1947: à la recherche du précieux franc suisse: l'invasion des contrebandiers à la frontière suisse-italienne.’, Gavroche, 24/144, pp. 911.Google Scholar
De Lucia, M., Industrie, agricoltura e credito nello sviluppo economico della Svizzera, 1800–1940, Naples: Edizioni scientifiche italiane.Google Scholar
Gerlach, S., ‘Estimates of real economic activity in Switzerland, 1886–1930’, Empirical Economics, 30/3, pp. 763–83.Google Scholar
Mazbouri, M., L'émergence de la place financière suisse (1890–1913): itinéraire d'un grand banquier, Lausanne:Editions Antipodes.Google Scholar
Pictet 1805–2005. 200 years of history: one bank and the men who built it, Geneva: Pictet.Google Scholar
Schroeder, K. P., ‘“In diesem Kopfe geht immer etwas vor”. Die Heidelberger Jahre des Schweizer Rechtsgelehrten Johann Caspar Bluntschli (1808–1881)’, in Grupp, K. and Hufeld, U. (eds), Recht – Kultur – Finanzen. Festschrift für Reinhard Mußgnug zum 70. Geburtstag am 26. Oktober 2005, Heidelberg: Müller, pp. 377–98.Google Scholar
AA., VV., ‘Historia de las cajas de ahorros’, Papeles de economía española, 105–6, pp. 2335.Google Scholar
Bernal, M., Espejo, C. and Pinzón, P., ‘Accounting regulation, inertia and organisational self-perception: double-entry adoption in a Spanish Casa de Comercio (1829–1852)’, Accounting, Business and Financial History, 15/2, pp. 145–69.Google Scholar
Benaul Berenguer, J. M. and Sudria Triay, C., ‘Ahorro e industria. Burguesia industrial y politica inversora de la Caja de Ahorros de Sabadell, 1859–1913’, Papeles de economía española, 105–6, pp. 227–43.Google Scholar
Carnero, I., Crónica de una noble institución salmantina. Caja de Ahorros y Monte de Piedad de Salamanca, después llamada Caja de Salamanca y Soria o Caja Duero. Desde sus inicios hasta el 125 aniversario, Salamanca: Edifsa.Google Scholar
Comin-Comin, F. and Torres Villanueva, E., ‘La confederacion Espanola de cajas de ahorros y el desarrollo de la red de servicios financieros de las cajas en el siglo XX (1900–1976)’, Papeles de economía española, 105–6, pp. 4865.Google Scholar
Cuevas Casana, J., Hoyo Aparicio, A. and Martinez Soto, A. P., ‘La historia economica de las cajas de ahorros espanolas. Una perspectiva institucional y regional de ahorro, 1830–2004’, Papeles de economía española, 105–6, pp. 615.Google Scholar
Díaz Hernández, O., ‘Los hermanos Urquijo Ussía y la modernización española en el primer tercio del siglo XX’, International J. of Iberian Studies, 18–2, pp. 85101.Google Scholar
Díaz Morlán, P., ‘Capitalismo rentista y decadencia empresarial: la desaparicion de la casa Martinez Rivas (1913–1921)’, Rev. de Historia Industrial, 14/3, pp. 117–39.Google Scholar
Fernandez Clemente, E., ‘Las cajas de ahorros en la prensa economica (1923–1936). El Economista, el Financiero y la Revista Nacional de Economia’, Papeles de economía española, 105–6, pp. 6681.Google Scholar
Gallego Martínez, D., ‘La formacion de los precios del trigo en España (1820–1869): el mercado interior’, Historia Agraria, 36, pp. 263–85.Google Scholar
García-Iglesias Soto, M. C.Ventajas y riesgos del patrón oro para la economía española (1850–1913), Madrid: Banco de España.Google Scholar
Glendinning, N. and Medrano, J. M., Goya y el Banco Nacional de San Carlos, Madrid, Banco de España.Google Scholar
Grupo de Historia de los Precios en Andalucía, Estudio de los precios agrarios y de la formación del mercado regional en Andalucía en la segunda mitad del siglo XIX, Jaén: Universidad de Jaén.Google Scholar
Herranz-Loncán, A., ‘The Spanish infrastructure stock, 1844–1935’, Research in Economic History, 23, pp. 83126.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Maixe-Altes, J. C., ‘Cajas de ahorros y desarrollo regional. Aspectos diferenciales de los sistemas financieros gallego y asturiano’, Papeles de economía española, 105–6, pp. 254–73.Google Scholar
Manera, C., ‘Las cajas de ahorros y el crecimiento economico en Baleares, 1880–2000’, Papeles de economía española, 105–6, pp. 168–87.Google Scholar
Martín Aceña, P, and Pons, M. Á., ‘Sistema monetario y financiero’, in Carreras, A. and Tafunell, X. (eds.), Estadísticas históricas de España, Siglos XIX y XX, Bilbao, Fundación BBVA, vol. II, pp. 645706.Google Scholar
Martinez, M. T., ‘Las cajas de ahorros en la historia de Andalucia’, Papeles de economía española, 105–6, pp. 132–53.Google Scholar
Méndez, J. F. (ed.), 100 años CAI, 1905–2005, Zaragoza: Caja de Ahorros de la Inmaculada.Google Scholar
Planas, J. and Saguer, E., ‘Accounting records of large rural estates and the dynamics of agriculture in Catalonia, 1850–1950’, Accounting, Business and Financial History, 15/2, pp. 171–85.Google Scholar
Pons Pons, J., ‘Large American Corporations in the Spanish Life Insurance Market, 1880–1922’, J. of European Economic History, 34–2, pp. 467–81.Google Scholar
Prats Albentosa, M. A., ‘Innovacion y transformacion financiera: el papel de las cajas de ahorros en la region de Murcia’, Papeles de economía española, 105–6, pp. 295308.Google Scholar
Quintas Seoane, J. R., ‘Un breve recorrido por la historiografia reciente sobre la historia de las cajas de ahorros’, Papeles de economía española, 105–6, pp. 25.Google Scholar
Robledo Hernández, R., ‘Del diezmo al presupuesto: la financiación de la universidad española, 1800–1930’, Investigaciones de Historia Económica, 1, pp. 97130.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sabaté Sort, M., Gadea, M. D. and Serrano Sanz, J. M., ‘The Spanish peseta versus the pound sterling, the French franc and the US dollar, 1870–1935: a long floating experience’, Applied Financial Economics Letters, 1–2, pp. 95–9.Google Scholar
Zubero, L. G., ‘El creciente y superior protagonismo de las cajas de ahorros en el sistema financiero de Aragon durante el siglo XX’, Papeles de economía española, 105–6, pp. 154–67.Google Scholar
Aleksic, V., ‘The History of the Allgemeiner Jugoslawischer Bankverein AG in Belgrade in the context of Yugoslav Banking History after 1918’, in Lazaretou, S. (ed.), ‘The drachma, foreign creditors, and the international monetary system: tales of a currency during the 19th and the early 20th centuries’, Explorations in economic history, 42/2, pp. 202–36.Google Scholar
Bozic, T., ‘Krcke kreditne zadruge i gospodarski list “pucki prijatelj” u prvom desetljecu 20. stoljeca’ [Credit cooperatives on the island of Krk and the economic journal Pucki Prijatelj during the first decade of the 20th century], Casopis za Suvremenu Povijest, 37/1, pp. 129–54.Google Scholar
Jelic, D., ‘Die Privatbanken in Jugoslawien zwischen den Weltkriegen’, in Eigner, P. (ed.), Privatbankiers in Mitteleuropa zwischen den Weltkriegen, Stuttgart: Steiner.Google Scholar
Lory, B., ‘Un grand chantier communautaire en Macédoine: l'eglise Saint-Demetre de Bitola-Manastir (1830)’, Rev. des Mondes Musulmans et de la Méditerranée, 107, pp. 245–57.Google Scholar
Prodanovic, M., Dreimal Jugoslawien auf Banknoten, In Bartetzky, A. (ed.) Neue Staaten – neue Bilder? Visuelle Kultur im Dienst staatlicher Selbstdarstellung in Zentral- und Osteuropa seit 1918, Cologne: Böhlau, pp. 291300.Google Scholar
Rathkolb, O. (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt. 150 Jahre österreichische Bankengeschichte im Zentrum Europ, Vienna: Zsolnay, pp. 226–38Google Scholar
Albert, S. D., ‘“One gypsy, one king”: the Austro-Hungarian bank competition’, Centropa, 5/2, pp. 92103.Google Scholar
Baltzarek, F., ‘Finanzrevolutionen, Industrialisierung und Credit-Mobilier-Banken in der Habsburgermonarchie’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 1236.Google Scholar
Bazantová, I., Centrální bankovnictví v ceské historii po soucasnost: institucionální pohled, Prague: Národohospodárský ústav Josefa Hlávky.Google Scholar
Berend, I. T., ‘Banking and the Hungarian Economy in the 20th Century’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 212–25.Google Scholar
Bohr, P., Österreichs genialster Geldfälscher und seine Zeit, Regensburg, Roderer.Google Scholar
Brandt, H. H., ‘Die Wiener Rothschilds seit 1820 und die Gründung der Credit-Anstalt 1855’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 3755.Google Scholar
Ciara, S., ‘Finansowe klopoty Galicyjskich uczonych na przelomie XIX i XX w’ [The financial problems of Galician men of science at the turn of the 19th century], Przeglad Historyczny, 96/4, pp. 573–86.Google Scholar
Denzel, M. A., Die Bozner Messen und ihr Zahlungsverkehr (1633–1850), Bozen: Athesia Verlagsanstalt.Google Scholar
Eigner, P., ‘Ein Schritt nach vorne, zwei Schritte zurück – die wechselhafte Geschichte des Finanzplatzes Wien im 20. Jh.’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 482501.Google Scholar
Eigner, P. (ed.), Privatbankiers in Mitteleuropa zwischen den Weltkriegen, Stuttgart: Steiner.Google Scholar
Feldman, G. D., ‘German banks and National Socialist Efforts to supply capital and support industrialization in newly annexed territories: the Austrian model’, Zeitschrift für Unternehmensgeschichte, 50/1, pp. 516.Google Scholar
Geschwandtner, M. and Auguste, C. L., ‘Die tragische Geschichte der bisher einzigen Bankgründerin Österreich’, Mitteilungen der Gesellschaft für Salzburger Landeskunde, 145, pp. 227–64.Google Scholar
Hampel, E., ‘Die Bank Austria Creditanstalt im erweiterten Europa – von den historischen Wurzeln bis heute’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 502–15.Google Scholar
Hallon, L., ‘Úloha Milana Hodzu v komercnom bankovníctve Slovenska v rokoch 1918–1938’ [Milan Hodza and his role in the Slovak commercial banking sector 1918–38], Historický Casopis, 53/1, pp. 5770.Google Scholar
Kämpken, N. and Ladenburger, M., ‘Alle Noten bringen mich nicht aus den Nöthen!!’ Beethoven und das Geld. Begleitbuch zu einer Ausstellung des Beethoven-Hauses in Zusammenarbeit mit dem Archiv der Gesellschaft der Musikfreunde in Wien und der Österreichischen Nationalbank', Bonn: Verlag Beethoven-Haus.Google Scholar
Klausinger, H., ‘Misguided monetary messages: the Austrian case,1931–34’, European J. of the History of Economic Thought, 12/1, pp. 2545.Google Scholar
Kövér, G., ‘Osztrák credit – Magyar hitel: az Osztrák Creditanstalt és a Magyar általános Hitelbank kartellje (1871–1900)’ [Austrian credit – Hungarian loan: the Austrian Creditanstalt and the cartel of the Hungarian General Credit Bank, 1871–1900], Századok, 139/5, pp. 1261–83.Google Scholar
Köhler, I., ‘Zwischen wirtschaftlicher Marginalisierung und politischer Verdrängung: Die Privatbanken in Deutschland 1929–1935’, in Eigner, (ed.), Privatbankiers in Mitteleuropa.Google Scholar
Kučera, J., ‘Der zögerliche Expansionist. Die Commerzbank in den böhmischen Ländern 1938–1945’, Bankhistorisches Archiv, 31/1, pp. 3356.Google Scholar
Hallon, L., ‘Uloha Milana Hodzu v komercnom bankovnictve Slovenska v rokoch 1918–1938’ [Milan Hodza and his role in the Slovak commercial banking sector from 1918 until 1938], Historicky casopis, 53/1, pp. 5770.Google Scholar
Hájek, J. P. R., ‘180 let ceského sporitelnictví: Ceská sporitelna 1825–2005’ [180 years of the Czech Savings System - 180 Jahre des Tschechischen Sparkassenwesens], Prague: Vysoká skola financní a správní/Ceská sporitelna.Google Scholar
Kubik, F., ‘Creditanstalt-Bankverein: Von der führenden Bank des Landes zur internationalen monetären Visitenkarte Österreichs’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 415–36.Google Scholar
Lussy, H. and López Rodrigo, P., Finanzbeziehungen Liechtensteins zur Zeit des Nationalsozialismus: Studie im Auftrag der Unabhängigen Historikerkommission Liechtenstein Zweiter Weltkrieg, Vaduz: Historischer Verein für das Fürstentum Liechtenstein.Google Scholar
Matis, H., ‘Österreichs Wirtschaft in der Zwischenkriegszeit: Desintegration, Neustrukturierung und Stagnation’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 124–47.Google Scholar
Matis, H., Die Schwarzenberg-Bank. Kapitalbildung und Industriefinanzierung in den habsburgischen Erblanden 1787–1830, Vienna: Verlag des Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften.Google Scholar
Mattl, S., ‘Die Finanzdiktatur’, in Tálos, E. (ed.), Austrofaschismus. Politik - Ökonomie – Kultur 1933–1938, Vienna: Lit, 5th edition, pp. 202–21.Google Scholar
Melichar, M., ‘Bankiers in der Krise: Der österreichische Privatbankensektor 1928–1938’, in Eigner, (ed.), Privatbankiers in Mitteleuropa.Google Scholar
Michel, B., ‘Von der k.k. privilegierten Österreichischen Länderbank zur Banque des Pays de l'Europe Centrale 1880–1938’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 7390.Google Scholar
Natmeßnig, C., ‘Wege zur Währungssanierung und Beginn der Bankenkonzentration auf dem Wiener Platz’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 162–79.Google Scholar
Novotny, J. and Sousa, J., ‘Die Struktur der Privatbankhäuser in den Böhmischen Ländern – 1918–1938’, in Eigner, (ed.), Privatbankiers in Mitteleuropa.Google Scholar
Rapp, C. K. and Rapp-Wimberger, N., Arbeite, sammle, vermehre. Von der Ersten Oesterreichischen Spar-Casse zur Erste Bank, Vienna: Brandstätter.Google Scholar
Rathkolb, O. (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt. 150 Jahre österreichische Bankengeschichte im Zentrum Europa, Vienna: Zsolnay.Google Scholar
Rumpier, H., ‘Die Gründung der Credit-Anstalt im Kontext der Neupositionierung von Österreichs Wirtschafts- und Außenhandelspolitik durch Karl Ludwig Freiherrn von Bruck’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 5672.Google Scholar
Seidel, H., ‘Von der Schalteröffnung bis zum Staatsvertrag. Die Creditanstalt-Bankverein im ersten Nachkriegsjahrzehnt’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 335–49.Google Scholar
Stiefel, D., ‘Die Sanierung und Konsolidierung der österreichischen Banken 1931–1934’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 196211.Google Scholar
Teichova, A., ‘Banking and industry in Central-East Europe in the first decades of the 20th century’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 148–61.Google Scholar
Venus, T., ‘Freiheit und Vereinnahmung. Über das schwierige Verhältnis zwischen Banken und Journalistik (1855–1938)’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 268–86.Google Scholar
Weber, F., ‘Große Hoffnungen und k(l)eine Erfolge. Zur Vorgeschichte der österreichischen Finanzkrise von 1931’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 180–95.Google Scholar
Weigt, A., Der deutsche Kapitalmarkt vor dem Ersten Weltkrieg. Gründerboom, Gründerkrise und Effizienz des deutschen Aktienmarktes bis 1914, Frankfurt/M: Knapp.Google Scholar
Wixforth, H., ‘Das polnische Bankwesen und die Privatbankiers in der Zwischenkriegszeit’, in Eigner, (ed.), Privatbankiers in MitteleuropaGoogle Scholar
Bazulin, I. U. V., Dvoistvennaia priroda deneg: russkaia ekonomicheskaia mysl' na rubezhe XIX-XX vekov: monografiia, St Petersburg: Russkaia simfoniia.Google Scholar
Beljaev, S. G., ‘Petr L. Bark - Bankier und russischer Finanzminister. Stationen seiner Karriere’, in Dahlmann, D., Heller, K. and Petrov, J. A. (eds.), Eisenbahnen und Motoren – Zucker und Schokolade. Deutsche im russischen Wirtschaftsleben vom 18. bis zum frühen 20. Jh., Berlin: Duncker u. Humblot, pp. 143–66.Google Scholar
Chernik, I. D., ‘Regulirovaniie dokhodov gorodskikh biudzhetov v Rossii v XIX stoletii’ [Regulating income of municipal budgets in Russia in the 19th century], Finansy, 6, pp. 75–6.Google Scholar
Frolov, S. A. and Esikov, S. A., Krest'ianskii pozemel'nyi bank v Tambovskoi gubernii (1884–1917 gg.), Tambov: Izd-vo TGTU.Google Scholar
Golovko, A. N., Finansova administratsiia Rosiis'koï imperiï v Ukraïni (kinets' XVIII–pochatok XX st.): istoryko-pravove doslidzhennia, Kharkiv: SIM.Google Scholar
Gruzitï, I. U. L., Banki Belarusi, 70-e gody XIX-nachalo XX veka, Minsk: Ekoperspektiva.Google Scholar
McCaffray, S. P., ‘Capital, industriousness, and private banks in the economic imagination of a nineteenth-century statesman’, in McCaffray, S. P. and Melancon, M. (eds.), Russia in the European context, 1789–1914: a member of the family, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 3348.Google Scholar
Owen, T. C., Dilemmas of Russian capitalism: Fedor Chizhov and corporate enterprise in the railroad age, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
P'iatacheko, H. O. and Kukharets', L. V., Stanovlennia ta rozvytok finansiv Ukraïny, 1917–2003, Kyïv: Naukovo-doslidnyi finansovyi instytut pry Ministerstvi finansiv Ukraïny.Google Scholar
Polikarpov, V. V., ‘Ob otnoshenii tsarskogo pravitel'stva k evreiskomu kapitalu v 1916 godu’ [On the relationship of the tsarist government toward Jewish capital in 1916], Voprosy Istorii, 2, pp. 110–15.Google Scholar
Valge, J., ‘Es ist nicht alles Gold, was glänzt. Das Gold der Bolschewiki in Estland 1920–1922 und die Folgen’, in Mertelsmann, O. (ed.), Estland und Russland. Aspekte der Beziehungen beider Länder, Hamburg: Kovac, pp. 157–92.Google Scholar
Zaitsev, M. V., ‘Finansovoe polozhenie saratovskogo gorodskogo samoupravleniia v 1892–1913 gg.’ [Financial position of Saratov municipal self-management in 1892–1913], Klio, 2/29, pp. 162–71.Google Scholar
Zalogov, N. A., ‘Finansovye osnovy gorodskogo samoupravleniia v Rossii (1785–1870 gg.)’ [The financial basis of urban self-government in Russia, 1785–1870], Finansy, 2, pp. 77–8.Google Scholar
Berghoff, H., ‘Markterschliessung und Risikomanagement. die Rolle der Kreditauskunfteien und Rating-Agenturen im Industrialisierungs- und Globalisierungsprozess des 19. Jahrhunderts’, Vierteljahrschrift für Sozial- und Wirtschaftsgeschichte, 92/2, pp. 141–62.Google Scholar
Brambilla, C., ‘Grandi banche e modelli creditizi in Italia, Francia e Germania tra XIX e XX secolo’, Annali di Storia dell'Impresa, 15–16 (2004–5), pp. 425–54.Google Scholar
Brötel, D. and Hermann, W., ‘Von Pariser Banken zum Asiengeschäft der Deutschen Bank (1850–1889)’, in Van der Heyden, U. and Zeller, J. (eds.), ‘… Macht und Anteil an der Weltherrschaft’. Berlin und der deutsche Kolonialismus, Münster: Unrast Verl, pp. 7580.Google Scholar
Bussière, E. and Cassis, Y. (eds.), London and Paris as international financial centres in the twentieth century, Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Carnevali, F., Europe's advantage: banks and small firms in Britain, France, Germany, and Italy since 1918, Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Cassis, Y., ‘Introduction: comparative perspectives on London and Paris as international financial centres in the twentieth century’, in Bussière, and Cassis, (eds.), London and Paris, pp. 114.Google Scholar
Clement, P., ‘Central bank networking at the Bank for International Settlements, 1930–1960’, in Dumoulin, M. (ed.), Les réseaux économiques dans le processus de construction européenne, Brussels: P. Lang, 2004, pp. 445–60.Google Scholar
Di Martino, P., ‘Approaching disaster: personal bankruptcy legislation in Italy and England, c. 1880–1939’, Business History, 47/1, pp. 2343.Google Scholar
Eigner, P. and Köhler, I., ‘Einleitung: Privatbanken und Privatbankiers in der Zwischenkriegszeit: Eine untergehende Spezies?’, in Eigner, (ed.), Privatbankiers in Mitteleuropa zwischen den Weltkriegen, Stuttgart: Steiner.Google Scholar
Evans, L., ‘Editorial: accounting history in the German language area’, Accounting, Business and Financial History, 15/3, pp. 229–34.Google Scholar
Feiertag, O. ‘Pierre Quesnay et les réseaux de l'internationalisme monétaire en Europe, 1919–1937’, in Dumoulin, M. (ed.), Les réseaux économiques dans le processus de construction européenne, Brussels: P. Lang, 2004, pp. 331–50.Google Scholar
Feldman, G. D., ‘German banks and national socialist efforts to supply capital and support industrialization in newly annexed territories: the Austrian model’, Zeitschrift fur Unternehmensgeschichte, 50/1, pp. 516.Google Scholar
Feldman, G. D., ‘Finanzinstitutionen und “Arisierung”’in Deutschland und Österreich', in Baresel-Brand, A. (ed.), Entehrt. Ausgeplündert. Arisiert. Entrechtung und Enteignung der Juden, Magdeburg: Koordinierungsstelle für Kulturgutverluste Magdeburg, pp. 1740.Google Scholar
Flandreau, M. and Gallice, F., ‘Paris: London, and the international money market: lessons from Paribas, 1885–1913’, in Bussière, and Cassis, (eds.), London and Paris, pp. 78106.Google Scholar
Flandreau, M. and Maurel, M., ‘Monetary union, trade integration, and business cycles in 19th century Europe’, Open Economies Rev., 16/2, pp. 135–52.Google Scholar
Hertner, P., ‘Großmachtrivalität und -kooperation im Adriaraum. Italien, Österreich-Ungarn und das Projekt einer albanischen Staatsbank, 1913/14’, Quellen und Forschungen aus italienischen Archiven und Bibliotheken, 85, pp. 272317.Google Scholar
Horn, M., ‘J. P. Morgan & Co., the house of Morgan and Europe 1933–1939’, Contemporary European History, 14/4, pp. 519–38.Google Scholar
James, H., Familienunternehmen in Europa: Haniel, Wendel und Falck, Munich: C. H. Beck.Google Scholar
Kalinski, J., ‘Austrian banks in Poland up to 1948’, in Rathkolb, O. (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt. 150 Jahre österreichische Bankengeschichte im Zentrum Europa, Vienna: Zsolnay, pp. 253–67.Google Scholar
Klüßendorf, N., ‘Kriegsfinanzierung und Edelmetallsammlungen am Ende des Ancien Régime’, in Alfaro, C., Marcos, C. and Paloma, O. (eds.), XIII Congreso Internacional de Numismática, Madrid, 2003, Actas-Proceedings-Actes, Madrid: Ministerio de Cultura, Secretaría General Técnica, pp. 1477–82.Google Scholar
Kostov, A., ‘Dutch capital and the Balkan states (in the 19th and the early 20th century)’, Etudes Balkaniques, 41/1, pp. 3750.Google Scholar
Kreutzmüller, C., Händler und Handlungsgehilfen, Der Finanzplatz Amsterdam und die deutschen Großbanken (1918–1945), Stuttgart: Steiner.Google Scholar
Kupper, H. U. and Mattessich, R., ‘Twentieth century accounting research in the German language area’, Accounting, Business and Financial History, 15/3, pp. 345410.Google Scholar
Leonardi, A., Una stagione ‘nera’ per il credito cooperativo: casse rurali e Raiffeisenkassen tra 1919 e 1945, Bologna: Il Mulino.Google Scholar
Özen, C., ‘Neogramsiyan hegemonya yaklasimi çerçevesinde güç ve global finans: pax britannica'daki büyük dönüsüm’, Uluslararasi iliskiler, 2/8, pp. 333.Google Scholar
Papp, J., ‘Quand le “bloc Chrétien” hongrois voulait ruiner le franc: l'affaire des faux billets (1925–1926)’, Gavroche, 24/140, pp. 17.Google Scholar
Petrov, J. A., ‘Rußlands finanzielle Verpflichtungen gegenüber Deutschland vor dem Ersten Weltkrieg und ihre Regulierung im Kontext des Friedens von Brest-Litovsk (1918)’, in Dahlmann, D., Heller, K. and Petrov, J. A. (eds.), Eisenbahnen und Motoren – Zucker und Schokolade. Deutsche im russischen Wirtschaftsleben vom 18. bis zum frühen 20. Jh., Berlin: Duncker u. Humblot, pp. 167–78.Google Scholar
Reis, J., ‘Los sistemas financieros de la periferia. Una comparacion entre Escandinavia y el sur de Europa durante el siglo XIX’, Papeles de economía española, 105–6, pp. 109–31.Google Scholar
Spufford, P., From Antwerp to London: the decline of financial centres in Europe, Wassenaar: NIAS.Google Scholar
Stöber, T., ‘Die Ökonomie der “Dépense”. Vitalistisches und ökonomisches Wissen im 19. Jahrhundert (Balzac, Zola, Bataille)’, Grenzgänge. Beiträge zu einer modernen Romanistik, 12/23, pp. 2238.Google Scholar
Tilly, R., ‘Die Entwicklung der europäischen Wertpapierbörsen seit dem ausgehenden 19. Jh. Einige vergleichende Betrachtungen’, in Merki, C. M. (ed.), Europas Finanzzentren. Geschichte und Bedeutung im 20. Jh., Frankfurt/M: Campus Verlag, pp. 223–44.Google Scholar
Zilch, R., ‘Neue Staaten – neues Geld: Brüche und Kontinuitäten in der numismatischen Symbolik osteuropäischer Staaten während und nach dem Ersten Weltkrieg’, in Bartetzky, A. (ed.), Neue Staaten – neue Bilder? Visuelle Kultur im Dienst staatlicher Selbstdarstellung in Zentral- und Osteuropa seit 1918, Cologne: Böhlau, pp. 99106.Google Scholar
Abildgren, K., ‘Interest-rate development in Denmark 1875–2003’, Nationallkonomisk tidsskrift, 143/2, pp. 153–68.Google Scholar
Ahlström, G., Hammarskjöld, Sverige och Bretton Woods, Stockholm: Sveriges riksbank.Google Scholar
Appelqvist, , Ö, ., Ämbetsman eller politiker? Om Dag Hammarskjölds roll i fyrtiotalets svenska regeringspolitik, Stockholm: Sveriges riksbank.Google Scholar
Edvinsson, R., Growth, accumulation, crisis: with new macroeconomic data for Sweden 1800–2000, Stockholm: Almqvist & Wiksell.Google Scholar
Eitrheim, O. and Qvigstad, J. F., Tilbakeblikk på norsk pengehistorie: konferanse 7. juni 2005 på Bogstad gård: historisk-monetær statistikk for Norge, Oslo: Norges Bank.Google Scholar
Eitrheim, O., Klovland, J. T. and Qvigstad, J. F., Historical monetary statistics for Norway, 1819–2003, Oslo: Norges Bank, 2004.Google Scholar
Hallberg, H., Ivetofta sparbank 1905–2005, Bromölla: Ivetofta sparbank.Google Scholar
Järvi, M. J., Längelmäen Säästöpankki 1905–2005: 100 vuotta Längelmäen Säästöpankki, Längelmäki: Längelmäen Säästöpankki.Google Scholar
Kuokkanen, E., Se pikkuusen paree pankki: Töysän Säästöpankin historiaa sadan vuoden ajalta, 1905–2005, Töysä: Töysän säästöpankki/Otavan kirjap.Google Scholar
Landberg, H., I växelbruk: Dag Hammarskjöld mellan arbetslöshetsutredningen, riksbanken och finansdepartementet under 1930-talet, Stockholm: Sveriges riksbank.Google Scholar
Larsson, U., Sveriges finansministrar 1840–2005, Stockholm: Finansdepartementet, Regeringskansliet.Google Scholar
Nilsson, G. B., The founder, Andre Oscar Wallenberg (1816–1886). Swedish banker, politician and journalist, Stockholm: Almqvist & Wiksell International.Google Scholar
Perlinge, A., Sockenbankirerna: kreditrelationer och tidig bankverksamhet: Vånga socken i Skåne 1840–1900, Stockholm: Nordiska museets förlag.Google Scholar
Sandberg, N. E., Vad kan vi lära av kraschen? Bank- och fastighetskrisen 1990–1993, Stockholm: SNS förlag.Google Scholar
Wiséhn, E., Mynt till ära och minne: svenska jubileums- och minnesmynt, Stockholm: Sveriges riksbank.Google Scholar
Hoare's: a very private bank, London: Constable.Google Scholar
Aiken, M. and Ardern, D., ‘An accounting history of capital maintenance: legal precedents for managerial autonomy in the United Kingdom’, Accounting Historians J., 32/1, pp. 2360.Google Scholar
Altorfer, S., ‘Die Kanalinseln Jersey und Guernsey: im Windschatten der “City of London”’, in Merki, C. M. (ed.), Europas Finanzzentren. Geschichte und Bedeutung im 20. Jh., Frankfurt/M: Campus Verlag, pp. 197220.Google Scholar
Anderson, M., Edwards, J. R. and Chandler, R. A., ‘Constructing the “well qualified” chartered accountant in England and Wales’, Accounting Historians J., 32/2, pp. 554.Google Scholar
Ashford, Z., ‘From James Mansfield to Ramsays, Bonars & Company: some notes on the story of a private bank’, Book of the Old Edinburgh Club, 6, pp. 2539.Google Scholar
Atkin, J., The foreign exchange market of London: development since 1900, London: Routledge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baker, M. and Collins, M., ‘English bank business loans, 1920–1968: transaction bank characteristics and small firm discrimination’, Financial History Rev., 12/2, pp. 135–71.Google Scholar
Barnes, P., ‘A Victorian financial crisis: the scandalous implications of the case of Overend Gurney’, in Rowbotham, J. and Stevenson, K. (eds.), Criminal conversations: Victorian crimes, social panic, and moral outrage, Columbus: Ohio State University Press, pp. 5569.Google Scholar
Blaazer, D. P., ‘Finance and the end of appeasement: the Bank of England, the national government and the Czech Gold’, J. of Contemporary History, 40/1, pp. 2539.Google Scholar
Cassis, Y., ‘London banks and international finance, 1890–1914’, in Bussière, and Cassis, (eds.), London and Paris, pp. 107–18.Google Scholar
Combs, M. B., ‘“A measure of legal independence”: the 1870 Married Women's Property Act and the portfolio allocations of British wives’, J. of Economic History, 65/4, pp. 1028–57.Google Scholar
Cottrell, P. L., ‘Established connections and new opportunities: London as an international financial centre, 1914–1958’, in Bussière, and Cassis, (eds.), London and Paris, pp. 153–82.Google Scholar
Cox, J., ‘Railway contractor becomes railway financier: Peto in the 1850s’, J. of the Railway & Canal Historical Society, 191, pp. 20–5.Google Scholar
Davie, S. S. K., ‘Accounting's uses in exploitative human engineering: theorizing citizenship, indirect rule and Britain's imperial expansion’, Accounting Historians J., 32/2, pp. 5580.Google Scholar
Dykes, D. W., ‘The Sherborne bank tokens’, British Numismatic J., 75, pp. 132–41.Google Scholar
Ferguson, N., ‘The city of London and British imperialism: new light on an old question’, in Bussière, and Cassis, (eds.), London and Paris, pp. 5777.Google Scholar
Ferguson, N., ‘A bolt from the blue? The City of London and the outbreak of the First World War’, in Louis, W. R. (ed.), Yet more adventures with Britannia: personalities, politics, and culture in Britain, London: I. B. Tauris, pp. 133–47.Google Scholar
Fleischman, R. K., Oldroyd, D. and Tyson, T. N.Accounting, coercion and social control during apprenticeship: converting slave workers to wage workers in the British West Indies c. 1834–1838’, Accounting Historians J., 32/2, pp. 201–31.Google Scholar
Flynn, D. T., ‘The duration of book credit in colonial New England’, Historical Methods, 38/4, pp. 168–77.Google Scholar
Hamilton, C. I., ‘British naval policy, policy-makers and financial control, 1860–1945’, War in History, 12/4, pp. 371–95.Google Scholar
Hickson, C. R., Turner, J. D. and McCann, C., ‘“Much ado about nothing”: the limitation of liability and the market for 19th century Irish bank stock’, Explorations in Economic History, 42/3, pp. 459–76.Google Scholar
Hickson, C. R. and Turner, J. D., ‘The genesis of corporate governance: nineteenth-century Irish joint-stock banks’, Business History, 47/2, pp. 174–89.Google Scholar
Hickson, C. R. and Turner, J. D., ‘The rise and decline of the Irish stock market, 1865–1913’, European Rev. of Economic History, 9/1, pp. 333.Google Scholar
Jarvie, P., Ready to trample on all human law: financial capitalism in the fiction of Charles Dickens, New York: Routledge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kaplan, H. H., Nathan Mayer Rothschild and the creation of a dynasty: the critical years 1806–1816, Stanford: Stanford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lawrence, C., Rockefeller money, the laboratory, and medicine in Edinburgh, 1919–1930: new science in an old country, Rochester NY: University of Rochester Press.Google Scholar
Lawson, Z., ‘Save the pennies! Savings banks and the working class in mid nineteenth-century Lancashire’, Local Historian, 35/3, pp. 168–84.Google Scholar
Levene, A., Powell, M. and Stewart, J., ‘Investment choices? County borough health expenditure in inter-war England and Wales’, Urban History, 32/3, pp. 434–58.Google Scholar
LLoyd-Jones, R., Lewis, M. J., Matthews, M. D. and Maltby, J., ‘Control, conflict and concession: corporate governance, accounting and accountability at Birmingham Small Arms, 1906–1933’, Accounting Historians J., 32/1, pp. 149–84.Google Scholar
McGowen, R., ‘The Bank of England and the policing of forgery 1797–1821’, Past & Present, 186, pp. 81116.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Madsen, J. B., A century of economic growth: the social returns to investment in equipment and structures', Manchester School, 73/1, pp. 101–22.Google Scholar
Matthews, S., ‘Cattle clubs, insurance and plague in the mid-nineteenth century’, Agricultural History Rev., 53/2, pp. 192211.Google Scholar
Michie, R., ‘A financial phoenix: the city of London in the twentieth century’, in Bussière, and Cassis, (eds.), London and Paris, pp. 1541.Google Scholar
Moore, S., ‘“Our Irish copper-farthen dean”: Swift's “Drapier's letters”, the “forging” of a modernist Anglo-Irish literature and the Atlantic world of paper credit’, Atlantic Studies, 2/1, pp. 6592.Google Scholar
Morris, R. J., Men, women, and property in England, 1780–1870: a social and economic history of family strategies amongst the Leeds middle classes. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Oakley, G., ‘The people's budget in the North and Squire Thelluson of Brodsworth Hall’, Northern History, 42/2, pp. 329–47.Google Scholar
O'Connell, S. and Reid, C., ‘Working-class consumer credit in the UK, 1925–60: the role of the check trader’, Economic History Rev., 58/2, pp. 378405.Google Scholar
Poole, A. G., ‘Conspicuous presumption: the treasury and the trustees of the national gallery, 1890–1939’, Twentieth Century British History, 16/1, pp. 128.Google Scholar
Ross, D. M., ‘Pobreza y cajas de ahorros en Escocia a mediados del siglo XIX’, Papeles de economía española, 105–6, pp. 8292.Google Scholar
Selgin, G., ‘Charles Wyatt, manager of the Parys mine mint: a study in ingratitude', British Numismatic J., 75, pp. 113–20.Google Scholar
Slinn, J., ‘Price controls or control through prices? Regulating the cost and consumption of prescription pharmaceuticals in the UK, 1948–67’, Business History, 47/3, pp. 352–66.Google Scholar
Solomou, S. and Vartis, D., ‘Effective exchange rates in Britain, 19201930’, J. of Economic History, 65/3, pp. 850–9.Google Scholar
Taylor, J., ‘Commercial fraud and public men in Victorian Britain’, Historical Research, 78/200, pp. 230–52.Google Scholar
Tiberi, M., The accounts of the British empire: capital flows from 1799 to 1914, Aldershot: Ashgate.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tribe, K., ‘Constructing national income in Britain, 19071941’, History of Economic Thought, 47/1, pp. 117.Google Scholar
Williams, S., ‘Poor relief, labourer's households and living standards in rural England c.1770–1834: a Bedfordshire case study’, Economic History Rev., 58/3, pp. 485519.Google Scholar
Williams, S., ‘Earnings, poor relief and the economy of makeshifts: Bedfordshire in the early years of the new poor law’, Rural History, 16/1, pp. 2152.Google Scholar
Woodall, A-M., What price the poor? William Booth, Karl Marx and the London residuum, Aldershot: Ashgate.Google Scholar
Buyst, E., The Bank, the franc and the euro: a history of the National Bank of Belgium, Tielt: Lannoo.Google Scholar
Buyst, E., La Banque nationale de Belgique, du franc belge à l'euro: un siècle et demi d'histoire, Brussels: Editions Racine.Google Scholar
Clesse, R., ‘Kooperative Bonnweg – ein Relikt der Arbeiterbewegung’, Ons Stad Luxembourg, 79, pp. 26–9.Google Scholar
Harms, R., ‘King Leopold's bonds’, in Goetzmann, and Rouwenhorst, (eds.), The origins of value, pp. 343–64.Google Scholar
Grapperhaus, F. H. M., Over de loden last van het koperen fietsplaatje: de Nederlandse rijwielbelasting 1924–1941, Deventer: Kluwer.Google Scholar
Hardewyn, A., ‘Les déterminants politiques, économiques et idéologiques du systême fiscal belge au XXe siècle’, Histoire, Economie et Société, 24/2, pp. 279302.Google Scholar
Meyers, P-H., ‘Caisse rurale Raiffeisenkasse Binsfeld: 1942 – 2004’, Bihob: Bulletin vam Syndicat d'intérêts Benzelt-Holler-Breidelt, 1, pp. 412,Google Scholar
Peeters, S., Goosens, M. and Buyst, E., Belgian national income during the interwar period: reconstruction of the database, Leuven: Leuven University Press.Google Scholar
Seil, G., ‘Das schwierige Geschäft mit den Geschäften: eine Tour durch die Escher Geschäftswelt’, 100 Joer Esch: 1906 – 2006, Luxembourg: Binsfeld, pp. 264–73.Google Scholar
Van Liempt, A., Kopfgeld. Bezahlte Denunziation von Juden in den besetzten Niederlanden, Munich: Siedler.Google Scholar
Aggius, J., ‘Du cadastre napoléonien du canton de Tournon-d'Agenais à nos jours’, Rev. de l'Agenais, 132/2, pp. 767–75.Google Scholar
Américi, L., ‘Détournement de fonds dans les caisses d’épargne françaises au XIXe siècle. Quelle justice entre philanthropie, professionnalisation et pédagogie de l'argent?', in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 199210.Google Scholar
Asselain, J-C., ‘Le siècle des dévaluations: du franc Poincaré au “franc fort” des années 1980’, in D'or et d'argent, pp. 6586.Google Scholar
Bonin, H., ‘Des archives du groupe de la Société générale à l'histoire des banques françaises pendant la Seconde Guerre mondiale’, in Joly, H. (ed.), Faire l'histoire des entreprises sous l'occupation: les acteurs économiques et leurs archives, Paris: Comité des travaux historiques et scientifiques, 2004, pp. 293306.Google Scholar
Bonin, H., ‘French banking and innovation, c. 1850–1970: did imaginative bankers exist?’, in Bruland, K. and Olivier, J-M. (eds.), Essays on Industrialisation in France, Norway and Spain, Oslo: Unipub forlag-Oslo Academic Press, pp. 113–33.Google Scholar
Bonin, H., ‘The challenged competitiveness of the Paris banking and finance markets, 1914–1958’, in Bussière, and Cassis, (eds.), London and Paris, pp. 183206.Google Scholar
Bonin, H., ‘Marque et image de marque bancaires. L'enjeu de la confiance, xixe-xxe siècles’, A nos marques, Horizons bancaires, 325, pp. 724.Google Scholar
Bonin, H., ‘Las estrategias de expansion de las cajas de ahorros francesas durante los siglos XIX y XX’, Papeles de economía española, 105–6, pp. 93108.Google Scholar
Bordas, J., Les directeurs généraux des douanes: l'administration et la politique douanière, 1801–1939, Paris: Comité pour l'histoire économique et financière de la France, 2004.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bouchardeau, P., ‘Grand argentier protestant et pasteur de laïcité: Auguste Giraud’, Rev. drômoise, 516, pp. 163–8.Google Scholar
Boulat, R., ‘Caisses d’épargne et protection sociale, 1818–1914: bonne affaire ou bonne action?', in Aubin, G. and Gallinato, B. (eds.), Les espaces locaux de la protection sociale: études offertes au professeur Pierre Guillaume: colloque de Bordeaux, février 2003, Paris: Association pour l'étude de l'histoire de la sécurité sociale, 2004, pp. 507–33.Google Scholar
Boyé, M., ‘Une “horreur” heureusement sauvegardée: la Banque de France d'Arcachon’, Bulletin de la société historique et archéologique d'Arcachon, 126, pp. 5166.Google Scholar
Branda, P., ‘Les finances et le budget de la France napoléonienne. 1: Qu'est-ce que le budget de l'Etat sous Napoléon?’, Souvenirs napoléoniens, 67/455–6, pp. 5568.Google Scholar
Branda, P., ‘Les finances et le budget de la France napoléonienne. 2: La guerre a-t-elle payé la guerre?’, Souvenirs napoléoniens, 68/457, pp. 2535.Google Scholar
Branda, P., ‘Les finances et le budget de la France napoléonienne. 3: La dynamique des budgets impériaux de 1805 à 1814 et le bilan de la première abdication’, Souvenirs napoléoniens, 68/458, pp. 1427.Google Scholar
Capitanio, S., Currencies: fiscal fortunes and cultural capital in nineteenth century France, New York: Peter Lang.Google Scholar
Christen-Lécuyer, C., ‘La mesure de l'efficacité sociale des caisses d’épargne françaises au XIXe siècle', Histoire & Mesure, 20/3, pp. 139–75.Google Scholar
Conreur, G., De l'assignat à l'euro: deux siècles d'histoire du franc, Paris: L'Harmattan.Google Scholar
De Blic, D., ‘Moraliser l'argent. Ce que Panama a changé dans la société française, 1889–1897’, Politix, 18/71, pp. 6182.Google Scholar
De Olivera, M., ‘Corruption, malversation et détournement. Les fonctionnaires des finances face à la tentation (première moitié du XIXe)’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 8798.Google Scholar
Dreyfus, J. M., ‘Die Privatbanken in Frankreich – 1918–1945’, in Eigner, P. (ed.), Privatbankiers in Mitteleuropa zwischen den Weltkriegen, Stuttgart: Steiner.Google Scholar
Duret, J., ‘Les inventaires de 1906 dans le pays mareuillais. Les protestations’, Au fil du Lay, 46, pp. 4490.Google Scholar
Fouqué, G., ‘Le Crédit mutuel: “une histoire des origines du Crédit Mutuel”’, Société des lettres, sciences et arts du Saumurois, 96/154, pp. 6785.Google Scholar
Gallarotti, G. M., ‘Hegemons of a lesser God: the bank of France and monetary leadership under the classical gold standard’, Oxford Rev. of Economic Policy, 12/4, pp. 624–46.Google Scholar
Gattellier, M., ‘L'or, la marine et la guerre’, Académie de Marine. Communications et mémoires, 1, pp. 83110.Google Scholar
Genevée, F., ‘Le PCF face aux amendes et à la “justice de classe”, 1920–1940’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 307–18.Google Scholar
de Gmeline, P., La banque Hervet: depuis 1830, de Bourges à Paris et dans la région du Centre, Paris: Editions de Venise.Google Scholar
de Gmeline, P., Depuis 1845, Dupuy de Parseval: quatre familles, une région, un groupe: une banque ouverte sur le monde, Paris: Editions de Venise.Google Scholar
Horn, M. and Imlay, T., ‘Money in wartime: France's financial preparations for the two World Wars’, International History Rev., 27/4, pp. 709–53.Google Scholar
Kamoun, P., ‘Financement du logement social et évolutions de ses missions: de 1894 (loi Siegfried) à nos jours; logement, habitat, cadre de vie’, Informations-sociales, 123, pp. 2033.Google Scholar
Karila-Cohen, P., ‘Les fonds secrets ou la méfiance legitime: l'invention paradoxale d'une “tradition républicaine” sous la restauration et la monarchie de juillet’, Rev. Historique, 307/4, pp. 731–66.Google Scholar
Kott, S., Le contrôle des dépenses engagées. Evolutions d'une fonction, Paris: Comité pour l'histoire économique et financière de la France, 2004.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mastin, J-L., ‘Stratégies du capitalisme familial lillois et autonomie financière régionale: le financement des filatures Julien Le Blan, 1858–1914’, Rev. d'histoire moderne et contemporaine, 52/4, pp. 74105.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Plessis, A., ‘Le franc au XIXe siècle’, in D'or et d'argent, pp. 4564.Google Scholar
Plessis, A., ‘When Paris dreamed of competing with the city…’, in Bussière, and Cassis, (eds.), London and Paris, pp. 4256.Google Scholar
Praquin, N., ‘La comptabilité aux frontières de l'organisation: un instrument de la stratégie entrepreneuriale. Le cas du crédit Lyonnais sous Henri Germain (1864–1905)’, Entreprises et histoire, 39, pp. 4558.Google Scholar
Regnard-Drouot, C., ‘La justice et les peines pécuniaires à Marseilles de 1851 à 1914’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 293306.Google Scholar
Rolland, D., ‘Les origines de la banque de Soissons’, Mémoires du Soissonnais, 20022005, 5/3, pp. 241–5.Google Scholar
Saul, S., ‘Banking alliances and international issues on the Paris capital market, 1890–1914’, in Bussière, and Cassis, (eds.), London and Paris, pp. 119–52.Google Scholar
Thomas, M., ‘Albert Sarraut, French colonial development, and the communist threat, 1919–1930’, J. of Modern History, 77/4, pp. 917–55.Google Scholar
Tulard, J., ‘Le franc germinal’, in D'or et d'argent, pp. 3544.Google Scholar
Vanoli, A., A history of national accounting, Amsterdam: IOS Press.Google Scholar
Viaene, A., L'efficience de la Bourse de Paris au XIXe siècle: une confrontation théorique face aux données empiriques des marchés à terme et à prime, Paris: Connaissances et Savoirs.Google Scholar
Yonnet, F., ‘Claude-Henri de Saint-Simon: l'industrialisation et les banquiers’, Cahiers d'économie politique, 46 (2004), pp. 147–74.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Abelshauser, W., ‘Die Wirtschaft des deutschen Kaiserreichs. Ein Treibhaus nachindustrieller Institutionen’, in Windolf, A. (ed.), Finanzmarkt-Kapitalismus. Analysen zum Wandel von Produktionsregimen, Wiesbaden: VS, Verlag f. Sozialwissenschaft, pp. 172–95.Google Scholar
Bähr, J., ‘Modernes Bankrecht und dirigistische Kapitallenkung. Die Ebenen der Steuerung im Finanzsektor des “Dritten Reichs”’, in Gosewinkel, D. (ed.), Wirtschaftskontrolle und Recht in der nationalsozialistischen Diktatur, Frankfurt/M: Klostermann, pp. 199224.Google Scholar
Barghorn, O., Auf dem Wege zur modernen Kleinstadt. Politik, Verwaltung und Finanzen norddeutscher Kleinstädte und Landgemeinden in der Zeit des Kaiserreiches 1871–1914, Taunusstein: Driesen Edition Wissenschaft.Google Scholar
Barkai, A., Oscar Wassermann und die Deutsche Bank. Bankier in schwieriger Zeit, Munich: Beck.Google Scholar
Baten, J., ‘Making profits in wartime: corporate profits, inequality, and GDP in Germany during the First World War’, Economic History Rev., 58/1, pp. 3456.Google Scholar
Beachy, R., The soul of commerce: credit, property, and politics in Leipzig, 1750–1840, Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Blisse, H., and Hofinger, H., ‘Reservefonds mit Fürsorgecharakter bei Vorschuss- und Kreditvereinen (Kreditgenossenschaften)’, Bankhistorisches Archiv, 31/2, pp. 134–43.Google Scholar
Boelcke, W. A., ‘Sparkassen im Königreich Württemberg und im Großherzogtum Baden. Ein Vergleich’, Zeitschrift für Württembergische Landesgeschichte, 64, pp. 283–92.Google Scholar
Boenke, K. C., Die Notgeldscheine aus Kolberg und Körlin. Zeugnisse aus der deutschen Geschichte zweier Städte in Pommern, Hamburg: Jancke.Google Scholar
Buchheim, C., ‘Die vielen Rechenfehler in der Abrechnung Götz Alys mit den Deutschen unter dem NS-Regime’, Sozial.Geschichte: Zeitschrift für Historische Analyse des 20. und 21. Jahrhunderts, 20/3, pp. 6776.Google Scholar
Burhop, C., ‘Die Vergütung des Führungspersonals deutscher Großbanken, 1871–1913’, Vierteljahrschrift für Sozial- und Wirtschaftsgeschichte, 92/3, pp. 281300.Google Scholar
Dohna, J. zu, Die “jüdischen Konten” der fürstlich Castell'schen Credit-Cassen und des Bankhauses Karl Meyer KG, Nuremberg: Gesellschaft für fränkische Geschichte.Google Scholar
Eierle, B., ‘Differential reporting in Germany: historical analysis’, Accounting, Business and Financial History, 15/3, pp. 279315.Google Scholar
Feldman, G. D., ‘The role of the Creditanstalt-Bankverein in the expansion of greater Germany, 1938–1945’, in Rathkolb, O. (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt. 150 Jahre österreichische Bankengeschichte im Zentrum Europa, Vienna: Zsolnay, pp. 317–34.Google Scholar
Gassert, P., ‘Men for all seasons? Die deutschen Unternehmer Hanns Martin Schleyer und Hermann Josef Abs’, Vorgange, 1/169, pp. 130–3.Google Scholar
Guinnane, T. W., ‘German debt in the twentieth century’, in Goetzmann, and Rouwenhorst, (eds.), The origins of value, pp. 327–42.Google Scholar
Jakubowski-Tiessen, M., ‘“Woher nehmen wir Geldt zu den Küsten her…?” Eine frühneuzeitliche Flutkatastrophe und ihre finanziellen Folgen’, Siedlungsforschung, 23, pp. 91100.Google Scholar
Klüßendorf, N., ‘“Pro deo et patria”. Das bischöfliche Tafelsilber und die Finanzen des Hochstifts Fulda im Ersten Koalitionskrieg’, Hessisches Jahrbuch für Landesgeschichte, 55, pp. 4771.Google Scholar
Köhler, I., Die ‘Arisierung’ der Privatbanken im Dritten Reich. Verdrängung, Ausschaltung und die Frage der Wiedergutmachung, Munich: Beck.Google Scholar
Köhler, I., ‘Zwischen wirtschaftlicher Marginalisierung und politischer Verdrängung. Die Privatbanken in Deutschland 1929–1935’, in Eigner, P. (ed.), Privatbankiers in Mitteleuropa zwischen den Weltkriegen, Stuttgart: Steiner, pp. 103–34.Google Scholar
Kopper, C., Bankiers unterm Hakenkreuz, Munich: Hanser.Google Scholar
Krause, D., Die Commerz- und Disconto-Bank 1870–1920/23, Stuttgart: Franz Steiner Verlag, 2004.Google Scholar
Kreutzmüller, C., Zum Umgang der Kaiser-Wilhelm-Gesellschaft mit Geld und Gut. Immobilientransfers und jüdische Stiftungen 1933–1945, Berlin, Forschungsprogramm Geschichte der Kaiser-Wilhelm-Gesellschaft im Nationalsozialismus.Google Scholar
Kreutzmüller, C. and Loose, I., ‘Die Bank der Deutschen Arbeit 1933–1945 – eine nationalsozialistische “Superbank”?’, Bankhistorisches Archiv, 31/1, pp. 132.Google Scholar
Mutschler, H., Vom ‘Soldaten Adolf Hitlers’ zum unabhängigen Organ der Steuerrechtspflege. Zur Frage der Unabhängigkeit der Steuerberater von der Finanzverwaltung in der Zeit zwischen 1919 und 1961, Stuttgart: Boorberg.Google Scholar
Pohl, H. R. and Bernd, S. G., Wirtschafts- und Sozialgeschichte der deutschen Sparkassen im 20. Jahrhundert, Stuttgart: Deutscher Sparkassenverlag.Google Scholar
Quick, R., ‘The formation and early development of German audit firms’, Accounting, Business and Financial History, 15/3, pp. 317–43.Google Scholar
Schulz, G. and Wysocki, J., Untersuchungen zur Wirtschafts- und Sozialgeschichte der deutschen Sparkassen im 19. Jh., Stuttgart: Deutscher Sparkassenverlag.Google Scholar
Schwanitz, W. G., ‘“Wir speisen im Adlon”: Herbert M. Gutmann und die Deutsche Orientbank’, in Heyden, U. and Van der Zeller, J. (eds.), ‘Macht und Anteil an der Weltherrschaft’. Berlin und der deutsche Kolonialismus, Münster: Unrast Verlag, pp. 81–6.Google Scholar
Scharwath, G., Vom Saarbrücker Groschen zur Deutschen Mark. Geldgeschichte der Saarregion, Saarbrücken: Staden-Verlag.Google Scholar
Steiner, A., ‘Zur Neuschatzung des Lebenshaltungskostenindex für die Vorkriegszeit des Nationalsozialismus’, Jahrbuch für Wirtschaftsgeschichte, 2, pp. 129–54.Google Scholar
Treisch, C., ‘Taxable treatment of the subsistence level of income in German natural law’, Accounting, Business and Financial History, 15/3, pp. 255–79.Google Scholar
Weidner, M., ‘Die Beschäftigung von Frauen in der Bankwirtschaft am Beispiel der Bayerischen Hypotheken- und Wechsel-Bank AG von 1835–1985 mit einem Ausblick auf die Bayerische Vereinsbank’, Bankhistorisches Archiv, 31/2, pp. 107–33.Google Scholar
Weschke, B. and Wöhnl, C., ‘Was mich interessiert ist Geld’ (Salvador Dali, Künstler 1904–1989): Geldgeschichte Geldpolitik, Geldtheorie von den Anfängen bis zur Gegenwart: anlässlich der gleichnamigen Wanderausstellung im Verbandsgebiet des Ostdeutschen Sparkassen- und Giroverbandes, eröffnet zum Weltspartag 2003, Berlin: Ostdeutscher Sparkassen- und Giroverband.Google Scholar
Ziegler, D., ‘“Aryanization” and the role of the German great banks, 1933–1938’, in Feldman, G. D. and Seibel, W. (eds.), Networks of Nazi persecution. bureaucracy, business and the organization of the Holocaust, Oxford: Berghahn, pp. 4468.Google Scholar
Ziegler, D., ‘Das deutsche Modell bankorientierter Finanzsysteme (1848–1957)’, in Windolf, (ed.), Finanzmarkt-Kapitalismus, pp. 276–93.Google Scholar
Ziegler, D., ‘Das deutsche Modell bankorientierter Finanzsysteme (1848–1957)’, Kölner Zeitschrift für Soziologie und Sozialpsychologie, 45, pp. 276–93.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zimmermann, N. M., Die veröffentlichten Bilanzen der Commerzbank 1870–1944. Eine Bilanzanalyse unter Einbeziehung der Bilanzdaten von Deutscher Bank und Dresdner Bank, Berlin: Frank & Timme.Google Scholar
Giovanni Malagodi banchiere, 1927–1952: atti del convegno: Fondazione Raffaele Mattioli, Milano, 20 ottobre 2004, Rome: Edizioni di storia e letteratura.Google Scholar
Artoni, R., ‘Note sul debito pubblico italiano dal 1885 al 2001’, Seminario su Debito pubblico e formazione dei mercati finanziari fra età moderna e contemporanea, tenuto, a Cassino, il 15 e 16 ottobre 2004 = Riv. di Storia Finanziaria, 15, pp. 6576, www.delpt.unina.it/stof/indice.Google Scholar
Canella, M. and Puccinelli, E. (eds.), Beneficenza a risparmio: i documenti preunitari della Cassa di risparmio delle Provincie lombarde, Cinisello Balsamo/Milan: Silvana/Banca Intesa.Google Scholar
Ceva, L., ‘Spese militari e industrie nell Italia liberale’, Italia contemporanea, 241.Google Scholar
Chiapparino, F., ‘La banca locale nelle Marche tra le due guerre mondiali’, Storia e problemi contemporanei, 2004, 17/37, pp. 73119.Google Scholar
Delli Gatti, D., Gallegati, M. and Gallegati, M., ‘On the nature and causes of business fluctuations in Italy, 1861–2000, Explorations in Economic History, 42/1, pp. 81100.Google Scholar
Ermice, M. C., Le origini del Gran libro del debito pubblico del Regno di Napoli e l'emergere di nuovi gruppi sociali, 1806–1815, Naples: Arte tipografica.Google Scholar
Fausto, D., ‘Lineamenti dell'evoluzione del debito pubblico in Italia (1861–1961)’, Seminario su Debito pubblico e formazione dei mercati finanziari fra età moderna e contemporanea, tenuto, a Cassino, il 15 e 16 ottobre 2004 = Riv. di Storia Finanziaria, 15, pp. 77110. www.delpt.unina.it/stof/indiceGoogle Scholar
Fornasari, M., ‘Un progetto bancario post-unitario: la Banca d'emissione per l'Alta Italia’, Studi Storici Luigi Simeoni, 55, pp. 243–73.Google Scholar
Fratianni, M. and Spinelli, F., A monetary history of Italy, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gagliardi, A., ‘Il ministero per gli Scambi e valute e la politica autarchica del fascismo’, Studi storici, 46, pp. 1033–71.Google Scholar
Garofalo, P., Exchange rate regimes and economic performance: the Italian experience, Rome: Banca d'Italia.Google Scholar
Magliani, S., Per la storia economica e sociale del territorio umbro: la prima Cassa di risparmio di Perugia dallo Stato pontificio allo Stato unitario, Rome: Edizioni dell'Ateneo.Google Scholar
Marongiu, G., La politica fiscale del fascismo, Lungro di Cosenza: Marco.Google Scholar
Martínez Oliva, J. C. and Schlitzer, G., Le battaglie della lira: moneta, finanza e relazioni internazionali dell'Italia dall'unità all'euro, Florence: Le Monnier.Google Scholar
Pagano, E., ‘Fisco e professioni durante il Regno d'Italia napoleonico’, Società e Storia, 2004, 27, pp. 531–57.Google Scholar
Pagano, E., ‘Le finanze comunali nel Regno d'Italia napoleonico. Il caso delle città lombarde’, Rassegna storica del Risorgimento, 92, pp. 507–38.Google Scholar
Patuelli, A., ‘Ricordi e considerazioni su Malagodi banchiere’, Giovanni Malagodi banchiere, 1927–1952, pp. 4756.Google Scholar
Pino, F., ‘Alla ricerca delle radici antiche di Banca Intesa’, in Canella, and Puccinelli, (eds.), Beneficenza a risparmio, pp. 89.Google Scholar
Pollard, J. F., Money and the rise of the modern papacy: financing the Vatican, 1850–1950, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Provvedi, R., ‘Le attività agricole, artigianali e professionali di Poggibonsi attraverso le analisi dei bilanci del Comune (1860–1880). I parte’, Miscellanea storica della Valdelsa, 111/1–3, p. 67131.Google Scholar
Rugafiori, P., ‘Gerolamo Gaslini: un imprenditore filantropo tra etica e politica’, Contemporanea, 8, pp. 447–84.Google Scholar
Sanseverino, T. S., ‘La vigilanza bancaria in Italia dal 1926 al 1960’, Riv. di storia finanziaria, 14/1, pp. 81146. www.delpt.unina.it/stof/indiceGoogle Scholar
Tuccimei, E., La ricerca economica a Via Nazionale: una storia degli ‘Studi’ da Canovai a Baffi (1894–1940), Rome: Banca d'Italia.Google Scholar
Volpi, A., Breve storia del mercato finanziario italiano: dal 1861 a oggi, Rome: Carocci.Google Scholar
Zanone, V., ‘Malagodi, dalla banca al servizio dello Stato’, Giovanni Malagodi banchiere, 1927–1952, pp. 5764.Google Scholar
Bazzocco, A., ‘1943–1947: à la recherche du précieux franc suisse: l'invasion des contrebandiers à la frontière suisse-italienne.’, Gavroche, 24/144, pp. 911.Google Scholar
De Lucia, M., Industrie, agricoltura e credito nello sviluppo economico della Svizzera, 1800–1940, Naples: Edizioni scientifiche italiane.Google Scholar
Gerlach, S., ‘Estimates of real economic activity in Switzerland, 1886–1930’, Empirical Economics, 30/3, pp. 763–83.Google Scholar
Mazbouri, M., L'émergence de la place financière suisse (1890–1913): itinéraire d'un grand banquier, Lausanne:Editions Antipodes.Google Scholar
Pictet 1805–2005. 200 years of history: one bank and the men who built it, Geneva: Pictet.Google Scholar
Schroeder, K. P., ‘“In diesem Kopfe geht immer etwas vor”. Die Heidelberger Jahre des Schweizer Rechtsgelehrten Johann Caspar Bluntschli (1808–1881)’, in Grupp, K. and Hufeld, U. (eds), Recht – Kultur – Finanzen. Festschrift für Reinhard Mußgnug zum 70. Geburtstag am 26. Oktober 2005, Heidelberg: Müller, pp. 377–98.Google Scholar
AA., VV., ‘Historia de las cajas de ahorros’, Papeles de economía española, 105–6, pp. 2335.Google Scholar
Bernal, M., Espejo, C. and Pinzón, P., ‘Accounting regulation, inertia and organisational self-perception: double-entry adoption in a Spanish Casa de Comercio (1829–1852)’, Accounting, Business and Financial History, 15/2, pp. 145–69.Google Scholar
Benaul Berenguer, J. M. and Sudria Triay, C., ‘Ahorro e industria. Burguesia industrial y politica inversora de la Caja de Ahorros de Sabadell, 1859–1913’, Papeles de economía española, 105–6, pp. 227–43.Google Scholar
Carnero, I., Crónica de una noble institución salmantina. Caja de Ahorros y Monte de Piedad de Salamanca, después llamada Caja de Salamanca y Soria o Caja Duero. Desde sus inicios hasta el 125 aniversario, Salamanca: Edifsa.Google Scholar
Comin-Comin, F. and Torres Villanueva, E., ‘La confederacion Espanola de cajas de ahorros y el desarrollo de la red de servicios financieros de las cajas en el siglo XX (1900–1976)’, Papeles de economía española, 105–6, pp. 4865.Google Scholar
Cuevas Casana, J., Hoyo Aparicio, A. and Martinez Soto, A. P., ‘La historia economica de las cajas de ahorros espanolas. Una perspectiva institucional y regional de ahorro, 1830–2004’, Papeles de economía española, 105–6, pp. 615.Google Scholar
Díaz Hernández, O., ‘Los hermanos Urquijo Ussía y la modernización española en el primer tercio del siglo XX’, International J. of Iberian Studies, 18–2, pp. 85101.Google Scholar
Díaz Morlán, P., ‘Capitalismo rentista y decadencia empresarial: la desaparicion de la casa Martinez Rivas (1913–1921)’, Rev. de Historia Industrial, 14/3, pp. 117–39.Google Scholar
Fernandez Clemente, E., ‘Las cajas de ahorros en la prensa economica (1923–1936). El Economista, el Financiero y la Revista Nacional de Economia’, Papeles de economía española, 105–6, pp. 6681.Google Scholar
Gallego Martínez, D., ‘La formacion de los precios del trigo en España (1820–1869): el mercado interior’, Historia Agraria, 36, pp. 263–85.Google Scholar
García-Iglesias Soto, M. C.Ventajas y riesgos del patrón oro para la economía española (1850–1913), Madrid: Banco de España.Google Scholar
Glendinning, N. and Medrano, J. M., Goya y el Banco Nacional de San Carlos, Madrid, Banco de España.Google Scholar
Grupo de Historia de los Precios en Andalucía, Estudio de los precios agrarios y de la formación del mercado regional en Andalucía en la segunda mitad del siglo XIX, Jaén: Universidad de Jaén.Google Scholar
Herranz-Loncán, A., ‘The Spanish infrastructure stock, 1844–1935’, Research in Economic History, 23, pp. 83126.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Maixe-Altes, J. C., ‘Cajas de ahorros y desarrollo regional. Aspectos diferenciales de los sistemas financieros gallego y asturiano’, Papeles de economía española, 105–6, pp. 254–73.Google Scholar
Manera, C., ‘Las cajas de ahorros y el crecimiento economico en Baleares, 1880–2000’, Papeles de economía española, 105–6, pp. 168–87.Google Scholar
Martín Aceña, P, and Pons, M. Á., ‘Sistema monetario y financiero’, in Carreras, A. and Tafunell, X. (eds.), Estadísticas históricas de España, Siglos XIX y XX, Bilbao, Fundación BBVA, vol. II, pp. 645706.Google Scholar
Martinez, M. T., ‘Las cajas de ahorros en la historia de Andalucia’, Papeles de economía española, 105–6, pp. 132–53.Google Scholar
Méndez, J. F. (ed.), 100 años CAI, 1905–2005, Zaragoza: Caja de Ahorros de la Inmaculada.Google Scholar
Planas, J. and Saguer, E., ‘Accounting records of large rural estates and the dynamics of agriculture in Catalonia, 1850–1950’, Accounting, Business and Financial History, 15/2, pp. 171–85.Google Scholar
Pons Pons, J., ‘Large American Corporations in the Spanish Life Insurance Market, 1880–1922’, J. of European Economic History, 34–2, pp. 467–81.Google Scholar
Prats Albentosa, M. A., ‘Innovacion y transformacion financiera: el papel de las cajas de ahorros en la region de Murcia’, Papeles de economía española, 105–6, pp. 295308.Google Scholar
Quintas Seoane, J. R., ‘Un breve recorrido por la historiografia reciente sobre la historia de las cajas de ahorros’, Papeles de economía española, 105–6, pp. 25.Google Scholar
Robledo Hernández, R., ‘Del diezmo al presupuesto: la financiación de la universidad española, 1800–1930’, Investigaciones de Historia Económica, 1, pp. 97130.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sabaté Sort, M., Gadea, M. D. and Serrano Sanz, J. M., ‘The Spanish peseta versus the pound sterling, the French franc and the US dollar, 1870–1935: a long floating experience’, Applied Financial Economics Letters, 1–2, pp. 95–9.Google Scholar
Zubero, L. G., ‘El creciente y superior protagonismo de las cajas de ahorros en el sistema financiero de Aragon durante el siglo XX’, Papeles de economía española, 105–6, pp. 154–67.Google Scholar
Aleksic, V., ‘The History of the Allgemeiner Jugoslawischer Bankverein AG in Belgrade in the context of Yugoslav Banking History after 1918’, in Lazaretou, S. (ed.), ‘The drachma, foreign creditors, and the international monetary system: tales of a currency during the 19th and the early 20th centuries’, Explorations in economic history, 42/2, pp. 202–36.Google Scholar
Bozic, T., ‘Krcke kreditne zadruge i gospodarski list “pucki prijatelj” u prvom desetljecu 20. stoljeca’ [Credit cooperatives on the island of Krk and the economic journal Pucki Prijatelj during the first decade of the 20th century], Casopis za Suvremenu Povijest, 37/1, pp. 129–54.Google Scholar
Jelic, D., ‘Die Privatbanken in Jugoslawien zwischen den Weltkriegen’, in Eigner, P. (ed.), Privatbankiers in Mitteleuropa zwischen den Weltkriegen, Stuttgart: Steiner.Google Scholar
Lory, B., ‘Un grand chantier communautaire en Macédoine: l'eglise Saint-Demetre de Bitola-Manastir (1830)’, Rev. des Mondes Musulmans et de la Méditerranée, 107, pp. 245–57.Google Scholar
Prodanovic, M., Dreimal Jugoslawien auf Banknoten, In Bartetzky, A. (ed.) Neue Staaten – neue Bilder? Visuelle Kultur im Dienst staatlicher Selbstdarstellung in Zentral- und Osteuropa seit 1918, Cologne: Böhlau, pp. 291300.Google Scholar
Rathkolb, O. (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt. 150 Jahre österreichische Bankengeschichte im Zentrum Europ, Vienna: Zsolnay, pp. 226–38Google Scholar
Albert, S. D., ‘“One gypsy, one king”: the Austro-Hungarian bank competition’, Centropa, 5/2, pp. 92103.Google Scholar
Baltzarek, F., ‘Finanzrevolutionen, Industrialisierung und Credit-Mobilier-Banken in der Habsburgermonarchie’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 1236.Google Scholar
Bazantová, I., Centrální bankovnictví v ceské historii po soucasnost: institucionální pohled, Prague: Národohospodárský ústav Josefa Hlávky.Google Scholar
Berend, I. T., ‘Banking and the Hungarian Economy in the 20th Century’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 212–25.Google Scholar
Bohr, P., Österreichs genialster Geldfälscher und seine Zeit, Regensburg, Roderer.Google Scholar
Brandt, H. H., ‘Die Wiener Rothschilds seit 1820 und die Gründung der Credit-Anstalt 1855’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 3755.Google Scholar
Ciara, S., ‘Finansowe klopoty Galicyjskich uczonych na przelomie XIX i XX w’ [The financial problems of Galician men of science at the turn of the 19th century], Przeglad Historyczny, 96/4, pp. 573–86.Google Scholar
Denzel, M. A., Die Bozner Messen und ihr Zahlungsverkehr (1633–1850), Bozen: Athesia Verlagsanstalt.Google Scholar
Eigner, P., ‘Ein Schritt nach vorne, zwei Schritte zurück – die wechselhafte Geschichte des Finanzplatzes Wien im 20. Jh.’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 482501.Google Scholar
Eigner, P. (ed.), Privatbankiers in Mitteleuropa zwischen den Weltkriegen, Stuttgart: Steiner.Google Scholar
Feldman, G. D., ‘German banks and National Socialist Efforts to supply capital and support industrialization in newly annexed territories: the Austrian model’, Zeitschrift für Unternehmensgeschichte, 50/1, pp. 516.Google Scholar
Geschwandtner, M. and Auguste, C. L., ‘Die tragische Geschichte der bisher einzigen Bankgründerin Österreich’, Mitteilungen der Gesellschaft für Salzburger Landeskunde, 145, pp. 227–64.Google Scholar
Hampel, E., ‘Die Bank Austria Creditanstalt im erweiterten Europa – von den historischen Wurzeln bis heute’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 502–15.Google Scholar
Hallon, L., ‘Úloha Milana Hodzu v komercnom bankovníctve Slovenska v rokoch 1918–1938’ [Milan Hodza and his role in the Slovak commercial banking sector 1918–38], Historický Casopis, 53/1, pp. 5770.Google Scholar
Kämpken, N. and Ladenburger, M., ‘Alle Noten bringen mich nicht aus den Nöthen!!’ Beethoven und das Geld. Begleitbuch zu einer Ausstellung des Beethoven-Hauses in Zusammenarbeit mit dem Archiv der Gesellschaft der Musikfreunde in Wien und der Österreichischen Nationalbank', Bonn: Verlag Beethoven-Haus.Google Scholar
Klausinger, H., ‘Misguided monetary messages: the Austrian case,1931–34’, European J. of the History of Economic Thought, 12/1, pp. 2545.Google Scholar
Kövér, G., ‘Osztrák credit – Magyar hitel: az Osztrák Creditanstalt és a Magyar általános Hitelbank kartellje (1871–1900)’ [Austrian credit – Hungarian loan: the Austrian Creditanstalt and the cartel of the Hungarian General Credit Bank, 1871–1900], Századok, 139/5, pp. 1261–83.Google Scholar
Köhler, I., ‘Zwischen wirtschaftlicher Marginalisierung und politischer Verdrängung: Die Privatbanken in Deutschland 1929–1935’, in Eigner, (ed.), Privatbankiers in Mitteleuropa.Google Scholar
Kučera, J., ‘Der zögerliche Expansionist. Die Commerzbank in den böhmischen Ländern 1938–1945’, Bankhistorisches Archiv, 31/1, pp. 3356.Google Scholar
Hallon, L., ‘Uloha Milana Hodzu v komercnom bankovnictve Slovenska v rokoch 1918–1938’ [Milan Hodza and his role in the Slovak commercial banking sector from 1918 until 1938], Historicky casopis, 53/1, pp. 5770.Google Scholar
Hájek, J. P. R., ‘180 let ceského sporitelnictví: Ceská sporitelna 1825–2005’ [180 years of the Czech Savings System - 180 Jahre des Tschechischen Sparkassenwesens], Prague: Vysoká skola financní a správní/Ceská sporitelna.Google Scholar
Kubik, F., ‘Creditanstalt-Bankverein: Von der führenden Bank des Landes zur internationalen monetären Visitenkarte Österreichs’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 415–36.Google Scholar
Lussy, H. and López Rodrigo, P., Finanzbeziehungen Liechtensteins zur Zeit des Nationalsozialismus: Studie im Auftrag der Unabhängigen Historikerkommission Liechtenstein Zweiter Weltkrieg, Vaduz: Historischer Verein für das Fürstentum Liechtenstein.Google Scholar
Matis, H., ‘Österreichs Wirtschaft in der Zwischenkriegszeit: Desintegration, Neustrukturierung und Stagnation’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 124–47.Google Scholar
Matis, H., Die Schwarzenberg-Bank. Kapitalbildung und Industriefinanzierung in den habsburgischen Erblanden 1787–1830, Vienna: Verlag des Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften.Google Scholar
Mattl, S., ‘Die Finanzdiktatur’, in Tálos, E. (ed.), Austrofaschismus. Politik - Ökonomie – Kultur 1933–1938, Vienna: Lit, 5th edition, pp. 202–21.Google Scholar
Melichar, M., ‘Bankiers in der Krise: Der österreichische Privatbankensektor 1928–1938’, in Eigner, (ed.), Privatbankiers in Mitteleuropa.Google Scholar
Michel, B., ‘Von der k.k. privilegierten Österreichischen Länderbank zur Banque des Pays de l'Europe Centrale 1880–1938’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 7390.Google Scholar
Natmeßnig, C., ‘Wege zur Währungssanierung und Beginn der Bankenkonzentration auf dem Wiener Platz’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 162–79.Google Scholar
Novotny, J. and Sousa, J., ‘Die Struktur der Privatbankhäuser in den Böhmischen Ländern – 1918–1938’, in Eigner, (ed.), Privatbankiers in Mitteleuropa.Google Scholar
Rapp, C. K. and Rapp-Wimberger, N., Arbeite, sammle, vermehre. Von der Ersten Oesterreichischen Spar-Casse zur Erste Bank, Vienna: Brandstätter.Google Scholar
Rathkolb, O. (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt. 150 Jahre österreichische Bankengeschichte im Zentrum Europa, Vienna: Zsolnay.Google Scholar
Rumpier, H., ‘Die Gründung der Credit-Anstalt im Kontext der Neupositionierung von Österreichs Wirtschafts- und Außenhandelspolitik durch Karl Ludwig Freiherrn von Bruck’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 5672.Google Scholar
Seidel, H., ‘Von der Schalteröffnung bis zum Staatsvertrag. Die Creditanstalt-Bankverein im ersten Nachkriegsjahrzehnt’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 335–49.Google Scholar
Stiefel, D., ‘Die Sanierung und Konsolidierung der österreichischen Banken 1931–1934’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 196211.Google Scholar
Teichova, A., ‘Banking and industry in Central-East Europe in the first decades of the 20th century’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 148–61.Google Scholar
Venus, T., ‘Freiheit und Vereinnahmung. Über das schwierige Verhältnis zwischen Banken und Journalistik (1855–1938)’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 268–86.Google Scholar
Weber, F., ‘Große Hoffnungen und k(l)eine Erfolge. Zur Vorgeschichte der österreichischen Finanzkrise von 1931’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 180–95.Google Scholar
Weigt, A., Der deutsche Kapitalmarkt vor dem Ersten Weltkrieg. Gründerboom, Gründerkrise und Effizienz des deutschen Aktienmarktes bis 1914, Frankfurt/M: Knapp.Google Scholar
Wixforth, H., ‘Das polnische Bankwesen und die Privatbankiers in der Zwischenkriegszeit’, in Eigner, (ed.), Privatbankiers in MitteleuropaGoogle Scholar
Bazulin, I. U. V., Dvoistvennaia priroda deneg: russkaia ekonomicheskaia mysl' na rubezhe XIX-XX vekov: monografiia, St Petersburg: Russkaia simfoniia.Google Scholar
Beljaev, S. G., ‘Petr L. Bark - Bankier und russischer Finanzminister. Stationen seiner Karriere’, in Dahlmann, D., Heller, K. and Petrov, J. A. (eds.), Eisenbahnen und Motoren – Zucker und Schokolade. Deutsche im russischen Wirtschaftsleben vom 18. bis zum frühen 20. Jh., Berlin: Duncker u. Humblot, pp. 143–66.Google Scholar
Chernik, I. D., ‘Regulirovaniie dokhodov gorodskikh biudzhetov v Rossii v XIX stoletii’ [Regulating income of municipal budgets in Russia in the 19th century], Finansy, 6, pp. 75–6.Google Scholar
Frolov, S. A. and Esikov, S. A., Krest'ianskii pozemel'nyi bank v Tambovskoi gubernii (1884–1917 gg.), Tambov: Izd-vo TGTU.Google Scholar
Golovko, A. N., Finansova administratsiia Rosiis'koï imperiï v Ukraïni (kinets' XVIII–pochatok XX st.): istoryko-pravove doslidzhennia, Kharkiv: SIM.Google Scholar
Gruzitï, I. U. L., Banki Belarusi, 70-e gody XIX-nachalo XX veka, Minsk: Ekoperspektiva.Google Scholar
McCaffray, S. P., ‘Capital, industriousness, and private banks in the economic imagination of a nineteenth-century statesman’, in McCaffray, S. P. and Melancon, M. (eds.), Russia in the European context, 1789–1914: a member of the family, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 3348.Google Scholar
Owen, T. C., Dilemmas of Russian capitalism: Fedor Chizhov and corporate enterprise in the railroad age, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
P'iatacheko, H. O. and Kukharets', L. V., Stanovlennia ta rozvytok finansiv Ukraïny, 1917–2003, Kyïv: Naukovo-doslidnyi finansovyi instytut pry Ministerstvi finansiv Ukraïny.Google Scholar
Polikarpov, V. V., ‘Ob otnoshenii tsarskogo pravitel'stva k evreiskomu kapitalu v 1916 godu’ [On the relationship of the tsarist government toward Jewish capital in 1916], Voprosy Istorii, 2, pp. 110–15.Google Scholar
Valge, J., ‘Es ist nicht alles Gold, was glänzt. Das Gold der Bolschewiki in Estland 1920–1922 und die Folgen’, in Mertelsmann, O. (ed.), Estland und Russland. Aspekte der Beziehungen beider Länder, Hamburg: Kovac, pp. 157–92.Google Scholar
Zaitsev, M. V., ‘Finansovoe polozhenie saratovskogo gorodskogo samoupravleniia v 1892–1913 gg.’ [Financial position of Saratov municipal self-management in 1892–1913], Klio, 2/29, pp. 162–71.Google Scholar
Zalogov, N. A., ‘Finansovye osnovy gorodskogo samoupravleniia v Rossii (1785–1870 gg.)’ [The financial basis of urban self-government in Russia, 1785–1870], Finansy, 2, pp. 77–8.Google Scholar
Bähr, J. and Gravey, M., ‘Les grandes banques allemandes et leurs activités dans l'Europe occidentale occupée, 1940–1944’, Histoire, Economie et Société, 24/4, pp. 495511.Google Scholar
Banken, R. and Gravey, M., ‘Les activités métaux précieux de la Degussa dans l'Europe occupée, 1939–1945’, Histoire, Economie et Société, 24/4, pp. 473–93.Google Scholar
Barendregt, J., ‘Zwischen London und Deutschland: Das Finanzzentrum Amsterdam im 20. Jh.’, in Merki, (ed.), Europas Finanzzentren Jh., pp. 97123.Google Scholar
Eichengreen, B., ‘The great detour: European money and banking in the second half of the 20th century’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 384400.Google Scholar
Landesmann, M. A., ‘Globalisation today and 100 years ago: European banks and the transformation of central and eastern Europe’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 456–81.Google Scholar
Mathis, F., ‘Vom Zweiten Weltkrieg zum Wirtschaftswunder. Unterbrechung und Fortsetzung der Industrialisierung in Europa’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 288316.Google Scholar
Meier, R. T., ‘Vom Boten zum Bit: Zur Geschichte der Technologien an den Wertpapierbörsen’, in Merki, (ed.), Europas Finanzzentren, pp. 269–93.Google Scholar
Merki, C. M. (ed.), Europas Finanzzentren. Geschichte und Bedeutung im 20. Jh., Frankfurt/M: Campus Verlag.Google Scholar
Paulet, E., European banking: historical roots and modern challenges, Paris: Hermès science/Lavoisier.Google Scholar
Posner, E., ‘Sources of institutional change: the supranational origins of Europe's new stock markets’, World Politics, 58/1, pp. 140.Google Scholar
Jensen-Eriksen, N., ‘Just rhetoric? The United Kingdom and the question of Western economic aid to Finland, 1950–1962’, in Eloranta, J. and Ojala, J. (eds.), East-West Trade and the Cold War, Jyväskylä: University of Jyväskylä, pp. 93111.Google Scholar
Adam, C., Cobham, D. and Girardin, E., ‘Monetary frameworks and institutional constraints: UK monetary policy reaction functions, 1985–2003’, Oxford Bulletin of Economics and Statistics, 67/4, pp. 497516.Google Scholar
Baker, M. and Collins, M., ‘London as an international banking centre, 1958–1980’, in Bussière, and Cassis, (eds.), London and Paris as international financial centres in the twentieth century, Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 247–64.Google Scholar
Budd, A., Black Wednesday: a re-examination of Britain's experience in the exchange rate mechanism, London: Institute of Economic Affairs.Google Scholar
Bull, H. W., To their credit: a history of the Association of Banking Teachers, Birmingham: Tudor Rose.Google Scholar
Bussière, E. and Cassis, Y. (eds.), London and Paris as international financial centres in the twentieth century, Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Consoli, D., ‘The dynamics of technological change in UK retail banking services: an evolutionary perspective’, Research Policy, 34/4, pp. 461–80.Google Scholar
Cutler, T., ‘“Managerialism avant la lettre?” The debate on accounting in the NHS hospitals in the 1950s’, in Berridge, V. and Loughlin, K. (eds.), Medicine, the market and the mass media: producing health in the Twentieth century, New York: Routledge, pp. 125–45.Google Scholar
Finlay, S., Consumer credit fundamentals, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.Google Scholar
Gorsky, M., Mohan, J. and Willis, T., ‘From hospital contributory schemes to health cash plans: the mutual ideal in British health care after 1948’, J. of Social Policy, 34/3, pp. 447–67.Google Scholar
Gorsky, M., Mohan, J. and Willis, T., ‘Hospital contributory schemes and the NHS debates 1937–1946: the rejection of social insurance in the British welfare state?’, 20th Century British History, 16/2, pp. 170–92.Google Scholar
Hickson, K., The IMF crisis of 1976 and British politics, New York: I. B. Tauris.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jack, L., ‘Stocks of knowledge, simplification and unintended consequences: the persistence of post-war accounting practices in UK agriculture’, Management Accounting Research, 16/1, pp. 5979.Google Scholar
King, M. R., ‘Epistemic communities and the diffusion of ideas: central bank reform in the United Kingdom’, West European Politics, 28/1, pp. 94123.Google Scholar
Matthews, D., ‘London and county securities: a case study in audit and regulatory failure’, Accounting Auditing & Accountability J., 18/4, pp. 518–36.Google Scholar
Michie, R. C., ‘Der Aufstieg der “City of London” als Finanzplatz: vom Inlandsgeschäft zum “Offshore”-Zentrum?’, in Merki, (ed.), Europas Finanzzentren, pp. 2351.Google Scholar
Mitchell, F. and Pong, C., ‘Accounting for a disappearance: a contribution to the history of the value added statement in the UK’, Accounting Historians J., 32/2, pp. 173–99.Google Scholar
Murphy, C. J., ‘SOE's foreign currency transactions’, Intelligence and National Security, 20/1, pp. 191208.Google Scholar
Roberts, R., ‘London as an international financial centre, 1980–2000: global powerhouse or Wimbledon EC2?’, in Bussière, and Cassis, (eds.), London and Paris, pp. 287312.Google Scholar
Robertson, F., ‘The aesthetics of authenticity. Printed Banknotes as industrial currency’, Technology and Culture, 46/1, pp. 3150.Google Scholar
Schenk, C., ‘Crisis and opportunity: the policy environment of international banking in the city of London, 1958–1980’, in Bussière, and Cassis, (eds.), London and Paris, pp. 207–28.Google Scholar
Soroka, S. N. and Wlezien, C., ‘Opinion-policy dynamics: public preferences and public expenditure in the United Kingdom’, British J. of Political Science, 47/4, pp. 569–93.Google Scholar
Stanton, J., ‘Intensive care: Measurement and audit in an expensive growth area of medicine’, in Berridge, V. (ed.), Making health policy: Networks in research and policy after 1945, Amsterdam: Rodopi, 243–73.Google Scholar
Treadgold, M., ‘Colonial currency boards: the seigniorage issue’, History of Economics Rev., 41, pp. 126–41.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Abe de Jong, A .R. and Hogfeldt, P., ‘Financing and control in the Netherlands: a historical perspective, in Morck, R. (ed.), A history of corporate governance around the world: family business groups to professional managers. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, pp. 467516.Google Scholar
Arnoldus, D. and Dankers, J., ‘Management consultancies in the Dutch banking sector, 1960s and 1970s’, Business History, 47/4, pp. 553–68.Google Scholar
Van Tielhof, M., ‘The predecessors of ABN AMRO and the expropriation of Jewish assets in the Netherlands’, Financial History Rev., 12/1, pp. 87108.Google Scholar
‘La politique économique et financière du général de Gaulle 1958–1969’, Cahiers de la Fondation Charles de Gaulle, 15, pp. 7158.Google Scholar
Aglan, A., ‘François Bloch-Lainé, un fonctionnaire résistant’, in Margairaz, (ed.), François Bloch-Lainé, pp. 118.Google Scholar
Andrieu, C., ‘François Bloch-Lainé, acteur et penseur critique du mouvement’, in Margairaz, (ed.), François Bloch-Lainé, pp. 1934.Google Scholar
Auger, V. (ed.), ‘Table ronde: Des années soixante à aujourd'hui, la marche vers l'euro’, D'or et d'argent, pp. 8798.Google Scholar
Barjot, D. and Berneron-Couvenhes, M-F. (eds.), ‘Concessions et optimisation des investissements publics’, Entreprises et histoire, 38, pp. 5138.Google Scholar
Bensadon, D., ‘La frontière comptable de l'entité groupe: évolution du concept de périmètre de consolidation des comptes du milieu des années 1960 a la loi du 3 janvier 1985’, Entreprises et Histoire, 39, pp. 822.Google Scholar
Berthereau, D., ‘Le contrôle d'une entreprise concessionnaire par la Commission de vérification des comptes des entreprises publiques: le cas du tunnel du Mont-Blanc, 1965–1971’, in Barjot, and Berneron-Couvenhes, (eds.), ‘Concessions et optimisation des investissements publics’, Entreprises et histoire, 38, pp. 8495.Google Scholar
Blondeau, C., ‘Banque, assurance, bancassurance, assurfinance, lignes de partages: une specificité française?’, Entreprises et histoire, 39, pp. 91114.Google Scholar
Bussière, E., ‘French banks and the Eurobonds issue market during the 1960s’, in Bussière, and Cassis, (eds.), London and Paris, pp. 265–86.Google Scholar
Bussière, E. (ed.), Michel Debré, un réformateur aux Finances 1966–1968. Journée d'études tenue à Bercy le 8 janvier 2004, Paris: Comité pour l'histoire économique et financière de la France.Google Scholar
Casanova, J-C., ‘Jean Monnet, un visionnaire pragmatique: “ouverture, échange, communication?”’, in Le Roy Ladurie, E., and Bourgeois, G. (eds.), Ouverture, société, pouvoir: de l'Edit de Nantes à la chute du communisme, Paris: Fayard, pp. 151–71.Google Scholar
Cortesse, P., ‘La politique budgétaire de Michel Debré’, in Bussière, (ed.), Michel Debré, pp. 2536.Google Scholar
Descamps, F., ‘Michel Debré et la réforme du ministère des Finances: continuités et innovations 1938–1968’, in Bussière, (ed.), Michel Debré, pp. 145–82.Google Scholar
Descamps, F., ‘François Bloch-Lainé et la réforme de l'Etat: de l'action au magistère moral 1946–1996’, in Margairaz, (ed.), François Bloch-Lainé, pp. 157232.Google Scholar
Dupont-Fauville, A., ‘Michel Debré ministre de l'Economie et des Finances’, in Bussière, (ed.), Michel Debré, pp. 512.Google Scholar
Feiertag, O., ‘The international opening-up of the Paris Bourse: overdraft-economy curbs and market dynamics’, in Bussière, and Cassis, (eds.), London and Paris, pp. 229–46.Google Scholar
Fridenson, P. and Sardais, C., ‘L'Etat actionnaire, banquier et consultant: François Bloch-Lainé et le double problème de financement de la Régie Renault de 1947 à 1952’, in Margairaz, (ed.), François Bloch-Lainé, pp. 5172.Google Scholar
Godefroy, T. and Lacoumes, P., ‘Justice et argent sale. De la non-ingérence à l'auto-contrôle, l’évolution des responsabilités du banquier', in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 211–23.Google Scholar
Karfakis, C., Sidiropoulos, M., and Trabelsi, J., ‘Has the ‘franc fort’ exchange rate policy affected the inflationary dynamics? Theory and new evidence', International Economic J., 19/3, pp. 379–96.Google Scholar
Kocher-Marboeuf, E., ‘Les combats de Michel Debré pour le rayonnement économique et financier de la France dans le monde’, in Bussière, (ed.), Michel Debré, pp. 127–46.Google Scholar
Lambert, C., Once a dealer. 50 years of ACI, The Financial Markets Association, Paris: P&L Services Ltd.Google Scholar
Levy, J., ‘La CGT au Crédit du Nord, 1949–1974’, in Bressol, E., Dreyfus, M. and Hedde, J. (eds.), La CGT dans les années 1950: Actes du colloque tenu à Montreuil au siège de la CGT les 20 et 21 novembre 2003, Rennes: Presses universitaires de Rennes, pp. 279–86.Google Scholar
Margairaz, M. (ed.), François Bloch-Lainé, fonctionnaire, financier, citoyen. Journée d'études tenue à Bercy le 25 février 2003, Paris: Comité pour l'histoire économique et financière de la France.Google Scholar
Margairaz, M., ‘Les deux septennats à la tête de la Caisse des dépôts et consignations (1953–1967): François Bloch-Lainé, acteur principal d'une mutation réussie?’, in Margairaz, (ed.), François Bloch-Lainé, pp. 103–26.Google Scholar
de Montricher, N., and Lascoumes, P., ‘Problèmes de construction juridique et judiciaire du profit légitime: le cas du délit d'initié’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 117–29.Google Scholar
Nougaret, R. and Plessis, A., ‘Réformer l'entreprise: François Bloch-Lainé au Crédit lyonnais (1967–1974)’, in Margairaz, (ed.), François Bloch-Lainé, pp. 127–56.Google Scholar
Quenouëlle-Corre, L., ‘The state, banks and financing of investments in France from World War II to the 1970s’, Financial History Rev., 12/1, pp. 6386.Google Scholar
Quenouëlle-Corre, L., ‘Le directeur du Trésor et le financement des entreprises (1947–1952)’, in Margairaz, (ed.), François Bloch-Lainé, pp. 73102.Google Scholar
Quenouëlle-Corre, L., ‘Les réformes financières et bancaires de 1966–1967’, in Bussière, (ed.), Michel Debré, pp. 85118.Google Scholar
Rouvillois, P., ‘La politique fiscale de Michel Debré, ministre de l'Economie et des Finances, de janvier 1966 à mai 1968’, in Bussière, (ed.), Michel Debré, pp. 6778.Google Scholar
Samuel, P., ‘Regards sur Michel Debré’, in Bussière, (ed.), Michel Debré, pp. 119–26.Google Scholar
Straus, A., ‘The future of the Paris market as an international financial centre from the point of view of European integration’, in Bussière, and Cassis, (eds.), London and Paris, pp. 313–22.Google Scholar
Straus, A., ‘Auf, Ab, Auf: Der Finanzplatz Paris im 20. Jh’, in Merki, (ed.), Europas Finanzzentren. Geschichte und Bedeutung im 20. Jh., Frankfurt/M: Campus Verlag, pp. 8396.Google Scholar
Tertrais, H., ‘Le rétablissement de la souveraineté financière de la France en Indochine’, in Margairaz, (ed.), François Bloch-Lainé, pp. 3550.Google Scholar
Touchelay, B., ‘Les professionnels de la comptabilité vus par les administrations fiscales françaises des années 1920 à la fin des années 1960: experts, faussaires ou charlatans?’, Entreprises et histoire, 39, pp. 5976.Google Scholar
Tristram, F., Une fiscalité pour la croissance: la direction générale des impôts et la politique fiscale en France de 1948 à la fin des années 1960, Paris, Comité pour l'Histoire économique et financière de la France, www.minefi.gouv.fr/notes_bleues/nbb/nbb298/fisca1.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tristram, F., ‘Contexte politique et conjoncture économique lors du passage de Michel debré, au ministère de l’Économie et des Finances, janvier 1966-mai 1968', in Bussière, (ed.), Michel Debré, pp. 1324.Google Scholar
Die Deutsche Bank in Frankfurt am Main, Munich: Piper.Google Scholar
Adams, K. H., Parteienfinanzierung in Deutschland. Entwicklung der Einnahmestrukturen politischer Parteien oder eine Sittengeschichte über Parteien, Geld und Macht, Marburg: Tectum Verl.Google Scholar
Clark, G. L. and Wójcik, D., ‘Financial valuation of the German model: the negative relationship between ownership concentration and stock market returns, 1997–2001’, Economic Geography, 81/1, pp. 1129.Google Scholar
Corneo, G., ‘The rise and likely fall of the German income tax, 1958–2005’, CESifo Economic Studies, 51/1, pp. 159–86.Google Scholar
Dohna, J., Die ‘Jüdischen Konten’ der Fürstlich Castell'schen Credit-Cassen und des Bankhauses Karl Meyer KG, Neustadt/Aisch: Kommissionsverlag Degener.Google Scholar
Fiedler, M., ‘Zur Rolle des Vertrauens in der ‘Deutschland AG’: Verflechtungen zwischen Finanz- und Nichtfinanzunternehmen im 20. Jh.', Jahrbuch für Wirtschaftsgeschichte, 1, pp. 93106.Google Scholar
Fitzenberger, B. and Kohn, K., ‘Gleicher Lohn fur gleiche Arbeit? Zum Zusammenhang zwischen Gewerkschaftsmitgliedschaft und Lohnstruktur in Westdeutschland 1985–1997’, Zeitschrift f. Arbeitsmarktforschung, 38/2–3, pp. 125–46.Google Scholar
Gebauer, H. J., Als die Calwer Handelsherren Geld verliehen. Geschichte der Calwer Banken, Calw: Stadtarchiv.Google Scholar
Gersch, T., Klinke, S. and Weschke, B., ‘Diawerbung der Sparkassen’, Archiv und Wirtschaft, 38/1, pp. 2637.Google Scholar
Hammerschmidt, P., Wohlfahrtsverbände in der Nachkriegszeit. Reorganisation und Finanzierung der Spitzenverbände der freien Wohlfahrtspflege 1945–1961, Weinheim: Juventa Verl.Google Scholar
Heske, G., ‘Die gesamtwirtschaftliche Entwicklung in Ostdeutschland 1970 bis 2000 – neue Ergebnisse einer volkswirtschaftlichen Gesamtrechnung’, Historical Social Research, 30/2, pp. 238–28.Google Scholar
Hilger, S., ‘Zur Genese des “German model”. Die Bedeutung des Ordoliberalismus für die Ausgestaltung der bundesdeutschen Wettbewerbsordnung nach dem Zweiten Weltkrieg’, in Windolf, A. (ed.), Finanzmarkt-Kapitalismus. Analysen zum Wandel von Produktionsregimen, Wiesbaden: VS, Verlag f. Sozialwissenschaft, pp. 222–41.Google Scholar
Jurk, G., ‘Als Berater der Bank von Mosambik’, in Voß, M. (ed.), Wir haben Spuren hinterlassen! Die DDR in Mosambik. Erlebnisse, Erfahrungen und Erkenntnisse aus drei Jahrzehnten, Münster: Lit, pp. 328–87.Google Scholar
Löffler, B., ‘Währungsrecht, Bundesbank und deutsche “Stabilitätskultur” nach 1945. Überlegungen zu mentalitätsgeschichtlichen Dimensionen normativ-institutioneller Regelungen’, in Seifert, M. and Helm, W. (eds.), Recht und Religion im Alltagsleben. Perspektiven der Kulturforschung. Festschrift für Walter Hartinger zum 65. Geburtstag, Passau: Klinger, pp. 6182.Google Scholar
Ochsen, C. and Welsch, H., ‘Technology, trade, and income distribution in West Germany: a factor-share analysis, 1976–1994’, J. of Applied Economics, 8/2, pp. 321345.Google Scholar
Plumpe, W., ‘Das Ende des deutschen Kapitalismus’, West End, 2/2, pp. 123.Google Scholar
Robert, C. and Valentin, J-M., Le commerce de l'esprit: économie et culture en Allemagne aujourd'hui, Paris: Presses de l'Université de Paris-Sorbonne.Google Scholar
Roesler, J., ‘Die Wirtschafts- und Finanzbeziehungen der DDR zum Westen in den 70er und 80er Jahren’, in Timmermann, H. (ed.), Die DDR in Europa – zwischen Isolation und Öffnung, Münster: Lit, pp. 134–52.Google Scholar
Schlegelmilch, C., ‘“Und da kann man nicht plotzlich volkseigen umdenken.” Wirtschaften zwischen Gewinnorientierung und Verstaatlichung. Firmengeschichte eines Mittelstandlers in der DDR’, Historical Social Research, 30/2, pp. 96129.Google Scholar
Tilly, R. H., ‘Trust and mistrust: banks, giant debtors, and enterprise crises in Germany, 1960–2002’, Jahrbuch für Wirtschaftsgeschichte, 1, pp. 107–38.Google Scholar
Ullrich, A.Finanzplatz Berlin. Entstehung und Entwicklung. Eine theoriengeleitete historisch-empirische Analyse, Sternenfels: Verlag Wissenschaft und Praxis.Google Scholar
Waesche, N., ‘“Rational exuberance”. Wirtschaftsgeschichtliche Kommentare zu Finanzeuphorie und Gründeroptimismus während der New Economy’, Jahrbuch für Wirtschaftsgeschichte, 1, pp. 165–80.Google Scholar
Weidner, M., ‘Die Beschäftigung von Frauen in der Bankwirtschaft am Beispiel der Bayerischen Hypotheken- und Wechsel-Bank AG von 1835 bis 1985 mit einem Ausblick auf die Bayerische Vereinsbank’, Bankhistorisches Archiv, 31/2, pp. 107–33.Google Scholar
Storie di Resistenza: il contributo delle lavoratrici e dei lavoratori del settore creditizio e finanziario, Rome: Fondazione Giuseppe Di Vittorio/Ediesse.Google Scholar
A'Hearn, B., ‘Finance-led divergence in the regions of Italy’, Financial History Rev., 12/1, pp. 741.Google Scholar
Antonelli, F., ‘Il denaro dello straniero’, Sociologia, 39/2, pp. 91–6.Google Scholar
Belli, F. and Mazzini, F. (eds.), I primi dieci anni della Fondazione Monte dei Paschi di Siena, Ospedaletto: Pacini.Google Scholar
Belli, F. and Mazzini, F., ‘Le fondazioni di origine bancaria: il quadro generale’, in Belli, and Mazzini, (eds.), I primi dieci, pp. 984.Google Scholar
Boccia, E., ‘Freno o acceleratore. Sul mercato finanziario italiano negli anni “40 e”’, Riv. di Storia Finanziaria, 15, pp. 3348. www.delpt.unina.it/stof/indiceGoogle Scholar
Borelli, V., Banca padrona, Milan: Rizzoli.Google Scholar
Botarelli, S., ‘Le scelte di politica tributaria negli anni delle riforme (1948–1971)’, Riv. di diritto finanziario e scienza delle finanze, 64/1, pp. 5486.Google Scholar
Capece, S., ‘Il non profit. L'interpretazione del fenomeno: spunti di riflessione sul rapporto tra le fondazioni di origine bancaria e il non profit italiano’, in Belli, and Mazzini, (eds.), I primi dieci, pp. 213–32.Google Scholar
Chiapparono, F., ‘Spunti e tracce di ricerca sulla storia della banca nelle Marche e nell’ Umbria del secondo dopoguerra', Proposte e ricerche, 28/55, p. 132–55.Google Scholar
Carboni, M., Muzzarelli, M. G. and Zamagni, V., Sacri recinti del credito. Sedi e storie dei Monti di Pietà in Emilia-Romagna, Venice: Marsiglio.Google Scholar
Cibej, N., ‘Poslovanje denarnih zavodov v coni B svobodnega trzaskega ozemlja’ [The functioning of monetary institutions in zone B of the free territory of Triest], Acta Histriae, 13/2, pp. 423–46.Google Scholar
De Luca, G. and Pizzorni, G., Storie Incrociate. Banca, imprese, territorio, Legnano: Banca di Legnano.Google Scholar
Dimitri, N. and Sani, L., ‘L'impatto economico dell'attività erogativi della Fondazione MPS: un'analisi aggregata’, in Belli, and Mazzini, (eds.), I primi dieci, pp. 177–88.Google Scholar
Di Pietra, R., Cocci, M., Lopane, T. and Ruggieri, A., ‘Le dimensioni economico-aziendali della Fondazione MPS. I primi dieci anni di una solida storia’, in Belli, and Mazzini, (eds.), I primi dieci, pp. 85150.Google Scholar
Felice, E., ‘Il reddito delle regioni italiane nel 1938 e nel 1951. una stima basata sul costo del lavoro’, Riv. di Storia Economica, 21/1, pp. 330.Google Scholar
Finzi, D., Un paese e la sua banca: storia della Cassa rurale di Anghiari, Città di Castello: Petruzzi.Google Scholar
Gabbi, G., ‘La gestione finanziaria del portafoglio di proprietà della Fondazione MPS’, in Belli, and Mazzini, (eds.), I primi dieci, pp. 151–76.Google Scholar
Kuder, M., ‘Portare i soldi in Svizzera: contrabbando di capitali ed evasione fiscale nell'Italia del boom’, Contemporanea, 2004, 7, pp. 609–21.Google Scholar
Marinello, A., ‘Il regime tributario applicabile alle fondazioni bancarie: profili evolutivi e rilievi critici’, in Belli, and Mazzini, (eds.), I primi dieci, pp. 189212.Google Scholar
Maccaglia, F., ‘L'espace économique mafieux au tournant du siècle: entre mutations structurelles et dynamiques conjoncturelles’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 107–16.Google Scholar
Mazzoni, M., ‘La deriva del capitalismo finanziario italiano: dalla cronaca giornalistica alla ricostruzione storica’, Passato e Presente, 2004, 22/63, pp. 124–39.Google Scholar
Montini, M., ‘Le fondazioni di origine bancaria nel quadro giuridico europeo’, in Belli, and Mazzini, (eds.), I primi dieci, pp. 233–48.Google Scholar
Oddo, G. and Pons, G., L'intrigo: banche e risparmiatori nell'era Fazio, Milan: Feltrinelli.Google Scholar
Rinaldi, A. and Vasta, M., ‘The structure of Italian capitalism, 1952–1972: new evidence using the interlocking directorates technique’, Financial History Rev., 12/1, pp. 173–98.Google Scholar
Piluso, G., Mediobanca: tra regole e mercato, Milan: Egea.Google Scholar
Romani, M. A., La banca dei milanesi: storia della Banca popolare di Milano, Rome: Laterza.Google Scholar
Spadavecchia, A., ‘State subsidies and the sources of company finance in Italian industrial districts, 1951–1991’, Enterprise and Society, 6/4, pp. 571–80.Google Scholar
Spadavecchia, A., ‘Financing industrial districts in Italy, 1971–91: a private venture?’, Business History, 47/4, pp. 569–93.Google Scholar
Tedesco, L., ‘Einaudi, la Banca d'Italia e la stretta creditizia. L'operato dell'istituto di emissione negli anni della ricostruzione’, Nuova Storia Contemporanea, 8/2 (2004), pp. 159–62.Google Scholar
Turani, G., I quattro dell'OPA selvaggia, Milan: Sperling & Kupfer.Google Scholar
Varni, A., Storia dell'Associazione fra le casse di risparmio italiane: 1951–1990, Rome: Laterza.Google Scholar
Charguéraud, M-A., La Suisse lynchée par l'Amérique: lettre ouverte au juge Korman, 1998–2004, Geneva: Labor et Fides.Google Scholar
Kienast, L. and Stutzer, A., ‘Demokratische Beteiligung und Staatsausgaben: die Auswirkungen des Frauenstimmrechts’, Schweizerische Zeitschrift fur Volkswirtschaft und Statistik, 141/4, pp. 617–50.Google Scholar
Maissen, T., Verweigerte Erinnerung: Nachrichtenlose Vermögen und die Schweizer Weltkriegsdebatte 1989–2004, Zurich: Neue Zürcher Zeitung.Google Scholar
Rüegg, E. and Widmer, T., ‘Konsequenzen von Staatsreformen für die demokratische Steuerungsfähigkeit. Vergleichende Analyse zu vier Schweizer Kantonen’, Politische Vierteljahresschrift, 46/1, pp. 86109.Google Scholar
Tanner, J., ‘Der diskrete Charme der Gnomen: Entwicklung und Perspektiven des Finanzplatzes Schweiz’, in Merki, (ed.), Europas Finanzzentren, pp. 127–47.Google Scholar
AA, VV., ‘Historia de las cajas de ahorros: nuevas perspectivas’, Papeles de Economía Española, 105–6, Madrid: Fundación de las Cajas de Ahorros.Google Scholar
Asensio del Arco, E. and Hernández Andreu, J., ‘España y el Sistema Monetario de Bretton Woods’, Información Comercial Española, 827, pp. 2543.Google Scholar
Banco de España Servicio de Estudios, El análisis de la economía española, Madrid: Banco de España.Google Scholar
Bernabe Perez, M. M. and Marin Hernandez, S., ‘Un analisis economico-contable de la actividad de las cajas de ahorros espanolas (1975–2000)’, Papeles de economía española, 105–6, pp. 309–28.Google Scholar
Carnero Lorenzo, F. and Nuez-Yanez, J. S., ‘La implicacion de las cajas de ahorros en la economia Canaria’, Papeles de economía española, 105–6, pp. 188206.Google Scholar
Coronas Vida, L. J., ‘Las cajas de ahorros de Castilla y Leon y su influencia en el desarrollo economico regional’, Papeles de economía española, 105–6, pp. 207–26.Google Scholar
Del Arco, E. A. and Gonzalez, N. C. (eds.), Espana y Bretton Woods, Madrid: Delta Publicaciones Universitarias.Google Scholar
Gutierrez Nieto, B., ‘Antecedentes del microcredito. Lecciones del pasado para las experiencias actuales’, CIRIEC Espana, Rev. de Economia Publica, Social y Cooperativa, 51, pp. 2550.Google Scholar
Hernangomez Cristobal, F., ‘La solvencia de las cajas de ahorros: 1994–2004’, Papeles de economía española, 105–6, pp. 329–37.Google Scholar
Ledesma-Rodríguez, F. J., Navarro-Ibáñez, M., Pérez-Rodríguez, J. V. and Sosvilla-Rivero, S., ‘Regímenes cambiarios de iure y de facto. El caso de la peseta/dólar, 1965–1998’, Rev. de Historia Económica, 23-3, pp. 541–61.Google Scholar
Parache, F. V. and Álvarez, G. J. (eds.), Crisis cambiarias y financieras: una comparación de dos crisis, Madrid: Ediciones Pirámide, 2003.Google Scholar
Rubio Lara, J., ‘Les peines pécuniaires dans le nouveau Code Pénal espagnol’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 319–24.Google Scholar
Rojo Duque, L. Á., ‘El largo camino de la política monetaria española hacia el euro’, Información Comercial Española, 826, pp. 7384.Google Scholar
Sánchez Soler, M., Los banqueros de Franco, Madrid: Oberón.Google Scholar
Torres-Villanueva, E., ‘Intervencionismo estatal y cambios en el marco regulador de las cajas de ahorros durante el primer franquismo (1939–1957)’, Papeles de economía española, 105–6, pp. 1626.Google Scholar
Varela Parache, F. and Varela Parache, M., ‘España y los organismos económicos internacionales’, Información Comercial Española, 826, pp. 167–77.Google Scholar
Avramov, I., Silata na parite: istoriia na parite i kredita po bulgarskite zemi, Sofia: Siela.Google Scholar
Tsaliki, P. and Tsoulfidis, L., ‘Marxian theory of competition and the concept of regulating capital: evidence from Greek manufacturing’, Rev. of Radical Political Economics, 37/1, pp. 522.Google Scholar
Chudják, F., ‘Menová reforma v ceskoslovensku roku 1945 (slovenské predstavy a poziadavky)’ [The 1945 monetary reform in Czechoslovakia and related Slovak demands], Historický Casopis, 53/1, pp. 7192.Google Scholar
Cechlovska, S., ‘Historie a soucasny stav ceskeho hypotecniho bankovnictvi’ [The history and the present state of Czech mortgage banking], Ekonomie a management, 1, pp. 2632.Google Scholar
Hanousek, J. and Filer, R. K., ‘Consumers’ opinion of inflation bias due to quality improvements', Economic Development and Cultural Change, 53/1, pp. 235–54.Google Scholar
Jancik, D. and Kubu, E., t‘Arizace’ a arizátori: drobný a strední zidovský majetek v úverech Kreditanstalt der Deutschen (1939–45), Prague: Nakl. Karolinum.Google Scholar
Karlen, S., Versicherungen in Liechtenstein zur Zeit des, Nationalsozialismus. Untersuchungen zu nachrichtenlosen Vermögenswerten bei liechtensteinischen Banken in der NS-Zeit: Bericht der Ernst & Young AG gemäss Mandatsverträgen vom 9. Juli 2002 und 5. Mai 2003 zwischen der Unabhängigen Historikerkommission Liechtenstein Zweiter Weltkrieg und der Ernst & Young AG, Vaduz: Historischer Verein für das Fürstentum Liechtenstein.Google Scholar
Kössner, B., ‘Kunstsponsoringkonzeptionen am Beispiel von Österreichischer Länderbank, Creditanstalt und Bank Austria Creditanstalt’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 368–82.Google Scholar
Lacina, V., ‘Tschechische Banken und ihre Verbindungen zum österreichischen Bankwesen bis 1945’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 239–52.Google Scholar
Merki, C., ‘Der Finanzplatz Liechtenstein: Zürichs attraktive Außenstelle’, in Merki, (ed.), Europas Finanzzentren, pp. 167–95.Google Scholar
Mooslechner, P., ‘Vom “ruinösen Wettbewerb” zur wettbewerbsfähigen Position auf einem um Osteuropa erweiterten Heimmarkt. Banken und Bankenpolitik in Österreich seit den 1970er Jahren’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 401–14.Google Scholar
Randa, G., ‘Die Integration von Bank Austria und Creditanstalt’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 437–54.Google Scholar
Sandgruber, R., ‘Banken und Sparkassen im Wiederaufbauboom der 1960er Jahre und die Philosophie des Sparen’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 350–67.Google Scholar
Sárközi, Z. and Katz, V., Magyar Általános Hitelbank RT, Budapest: Magyar Országos Levéltár.Google Scholar
Stintzky, O., ‘Une lecture institutionnelle de la construction des systèmes monétaires et bancaires dans les économies en transition d'Europe Centrale: Hongrie, Pologne, République tchèque’, Rev. des Etudes Slaves, 76/1, pp. 159–62.Google Scholar
Anan'ich, B. V., Kredit i banki v Rossii do nachala XX veka: Sankt-Peterburg i Moskva, St Petersburg: Izd-vo S.-Peterburgskogo universiteta.Google Scholar
Andresen, N. A., ‘Sikker som banken? Tillit og spareadferd i Russland 1991–1998’ [Safe as the bank? Trust and patterns of saving in Russia,1991–98], Nordisk Ost-Forum, 19/3, pp. 307–28.Google Scholar
Barnett, V., ‘Diskussiia o politicheskoi i ekonomicheskoi roli zolotovaliutnykh rezervov Rossii v gody Pervoi mirovoi voiny’, Vestnik Sankt Peterburgskogo universiteta, 4, pp. 4869.Google Scholar
Borodkin, L. and Ertz, S., ‘Forced labour and the need for motivation: wages and bonuses in the Stalinist camp system’, Comparative Economic Studies, 47/2, pp. 418–36.Google Scholar
Cherniavskii, A. and Vartapetov, K., ‘Fiscal decentralization and local government in the reform period’, Problems of Economic Transition, 47/11, pp. 1836.Google Scholar
Dudakov, A. P., ‘Rabotniki finansovoi sistemy v Velikoi Otechestvennoi Voine’ [Financial system employees during the Great Patriotic War], Finansy, 5, pp. 710.Google Scholar
Ertz, S., ‘Trading effort for freedom: workday credits in the Stalinist camp system’, Comparative Economic Studies, 47/2, pp. 476–91.Google Scholar
Ivanenko, V., ‘The statutory tax burden and its avoidance in transitional Russia’, Europe-Asia Studies, 57/7, pp. 1021–45.Google Scholar
Ivanovskii, Z. V. and Tychinina, L. V., Rossiia i mir–vchera, segodnia, zavtra: otechestvennyi i zarubezhnyi opyt ekonomicheskoi deiatel'nosti, Moscow: MGI im. E. R. Dashkovoi.Google Scholar
Kargin, V., Nauda un cilveki, Riga: Atena.Google Scholar
Kovalev, V. V., ‘Sushchnost’ i funktsii finansov firmy' [Finance of a firm: essence and functions], Vestnik Sankt Peterburgskogo universiteta, 1/5, pp. 61–9.Google Scholar
Kudrin, A. L., ‘Finansovaia sistema strany v gody Velikoi Otechestvennoi Voiny’ [The country's financial system during the Great Patriotic War], Finansy, 5, pp. 36.Google Scholar
Kuz'mich, S. A. I. and Shirokov, G., ‘Lishnie den'gi: k prichinam zamedleniia tempov razvitiia’ [Extra money: examining the rationale for slowing down the rate of development], Vostok, 1, pp. 91102.Google Scholar
Millar, J., ‘Bergson's Structure of Soviet Wages’, Comparative Economic Studies, 47/2, pp. 289–95.Google Scholar
Ogushi, A., ‘Money, property and the demise of the CPSU’, J. of Communist Studies and Transition Politics, 21/2, pp. 268–95.Google Scholar
Raev, V. M., ‘Chtoby imet’ boesposobnye vooruzhennye sily, nuzhno umet' schitat' i ekonomno raskhodovat' denezhnye sredstva' [In order to have efficient armed forces, it is necessary to be able to calculate and disburse funds economically], Voenno Istoricheskii Zhurnal, 1, pp. 34–8.Google Scholar
Auberg, V., ‘Le groupe de Bilderberg et l'intégration européenne jusqu'au milieu des années 1960. Une influence complexe', in Dumoulin, M. (ed.), Réseaux économiques et construction européenne / Economic networks and European integration, Brussels: PIE–P. Lang, 2004, pp. 411–30.Google Scholar
Beaverstock, J. V., ‘Demystifying the euro in European Financial Centre relations: London and Frankfurt, 2000–2001’, J. of Contemporary European Studies, 13/2, pp. 143–58.Google Scholar
Comin-Comin, F., ‘El nuevo papel de la CECA y las cajas ante las mayores exigencias de financiacion del estado (1957–1963)’, Papeles de economía española, 105–106, pp. 2747.Google Scholar
Ferguson, N., ‘The first “Eurobonds”’, in Goetzmann, and Rouwenhorst, (eds.), The origins of value, pp. 313–26.Google Scholar
Fiorentini, R., ‘The international role of the euro and the relationship between EU and IMF’, Politico, 70/1, pp. 3555.Google Scholar
Franz, N., ‘Der Finanzplatz Luxemburg als Ergebnis wirtschaftlichen Bedarfs, politischen Willens und europäischer Integration’, in Merki, (ed.), Europas Finanzzentren, pp. 149–65.Google Scholar
Gutnik, V., ‘Evropeiskii Ekonomicheskii i valiutnyi soiuz: predvaritel'nye itogi I perspektiviy razvitiia’ [European Economic and Monetary Union: preliminary results and prospects], Mirovaia ekonomika i mezhdunarodnye otnosheniia, 5, pp. 315.Google Scholar
Holtfrerich, C. L., ‘Frankfurts Weg zu einem europäischen Finanzzentrum’, in Merki, (ed.), Europas Finanzzentren, pp. 5381.Google Scholar
Kaplan, J. J., ‘Networks and institutions in the origins and operations of the European payments Union’, in Dumoulin, (ed.), Réseaux économiques et construction européenne, pp. 381–90.Google Scholar
Knudsen, A. C. L., ‘The politics of financing the community and the fate of the first British membership application’, J. of European Integration History, 11/2, pp. 1130Google Scholar
Magnifico, G., L'euro: ragioni e lezioni di un successo sofferto, Rome: Luiss University Press.Google Scholar
Merki, C. M. (ed.) Europas Finanzzentren. Geschichte und Bedeutung im 20. Jh., Frankfurt/M: Campus Verlag.Google Scholar
Mittag, J., ‘Integration durch Kommunikation: der Bankier Friedrich Carl von Oppenheim und die Europäische Integration’, in Mittag, J. and Wessels, W. (eds.), ‘Der kölsche Europäer’. Friedrich Carl von Oppenheim und die europäische Einigung, Münster, Aschendorff, pp. 31183.Google Scholar
Straumann, T., ‘Finanzplatz und Pfadabhängigkeit: die Bundesrepublik, die Schweiz und die Vertreibung der Euromärkte (1955–1980)’, in Merki, (ed.), Europas Finanzzentren, pp. 245–68.Google Scholar
Wilson, J., ‘Le groupe de Bellagio: origines et premiers pas’, in Dumoulin, (ed.), Réseaux économiques et construction européenne, pp. 381410.Google Scholar
Bähr, J. and Gravey, M., ‘Les grandes banques allemandes et leurs activités dans l'Europe occidentale occupée, 1940–1944’, Histoire, Economie et Société, 24/4, pp. 495511.Google Scholar
Banken, R. and Gravey, M., ‘Les activités métaux précieux de la Degussa dans l'Europe occupée, 1939–1945’, Histoire, Economie et Société, 24/4, pp. 473–93.Google Scholar
Barendregt, J., ‘Zwischen London und Deutschland: Das Finanzzentrum Amsterdam im 20. Jh.’, in Merki, (ed.), Europas Finanzzentren Jh., pp. 97123.Google Scholar
Eichengreen, B., ‘The great detour: European money and banking in the second half of the 20th century’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 384400.Google Scholar
Landesmann, M. A., ‘Globalisation today and 100 years ago: European banks and the transformation of central and eastern Europe’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 456–81.Google Scholar
Mathis, F., ‘Vom Zweiten Weltkrieg zum Wirtschaftswunder. Unterbrechung und Fortsetzung der Industrialisierung in Europa’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 288316.Google Scholar
Meier, R. T., ‘Vom Boten zum Bit: Zur Geschichte der Technologien an den Wertpapierbörsen’, in Merki, (ed.), Europas Finanzzentren, pp. 269–93.Google Scholar
Merki, C. M. (ed.), Europas Finanzzentren. Geschichte und Bedeutung im 20. Jh., Frankfurt/M: Campus Verlag.Google Scholar
Paulet, E., European banking: historical roots and modern challenges, Paris: Hermès science/Lavoisier.Google Scholar
Posner, E., ‘Sources of institutional change: the supranational origins of Europe's new stock markets’, World Politics, 58/1, pp. 140.Google Scholar
Jensen-Eriksen, N., ‘Just rhetoric? The United Kingdom and the question of Western economic aid to Finland, 1950–1962’, in Eloranta, J. and Ojala, J. (eds.), East-West Trade and the Cold War, Jyväskylä: University of Jyväskylä, pp. 93111.Google Scholar
Adam, C., Cobham, D. and Girardin, E., ‘Monetary frameworks and institutional constraints: UK monetary policy reaction functions, 1985–2003’, Oxford Bulletin of Economics and Statistics, 67/4, pp. 497516.Google Scholar
Baker, M. and Collins, M., ‘London as an international banking centre, 1958–1980’, in Bussière, and Cassis, (eds.), London and Paris as international financial centres in the twentieth century, Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 247–64.Google Scholar
Budd, A., Black Wednesday: a re-examination of Britain's experience in the exchange rate mechanism, London: Institute of Economic Affairs.Google Scholar
Bull, H. W., To their credit: a history of the Association of Banking Teachers, Birmingham: Tudor Rose.Google Scholar
Bussière, E. and Cassis, Y. (eds.), London and Paris as international financial centres in the twentieth century, Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Consoli, D., ‘The dynamics of technological change in UK retail banking services: an evolutionary perspective’, Research Policy, 34/4, pp. 461–80.Google Scholar
Cutler, T., ‘“Managerialism avant la lettre?” The debate on accounting in the NHS hospitals in the 1950s’, in Berridge, V. and Loughlin, K. (eds.), Medicine, the market and the mass media: producing health in the Twentieth century, New York: Routledge, pp. 125–45.Google Scholar
Finlay, S., Consumer credit fundamentals, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.Google Scholar
Gorsky, M., Mohan, J. and Willis, T., ‘From hospital contributory schemes to health cash plans: the mutual ideal in British health care after 1948’, J. of Social Policy, 34/3, pp. 447–67.Google Scholar
Gorsky, M., Mohan, J. and Willis, T., ‘Hospital contributory schemes and the NHS debates 1937–1946: the rejection of social insurance in the British welfare state?’, 20th Century British History, 16/2, pp. 170–92.Google Scholar
Hickson, K., The IMF crisis of 1976 and British politics, New York: I. B. Tauris.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jack, L., ‘Stocks of knowledge, simplification and unintended consequences: the persistence of post-war accounting practices in UK agriculture’, Management Accounting Research, 16/1, pp. 5979.Google Scholar
King, M. R., ‘Epistemic communities and the diffusion of ideas: central bank reform in the United Kingdom’, West European Politics, 28/1, pp. 94123.Google Scholar
Matthews, D., ‘London and county securities: a case study in audit and regulatory failure’, Accounting Auditing & Accountability J., 18/4, pp. 518–36.Google Scholar
Michie, R. C., ‘Der Aufstieg der “City of London” als Finanzplatz: vom Inlandsgeschäft zum “Offshore”-Zentrum?’, in Merki, (ed.), Europas Finanzzentren, pp. 2351.Google Scholar
Mitchell, F. and Pong, C., ‘Accounting for a disappearance: a contribution to the history of the value added statement in the UK’, Accounting Historians J., 32/2, pp. 173–99.Google Scholar
Murphy, C. J., ‘SOE's foreign currency transactions’, Intelligence and National Security, 20/1, pp. 191208.Google Scholar
Roberts, R., ‘London as an international financial centre, 1980–2000: global powerhouse or Wimbledon EC2?’, in Bussière, and Cassis, (eds.), London and Paris, pp. 287312.Google Scholar
Robertson, F., ‘The aesthetics of authenticity. Printed Banknotes as industrial currency’, Technology and Culture, 46/1, pp. 3150.Google Scholar
Schenk, C., ‘Crisis and opportunity: the policy environment of international banking in the city of London, 1958–1980’, in Bussière, and Cassis, (eds.), London and Paris, pp. 207–28.Google Scholar
Soroka, S. N. and Wlezien, C., ‘Opinion-policy dynamics: public preferences and public expenditure in the United Kingdom’, British J. of Political Science, 47/4, pp. 569–93.Google Scholar
Stanton, J., ‘Intensive care: Measurement and audit in an expensive growth area of medicine’, in Berridge, V. (ed.), Making health policy: Networks in research and policy after 1945, Amsterdam: Rodopi, 243–73.Google Scholar
Treadgold, M., ‘Colonial currency boards: the seigniorage issue’, History of Economics Rev., 41, pp. 126–41.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Abe de Jong, A .R. and Hogfeldt, P., ‘Financing and control in the Netherlands: a historical perspective, in Morck, R. (ed.), A history of corporate governance around the world: family business groups to professional managers. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, pp. 467516.Google Scholar
Arnoldus, D. and Dankers, J., ‘Management consultancies in the Dutch banking sector, 1960s and 1970s’, Business History, 47/4, pp. 553–68.Google Scholar
Van Tielhof, M., ‘The predecessors of ABN AMRO and the expropriation of Jewish assets in the Netherlands’, Financial History Rev., 12/1, pp. 87108.Google Scholar
‘La politique économique et financière du général de Gaulle 1958–1969’, Cahiers de la Fondation Charles de Gaulle, 15, pp. 7158.Google Scholar
Aglan, A., ‘François Bloch-Lainé, un fonctionnaire résistant’, in Margairaz, (ed.), François Bloch-Lainé, pp. 118.Google Scholar
Andrieu, C., ‘François Bloch-Lainé, acteur et penseur critique du mouvement’, in Margairaz, (ed.), François Bloch-Lainé, pp. 1934.Google Scholar
Auger, V. (ed.), ‘Table ronde: Des années soixante à aujourd'hui, la marche vers l'euro’, D'or et d'argent, pp. 8798.Google Scholar
Barjot, D. and Berneron-Couvenhes, M-F. (eds.), ‘Concessions et optimisation des investissements publics’, Entreprises et histoire, 38, pp. 5138.Google Scholar
Bensadon, D., ‘La frontière comptable de l'entité groupe: évolution du concept de périmètre de consolidation des comptes du milieu des années 1960 a la loi du 3 janvier 1985’, Entreprises et Histoire, 39, pp. 822.Google Scholar
Berthereau, D., ‘Le contrôle d'une entreprise concessionnaire par la Commission de vérification des comptes des entreprises publiques: le cas du tunnel du Mont-Blanc, 1965–1971’, in Barjot, and Berneron-Couvenhes, (eds.), ‘Concessions et optimisation des investissements publics’, Entreprises et histoire, 38, pp. 8495.Google Scholar
Blondeau, C., ‘Banque, assurance, bancassurance, assurfinance, lignes de partages: une specificité française?’, Entreprises et histoire, 39, pp. 91114.Google Scholar
Bussière, E., ‘French banks and the Eurobonds issue market during the 1960s’, in Bussière, and Cassis, (eds.), London and Paris, pp. 265–86.Google Scholar
Bussière, E. (ed.), Michel Debré, un réformateur aux Finances 1966–1968. Journée d'études tenue à Bercy le 8 janvier 2004, Paris: Comité pour l'histoire économique et financière de la France.Google Scholar
Casanova, J-C., ‘Jean Monnet, un visionnaire pragmatique: “ouverture, échange, communication?”’, in Le Roy Ladurie, E., and Bourgeois, G. (eds.), Ouverture, société, pouvoir: de l'Edit de Nantes à la chute du communisme, Paris: Fayard, pp. 151–71.Google Scholar
Cortesse, P., ‘La politique budgétaire de Michel Debré’, in Bussière, (ed.), Michel Debré, pp. 2536.Google Scholar
Descamps, F., ‘Michel Debré et la réforme du ministère des Finances: continuités et innovations 1938–1968’, in Bussière, (ed.), Michel Debré, pp. 145–82.Google Scholar
Descamps, F., ‘François Bloch-Lainé et la réforme de l'Etat: de l'action au magistère moral 1946–1996’, in Margairaz, (ed.), François Bloch-Lainé, pp. 157232.Google Scholar
Dupont-Fauville, A., ‘Michel Debré ministre de l'Economie et des Finances’, in Bussière, (ed.), Michel Debré, pp. 512.Google Scholar
Feiertag, O., ‘The international opening-up of the Paris Bourse: overdraft-economy curbs and market dynamics’, in Bussière, and Cassis, (eds.), London and Paris, pp. 229–46.Google Scholar
Fridenson, P. and Sardais, C., ‘L'Etat actionnaire, banquier et consultant: François Bloch-Lainé et le double problème de financement de la Régie Renault de 1947 à 1952’, in Margairaz, (ed.), François Bloch-Lainé, pp. 5172.Google Scholar
Godefroy, T. and Lacoumes, P., ‘Justice et argent sale. De la non-ingérence à l'auto-contrôle, l’évolution des responsabilités du banquier', in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 211–23.Google Scholar
Karfakis, C., Sidiropoulos, M., and Trabelsi, J., ‘Has the ‘franc fort’ exchange rate policy affected the inflationary dynamics? Theory and new evidence', International Economic J., 19/3, pp. 379–96.Google Scholar
Kocher-Marboeuf, E., ‘Les combats de Michel Debré pour le rayonnement économique et financier de la France dans le monde’, in Bussière, (ed.), Michel Debré, pp. 127–46.Google Scholar
Lambert, C., Once a dealer. 50 years of ACI, The Financial Markets Association, Paris: P&L Services Ltd.Google Scholar
Levy, J., ‘La CGT au Crédit du Nord, 1949–1974’, in Bressol, E., Dreyfus, M. and Hedde, J. (eds.), La CGT dans les années 1950: Actes du colloque tenu à Montreuil au siège de la CGT les 20 et 21 novembre 2003, Rennes: Presses universitaires de Rennes, pp. 279–86.Google Scholar
Margairaz, M. (ed.), François Bloch-Lainé, fonctionnaire, financier, citoyen. Journée d'études tenue à Bercy le 25 février 2003, Paris: Comité pour l'histoire économique et financière de la France.Google Scholar
Margairaz, M., ‘Les deux septennats à la tête de la Caisse des dépôts et consignations (1953–1967): François Bloch-Lainé, acteur principal d'une mutation réussie?’, in Margairaz, (ed.), François Bloch-Lainé, pp. 103–26.Google Scholar
de Montricher, N., and Lascoumes, P., ‘Problèmes de construction juridique et judiciaire du profit légitime: le cas du délit d'initié’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 117–29.Google Scholar
Nougaret, R. and Plessis, A., ‘Réformer l'entreprise: François Bloch-Lainé au Crédit lyonnais (1967–1974)’, in Margairaz, (ed.), François Bloch-Lainé, pp. 127–56.Google Scholar
Quenouëlle-Corre, L., ‘The state, banks and financing of investments in France from World War II to the 1970s’, Financial History Rev., 12/1, pp. 6386.Google Scholar
Quenouëlle-Corre, L., ‘Le directeur du Trésor et le financement des entreprises (1947–1952)’, in Margairaz, (ed.), François Bloch-Lainé, pp. 73102.Google Scholar
Quenouëlle-Corre, L., ‘Les réformes financières et bancaires de 1966–1967’, in Bussière, (ed.), Michel Debré, pp. 85118.Google Scholar
Rouvillois, P., ‘La politique fiscale de Michel Debré, ministre de l'Economie et des Finances, de janvier 1966 à mai 1968’, in Bussière, (ed.), Michel Debré, pp. 6778.Google Scholar
Samuel, P., ‘Regards sur Michel Debré’, in Bussière, (ed.), Michel Debré, pp. 119–26.Google Scholar
Straus, A., ‘The future of the Paris market as an international financial centre from the point of view of European integration’, in Bussière, and Cassis, (eds.), London and Paris, pp. 313–22.Google Scholar
Straus, A., ‘Auf, Ab, Auf: Der Finanzplatz Paris im 20. Jh’, in Merki, (ed.), Europas Finanzzentren. Geschichte und Bedeutung im 20. Jh., Frankfurt/M: Campus Verlag, pp. 8396.Google Scholar
Tertrais, H., ‘Le rétablissement de la souveraineté financière de la France en Indochine’, in Margairaz, (ed.), François Bloch-Lainé, pp. 3550.Google Scholar
Touchelay, B., ‘Les professionnels de la comptabilité vus par les administrations fiscales françaises des années 1920 à la fin des années 1960: experts, faussaires ou charlatans?’, Entreprises et histoire, 39, pp. 5976.Google Scholar
Tristram, F., Une fiscalité pour la croissance: la direction générale des impôts et la politique fiscale en France de 1948 à la fin des années 1960, Paris, Comité pour l'Histoire économique et financière de la France, www.minefi.gouv.fr/notes_bleues/nbb/nbb298/fisca1.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tristram, F., ‘Contexte politique et conjoncture économique lors du passage de Michel debré, au ministère de l’Économie et des Finances, janvier 1966-mai 1968', in Bussière, (ed.), Michel Debré, pp. 1324.Google Scholar
Die Deutsche Bank in Frankfurt am Main, Munich: Piper.Google Scholar
Adams, K. H., Parteienfinanzierung in Deutschland. Entwicklung der Einnahmestrukturen politischer Parteien oder eine Sittengeschichte über Parteien, Geld und Macht, Marburg: Tectum Verl.Google Scholar
Clark, G. L. and Wójcik, D., ‘Financial valuation of the German model: the negative relationship between ownership concentration and stock market returns, 1997–2001’, Economic Geography, 81/1, pp. 1129.Google Scholar
Corneo, G., ‘The rise and likely fall of the German income tax, 1958–2005’, CESifo Economic Studies, 51/1, pp. 159–86.Google Scholar
Dohna, J., Die ‘Jüdischen Konten’ der Fürstlich Castell'schen Credit-Cassen und des Bankhauses Karl Meyer KG, Neustadt/Aisch: Kommissionsverlag Degener.Google Scholar
Fiedler, M., ‘Zur Rolle des Vertrauens in der ‘Deutschland AG’: Verflechtungen zwischen Finanz- und Nichtfinanzunternehmen im 20. Jh.', Jahrbuch für Wirtschaftsgeschichte, 1, pp. 93106.Google Scholar
Fitzenberger, B. and Kohn, K., ‘Gleicher Lohn fur gleiche Arbeit? Zum Zusammenhang zwischen Gewerkschaftsmitgliedschaft und Lohnstruktur in Westdeutschland 1985–1997’, Zeitschrift f. Arbeitsmarktforschung, 38/2–3, pp. 125–46.Google Scholar
Gebauer, H. J., Als die Calwer Handelsherren Geld verliehen. Geschichte der Calwer Banken, Calw: Stadtarchiv.Google Scholar
Gersch, T., Klinke, S. and Weschke, B., ‘Diawerbung der Sparkassen’, Archiv und Wirtschaft, 38/1, pp. 2637.Google Scholar
Hammerschmidt, P., Wohlfahrtsverbände in der Nachkriegszeit. Reorganisation und Finanzierung der Spitzenverbände der freien Wohlfahrtspflege 1945–1961, Weinheim: Juventa Verl.Google Scholar
Heske, G., ‘Die gesamtwirtschaftliche Entwicklung in Ostdeutschland 1970 bis 2000 – neue Ergebnisse einer volkswirtschaftlichen Gesamtrechnung’, Historical Social Research, 30/2, pp. 238–28.Google Scholar
Hilger, S., ‘Zur Genese des “German model”. Die Bedeutung des Ordoliberalismus für die Ausgestaltung der bundesdeutschen Wettbewerbsordnung nach dem Zweiten Weltkrieg’, in Windolf, A. (ed.), Finanzmarkt-Kapitalismus. Analysen zum Wandel von Produktionsregimen, Wiesbaden: VS, Verlag f. Sozialwissenschaft, pp. 222–41.Google Scholar
Jurk, G., ‘Als Berater der Bank von Mosambik’, in Voß, M. (ed.), Wir haben Spuren hinterlassen! Die DDR in Mosambik. Erlebnisse, Erfahrungen und Erkenntnisse aus drei Jahrzehnten, Münster: Lit, pp. 328–87.Google Scholar
Löffler, B., ‘Währungsrecht, Bundesbank und deutsche “Stabilitätskultur” nach 1945. Überlegungen zu mentalitätsgeschichtlichen Dimensionen normativ-institutioneller Regelungen’, in Seifert, M. and Helm, W. (eds.), Recht und Religion im Alltagsleben. Perspektiven der Kulturforschung. Festschrift für Walter Hartinger zum 65. Geburtstag, Passau: Klinger, pp. 6182.Google Scholar
Ochsen, C. and Welsch, H., ‘Technology, trade, and income distribution in West Germany: a factor-share analysis, 1976–1994’, J. of Applied Economics, 8/2, pp. 321345.Google Scholar
Plumpe, W., ‘Das Ende des deutschen Kapitalismus’, West End, 2/2, pp. 123.Google Scholar
Robert, C. and Valentin, J-M., Le commerce de l'esprit: économie et culture en Allemagne aujourd'hui, Paris: Presses de l'Université de Paris-Sorbonne.Google Scholar
Roesler, J., ‘Die Wirtschafts- und Finanzbeziehungen der DDR zum Westen in den 70er und 80er Jahren’, in Timmermann, H. (ed.), Die DDR in Europa – zwischen Isolation und Öffnung, Münster: Lit, pp. 134–52.Google Scholar
Schlegelmilch, C., ‘“Und da kann man nicht plotzlich volkseigen umdenken.” Wirtschaften zwischen Gewinnorientierung und Verstaatlichung. Firmengeschichte eines Mittelstandlers in der DDR’, Historical Social Research, 30/2, pp. 96129.Google Scholar
Tilly, R. H., ‘Trust and mistrust: banks, giant debtors, and enterprise crises in Germany, 1960–2002’, Jahrbuch für Wirtschaftsgeschichte, 1, pp. 107–38.Google Scholar
Ullrich, A.Finanzplatz Berlin. Entstehung und Entwicklung. Eine theoriengeleitete historisch-empirische Analyse, Sternenfels: Verlag Wissenschaft und Praxis.Google Scholar
Waesche, N., ‘“Rational exuberance”. Wirtschaftsgeschichtliche Kommentare zu Finanzeuphorie und Gründeroptimismus während der New Economy’, Jahrbuch für Wirtschaftsgeschichte, 1, pp. 165–80.Google Scholar
Weidner, M., ‘Die Beschäftigung von Frauen in der Bankwirtschaft am Beispiel der Bayerischen Hypotheken- und Wechsel-Bank AG von 1835 bis 1985 mit einem Ausblick auf die Bayerische Vereinsbank’, Bankhistorisches Archiv, 31/2, pp. 107–33.Google Scholar
Storie di Resistenza: il contributo delle lavoratrici e dei lavoratori del settore creditizio e finanziario, Rome: Fondazione Giuseppe Di Vittorio/Ediesse.Google Scholar
A'Hearn, B., ‘Finance-led divergence in the regions of Italy’, Financial History Rev., 12/1, pp. 741.Google Scholar
Antonelli, F., ‘Il denaro dello straniero’, Sociologia, 39/2, pp. 91–6.Google Scholar
Belli, F. and Mazzini, F. (eds.), I primi dieci anni della Fondazione Monte dei Paschi di Siena, Ospedaletto: Pacini.Google Scholar
Belli, F. and Mazzini, F., ‘Le fondazioni di origine bancaria: il quadro generale’, in Belli, and Mazzini, (eds.), I primi dieci, pp. 984.Google Scholar
Boccia, E., ‘Freno o acceleratore. Sul mercato finanziario italiano negli anni “40 e”’, Riv. di Storia Finanziaria, 15, pp. 3348. www.delpt.unina.it/stof/indiceGoogle Scholar
Borelli, V., Banca padrona, Milan: Rizzoli.Google Scholar
Botarelli, S., ‘Le scelte di politica tributaria negli anni delle riforme (1948–1971)’, Riv. di diritto finanziario e scienza delle finanze, 64/1, pp. 5486.Google Scholar
Capece, S., ‘Il non profit. L'interpretazione del fenomeno: spunti di riflessione sul rapporto tra le fondazioni di origine bancaria e il non profit italiano’, in Belli, and Mazzini, (eds.), I primi dieci, pp. 213–32.Google Scholar
Chiapparono, F., ‘Spunti e tracce di ricerca sulla storia della banca nelle Marche e nell’ Umbria del secondo dopoguerra', Proposte e ricerche, 28/55, p. 132–55.Google Scholar
Carboni, M., Muzzarelli, M. G. and Zamagni, V., Sacri recinti del credito. Sedi e storie dei Monti di Pietà in Emilia-Romagna, Venice: Marsiglio.Google Scholar
Cibej, N., ‘Poslovanje denarnih zavodov v coni B svobodnega trzaskega ozemlja’ [The functioning of monetary institutions in zone B of the free territory of Triest], Acta Histriae, 13/2, pp. 423–46.Google Scholar
De Luca, G. and Pizzorni, G., Storie Incrociate. Banca, imprese, territorio, Legnano: Banca di Legnano.Google Scholar
Dimitri, N. and Sani, L., ‘L'impatto economico dell'attività erogativi della Fondazione MPS: un'analisi aggregata’, in Belli, and Mazzini, (eds.), I primi dieci, pp. 177–88.Google Scholar
Di Pietra, R., Cocci, M., Lopane, T. and Ruggieri, A., ‘Le dimensioni economico-aziendali della Fondazione MPS. I primi dieci anni di una solida storia’, in Belli, and Mazzini, (eds.), I primi dieci, pp. 85150.Google Scholar
Felice, E., ‘Il reddito delle regioni italiane nel 1938 e nel 1951. una stima basata sul costo del lavoro’, Riv. di Storia Economica, 21/1, pp. 330.Google Scholar
Finzi, D., Un paese e la sua banca: storia della Cassa rurale di Anghiari, Città di Castello: Petruzzi.Google Scholar
Gabbi, G., ‘La gestione finanziaria del portafoglio di proprietà della Fondazione MPS’, in Belli, and Mazzini, (eds.), I primi dieci, pp. 151–76.Google Scholar
Kuder, M., ‘Portare i soldi in Svizzera: contrabbando di capitali ed evasione fiscale nell'Italia del boom’, Contemporanea, 2004, 7, pp. 609–21.Google Scholar
Marinello, A., ‘Il regime tributario applicabile alle fondazioni bancarie: profili evolutivi e rilievi critici’, in Belli, and Mazzini, (eds.), I primi dieci, pp. 189212.Google Scholar
Maccaglia, F., ‘L'espace économique mafieux au tournant du siècle: entre mutations structurelles et dynamiques conjoncturelles’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 107–16.Google Scholar
Mazzoni, M., ‘La deriva del capitalismo finanziario italiano: dalla cronaca giornalistica alla ricostruzione storica’, Passato e Presente, 2004, 22/63, pp. 124–39.Google Scholar
Montini, M., ‘Le fondazioni di origine bancaria nel quadro giuridico europeo’, in Belli, and Mazzini, (eds.), I primi dieci, pp. 233–48.Google Scholar
Oddo, G. and Pons, G., L'intrigo: banche e risparmiatori nell'era Fazio, Milan: Feltrinelli.Google Scholar
Rinaldi, A. and Vasta, M., ‘The structure of Italian capitalism, 1952–1972: new evidence using the interlocking directorates technique’, Financial History Rev., 12/1, pp. 173–98.Google Scholar
Piluso, G., Mediobanca: tra regole e mercato, Milan: Egea.Google Scholar
Romani, M. A., La banca dei milanesi: storia della Banca popolare di Milano, Rome: Laterza.Google Scholar
Spadavecchia, A., ‘State subsidies and the sources of company finance in Italian industrial districts, 1951–1991’, Enterprise and Society, 6/4, pp. 571–80.Google Scholar
Spadavecchia, A., ‘Financing industrial districts in Italy, 1971–91: a private venture?’, Business History, 47/4, pp. 569–93.Google Scholar
Tedesco, L., ‘Einaudi, la Banca d'Italia e la stretta creditizia. L'operato dell'istituto di emissione negli anni della ricostruzione’, Nuova Storia Contemporanea, 8/2 (2004), pp. 159–62.Google Scholar
Turani, G., I quattro dell'OPA selvaggia, Milan: Sperling & Kupfer.Google Scholar
Varni, A., Storia dell'Associazione fra le casse di risparmio italiane: 1951–1990, Rome: Laterza.Google Scholar
Charguéraud, M-A., La Suisse lynchée par l'Amérique: lettre ouverte au juge Korman, 1998–2004, Geneva: Labor et Fides.Google Scholar
Kienast, L. and Stutzer, A., ‘Demokratische Beteiligung und Staatsausgaben: die Auswirkungen des Frauenstimmrechts’, Schweizerische Zeitschrift fur Volkswirtschaft und Statistik, 141/4, pp. 617–50.Google Scholar
Maissen, T., Verweigerte Erinnerung: Nachrichtenlose Vermögen und die Schweizer Weltkriegsdebatte 1989–2004, Zurich: Neue Zürcher Zeitung.Google Scholar
Rüegg, E. and Widmer, T., ‘Konsequenzen von Staatsreformen für die demokratische Steuerungsfähigkeit. Vergleichende Analyse zu vier Schweizer Kantonen’, Politische Vierteljahresschrift, 46/1, pp. 86109.Google Scholar
Tanner, J., ‘Der diskrete Charme der Gnomen: Entwicklung und Perspektiven des Finanzplatzes Schweiz’, in Merki, (ed.), Europas Finanzzentren, pp. 127–47.Google Scholar
AA, VV., ‘Historia de las cajas de ahorros: nuevas perspectivas’, Papeles de Economía Española, 105–6, Madrid: Fundación de las Cajas de Ahorros.Google Scholar
Asensio del Arco, E. and Hernández Andreu, J., ‘España y el Sistema Monetario de Bretton Woods’, Información Comercial Española, 827, pp. 2543.Google Scholar
Banco de España Servicio de Estudios, El análisis de la economía española, Madrid: Banco de España.Google Scholar
Bernabe Perez, M. M. and Marin Hernandez, S., ‘Un analisis economico-contable de la actividad de las cajas de ahorros espanolas (1975–2000)’, Papeles de economía española, 105–6, pp. 309–28.Google Scholar
Carnero Lorenzo, F. and Nuez-Yanez, J. S., ‘La implicacion de las cajas de ahorros en la economia Canaria’, Papeles de economía española, 105–6, pp. 188206.Google Scholar
Coronas Vida, L. J., ‘Las cajas de ahorros de Castilla y Leon y su influencia en el desarrollo economico regional’, Papeles de economía española, 105–6, pp. 207–26.Google Scholar
Del Arco, E. A. and Gonzalez, N. C. (eds.), Espana y Bretton Woods, Madrid: Delta Publicaciones Universitarias.Google Scholar
Gutierrez Nieto, B., ‘Antecedentes del microcredito. Lecciones del pasado para las experiencias actuales’, CIRIEC Espana, Rev. de Economia Publica, Social y Cooperativa, 51, pp. 2550.Google Scholar
Hernangomez Cristobal, F., ‘La solvencia de las cajas de ahorros: 1994–2004’, Papeles de economía española, 105–6, pp. 329–37.Google Scholar
Ledesma-Rodríguez, F. J., Navarro-Ibáñez, M., Pérez-Rodríguez, J. V. and Sosvilla-Rivero, S., ‘Regímenes cambiarios de iure y de facto. El caso de la peseta/dólar, 1965–1998’, Rev. de Historia Económica, 23-3, pp. 541–61.Google Scholar
Parache, F. V. and Álvarez, G. J. (eds.), Crisis cambiarias y financieras: una comparación de dos crisis, Madrid: Ediciones Pirámide, 2003.Google Scholar
Rubio Lara, J., ‘Les peines pécuniaires dans le nouveau Code Pénal espagnol’, in Garnot, (ed.), Justice et argent, pp. 319–24.Google Scholar
Rojo Duque, L. Á., ‘El largo camino de la política monetaria española hacia el euro’, Información Comercial Española, 826, pp. 7384.Google Scholar
Sánchez Soler, M., Los banqueros de Franco, Madrid: Oberón.Google Scholar
Torres-Villanueva, E., ‘Intervencionismo estatal y cambios en el marco regulador de las cajas de ahorros durante el primer franquismo (1939–1957)’, Papeles de economía española, 105–6, pp. 1626.Google Scholar
Varela Parache, F. and Varela Parache, M., ‘España y los organismos económicos internacionales’, Información Comercial Española, 826, pp. 167–77.Google Scholar
Avramov, I., Silata na parite: istoriia na parite i kredita po bulgarskite zemi, Sofia: Siela.Google Scholar
Tsaliki, P. and Tsoulfidis, L., ‘Marxian theory of competition and the concept of regulating capital: evidence from Greek manufacturing’, Rev. of Radical Political Economics, 37/1, pp. 522.Google Scholar
Chudják, F., ‘Menová reforma v ceskoslovensku roku 1945 (slovenské predstavy a poziadavky)’ [The 1945 monetary reform in Czechoslovakia and related Slovak demands], Historický Casopis, 53/1, pp. 7192.Google Scholar
Cechlovska, S., ‘Historie a soucasny stav ceskeho hypotecniho bankovnictvi’ [The history and the present state of Czech mortgage banking], Ekonomie a management, 1, pp. 2632.Google Scholar
Hanousek, J. and Filer, R. K., ‘Consumers’ opinion of inflation bias due to quality improvements', Economic Development and Cultural Change, 53/1, pp. 235–54.Google Scholar
Jancik, D. and Kubu, E., t‘Arizace’ a arizátori: drobný a strední zidovský majetek v úverech Kreditanstalt der Deutschen (1939–45), Prague: Nakl. Karolinum.Google Scholar
Karlen, S., Versicherungen in Liechtenstein zur Zeit des, Nationalsozialismus. Untersuchungen zu nachrichtenlosen Vermögenswerten bei liechtensteinischen Banken in der NS-Zeit: Bericht der Ernst & Young AG gemäss Mandatsverträgen vom 9. Juli 2002 und 5. Mai 2003 zwischen der Unabhängigen Historikerkommission Liechtenstein Zweiter Weltkrieg und der Ernst & Young AG, Vaduz: Historischer Verein für das Fürstentum Liechtenstein.Google Scholar
Kössner, B., ‘Kunstsponsoringkonzeptionen am Beispiel von Österreichischer Länderbank, Creditanstalt und Bank Austria Creditanstalt’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 368–82.Google Scholar
Lacina, V., ‘Tschechische Banken und ihre Verbindungen zum österreichischen Bankwesen bis 1945’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 239–52.Google Scholar
Merki, C., ‘Der Finanzplatz Liechtenstein: Zürichs attraktive Außenstelle’, in Merki, (ed.), Europas Finanzzentren, pp. 167–95.Google Scholar
Mooslechner, P., ‘Vom “ruinösen Wettbewerb” zur wettbewerbsfähigen Position auf einem um Osteuropa erweiterten Heimmarkt. Banken und Bankenpolitik in Österreich seit den 1970er Jahren’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 401–14.Google Scholar
Randa, G., ‘Die Integration von Bank Austria und Creditanstalt’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 437–54.Google Scholar
Sandgruber, R., ‘Banken und Sparkassen im Wiederaufbauboom der 1960er Jahre und die Philosophie des Sparen’, in Rathkolb, (ed.), Bank Austria Creditanstalt, pp. 350–67.Google Scholar
Sárközi, Z. and Katz, V., Magyar Általános Hitelbank RT, Budapest: Magyar Országos Levéltár.Google Scholar
Stintzky, O., ‘Une lecture institutionnelle de la construction des systèmes monétaires et bancaires dans les économies en transition d'Europe Centrale: Hongrie, Pologne, République tchèque’, Rev. des Etudes Slaves, 76/1, pp. 159–62.Google Scholar
Anan'ich, B. V., Kredit i banki v Rossii do nachala XX veka: Sankt-Peterburg i Moskva, St Petersburg: Izd-vo S.-Peterburgskogo universiteta.Google Scholar
Andresen, N. A., ‘Sikker som banken? Tillit og spareadferd i Russland 1991–1998’ [Safe as the bank? Trust and patterns of saving in Russia,1991–98], Nordisk Ost-Forum, 19/3, pp. 307–28.Google Scholar
Barnett, V., ‘Diskussiia o politicheskoi i ekonomicheskoi roli zolotovaliutnykh rezervov Rossii v gody Pervoi mirovoi voiny’, Vestnik Sankt Peterburgskogo universiteta, 4, pp. 4869.Google Scholar
Borodkin, L. and Ertz, S., ‘Forced labour and the need for motivation: wages and bonuses in the Stalinist camp system’, Comparative Economic Studies, 47/2, pp. 418–36.Google Scholar
Cherniavskii, A. and Vartapetov, K., ‘Fiscal decentralization and local government in the reform period’, Problems of Economic Transition, 47/11, pp. 1836.Google Scholar
Dudakov, A. P., ‘Rabotniki finansovoi sistemy v Velikoi Otechestvennoi Voine’ [Financial system employees during the Great Patriotic War], Finansy, 5, pp. 710.Google Scholar
Ertz, S., ‘Trading effort for freedom: workday credits in the Stalinist camp system’, Comparative Economic Studies, 47/2, pp. 476–91.Google Scholar
Ivanenko, V., ‘The statutory tax burden and its avoidance in transitional Russia’, Europe-Asia Studies, 57/7, pp. 1021–45.Google Scholar
Ivanovskii, Z. V. and Tychinina, L. V., Rossiia i mir–vchera, segodnia, zavtra: otechestvennyi i zarubezhnyi opyt ekonomicheskoi deiatel'nosti, Moscow: MGI im. E. R. Dashkovoi.Google Scholar
Kargin, V., Nauda un cilveki, Riga: Atena.Google Scholar
Kovalev, V. V., ‘Sushchnost’ i funktsii finansov firmy' [Finance of a firm: essence and functions], Vestnik Sankt Peterburgskogo universiteta, 1/5, pp. 61–9.Google Scholar
Kudrin, A. L., ‘Finansovaia sistema strany v gody Velikoi Otechestvennoi Voiny’ [The country's financial system during the Great Patriotic War], Finansy, 5, pp. 36.Google Scholar
Kuz'mich, S. A. I. and Shirokov, G., ‘Lishnie den'gi: k prichinam zamedleniia tempov razvitiia’ [Extra money: examining the rationale for slowing down the rate of development], Vostok, 1, pp. 91102.Google Scholar
Millar, J., ‘Bergson's Structure of Soviet Wages’, Comparative Economic Studies, 47/2, pp. 289–95.Google Scholar
Ogushi, A., ‘Money, property and the demise of the CPSU’, J. of Communist Studies and Transition Politics, 21/2, pp. 268–95.Google Scholar
Raev, V. M., ‘Chtoby imet’ boesposobnye vooruzhennye sily, nuzhno umet' schitat' i ekonomno raskhodovat' denezhnye sredstva' [In order to have efficient armed forces, it is necessary to be able to calculate and disburse funds economically], Voenno Istoricheskii Zhurnal, 1, pp. 34–8.Google Scholar
Auberg, V., ‘Le groupe de Bilderberg et l'intégration européenne jusqu'au milieu des années 1960. Une influence complexe', in Dumoulin, M. (ed.), Réseaux économiques et construction européenne / Economic networks and European integration, Brussels: PIE–P. Lang, 2004, pp. 411–30.Google Scholar
Beaverstock, J. V., ‘Demystifying the euro in European Financial Centre relations: London and Frankfurt, 2000–2001’, J. of Contemporary European Studies, 13/2, pp. 143–58.Google Scholar
Comin-Comin, F., ‘El nuevo papel de la CECA y las cajas ante las mayores exigencias de financiacion del estado (1957–1963)’, Papeles de economía española, 105–106, pp. 2747.Google Scholar
Ferguson, N., ‘The first “Eurobonds”’, in Goetzmann, and Rouwenhorst, (eds.), The origins of value, pp. 313–26.Google Scholar
Fiorentini, R., ‘The international role of the euro and the relationship between EU and IMF’, Politico, 70/1, pp. 3555.Google Scholar
Franz, N., ‘Der Finanzplatz Luxemburg als Ergebnis wirtschaftlichen Bedarfs, politischen Willens und europäischer Integration’, in Merki, (ed.), Europas Finanzzentren, pp. 149–65.Google Scholar
Gutnik, V., ‘Evropeiskii Ekonomicheskii i valiutnyi soiuz: predvaritel'nye itogi I perspektiviy razvitiia’ [European Economic and Monetary Union: preliminary results and prospects], Mirovaia ekonomika i mezhdunarodnye otnosheniia, 5, pp. 315.Google Scholar
Holtfrerich, C. L., ‘Frankfurts Weg zu einem europäischen Finanzzentrum’, in Merki, (ed.), Europas Finanzzentren, pp. 5381.Google Scholar
Kaplan, J. J., ‘Networks and institutions in the origins and operations of the European payments Union’, in Dumoulin, (ed.), Réseaux économiques et construction européenne, pp. 381–90.Google Scholar
Knudsen, A. C. L., ‘The politics of financing the community and the fate of the first British membership application’, J. of European Integration History, 11/2, pp. 1130Google Scholar
Magnifico, G., L'euro: ragioni e lezioni di un successo sofferto, Rome: Luiss University Press.Google Scholar
Merki, C. M. (ed.) Europas Finanzzentren. Geschichte und Bedeutung im 20. Jh., Frankfurt/M: Campus Verlag.Google Scholar
Mittag, J., ‘Integration durch Kommunikation: der Bankier Friedrich Carl von Oppenheim und die Europäische Integration’, in Mittag, J. and Wessels, W. (eds.), ‘Der kölsche Europäer’. Friedrich Carl von Oppenheim und die europäische Einigung, Münster, Aschendorff, pp. 31183.Google Scholar
Straumann, T., ‘Finanzplatz und Pfadabhängigkeit: die Bundesrepublik, die Schweiz und die Vertreibung der Euromärkte (1955–1980)’, in Merki, (ed.), Europas Finanzzentren, pp. 245–68.Google Scholar
Wilson, J., ‘Le groupe de Bellagio: origines et premiers pas’, in Dumoulin, (ed.), Réseaux économiques et construction européenne, pp. 381410.Google Scholar
Khan, S., Islam, F. and Ahmed, S., ‘The Asian crisis: an economic analysis of the causes’, J. of Developing Areas, 39/1, pp. 169–90.Google Scholar
Ahmadjian, C. and Robbins, G. E., ‘A clash of capitalisms: foreign shareholders and corporate restructuring in 1990s Japan’, American Sociological Rev., 70/3, pp. 451–71.Google Scholar
Bytheway, S. J., Nihon keizai to gaikoku shihon: 1858–1939 [Foreign capital and the Japanese economy, 1858–1939], Tokyo: Tosui Shobo.Google Scholar
Hara, Y., Oguri, T., Tinker, T., Jinnai, Y., Ishikawa, J. and Yamaji, H., ‘Japanese critical accounting’, Critical Perspectives on Accounting, 16/2, pp. 73150.Google Scholar
Hotori, E., ‘Senji taisei shita ni okeru okurasho ginko kensa: purudensu kisei toshite no sokumen o chushin ni’ [The wartime inspection of banks by the Ministry of Finance: focus on the “prudence” regulation], Shakai-Keizai Shigaku, 70/6, pp. 324.Google Scholar
Ishii, K., ‘Reconsideration of the financial history of Japan: from moneychangers to banks’, J. of Tokyo Keizai University, 242, pp. 5584.Google Scholar
Kato, K., ‘Senkan-ki nihon denki no kigyo baishu: kabushiki shutoku o chushin ni’ [Corporate acquisition in the electric power industry during the interwar period: stock acquisition], Shakai-Keizai Shigaku, 71/3, pp. 2547.Google Scholar
Konishi, M., ‘Bond underwriting syndicates organized by commercial banks: evidence from prewar Japan’, J. of the Japanese and International Economies, 19/3, pp. 303–21.Google Scholar
Okawa, H., ‘Kindai nihon ni okeru “jizen” to “fuon”: 1890 nen no akita shi ni okeru beika toki e no taio o chushin ni’ [‘Charity’ and ‘unrest’ in modern Japan: reactions to the inflation of rice prices in Akita in 1890], Rekishigaku Kenkyu, 8, pp. 119.Google Scholar
Okazaki, T., Sawada, M. and Yokoyama, K., ‘Measuring the extent and implications of director interlocking in the prewar Japanese banking industry’, J. of Economic History, 65/4, pp. 1082–115.Google Scholar
Saito, O., ‘Zenkindai keizai seicho no futatsu no patan: tokugawa nihon no hikaku shiteki itchi’ [Two patterns in premodern economic growth: Tokugawa Japan's place in historical comparison], Shakai-Keizai Shigaku, 70/5, pp. 323.Google Scholar
Sato, M. and Yago, K., ‘L’élite managériale au Japon: le cas des banques', in Godelier, E. (ed.), Entreprises et histoire, 41, pp. 7188.Google Scholar
Shirai, S., ‘Growing problems in the local public finance system of Japan’, Social Science Japan J., 8/2, pp. 213–38.Google Scholar
Shiratori, K., ‘Hosho hoko tokuyu no kaishu shori to nihon ginko, okurasho, 1927–1936 nen’ [The Ministry of Finance, the Bank of Japan, and the recovery of special compensatory loans,1927–36], Shakai-Keizai Shigaku, 70/6, pp. 7190.Google Scholar
Sugiyama, H., ‘Tekkogyo ni okeru shokumu kyu donyu to sono henyo: yahata seitetsu, shin nippon seitetsu, 1960–1971 nen’ [The introduction and transformation of job-based wages in the steel industry: a case study of Yahata Steel and Nippon Steel,1960–71], Shakai-Keizai Shigaku, 71/4, pp. 7190.Google Scholar
Tachibanaki, T., Confronting Income Inequality in Japan: A Comparative Analysis of Causes, Consequences, and Reform, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Yasuba, Y., ‘Sangyo kakumei no jidai no nihon no jisshitsu chingin: hikaku keizaishiteki apurochi’ [Real wages in the period of the Industrial Revolution in Japan: a comparative economic history approach], Shakai-Keizai Shigaku, 71/1, pp. 4960.Google Scholar
Atwell, W. S., ‘Another look at silver imports into China, ca. 1635–1644’, J. of World History, 16/4, pp. 467–90.Google Scholar
Benjamin, D., Brandt, L. and Giles, J., ‘The evolution of income inequality in rural China’, Economic Development and Cultural Change, 53/4, pp. 769824.Google Scholar
Bernhardt, K. L. F., Chang jiang xia you di qu de di zu, fu shui yu nong min de fan kang dou zheng, 1840–1950 [Rents, taxes, and peasant resistance], Shanghai: Shanghai shu dian chu ban she.Google Scholar
Bian, M. L., ‘Mingqing diandang he jiedai falü guifan de tiaozheng yu xiangcun shehui de wending’ [Readjustments of laws and regulations on pawning and loan activities and social stability of rural areas in the Ming-Qing period], Zhongguo Nongshi, 24/4, pp. 6675.Google Scholar
Bian, M. L., ‘A history of modern Shanghai banking: the rise and decline of China's finance capitalism’, Enterprise & Society, 6/2, pp. 305–8.Google Scholar
Bian, M. L., The making of the state enterprise system in modern China: the dynamics of institutional change, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cai, Q. and Hou, D., ‘20–30 Niandai hua yang yi zhen hui de xinyong hezuo shiyan’ [Experimentation with rural credit cooperatives by the China International Famine Relief Commission from the 1920s to the early 1930s], Zhongguo Nongshi, 24/1, pp. 7987.Google Scholar
Chao, K., ‘Yongdian zhi xia de tian pi jiage’ [The prices of land under the permanent tenancy system], Zhongguo Nongshi, 24/3, pp. 43–8.Google Scholar
Chen, H., ‘Qingdai de hegong yu caizheng’ [River engineering projects and public finance in the Qing dynasty], Qing Shi Yanjiu, 3, pp. 3342.Google Scholar
Chen, Y., Shanghai yin hang jiu shi nian [The ninety years of the Shanghai Commercial & Saving Bank, Ltd], Taibei Shi: Shanghai shang ye chu xu yin hang.Google Scholar
Cheng, L., Banking in modern China: entrepreneurs, professional managers, and the development of Chinese banks, 1897–1937, New York: Cambridge University Press, 2003.Google Scholar
Cho, H., Chinas langer Marsch in den Kapitalismus, Münster: Westfälisches Dampfboot.Google Scholar
Cui, H., ‘Qingdai baqi guanbing hongbai shi shangci yinliang shiliao’ [Resources on monetary allotments to the Eight Banners for weddings and funerals], Lishi Dang'an (Historical Archives), 1, pp. 812.Google Scholar
Ge, F., ‘Zhong-fa geng kuan an zhong de wuli zhaiquan wenti’ [The issue of interest-free bonds in the Sino-French dispute over Boxer indemnities], Jindaishi Yanjiu, 2, pp. 123–41.Google Scholar
Gong, G., ‘20 shijichu tianjin de jinrong fengchao jiqi yingdui jizhi’ [The Tianjin financial panic and response mechanisms in the early 20th century], Shixue Yueka, 2, pp. 111–22.Google Scholar
Goodstadt, L. F., Uneasy partners: the conflict between public interest and private profit in Hong Kong, Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press.Google Scholar
Hansen, V. and Mata-Fink, A., ‘How business was conducted on the Chinese silk road during the Tang dynasty, 618–907’, in Goetzmann, and Rouwenhorst, (eds.), The origins of value, pp. 4364.Google Scholar
Heilmann, S, ‘Regulatory innovation by Leninist means: communist party supervision in China's financial industry’, China Q., 181, pp. 121.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hui, Q., ‘Tax and fee reform, village autonomy, and central and local finance historical experience and realistic options’, Chinese Economy, 38/6, pp. 335.Google Scholar
Huppatz, D. J., ‘Globalizing corporate identity in Hong Kong: rebranding two banks’, J. of Design History, 18/4, pp. 357–69.Google Scholar
Kanada, S., ‘Honkon ni okeru shoki kabushiki kaisha to kajin toshi’ [Early joint-stock companies in Hong Kong and Chinese investment], Rekishigaku Kenkyu, 3, pp. 958.Google Scholar
Khan, A .R. and Riskin, C., ‘China's household income and its distribution, 1995 and 2002’, China Q., 182, pp. 356–84.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Koo, B., ‘Jingqi de bizhi gaige fang'an yu wan Qing bizhi wenti’ [J. W. Jenks's program for currency reform and the currency problem in late Qing China], Jindaishi Yanjiu, 3, pp. 117–43.Google Scholar
Lewis, T., In partnership: KPMG'S 60 years in Hong Kong and 20 years in China, Hong Kong: KPMG.Google Scholar
Li, H., ‘Family life cycle and peasant income in socialist China: evidence from Qin village’, J. of Family History, 30/1, pp. 121–38.Google Scholar
Liang, L., ‘Rejection or acceptance: finding reasons for the late Qing magistrate's comments on land and debt petitions’, Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, 68/2, pp. 276–94.Google Scholar
Ma, C., ‘1920 dao 1930 niandai Shanghai jinrongye dui xinyong guanli de tichang he zheng xin jiguo zhi chuxian’ [The promotion of credit management and the emergence of credit information services in Shanghai during the 1920s–30s], J. of Oriental Studies, 39/1, pp. 7991.Google Scholar
Ma, L., ‘Jindai zhongguo jingji minzu zhuyi de duozhixing: yi tielu waizhai guan kaocha dian’ [The multidimensionality of modern Chinese economic nationalism: the foreign railway loan as a case study], Shixue Lilun Yanjiu, 2, pp. 3443.Google Scholar
Marchisio, J., Les chemins de fer chinois: finance et diplomatie, 1860–1914, Paris: You-Feng.Google Scholar
Nishimura, S., ‘The foreign and native banks in China: chop loans in Shanghai and Hankow before 1914’, Modern Asian Studies, 39/1, pp. 109–32.Google Scholar
Pang, K. T. W., The history of rates in Hong Kong: a brief rev. of 160 years of rating in Hong Kong, Hong Kong: Rating and Valuation Dept.Google Scholar
Ren, Z., ‘Shishu wanzing hubu yinku zhidu yu gengzi zhi hou de biange’ [The Ministry of Revenue's silver reserve in the late Qing and its reform after the Boxer Rebellion], Qing Shi Yanjiu, 2, pp. 4450.Google Scholar
Sheehan, B., Trust in troubled times: money, banks, and state-society relations in republican Tianjin, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2003.Google Scholar
Sheehan, B., ‘Myth and reality in Chinese financial cliques in 1936’, Enterprise and Society, 6/3, pp. 452–91.Google Scholar
Von Glahn, R., ‘The origins of paper money in China’, in Goetzmann, and Rouwenhorst, (eds.), The origins of value, pp. 6590.Google Scholar
Wang, Y., ‘Yinhang xuehui kaolun (1932–1950)’ [History of the Bank Academy,1932–50]', Shixue Yuekan, 8, pp. 61–5.Google Scholar
Wu, J., ‘Shanghai jinrongye yu jinyuanquan zhengce de tuixing’ [The financial sector in Shanghai and the issuance of paper money by the Guomindang government in 1948], Shixue Yuekan, 1, pp. 6982.Google Scholar
Xu, C., ‘Nongjia fu zhai yu diquan yidong: yi 20 shiji 30 niandai qianqi chang jiang zhong xialiu diqu nongcun wei zhongxin’ [Peasant household debt and shifts in landownership: rural areas along the lower Yangtze in the early 1930s], Jindaishi Yanjiu, 2, pp. 78122.Google Scholar
Yang, Y., ‘Jindai jiangxi difang huobi yu xiangcun jinrong zhuanxing’ [Local currency and financial transition in modern Jiangxi], Zhongguo Nongshi, 24/4, pp. 5865.Google Scholar
Zhang, N., ‘Lun woguo xiandai huobi danwei “yuan, jiao, fen” tixi de queli’ [The establishment of the Chinese modern monetary unit system: ‘yuan, jiao, and fen’], Shixue Yuekan, 2, pp. 43–8.Google Scholar
Zhang, Q., ‘Beiyang zhengfu shiqi de jiu liu gongzhai shuping’ [Commentary on the ‘jiuliu’ bond of Beiyang government], Shixue Yuekan, 6, pp. 4456.Google Scholar
Zhang, Y., ‘Cong shulu xian zhang min jiazu qiyue wenshu kan qingdai zhili nongcun de yinqian liutong’ [The circulation of money in rural Zhili Province during the Qing dynasty as seen from official documents pertaining to the Zhang family of Shulu County], Zhongguo Nongshi, 24/1, pp. 109–15.Google Scholar
Zheng, C., ‘Shanghai yinhang gonghui yu jindai zhongguo bizhi gaige shuping’ [The Shanghai Bankers' Association and reform of the monetary system in modern China], Shixue Yuekan, 2, pp. 3742.Google Scholar
The Reserve Bank of India, 1967–1981, vol. 3, Mumbai/Delhi: Central Office/Reserve Bank of India.Google Scholar
Ways and means for replenishing the Indian exchequer, Kurrachi: Sindian Press.Google Scholar
Bhattacharya, S., The financial foundations of the British Raj: ideas and interests in the reconstruction of Indian public finance 1858–1872, Hyderabad: Orient Longman.Google Scholar
Kawamura, T., ‘Higashi indo kaisha kaisan izen no isutan banku mondai, 1847–1857-nen’ [Problems surrounding the establishment of Eastern banks before the demise of the East India Company, 1847–57], Shakai-Keizai Shigaku, 71/2, pp. 2547.Google Scholar
Kirk, J. A., ‘Banking on India's states: the politics of World Bank reform programs in Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka’, India Rev., 4/3, pp. 287325.Google Scholar
Mathiyazhagan, M. K. and Parida, P. C., ‘An empirical analysis of exchange rate and trade balance and the balance of payments adjustment in India’, Asian Profile, 33/5, pp. 481–94.Google Scholar
McGuire, J., ‘Exchange banks, India and the world economy: 1850–1914’, Asian Studies Rev., 29/2, pp. 143–63.Google Scholar
Mohanty, B. K. and Tripathy, T., ‘Money, output and price behavior in India under reforms: some empirical evidence’, ICFAI J. of Monetary Economics, 3/4, pp. 5670.Google Scholar
Muirhead, B., ‘Differing perspectives: India, the World Bank and the 1963 aid-India negotiations’, India Rev., 4/1, pp. 122.Google Scholar
Sah, A. N. and Sivaram, Y-G., ‘Money demand function in India before and after liberalization’, ICFAI J. of Monetary Economics, 3/4, pp. 615.Google Scholar
Sury, M. M., Finance Commissions of India, I to XI, 1952–57 to 2005–10, New Delhi: New Century Publications.Google Scholar
Borensztein, E. and Lee, J-W., ‘Financial reform and the efficiency of credit allocation in Korea’, J. of Policy Reform, 8/1, pp. 5568.Google Scholar
Kwon, H. Y., ‘Targeting public spending in a new democracy: evidence from South Korea’, British J. of Political Science, 35/2, pp. 321–41.Google Scholar
Pirie, I., ‘Better by design: Korea's neoliberal economy’, Pacific Rev., 18/3, pp. 355–74.Google Scholar
Zhang, X., ‘The changing politics of central banking in Taiwan and Thailand’, Pacific Affairs, 78/3, pp. 377401.Google Scholar
Zhang, X., ‘Political institutions and central bank autonomy in Taiwan’, European J. of East Asian Studies, 4/1, pp. 87113.Google Scholar
Gorodzeisky, A. and Semyonov, M., ‘Labor migration, remittances and household income: a comparison between Filipino and Filipina overseas workers’, International Migration Rev., 39/1, pp. 4568.Google Scholar
Hillman, J., ‘Australian capital and South-East Asian tin mining, 1906–40’, Australian Economic History Rev., 45/2, pp. 161–85.Google Scholar
Islam, K. N., ‘Pro-cyclicality of consumer spending and the financial crisis of Thailand’, J. of Developing Areas, 38/2, pp. 4154.Google Scholar
Nepal Rastra Bank in 50 years, Kathmandu: Nepal Rastra Bank.Google Scholar
Jalali-Naini, A. R., ‘Capital accumulation and economic growth in Iran: past experience and future prospects’, Iranian Studies, 38/1, pp. 91116.Google Scholar
Stephens, M., ‘A critical analysis of housing finance reform in a “super” home-ownership state: the case of Armenia’, Urban Studies, 42/10, pp. 1795–815.Google Scholar
Khan, S., Islam, F. and Ahmed, S., ‘The Asian crisis: an economic analysis of the causes’, J. of Developing Areas, 39/1, pp. 169–90.Google Scholar
Ahmadjian, C. and Robbins, G. E., ‘A clash of capitalisms: foreign shareholders and corporate restructuring in 1990s Japan’, American Sociological Rev., 70/3, pp. 451–71.Google Scholar
Bytheway, S. J., Nihon keizai to gaikoku shihon: 1858–1939 [Foreign capital and the Japanese economy, 1858–1939], Tokyo: Tosui Shobo.Google Scholar
Hara, Y., Oguri, T., Tinker, T., Jinnai, Y., Ishikawa, J. and Yamaji, H., ‘Japanese critical accounting’, Critical Perspectives on Accounting, 16/2, pp. 73150.Google Scholar
Hotori, E., ‘Senji taisei shita ni okeru okurasho ginko kensa: purudensu kisei toshite no sokumen o chushin ni’ [The wartime inspection of banks by the Ministry of Finance: focus on the “prudence” regulation], Shakai-Keizai Shigaku, 70/6, pp. 324.Google Scholar
Ishii, K., ‘Reconsideration of the financial history of Japan: from moneychangers to banks’, J. of Tokyo Keizai University, 242, pp. 5584.Google Scholar
Kato, K., ‘Senkan-ki nihon denki no kigyo baishu: kabushiki shutoku o chushin ni’ [Corporate acquisition in the electric power industry during the interwar period: stock acquisition], Shakai-Keizai Shigaku, 71/3, pp. 2547.Google Scholar
Konishi, M., ‘Bond underwriting syndicates organized by commercial banks: evidence from prewar Japan’, J. of the Japanese and International Economies, 19/3, pp. 303–21.Google Scholar
Okawa, H., ‘Kindai nihon ni okeru “jizen” to “fuon”: 1890 nen no akita shi ni okeru beika toki e no taio o chushin ni’ [‘Charity’ and ‘unrest’ in modern Japan: reactions to the inflation of rice prices in Akita in 1890], Rekishigaku Kenkyu, 8, pp. 119.Google Scholar
Okazaki, T., Sawada, M. and Yokoyama, K., ‘Measuring the extent and implications of director interlocking in the prewar Japanese banking industry’, J. of Economic History, 65/4, pp. 1082–115.Google Scholar
Saito, O., ‘Zenkindai keizai seicho no futatsu no patan: tokugawa nihon no hikaku shiteki itchi’ [Two patterns in premodern economic growth: Tokugawa Japan's place in historical comparison], Shakai-Keizai Shigaku, 70/5, pp. 323.Google Scholar
Sato, M. and Yago, K., ‘L’élite managériale au Japon: le cas des banques', in Godelier, E. (ed.), Entreprises et histoire, 41, pp. 7188.Google Scholar
Shirai, S., ‘Growing problems in the local public finance system of Japan’, Social Science Japan J., 8/2, pp. 213–38.Google Scholar
Shiratori, K., ‘Hosho hoko tokuyu no kaishu shori to nihon ginko, okurasho, 1927–1936 nen’ [The Ministry of Finance, the Bank of Japan, and the recovery of special compensatory loans,1927–36], Shakai-Keizai Shigaku, 70/6, pp. 7190.Google Scholar
Sugiyama, H., ‘Tekkogyo ni okeru shokumu kyu donyu to sono henyo: yahata seitetsu, shin nippon seitetsu, 1960–1971 nen’ [The introduction and transformation of job-based wages in the steel industry: a case study of Yahata Steel and Nippon Steel,1960–71], Shakai-Keizai Shigaku, 71/4, pp. 7190.Google Scholar
Tachibanaki, T., Confronting Income Inequality in Japan: A Comparative Analysis of Causes, Consequences, and Reform, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Yasuba, Y., ‘Sangyo kakumei no jidai no nihon no jisshitsu chingin: hikaku keizaishiteki apurochi’ [Real wages in the period of the Industrial Revolution in Japan: a comparative economic history approach], Shakai-Keizai Shigaku, 71/1, pp. 4960.Google Scholar
Atwell, W. S., ‘Another look at silver imports into China, ca. 1635–1644’, J. of World History, 16/4, pp. 467–90.Google Scholar
Benjamin, D., Brandt, L. and Giles, J., ‘The evolution of income inequality in rural China’, Economic Development and Cultural Change, 53/4, pp. 769824.Google Scholar
Bernhardt, K. L. F., Chang jiang xia you di qu de di zu, fu shui yu nong min de fan kang dou zheng, 1840–1950 [Rents, taxes, and peasant resistance], Shanghai: Shanghai shu dian chu ban she.Google Scholar
Bian, M. L., ‘Mingqing diandang he jiedai falü guifan de tiaozheng yu xiangcun shehui de wending’ [Readjustments of laws and regulations on pawning and loan activities and social stability of rural areas in the Ming-Qing period], Zhongguo Nongshi, 24/4, pp. 6675.Google Scholar
Bian, M. L., ‘A history of modern Shanghai banking: the rise and decline of China's finance capitalism’, Enterprise & Society, 6/2, pp. 305–8.Google Scholar
Bian, M. L., The making of the state enterprise system in modern China: the dynamics of institutional change, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cai, Q. and Hou, D., ‘20–30 Niandai hua yang yi zhen hui de xinyong hezuo shiyan’ [Experimentation with rural credit cooperatives by the China International Famine Relief Commission from the 1920s to the early 1930s], Zhongguo Nongshi, 24/1, pp. 7987.Google Scholar
Chao, K., ‘Yongdian zhi xia de tian pi jiage’ [The prices of land under the permanent tenancy system], Zhongguo Nongshi, 24/3, pp. 43–8.Google Scholar
Chen, H., ‘Qingdai de hegong yu caizheng’ [River engineering projects and public finance in the Qing dynasty], Qing Shi Yanjiu, 3, pp. 3342.Google Scholar
Chen, Y., Shanghai yin hang jiu shi nian [The ninety years of the Shanghai Commercial & Saving Bank, Ltd], Taibei Shi: Shanghai shang ye chu xu yin hang.Google Scholar
Cheng, L., Banking in modern China: entrepreneurs, professional managers, and the development of Chinese banks, 1897–1937, New York: Cambridge University Press, 2003.Google Scholar
Cho, H., Chinas langer Marsch in den Kapitalismus, Münster: Westfälisches Dampfboot.Google Scholar
Cui, H., ‘Qingdai baqi guanbing hongbai shi shangci yinliang shiliao’ [Resources on monetary allotments to the Eight Banners for weddings and funerals], Lishi Dang'an (Historical Archives), 1, pp. 812.Google Scholar
Ge, F., ‘Zhong-fa geng kuan an zhong de wuli zhaiquan wenti’ [The issue of interest-free bonds in the Sino-French dispute over Boxer indemnities], Jindaishi Yanjiu, 2, pp. 123–41.Google Scholar
Gong, G., ‘20 shijichu tianjin de jinrong fengchao jiqi yingdui jizhi’ [The Tianjin financial panic and response mechanisms in the early 20th century], Shixue Yueka, 2, pp. 111–22.Google Scholar
Goodstadt, L. F., Uneasy partners: the conflict between public interest and private profit in Hong Kong, Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press.Google Scholar
Hansen, V. and Mata-Fink, A., ‘How business was conducted on the Chinese silk road during the Tang dynasty, 618–907’, in Goetzmann, and Rouwenhorst, (eds.), The origins of value, pp. 4364.Google Scholar
Heilmann, S, ‘Regulatory innovation by Leninist means: communist party supervision in China's financial industry’, China Q., 181, pp. 121.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hui, Q., ‘Tax and fee reform, village autonomy, and central and local finance historical experience and realistic options’, Chinese Economy, 38/6, pp. 335.Google Scholar
Huppatz, D. J., ‘Globalizing corporate identity in Hong Kong: rebranding two banks’, J. of Design History, 18/4, pp. 357–69.Google Scholar
Kanada, S., ‘Honkon ni okeru shoki kabushiki kaisha to kajin toshi’ [Early joint-stock companies in Hong Kong and Chinese investment], Rekishigaku Kenkyu, 3, pp. 958.Google Scholar
Khan, A .R. and Riskin, C., ‘China's household income and its distribution, 1995 and 2002’, China Q., 182, pp. 356–84.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Koo, B., ‘Jingqi de bizhi gaige fang'an yu wan Qing bizhi wenti’ [J. W. Jenks's program for currency reform and the currency problem in late Qing China], Jindaishi Yanjiu, 3, pp. 117–43.Google Scholar
Lewis, T., In partnership: KPMG'S 60 years in Hong Kong and 20 years in China, Hong Kong: KPMG.Google Scholar
Li, H., ‘Family life cycle and peasant income in socialist China: evidence from Qin village’, J. of Family History, 30/1, pp. 121–38.Google Scholar
Liang, L., ‘Rejection or acceptance: finding reasons for the late Qing magistrate's comments on land and debt petitions’, Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, 68/2, pp. 276–94.Google Scholar
Ma, C., ‘1920 dao 1930 niandai Shanghai jinrongye dui xinyong guanli de tichang he zheng xin jiguo zhi chuxian’ [The promotion of credit management and the emergence of credit information services in Shanghai during the 1920s–30s], J. of Oriental Studies, 39/1, pp. 7991.Google Scholar
Ma, L., ‘Jindai zhongguo jingji minzu zhuyi de duozhixing: yi tielu waizhai guan kaocha dian’ [The multidimensionality of modern Chinese economic nationalism: the foreign railway loan as a case study], Shixue Lilun Yanjiu, 2, pp. 3443.Google Scholar
Marchisio, J., Les chemins de fer chinois: finance et diplomatie, 1860–1914, Paris: You-Feng.Google Scholar
Nishimura, S., ‘The foreign and native banks in China: chop loans in Shanghai and Hankow before 1914’, Modern Asian Studies, 39/1, pp. 109–32.Google Scholar
Pang, K. T. W., The history of rates in Hong Kong: a brief rev. of 160 years of rating in Hong Kong, Hong Kong: Rating and Valuation Dept.Google Scholar
Ren, Z., ‘Shishu wanzing hubu yinku zhidu yu gengzi zhi hou de biange’ [The Ministry of Revenue's silver reserve in the late Qing and its reform after the Boxer Rebellion], Qing Shi Yanjiu, 2, pp. 4450.Google Scholar
Sheehan, B., Trust in troubled times: money, banks, and state-society relations in republican Tianjin, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2003.Google Scholar
Sheehan, B., ‘Myth and reality in Chinese financial cliques in 1936’, Enterprise and Society, 6/3, pp. 452–91.Google Scholar
Von Glahn, R., ‘The origins of paper money in China’, in Goetzmann, and Rouwenhorst, (eds.), The origins of value, pp. 6590.Google Scholar
Wang, Y., ‘Yinhang xuehui kaolun (1932–1950)’ [History of the Bank Academy,1932–50]', Shixue Yuekan, 8, pp. 61–5.Google Scholar
Wu, J., ‘Shanghai jinrongye yu jinyuanquan zhengce de tuixing’ [The financial sector in Shanghai and the issuance of paper money by the Guomindang government in 1948], Shixue Yuekan, 1, pp. 6982.Google Scholar
Xu, C., ‘Nongjia fu zhai yu diquan yidong: yi 20 shiji 30 niandai qianqi chang jiang zhong xialiu diqu nongcun wei zhongxin’ [Peasant household debt and shifts in landownership: rural areas along the lower Yangtze in the early 1930s], Jindaishi Yanjiu, 2, pp. 78122.Google Scholar
Yang, Y., ‘Jindai jiangxi difang huobi yu xiangcun jinrong zhuanxing’ [Local currency and financial transition in modern Jiangxi], Zhongguo Nongshi, 24/4, pp. 5865.Google Scholar
Zhang, N., ‘Lun woguo xiandai huobi danwei “yuan, jiao, fen” tixi de queli’ [The establishment of the Chinese modern monetary unit system: ‘yuan, jiao, and fen’], Shixue Yuekan, 2, pp. 43–8.Google Scholar
Zhang, Q., ‘Beiyang zhengfu shiqi de jiu liu gongzhai shuping’ [Commentary on the ‘jiuliu’ bond of Beiyang government], Shixue Yuekan, 6, pp. 4456.Google Scholar
Zhang, Y., ‘Cong shulu xian zhang min jiazu qiyue wenshu kan qingdai zhili nongcun de yinqian liutong’ [The circulation of money in rural Zhili Province during the Qing dynasty as seen from official documents pertaining to the Zhang family of Shulu County], Zhongguo Nongshi, 24/1, pp. 109–15.Google Scholar
Zheng, C., ‘Shanghai yinhang gonghui yu jindai zhongguo bizhi gaige shuping’ [The Shanghai Bankers' Association and reform of the monetary system in modern China], Shixue Yuekan, 2, pp. 3742.Google Scholar
The Reserve Bank of India, 1967–1981, vol. 3, Mumbai/Delhi: Central Office/Reserve Bank of India.Google Scholar
Ways and means for replenishing the Indian exchequer, Kurrachi: Sindian Press.Google Scholar
Bhattacharya, S., The financial foundations of the British Raj: ideas and interests in the reconstruction of Indian public finance 1858–1872, Hyderabad: Orient Longman.Google Scholar
Kawamura, T., ‘Higashi indo kaisha kaisan izen no isutan banku mondai, 1847–1857-nen’ [Problems surrounding the establishment of Eastern banks before the demise of the East India Company, 1847–57], Shakai-Keizai Shigaku, 71/2, pp. 2547.Google Scholar
Kirk, J. A., ‘Banking on India's states: the politics of World Bank reform programs in Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka’, India Rev., 4/3, pp. 287325.Google Scholar
Mathiyazhagan, M. K. and Parida, P. C., ‘An empirical analysis of exchange rate and trade balance and the balance of payments adjustment in India’, Asian Profile, 33/5, pp. 481–94.Google Scholar
McGuire, J., ‘Exchange banks, India and the world economy: 1850–1914’, Asian Studies Rev., 29/2, pp. 143–63.Google Scholar
Mohanty, B. K. and Tripathy, T., ‘Money, output and price behavior in India under reforms: some empirical evidence’, ICFAI J. of Monetary Economics, 3/4, pp. 5670.Google Scholar
Muirhead, B., ‘Differing perspectives: India, the World Bank and the 1963 aid-India negotiations’, India Rev., 4/1, pp. 122.Google Scholar
Sah, A. N. and Sivaram, Y-G., ‘Money demand function in India before and after liberalization’, ICFAI J. of Monetary Economics, 3/4, pp. 615.Google Scholar
Sury, M. M., Finance Commissions of India, I to XI, 1952–57 to 2005–10, New Delhi: New Century Publications.Google Scholar
Borensztein, E. and Lee, J-W., ‘Financial reform and the efficiency of credit allocation in Korea’, J. of Policy Reform, 8/1, pp. 5568.Google Scholar
Kwon, H. Y., ‘Targeting public spending in a new democracy: evidence from South Korea’, British J. of Political Science, 35/2, pp. 321–41.Google Scholar
Pirie, I., ‘Better by design: Korea's neoliberal economy’, Pacific Rev., 18/3, pp. 355–74.Google Scholar
Zhang, X., ‘The changing politics of central banking in Taiwan and Thailand’, Pacific Affairs, 78/3, pp. 377401.Google Scholar
Zhang, X., ‘Political institutions and central bank autonomy in Taiwan’, European J. of East Asian Studies, 4/1, pp. 87113.Google Scholar
Gorodzeisky, A. and Semyonov, M., ‘Labor migration, remittances and household income: a comparison between Filipino and Filipina overseas workers’, International Migration Rev., 39/1, pp. 4568.Google Scholar
Hillman, J., ‘Australian capital and South-East Asian tin mining, 1906–40’, Australian Economic History Rev., 45/2, pp. 161–85.Google Scholar
Islam, K. N., ‘Pro-cyclicality of consumer spending and the financial crisis of Thailand’, J. of Developing Areas, 38/2, pp. 4154.Google Scholar
Nepal Rastra Bank in 50 years, Kathmandu: Nepal Rastra Bank.Google Scholar
Jalali-Naini, A. R., ‘Capital accumulation and economic growth in Iran: past experience and future prospects’, Iranian Studies, 38/1, pp. 91116.Google Scholar
Stephens, M., ‘A critical analysis of housing finance reform in a “super” home-ownership state: the case of Armenia’, Urban Studies, 42/10, pp. 1795–815.Google Scholar
Kuran, T., ‘The logic of financial westernization in the Middle East’, J. of Economic Behavior and Organization, 56/4, pp. 593615.Google Scholar
Besirli, M., ‘Tokat voyvodaligi (1774–1842)’ [Estate management in Tokat, 1774–1842], Belleten, 69/254, pp. 161215.Google Scholar
Cosgel, M. M, ‘Efficiency and continuity in public finance: the Ottoman system of taxation’, International journal of Middle East studies, 37/4, pp. 567586.Google Scholar
Cosgel, M. M. and Miceli, T. J., ‘Risk, transaction costs, and tax assignment: government finance in the Ottoman Empire’, J. of Economic History, 65/3, pp. 806–21.Google Scholar
Karaman, D., ‘Ser'iye sicillerine gore XVIII. Yuzyilda Ankara damga mukataasi’ [The Ankara damga mukataasi (stamp tax) in the 18th century], Bilig, 32, pp. 179222.Google Scholar
Kazgan, H., Galata bankerleri, Istanbul: Orion Yayinevi.Google Scholar
Orbay, K., ‘Detailed tax farm registers and arrears registers as sources of the Waqfs’ financial analyses', Acta Orientalia Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae, 58/4, pp. 331–47.Google Scholar
Pamuk, S., ‘Urban real wages around the eastern Mediterranean in comparative perspective, 1100–2000’, Research in Economic History, 23, pp. 209–28.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Petmezas, S. D., ‘Christian communities in eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century Ottoman Greece: their fiscal functions’, Princeton Papers: Interdisciplinary J. of Middle Eastern Studies, 12, pp. 71127.Google Scholar
Dogruel, F. and Dogruel, A. S., Türkiye'de enflasyonun tarihi, Ankara: Türkiye Cumhuriyet Merkez Bankasi.Google Scholar
Eres, B., ‘Capital accumulation and the development of a financial system: the Turkish example’, Rev. of Radical Political Economics, 37/3, pp. 320–28.Google Scholar
Kazgan, G., Türkiye ekonomisinde krizler, 1929–2001: ‘ekonomi politik’ açisindan bir irdeleme, Istanbul: Istanbul Bilgi Universitesi.Google Scholar
Parvus, S. M., Türkiye'nin mali tutsakligi, Istanbul: Ileri yayinlari.Google Scholar
Tabakoglu, A., Toplu makaleler, Istanbul: Kitabevi.Google Scholar
Awran, A. A. and Farhan, U. A., ‘Determinants of interest rates in the Jordanian economy: an analytical study for the period 1990 to 2002’, J. of the Social Sciences, 33/2, pp. 337–76. (In Hebrew)Google Scholar
Looney, R., ‘Postwar Iraq's financial system: building from scratch’, Middle East policy, 12/1, pp. 134–49.Google Scholar
Nadan, A., ‘The competitive advantage of moneylenders over banks in rural Palestine’, J. of the Economic and Social History of the Orient, 1, pp. 140.Google Scholar
Nassar, M. H. A. and Shbaitah, M. F., ‘Accounting earnings and cash flows as a measure of performance in business: an applied study on Amman stock exchange’, Dirasat, 32/2, pp. 279–97.Google Scholar
Tuten, E. E., Between capital and land: the Jewish National Fund's finances and land-purchase priorities in Palestine, 1939–45, London: Routledge Curzon.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kuran, T., ‘The logic of financial westernization in the Middle East’, J. of Economic Behavior and Organization, 56/4, pp. 593615.Google Scholar
Besirli, M., ‘Tokat voyvodaligi (1774–1842)’ [Estate management in Tokat, 1774–1842], Belleten, 69/254, pp. 161215.Google Scholar
Cosgel, M. M, ‘Efficiency and continuity in public finance: the Ottoman system of taxation’, International journal of Middle East studies, 37/4, pp. 567586.Google Scholar
Cosgel, M. M. and Miceli, T. J., ‘Risk, transaction costs, and tax assignment: government finance in the Ottoman Empire’, J. of Economic History, 65/3, pp. 806–21.Google Scholar
Karaman, D., ‘Ser'iye sicillerine gore XVIII. Yuzyilda Ankara damga mukataasi’ [The Ankara damga mukataasi (stamp tax) in the 18th century], Bilig, 32, pp. 179222.Google Scholar
Kazgan, H., Galata bankerleri, Istanbul: Orion Yayinevi.Google Scholar
Orbay, K., ‘Detailed tax farm registers and arrears registers as sources of the Waqfs’ financial analyses', Acta Orientalia Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae, 58/4, pp. 331–47.Google Scholar
Pamuk, S., ‘Urban real wages around the eastern Mediterranean in comparative perspective, 1100–2000’, Research in Economic History, 23, pp. 209–28.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Petmezas, S. D., ‘Christian communities in eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century Ottoman Greece: their fiscal functions’, Princeton Papers: Interdisciplinary J. of Middle Eastern Studies, 12, pp. 71127.Google Scholar
Dogruel, F. and Dogruel, A. S., Türkiye'de enflasyonun tarihi, Ankara: Türkiye Cumhuriyet Merkez Bankasi.Google Scholar
Eres, B., ‘Capital accumulation and the development of a financial system: the Turkish example’, Rev. of Radical Political Economics, 37/3, pp. 320–28.Google Scholar
Kazgan, G., Türkiye ekonomisinde krizler, 1929–2001: ‘ekonomi politik’ açisindan bir irdeleme, Istanbul: Istanbul Bilgi Universitesi.Google Scholar
Parvus, S. M., Türkiye'nin mali tutsakligi, Istanbul: Ileri yayinlari.Google Scholar
Tabakoglu, A., Toplu makaleler, Istanbul: Kitabevi.Google Scholar
Awran, A. A. and Farhan, U. A., ‘Determinants of interest rates in the Jordanian economy: an analytical study for the period 1990 to 2002’, J. of the Social Sciences, 33/2, pp. 337–76. (In Hebrew)Google Scholar
Looney, R., ‘Postwar Iraq's financial system: building from scratch’, Middle East policy, 12/1, pp. 134–49.Google Scholar
Nadan, A., ‘The competitive advantage of moneylenders over banks in rural Palestine’, J. of the Economic and Social History of the Orient, 1, pp. 140.Google Scholar
Nassar, M. H. A. and Shbaitah, M. F., ‘Accounting earnings and cash flows as a measure of performance in business: an applied study on Amman stock exchange’, Dirasat, 32/2, pp. 279–97.Google Scholar
Tuten, E. E., Between capital and land: the Jewish National Fund's finances and land-purchase priorities in Palestine, 1939–45, London: Routledge Curzon.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bellamy, M. J. and Bryce, R. B., Canada and the cost of World War II: the international operations of Canada's Department of Finance, 1939–1947, Montreal: McGill-Queens University Press.Google Scholar
Dimand, R. W., ‘David Hume on Canadian paper money: an overlooked contribution’, J. of Money, Credit and Banking, 37/4, pp. 783–7.Google Scholar
Di Matteo, L., ‘Wealth and inequality on Ontario's Northwestern frontier: evidence from probate’, Histoire Sociale – Social history, 38/75, pp. 79105.Google Scholar
Laieunesse, M., ‘Le financement des bibliothèques publiques du Québec depuis 1960’, Argus: Montreal, 34/3, pp. 1118.Google Scholar
Poulin, P. and Tremblay, B., Desjardins en mouvement: comment une grande coopérative de services financiers s'adapte aux transformations du secteur bancaire, Montreal: Presses HEC.Google Scholar
Powell, J., A history of the Canadian dollar, Ottawa: Bank of Canada.Google Scholar
Powell, J., Le dollar canadien: une perspective historique, Ottawa: Banque du Canada.Google Scholar
Sargent, J., The 1975–78 anti-inflation program in retrospect, Ottawa: Bank of Canada.Google Scholar
Vardy, J., The Bank of Canada: an illustrated history – La Banque du Canada: une histoire en images, Ottawa: Bank of Canada – Banque du Canada.Google Scholar
History of tax rates, Sacramento: California State Legislature, Assembly Committee on Revenue and Taxation.Google Scholar
[Ned Davis Research Inc.], Markets in motion: [a financial market history, 1900 to 2004], Chichester: Wiley.Google Scholar
Wachovia completes research of predecessor companies: apologizes for historical ties to slavery and plans to work with community partners to increase education and awareness of African-American history, Charlotte, NC: Wachovia Corporation.Google Scholar
Adams, E. H. and Handy, S. G., A century of putting people first: accuracy, fairness, and a concern for the welfare of the customer, Layton: First National Bank of Layton.Google Scholar
Adamson, M. R., ‘“Must we overlook all impairment of our interests?” debating the foreign aid role of the export-import bank, 1934–1941’, Diplomatic History, 29, pp. 589623.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Anari, A., Kolari, J. and Mason, J., ‘Bank asset liquidation and the propagation of the U.S. Great Depression’, J. of Money, Credit and Banking, 37/4, pp. 753–73.Google Scholar
Apfelbaum, J., Without compromise, fear or favor: the first century of the Texas Department of Banking, Austin: Texas Department of Banking.Google Scholar
Atack, J., ‘Capital deepening and the rise of the factory: the American experience during the nineteenth century’, Economic History Rev., 58/3, pp. 586–95.Google Scholar
Baranoff, D., ‘Shaped by risk: the American fire insurance industry, 1790–1920’, Enterprise and Society, 6/4, pp. 561–70.Google Scholar
Bernstein, P. L., Capital ideas: the improbable origins of modern Wall Street, Hoboken: Wiley.Google Scholar
Bordo, M. D. and Wheelock, D. C., ‘Politica monetaria y precios de activos: una mirada retrospectiva a los momentos de auge en los mercados de valores de Estados Unidos en el pasado’, Boletín, Centro de estudios monetarios latinoamericanos, 51/1, pp. 1234.Google Scholar
Brainard, W. C. and Scarf, H. E., ‘How to compute equilibrium prices in 1891’, in Dimand, and Geanakoplos, (eds.), Celebrating Irving Fisher, pp. 5784.Google Scholar
Broome, L. L., The first one hundred years of banking in North Carolina, Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina School of Law Banking Institute.Google Scholar
Brown, D. and Kubler, F., ‘Comment on William C. Brainard and Herbert E. Scarf's “How to compute equilibrium prices in 1891”’, in Dimand, and Geanakoplos, (eds.), Celebrating Irving Fisher, pp. 85–8.Google Scholar
Bullard, J. and Eusepi, S., ‘Did the great inflation occur despite policymaker commitment to a Taylor rule?’, Rev. of Economic Dynamics, 8/2, pp. 324–59.Google Scholar
Carlson, M., ‘Causes of bank suspensions in the panic of 1893’, Explorations in Economic History, 42/1, pp. 5680.Google Scholar
Clark, G., ‘The efficiency gains from site value taxes: the Tithe commutation act of 1836’, Explorations in economic history, 42/2, pp. 282310.Google Scholar
Cohen, J. P. and Coughlin, C. C., ‘An introduction to two-rate taxation of land and buildings’, Federal Reserve Bank of St Louis Rev., 87/3, pp. 359–74.Google Scholar
Cruson, D., The Newtown savings bank: one hundred fifty years of service, Newtown: Newtown Savings Bank.Google Scholar
Derks, S. and Smith, T., The value of a dollar: colonial era to the Civil War, 1600–1865, Millerton: Grey House.Google Scholar
Desan, C., ‘The market as a matter of money: Denaturalizing economic currency in American constitutional history’, Law and Social Inquiry J. of the American Bar Foundation, 30/1, pp. 160.Google Scholar
Downing, N. W., Transatlantic paper and the emergence of the American capital market, in Goetzmann, and Rouwenhorst, (eds.), The origins of value, pp. 271–98.Google Scholar
Duncan, R., The dollar crisis: causes, consequences, cures, Singapore: J. Wiley & Sons.Google Scholar
Fishback, P. V., ‘Did new deal grant programs stimulate local economies? A study of federal grants and retail sales during the great depression’, J. of Economic History, 65/1, pp. 3672.Google Scholar
Friedberg, A. L. and Friedberg, I. S., A guide book of United States paper money: complete source for history, grading, and prices, Atlanta: Whitman.Google Scholar
Giedeman, D. C., ‘Branch banking restrictions and Finance constraints in early-twentieth century America’, J. of Economic History, 65/1, pp. 129–51.Google Scholar
Gordon, J. S., Wei da de bo yi: Huàerjie jin rong di guo de ju qi [The great game: the emergence of Wall Street as a world power (1653–2000)], Beijing: Zhong xin chu ban she.Google Scholar
Hewett, R. S., ‘Taxation and the American Revolution’, J. of Economics (MVEA), 31/1, pp. 115.Google Scholar
Kanazawa, M., ‘Immigration, exclusion, and taxation: anti-Chinese legislation in gold rush California’, J. of Economic History, 65/3, pp. 779805.Google Scholar
Kennan, G., E. H. Harriman: railroad czar, New York: Cosimo Classics.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kenneth, D., The gold ring: Jim Fisk, Jay Gould, and Black Friday, 1869, New York: Carroll & Graf.Google Scholar
Klotter, J. C., A 100-year partnership: Hyden Citizens Bank and Leslie County, 1904–2004, Hyden, KY: Hyden Citizens Bank.Google Scholar
Körnert, J., ‘Analyse der Finanzmärkte der USA in den fünf Bankenkrisen der National Banking-Ära’, Bankhistorisches Archiv, 31/2, pp. 87106.Google Scholar
Kopfensteiner, D. and Ottenweller, C., The Houston branch of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas: financial crises and banking timeline, 1919–1979, Houston: Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, Houston Branch.Google Scholar
Lange, D. W. and Mead, M. J., History of the United States Mint and its coinage, Atlanta: Whitman.Google Scholar
Lee, R. A., Farmers vs. wage earners: organized labor in Kansas, 1860–1960, University of Nebraska Press.Google Scholar
Loeb, S. E. and Miranti, P. J., The Institute of Accounts: nineteenth-century origins of accounting professionalism in the United States, London: Routledge, 2004.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Love, P. H., Andrew W. Mellon: the man and his work, Whitefish, MT: Kessinger.Google Scholar
Mehrling, P., Fischer Black and the revolutionary idea of finance: John Wiley & Sons, Hoboken: Perry Mehrling.Google Scholar
Meissner, C. M., ‘Voting rules and the success of connected lending in 19th century New England banks’, Explorations in Economic History, 42/4, pp. 509–28.Google Scholar
Michener, R. W. and Wright, R. E., ‘State “currencies” and the transition to the US dollar: clarifying some confusions’, American Economic Rev., 95/3, pp. 682703.Google Scholar
Mitchener, K. J., ‘Bank supervision, regulation, and instability during the Great Depression’, J. of Economic History, 65/1, pp. 152–85.Google Scholar
Mitchener, K. J. and Weidenmier, M., ‘Empire, public goods, and the Roosevelt corollary’, J. of Economic History, 65/3, pp. 658–92.Google Scholar
Officer, L. H., ‘The quantity theory in New England, 1703–1749: new data to analyze an old question’, Explorations in Economic History, 42/1, pp. 101–22.Google Scholar
Pratt, J. A., ‘From buildings and loans to bail-outs: a history of the American savings and loan industry’, J. of American History, 92/2, pp. 701–2.Google Scholar
Robertson, F., ‘The aesthetics of authenticity: printed banknotes as industrial currency’, Technology and Culture, 46/1, pp. 3151.Google Scholar
Rogers, A., ‘Prosperous but precarious: property deeds and mortgages in a small market town in the 18th and 19th centuries’, Family and Community History, 8/2, pp. 105–22.Google Scholar
Roth, R., ‘American Civil War: financial support of Frankfurt bankers for the United States’, in Adam, T. (ed.), Germany and the Americas: culture, politics, and history: a multidisciplinary encyclopedia, Santa Barbara: ABC-CLIO, Vol.1, pp. 61–2.Google Scholar
Rothbard, M. N., A history of money and banking in the United States: the colonial era to World War II, Auburn: Ludwig von Mises Institute.Google Scholar
Rousseau, P. L. and Sylla, R., ‘Emerging Financial Markets and Early US Growth’, Explorations in Economic History, 42/1, pp. 126.Google Scholar
Rutherford, M., ‘“Who's afraid of Arthur Burns?” The NBER and the foundations’, J. of the History of Economic Thought, 27/2, pp. 109–41.Google Scholar
Sexton, J., Debtor diplomacy: finance and American foreign relations in the Civil War era, 1837–1873, Oxford: Clarendon Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shiller, R. J., ‘The invention of inflation-indexed bonds in early America’, in Goetzmann, and Rouwenhorst, (eds.), The origins of value, pp. 239–48.Google Scholar
Slade, G. R., Banking in the Great Northern Territory: an illustrated history, Afton: Afton Historical Society Press.Google Scholar
Solakoglu, E. G. and Goodwin, B. K., ‘The effects of railroad development on price convergence among the states of the USA from 1866 to 1906’, Applied Economics, 37/15, pp. 1747–61.Google Scholar
Sreenivasan, K. R., ‘Comment on William C. Brainard and Herbert E. Scarf's “How to compute equilibrium prices in 1891”’, in Dimand, and Geanakoplos, (eds.), Celebrating Irving Fisher, pp. 8992.Google Scholar
Sylla, R., ‘The origins of the New York Stock Exchange’, in Goetzmann, and Rouwenhorst, (eds.), The origins of value, pp. 299312.Google Scholar
Thompson, E. L., The reconstruction of southern debtors: bankruptcy after the civil war, Athens: University of Georgia Press, 2004.Google Scholar
Thies, C. F., ‘Money and the adoption of the US Constitution’, J. of Private Enterprise, 20/2, pp. 147–64.Google Scholar
Toma, M., Competition and monopoly in the Federal Reserve System, 1914–1951: a microeconomics approach to monetary history, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Valentine, P., Tax revolt: the rebellion against an overbearing, bloated, arrogant, and abusive government, Nashville: Nelson Current.Google Scholar
Vangermeersch, R., One hundred year selective history of the Rhode Island Society of Certified Public Accountants: 1905–2005, with chronologies and memorabilia, Rhode Island: Rhode Island Society of Certified Public Accountants.Google Scholar
Walter, J. R., ‘Depression-era bank failures: the great contagion or the great shakeout?’, Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond Economic Q., 91/1, pp. 3954.Google Scholar
Weber, W. E., Were U.S. state banknotes priced as securities?, Minneapolis: Federal Reserve Bank of Minnesota.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
West, G. M., Historical perspective of tax collecting in New Hampshire, Concord: New Hampshire Tax Collectors Association.Google Scholar
Wicker, E., The great debate on banking reform: Nelson Aldrich and the origins of the Fed., Columbus: Ohio State University Press.Google Scholar
Wright, R. E., The first Wall Street: Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, and the birth of American finance, Chicago: University of Chicago Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wright, R. E., The US national debt, 1787–1900, London: Pickering & Chatto.Google Scholar
Aho, J. A., Confession and bookkeeping: the religious, moral, and rhetorical roots of modern accounting, Albany: State University of New York Press.Google Scholar
Aitken, R., ‘“A direct personal stake”: cultural economy, mass investment and the New York Stock Exchange’, Rev. of International Political Economy, 12/2, pp. 334–63.Google Scholar
Askew, R. and Browne, I., ‘Race, ethnicity, and wage inequality among women: what happened in the 1990s and early 21st century?’, American Behavioral Scientist, 48/9, pp. 1275–92.Google Scholar
Avi-Yonah, R. S., ‘Story of the separate corporate income tax: a vehicle for regulating corporate managers’, in Bank, and Stark, (eds.), Business tax stories.Google Scholar
Bank, S. A., ‘Story of double taxation: a clash over the control of corporate earnings’, in Bank, and Stark, (eds.), Business tax stories.Google Scholar
Bank, S. A. and Stark, K. J. (eds.), Business tax stories, New York: Foundation Press.Google Scholar
Bank, S. A. and Stark, K. J., ‘Evolutionary perspective on the history of US business taxation’, in Bank, and Stark, (eds.), Business tax stories.Google Scholar
Bremner, R. P., Chairman of the Fed: William McChesney Martin Jr. and the creation of the modern federal reserve, New Haven: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Cogley, T. and Sargent, T. J., ‘The conquest of US inflation: learning and robustness to model uncertainty’, Rev. of Economic Dynamics, 8/2, pp. 528–63.Google Scholar
Cogley, T. and Sargent, T. J., ‘Drifts and volatilities: monetary policies and outcomes in the post WWII US’, Rev. of Economic Dynamics, 8/2, pp. 262302.Google Scholar
Dealey, H., Gossy, A., Kronowitz, D., Rodengen, J. L. and Shockley, D., New horizons: the story of Federated Investors, Fort Lauderdale: Write Stuff Enterprises.Google Scholar
Dobson, A. P., ‘The export-import bank and US foreign economic relations’, Diplomatic History, 29/2, pp. 375–78.Google Scholar
Fraser, S., Every man a speculator: a history of Wall Street in American life, New York: Harper Collins.Google Scholar
Garrison, J. C., The new income tax scandal: how Congress hijacked the sixteenth amendment, Philadelphia: Xlibris.Google Scholar
Geck, C., ‘What goes up: the uncensored history of modern Wall Street as told by the bankers, brokers, CEOs, and scoundrels who made it happen’, Library J., 130/14, pp. 156–66.Google Scholar
Hamill, S. P., ‘Story of LLCs: combining the best features of a flawed business tax structure’, in Bank, and Stark, (eds.), Business tax stories.Google Scholar
Higgs, R., ‘La transizione americana. Dalla pianificazione centralizzata al mercato,1945–47’, 900, 12, pp. 6782.Google Scholar
Hsu, D. H. and Kenney, M., ‘Organizing venture capital: the rise and demise of American research and development corporation, 1946–1973’, Industrial and Corporate Change, 14/4, pp. 579616.Google Scholar
Jensen, S., ‘A legislative history of the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of 2005’, American Bankruptcy Law J., 79/3, pp. 485569.Google Scholar
Kenneson, C., The Lewis State Bank of Tallahassee, Florida and the family who made it possible, Tallahassee: The Compiler.Google Scholar
Koegel, J. K., History of Women's Fund of Central Indiana, Indianapolis: Women's Fund of Central Indiana, Central Indiana Community Foundation.Google Scholar
Krippner, G. R., ‘The financialization of the American economy’, Socio-Economic Rev., 3/2, pp. 173208.Google Scholar
Leyden, D. P., Adequacy, accountability, and the future of public education funding, New York: Springer.Google Scholar
Light, A., ‘Job mobility and wage growth: evidence from the NLSY79’, Monthly Labor Rev., 128/2, pp. 33–9.Google Scholar
Lindsey, D. E., Orphanides, A. and Rasche, R. H., The reform of October 1979: how it happened and why, Washington: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System.Google Scholar
Lowenstein, R., Origins of the crash: the great bubble and its undoing, New York: Penguin Books.Google Scholar
Mann, G, ‘What's a penny worth? Wages, prices, and the American working man’, Ethnography, 6/3, pp. 315–56.Google Scholar
Marrero, G. A., ‘An active public investment rule and the downsizing experience in the US: 1960–2000’, Topics in Macroeconomics, 5/1, pp. 126.Google Scholar
Montagne, S., ‘Pouvoir financier vs. pouvoir salarial les fonds de pension américains: contribution du droit a la légitimité financière’, Annales. Histoire, Sciences Sociales, 60/6, pp. 1299–325.Google Scholar
Schlunk, H. J., ‘Story of General Utilities and its repeal: much ado about nothing?’, in Bank, and Stark, (eds.), Business tax stories.Google Scholar
Smeeding, T. M., ‘Public policy, economic inequality, and poverty: the United States in comparative perspective’, Social Science Q., 86, pp. 955–83.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Urofsky, M. I., Money and free speech: campaign finance reform and the courts, Lawrence: University Press of Kansas.Google Scholar
Twyman, T. R., Solomon's treasure: the magic and mystery of America's money, Portland: Dragon Key Press.Google Scholar
Wilkinson, R., Aiding students, buying students: financial aid in America, Nashville Vanderbilt University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Williams, B., Debt for sale: a social history of the credit trap, Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2004.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Woodward, B., Maestro: Greenspan's Fed and the American boom, New York: Simon & Schuster Paperbacks.Google Scholar
Zelenak, L., ‘Tax or welfare? The administration of the earned income tax credit’, UCLA Law Rev., 52/6, pp. 1867–916.Google Scholar
Bellamy, M. J. and Bryce, R. B., Canada and the cost of World War II: the international operations of Canada's Department of Finance, 1939–1947, Montreal: McGill-Queens University Press.Google Scholar
Dimand, R. W., ‘David Hume on Canadian paper money: an overlooked contribution’, J. of Money, Credit and Banking, 37/4, pp. 783–7.Google Scholar
Di Matteo, L., ‘Wealth and inequality on Ontario's Northwestern frontier: evidence from probate’, Histoire Sociale – Social history, 38/75, pp. 79105.Google Scholar
Laieunesse, M., ‘Le financement des bibliothèques publiques du Québec depuis 1960’, Argus: Montreal, 34/3, pp. 1118.Google Scholar
Poulin, P. and Tremblay, B., Desjardins en mouvement: comment une grande coopérative de services financiers s'adapte aux transformations du secteur bancaire, Montreal: Presses HEC.Google Scholar
Powell, J., A history of the Canadian dollar, Ottawa: Bank of Canada.Google Scholar
Powell, J., Le dollar canadien: une perspective historique, Ottawa: Banque du Canada.Google Scholar
Sargent, J., The 1975–78 anti-inflation program in retrospect, Ottawa: Bank of Canada.Google Scholar
Vardy, J., The Bank of Canada: an illustrated history – La Banque du Canada: une histoire en images, Ottawa: Bank of Canada – Banque du Canada.Google Scholar
History of tax rates, Sacramento: California State Legislature, Assembly Committee on Revenue and Taxation.Google Scholar
[Ned Davis Research Inc.], Markets in motion: [a financial market history, 1900 to 2004], Chichester: Wiley.Google Scholar
Wachovia completes research of predecessor companies: apologizes for historical ties to slavery and plans to work with community partners to increase education and awareness of African-American history, Charlotte, NC: Wachovia Corporation.Google Scholar
Adams, E. H. and Handy, S. G., A century of putting people first: accuracy, fairness, and a concern for the welfare of the customer, Layton: First National Bank of Layton.Google Scholar
Adamson, M. R., ‘“Must we overlook all impairment of our interests?” debating the foreign aid role of the export-import bank, 1934–1941’, Diplomatic History, 29, pp. 589623.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Anari, A., Kolari, J. and Mason, J., ‘Bank asset liquidation and the propagation of the U.S. Great Depression’, J. of Money, Credit and Banking, 37/4, pp. 753–73.Google Scholar
Apfelbaum, J., Without compromise, fear or favor: the first century of the Texas Department of Banking, Austin: Texas Department of Banking.Google Scholar
Atack, J., ‘Capital deepening and the rise of the factory: the American experience during the nineteenth century’, Economic History Rev., 58/3, pp. 586–95.Google Scholar
Baranoff, D., ‘Shaped by risk: the American fire insurance industry, 1790–1920’, Enterprise and Society, 6/4, pp. 561–70.Google Scholar
Bernstein, P. L., Capital ideas: the improbable origins of modern Wall Street, Hoboken: Wiley.Google Scholar
Bordo, M. D. and Wheelock, D. C., ‘Politica monetaria y precios de activos: una mirada retrospectiva a los momentos de auge en los mercados de valores de Estados Unidos en el pasado’, Boletín, Centro de estudios monetarios latinoamericanos, 51/1, pp. 1234.Google Scholar
Brainard, W. C. and Scarf, H. E., ‘How to compute equilibrium prices in 1891’, in Dimand, and Geanakoplos, (eds.), Celebrating Irving Fisher, pp. 5784.Google Scholar
Broome, L. L., The first one hundred years of banking in North Carolina, Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina School of Law Banking Institute.Google Scholar
Brown, D. and Kubler, F., ‘Comment on William C. Brainard and Herbert E. Scarf's “How to compute equilibrium prices in 1891”’, in Dimand, and Geanakoplos, (eds.), Celebrating Irving Fisher, pp. 85–8.Google Scholar
Bullard, J. and Eusepi, S., ‘Did the great inflation occur despite policymaker commitment to a Taylor rule?’, Rev. of Economic Dynamics, 8/2, pp. 324–59.Google Scholar
Carlson, M., ‘Causes of bank suspensions in the panic of 1893’, Explorations in Economic History, 42/1, pp. 5680.Google Scholar
Clark, G., ‘The efficiency gains from site value taxes: the Tithe commutation act of 1836’, Explorations in economic history, 42/2, pp. 282310.Google Scholar
Cohen, J. P. and Coughlin, C. C., ‘An introduction to two-rate taxation of land and buildings’, Federal Reserve Bank of St Louis Rev., 87/3, pp. 359–74.Google Scholar
Cruson, D., The Newtown savings bank: one hundred fifty years of service, Newtown: Newtown Savings Bank.Google Scholar
Derks, S. and Smith, T., The value of a dollar: colonial era to the Civil War, 1600–1865, Millerton: Grey House.Google Scholar
Desan, C., ‘The market as a matter of money: Denaturalizing economic currency in American constitutional history’, Law and Social Inquiry J. of the American Bar Foundation, 30/1, pp. 160.Google Scholar
Downing, N. W., Transatlantic paper and the emergence of the American capital market, in Goetzmann, and Rouwenhorst, (eds.), The origins of value, pp. 271–98.Google Scholar
Duncan, R., The dollar crisis: causes, consequences, cures, Singapore: J. Wiley & Sons.Google Scholar
Fishback, P. V., ‘Did new deal grant programs stimulate local economies? A study of federal grants and retail sales during the great depression’, J. of Economic History, 65/1, pp. 3672.Google Scholar
Friedberg, A. L. and Friedberg, I. S., A guide book of United States paper money: complete source for history, grading, and prices, Atlanta: Whitman.Google Scholar
Giedeman, D. C., ‘Branch banking restrictions and Finance constraints in early-twentieth century America’, J. of Economic History, 65/1, pp. 129–51.Google Scholar
Gordon, J. S., Wei da de bo yi: Huàerjie jin rong di guo de ju qi [The great game: the emergence of Wall Street as a world power (1653–2000)], Beijing: Zhong xin chu ban she.Google Scholar
Hewett, R. S., ‘Taxation and the American Revolution’, J. of Economics (MVEA), 31/1, pp. 115.Google Scholar
Kanazawa, M., ‘Immigration, exclusion, and taxation: anti-Chinese legislation in gold rush California’, J. of Economic History, 65/3, pp. 779805.Google Scholar
Kennan, G., E. H. Harriman: railroad czar, New York: Cosimo Classics.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kenneth, D., The gold ring: Jim Fisk, Jay Gould, and Black Friday, 1869, New York: Carroll & Graf.Google Scholar
Klotter, J. C., A 100-year partnership: Hyden Citizens Bank and Leslie County, 1904–2004, Hyden, KY: Hyden Citizens Bank.Google Scholar
Körnert, J., ‘Analyse der Finanzmärkte der USA in den fünf Bankenkrisen der National Banking-Ära’, Bankhistorisches Archiv, 31/2, pp. 87106.Google Scholar
Kopfensteiner, D. and Ottenweller, C., The Houston branch of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas: financial crises and banking timeline, 1919–1979, Houston: Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, Houston Branch.Google Scholar
Lange, D. W. and Mead, M. J., History of the United States Mint and its coinage, Atlanta: Whitman.Google Scholar
Lee, R. A., Farmers vs. wage earners: organized labor in Kansas, 1860–1960, University of Nebraska Press.Google Scholar
Loeb, S. E. and Miranti, P. J., The Institute of Accounts: nineteenth-century origins of accounting professionalism in the United States, London: Routledge, 2004.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Love, P. H., Andrew W. Mellon: the man and his work, Whitefish, MT: Kessinger.Google Scholar
Mehrling, P., Fischer Black and the revolutionary idea of finance: John Wiley & Sons, Hoboken: Perry Mehrling.Google Scholar
Meissner, C. M., ‘Voting rules and the success of connected lending in 19th century New England banks’, Explorations in Economic History, 42/4, pp. 509–28.Google Scholar
Michener, R. W. and Wright, R. E., ‘State “currencies” and the transition to the US dollar: clarifying some confusions’, American Economic Rev., 95/3, pp. 682703.Google Scholar
Mitchener, K. J., ‘Bank supervision, regulation, and instability during the Great Depression’, J. of Economic History, 65/1, pp. 152–85.Google Scholar
Mitchener, K. J. and Weidenmier, M., ‘Empire, public goods, and the Roosevelt corollary’, J. of Economic History, 65/3, pp. 658–92.Google Scholar
Officer, L. H., ‘The quantity theory in New England, 1703–1749: new data to analyze an old question’, Explorations in Economic History, 42/1, pp. 101–22.Google Scholar
Pratt, J. A., ‘From buildings and loans to bail-outs: a history of the American savings and loan industry’, J. of American History, 92/2, pp. 701–2.Google Scholar
Robertson, F., ‘The aesthetics of authenticity: printed banknotes as industrial currency’, Technology and Culture, 46/1, pp. 3151.Google Scholar
Rogers, A., ‘Prosperous but precarious: property deeds and mortgages in a small market town in the 18th and 19th centuries’, Family and Community History, 8/2, pp. 105–22.Google Scholar
Roth, R., ‘American Civil War: financial support of Frankfurt bankers for the United States’, in Adam, T. (ed.), Germany and the Americas: culture, politics, and history: a multidisciplinary encyclopedia, Santa Barbara: ABC-CLIO, Vol.1, pp. 61–2.Google Scholar
Rothbard, M. N., A history of money and banking in the United States: the colonial era to World War II, Auburn: Ludwig von Mises Institute.Google Scholar
Rousseau, P. L. and Sylla, R., ‘Emerging Financial Markets and Early US Growth’, Explorations in Economic History, 42/1, pp. 126.Google Scholar
Rutherford, M., ‘“Who's afraid of Arthur Burns?” The NBER and the foundations’, J. of the History of Economic Thought, 27/2, pp. 109–41.Google Scholar
Sexton, J., Debtor diplomacy: finance and American foreign relations in the Civil War era, 1837–1873, Oxford: Clarendon Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shiller, R. J., ‘The invention of inflation-indexed bonds in early America’, in Goetzmann, and Rouwenhorst, (eds.), The origins of value, pp. 239–48.Google Scholar
Slade, G. R., Banking in the Great Northern Territory: an illustrated history, Afton: Afton Historical Society Press.Google Scholar
Solakoglu, E. G. and Goodwin, B. K., ‘The effects of railroad development on price convergence among the states of the USA from 1866 to 1906’, Applied Economics, 37/15, pp. 1747–61.Google Scholar
Sreenivasan, K. R., ‘Comment on William C. Brainard and Herbert E. Scarf's “How to compute equilibrium prices in 1891”’, in Dimand, and Geanakoplos, (eds.), Celebrating Irving Fisher, pp. 8992.Google Scholar
Sylla, R., ‘The origins of the New York Stock Exchange’, in Goetzmann, and Rouwenhorst, (eds.), The origins of value, pp. 299312.Google Scholar
Thompson, E. L., The reconstruction of southern debtors: bankruptcy after the civil war, Athens: University of Georgia Press, 2004.Google Scholar
Thies, C. F., ‘Money and the adoption of the US Constitution’, J. of Private Enterprise, 20/2, pp. 147–64.Google Scholar
Toma, M., Competition and monopoly in the Federal Reserve System, 1914–1951: a microeconomics approach to monetary history, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Valentine, P., Tax revolt: the rebellion against an overbearing, bloated, arrogant, and abusive government, Nashville: Nelson Current.Google Scholar
Vangermeersch, R., One hundred year selective history of the Rhode Island Society of Certified Public Accountants: 1905–2005, with chronologies and memorabilia, Rhode Island: Rhode Island Society of Certified Public Accountants.Google Scholar
Walter, J. R., ‘Depression-era bank failures: the great contagion or the great shakeout?’, Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond Economic Q., 91/1, pp. 3954.Google Scholar
Weber, W. E., Were U.S. state banknotes priced as securities?, Minneapolis: Federal Reserve Bank of Minnesota.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
West, G. M., Historical perspective of tax collecting in New Hampshire, Concord: New Hampshire Tax Collectors Association.Google Scholar
Wicker, E., The great debate on banking reform: Nelson Aldrich and the origins of the Fed., Columbus: Ohio State University Press.Google Scholar
Wright, R. E., The first Wall Street: Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, and the birth of American finance, Chicago: University of Chicago Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wright, R. E., The US national debt, 1787–1900, London: Pickering & Chatto.Google Scholar
Aho, J. A., Confession and bookkeeping: the religious, moral, and rhetorical roots of modern accounting, Albany: State University of New York Press.Google Scholar
Aitken, R., ‘“A direct personal stake”: cultural economy, mass investment and the New York Stock Exchange’, Rev. of International Political Economy, 12/2, pp. 334–63.Google Scholar
Askew, R. and Browne, I., ‘Race, ethnicity, and wage inequality among women: what happened in the 1990s and early 21st century?’, American Behavioral Scientist, 48/9, pp. 1275–92.Google Scholar
Avi-Yonah, R. S., ‘Story of the separate corporate income tax: a vehicle for regulating corporate managers’, in Bank, and Stark, (eds.), Business tax stories.Google Scholar
Bank, S. A., ‘Story of double taxation: a clash over the control of corporate earnings’, in Bank, and Stark, (eds.), Business tax stories.Google Scholar
Bank, S. A. and Stark, K. J. (eds.), Business tax stories, New York: Foundation Press.Google Scholar
Bank, S. A. and Stark, K. J., ‘Evolutionary perspective on the history of US business taxation’, in Bank, and Stark, (eds.), Business tax stories.Google Scholar
Bremner, R. P., Chairman of the Fed: William McChesney Martin Jr. and the creation of the modern federal reserve, New Haven: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Cogley, T. and Sargent, T. J., ‘The conquest of US inflation: learning and robustness to model uncertainty’, Rev. of Economic Dynamics, 8/2, pp. 528–63.Google Scholar
Cogley, T. and Sargent, T. J., ‘Drifts and volatilities: monetary policies and outcomes in the post WWII US’, Rev. of Economic Dynamics, 8/2, pp. 262302.Google Scholar
Dealey, H., Gossy, A., Kronowitz, D., Rodengen, J. L. and Shockley, D., New horizons: the story of Federated Investors, Fort Lauderdale: Write Stuff Enterprises.Google Scholar
Dobson, A. P., ‘The export-import bank and US foreign economic relations’, Diplomatic History, 29/2, pp. 375–78.Google Scholar
Fraser, S., Every man a speculator: a history of Wall Street in American life, New York: Harper Collins.Google Scholar
Garrison, J. C., The new income tax scandal: how Congress hijacked the sixteenth amendment, Philadelphia: Xlibris.Google Scholar
Geck, C., ‘What goes up: the uncensored history of modern Wall Street as told by the bankers, brokers, CEOs, and scoundrels who made it happen’, Library J., 130/14, pp. 156–66.Google Scholar
Hamill, S. P., ‘Story of LLCs: combining the best features of a flawed business tax structure’, in Bank, and Stark, (eds.), Business tax stories.Google Scholar
Higgs, R., ‘La transizione americana. Dalla pianificazione centralizzata al mercato,1945–47’, 900, 12, pp. 6782.Google Scholar
Hsu, D. H. and Kenney, M., ‘Organizing venture capital: the rise and demise of American research and development corporation, 1946–1973’, Industrial and Corporate Change, 14/4, pp. 579616.Google Scholar
Jensen, S., ‘A legislative history of the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of 2005’, American Bankruptcy Law J., 79/3, pp. 485569.Google Scholar
Kenneson, C., The Lewis State Bank of Tallahassee, Florida and the family who made it possible, Tallahassee: The Compiler.Google Scholar
Koegel, J. K., History of Women's Fund of Central Indiana, Indianapolis: Women's Fund of Central Indiana, Central Indiana Community Foundation.Google Scholar
Krippner, G. R., ‘The financialization of the American economy’, Socio-Economic Rev., 3/2, pp. 173208.Google Scholar
Leyden, D. P., Adequacy, accountability, and the future of public education funding, New York: Springer.Google Scholar
Light, A., ‘Job mobility and wage growth: evidence from the NLSY79’, Monthly Labor Rev., 128/2, pp. 33–9.Google Scholar
Lindsey, D. E., Orphanides, A. and Rasche, R. H., The reform of October 1979: how it happened and why, Washington: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System.Google Scholar
Lowenstein, R., Origins of the crash: the great bubble and its undoing, New York: Penguin Books.Google Scholar
Mann, G, ‘What's a penny worth? Wages, prices, and the American working man’, Ethnography, 6/3, pp. 315–56.Google Scholar
Marrero, G. A., ‘An active public investment rule and the downsizing experience in the US: 1960–2000’, Topics in Macroeconomics, 5/1, pp. 126.Google Scholar
Montagne, S., ‘Pouvoir financier vs. pouvoir salarial les fonds de pension américains: contribution du droit a la légitimité financière’, Annales. Histoire, Sciences Sociales, 60/6, pp. 1299–325.Google Scholar
Schlunk, H. J., ‘Story of General Utilities and its repeal: much ado about nothing?’, in Bank, and Stark, (eds.), Business tax stories.Google Scholar
Smeeding, T. M., ‘Public policy, economic inequality, and poverty: the United States in comparative perspective’, Social Science Q., 86, pp. 955–83.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Urofsky, M. I., Money and free speech: campaign finance reform and the courts, Lawrence: University Press of Kansas.Google Scholar
Twyman, T. R., Solomon's treasure: the magic and mystery of America's money, Portland: Dragon Key Press.Google Scholar
Wilkinson, R., Aiding students, buying students: financial aid in America, Nashville Vanderbilt University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Williams, B., Debt for sale: a social history of the credit trap, Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2004.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Woodward, B., Maestro: Greenspan's Fed and the American boom, New York: Simon & Schuster Paperbacks.Google Scholar
Zelenak, L., ‘Tax or welfare? The administration of the earned income tax credit’, UCLA Law Rev., 52/6, pp. 1867–916.Google Scholar
Eltis, D., Lewis, F. D. and Richardson, D., ‘Slave prices, the African slave trade, and productivity in the Caribbean, 1674–1807’, Economic History Rev., 58/4, pp. 673700.Google Scholar
Minda, A. and Truquin, S., ‘International regulation and supervision: a solution to bank failure in Latin America?’, Ibero Americana, 35/1, pp. 935.Google Scholar
Neiburg, F., ‘Inflacion y crisis nacional. culturas economicas y espacios publicos en la Argentina y Brasil’, Anuario de Estudios Americanos, 62/1, pp. 113138.Google Scholar
Santillan Salgado, R. J, Coiteux, M., Brandl, M. W., Garrido, C., Roy, J. and Hebb, G. M., ‘Banking, capital markets and monetary policy in the NAFTA countries: a recent survey’, Latin American Business Review, 6/1, pp. 1123.Google Scholar
Aboites, L. and Jáuregui, L., Penuria sin fin: historia de los impuestos en México siglos XVIII-XX, Mexico: Instituto Mora.Google Scholar
Amuedo-Dorantes, C. and Pozo, S., ‘On the use of differing money transmission methods by Mexican immigrants’, International Migration Rev., 39/3, pp. 554–76.Google Scholar
Baskes, J., ‘Colonial institutions and cross-cultural trade: “repartimiento” credit and indigenous production of cochineal in eighteenth-century Oaxaca, Mexico’, J. of Economic History, 65/1, pp. 186210.Google Scholar
Bátiz Vázquez, J. A., ‘El archivo historico Banamex: su genesis’, América Latina en la Historia Económica. Boletín de Fuentes, 23, pp. 95104.Google Scholar
Blázquez Domínguez, C. and Ordóñez López, C. A., La sucursal del Banco Mercantil de Veracruz en Xalapa, 1904–1910, Veracruz: Instituto Veracruzano de Cultura.Google Scholar
Del Angel-Mobarak, G. A., Bazdresch Paradan, C. and Suárez Dávila, F. (eds.), Cuando el Estado se hizo banquero: consecuencias de la nacionalización bancaria en México, Mexico, DF: Fondo de Cultura Económica.Google Scholar
Huybens, E., Jordan, A. L. and Pratap, S., ‘Financial market discipline in early-twentieth-century Mexico’, J. of Economic History, 65/3, pp. 757–78.Google Scholar
Marichal, C., ‘Crisis bancarias en América Latina: Perspectiva histórica’, in del Ángel, G. A. (ed.), La banca en América Latina: lecciones del pasado. Retos al futuro, Mexico: Centro de Investigación y Docencia Económicas, 2004, pp. 41–5.Google Scholar
Marichal, C., ‘Una historia de la banca de desarrollo en México’, Crisis y alternativas de la banca de desarrollo en México, Mexico: Memoria del primer foro de reflexión de los trabajadores de Bancomext, 2004, pp. 2330.Google Scholar
Marichal, C., ‘Influences françaises sur la formation de la Banque Mexicaine: le Banco Nacional de México, 1884–1914’, Economies et Sociétés, 2004, 31, pp. 1097–118.Google Scholar
Miranda, J., El tributo indígena en la Nueva España durante el siglo XVI, Mexico: Colegio de Mexico.Google Scholar
Moreno Acevedo, E. and Quezada, S., ‘Del deficit a la insolvencia. finanzas y real hacienda en Yucatan, 1760–1816’, Mexican Studies, 21/2, pp. 307–31.Google Scholar
Nuñez Estrada, H., Reforma y crisis del sistema bancario, 1990–2000: quiebra de Banca Serfin: enfoque organizacional, Mexico: Plaza y Valdés.Google Scholar
Quiroz, E., Entre el lujo y la subsistencia: mercado, abastecimiento y precios de la carne en la ciudad de México, 1750–1812, Mexico: Colegio de Mexico: Instituto de Investigaciones Dr. José María Luis Mora.Google Scholar
Richardson, J. W., ‘Toward democracy: a critique of a World Bank loan to the united Mexican states’, Rev. of Policy Research, 22/4, pp. 473–82.Google Scholar
Riguzzi, P., ‘Sistema financiero, banca privada y credito agricola en Mexico, 1897–1913: un desencuentro anunciado?’, Mexican Studies, 21/2, pp. 333–67.Google Scholar
Rodríguez, M. G., La nostalgia y la modernidad, empresarios y empresas regionales en México, siglos XIX y XX, Durango: Instituto de Investigaciones Históricas de la Universidad Juárez del Estado de Durango.Google Scholar
Ruiz Gomez, J. J., ‘Sistema bancario mexicano: regreso al futuro’, Información comercial espanola, 821, pp. 191212.Google Scholar
Tortolero, A., ‘Moneda, credito y exposiciones: el inasible triangulo de la modernidad en la agricultura mexicana, 1876–1920’, Jahrbuch fur Geschichte Lateinamerikas, 42, pp. 115–44.Google Scholar
Turrent-Diaz, E., ‘Las tres etapas de la autonomia del banco central en Mexico’, Analisis Economico, 20/43, p. 4781.Google Scholar
Alacevich, M., ‘Post-war economic policies for development: Lauchlin B. Currie and the World Bank in Colombia’, Storia del pensiero economico, 34/1, pp. 7392.Google Scholar
Barriga del Diestro, F., ‘La moneda que vio nacer, crecer y morir a Colombia 1813–1836’, Boletín de Historia y Antigüedades, 92/831, pp. 809–44.Google Scholar
Caballero, A. C., ‘Las crisis financieras del ultimo cuarto del siglo XX’, Coyuntura economica, 35/2, pp. 195206.Google Scholar
Fernandez, M. C., ‘La politica monetaria y los ciclos economicos en Colombia en los ultimos 35 anos’, Coyuntura economica, 35/2, pp. 101–8.Google Scholar
Renteria-R, C., ‘El presupuesto de 1970 y el presupuesto de 2005: evidencia de decisiones economicas y fiscales de los ultimos 35 anos’, Coyuntura economica, 35/2, pp. 135–48.Google Scholar
Restrepo Salazar, J. C., Finanzas y financistas, Bucaramanga: Sic Editorial.Google Scholar
Sanchez, F., ‘Desigualdad del ingreso 1976–2004’, Coyuntura economica, 35/2, pp. 289–94.Google Scholar
Urrutia, M. M., ‘Cambio en los instrumentos de politica monetaria’, Coyuntura economica, 35/2, pp. 93100.Google Scholar
Villar, G. L, ‘Flujos de capital privado en Colombia 1970–2005’, Coyuntura economica, 35/2, pp. 159–66.Google Scholar
Abreu Bolzan, M., Tribunal de Contas do Estado: Estado do Rio Grande do Sul: 70 anos, 1935–2005, Porto Alegre: Tribunal de Contas do Estado do Rio Grande do Sul.Google Scholar
Aldrighi, D. M. and De Saes, F. A. M., ‘Financing pioneering railways in Sao Paulo: the idiosyncratic case of the Estrada de Ferro Sorocabana (1872–1919)’, Estudos Economicos, 35/1, pp. 133–68.Google Scholar
Barros Leite, C. E., A evolução das ciências contábeis no Brasil, Rio de Janeiro: FGV.Google Scholar
Cassiano, K. M. and Cribri Neto, F., ‘Uma analise da dinamica inflacionaria Brasileira’, Rev. brasileira de economia, 59/4, pp. 535–66.Google Scholar
Hanley, A. G., Native capital: financial institutions and economic development in Sao Paulo, Brazil, 1850–1920, Stanford: Stanford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lima De Cerqueira, F. C. G., ‘Uma analise critica da literatura sobre a oferta e a circulacao de moeda metalica no Brasil nos seculos XVI e XVII’, Estudos Economicos, 35/1, pp. 169201.Google Scholar
Moreira Sindeaux de Oliveira, C. and Ramos Vianna, P. J., Desenvolvimento regiona: 50 anos do BNB, Fortaleza: Banco do Nordeste.Google Scholar
Triner, G. D. and Wandschneider, K., ‘The Baring crisis and the Brazilian Encilhamento, 1889–1891: an early example of contagion among emerging capital markets’, Financial History Rev., 12/2, pp. 199225.Google Scholar
Villela, A., ‘Política tarifária no II reinado: evoluçao e impactos, 1850–1889’, Nova economia. Rev. do departamento de ciências econômicas da universidade federal de Minas Gerais, 15/1, pp. 3573.Google Scholar
Blustein, P., And the money kept rolling in (and out): Wall Street, the IMF, and the bankrupting of Argentina, New York: Public Affairs.Google Scholar
Bragoni, B., ‘Mercados, monedas y credito a la luz del funcionamiento de una entidad bancaria (Mendoza, 1866–1879)’, Desarrollo economico, 44/177, pp. 5574.Google Scholar
Brunet, I. and Schilman, F., ‘Modelo de valorizacion financiera (Argentina, 1976–2001)’, Sistema, 188, pp. 97112.Google Scholar
Campos, M., ‘El cierre de la caja de conversion en 1929: una decision de politica economica’, Desarrollo Económico, 44/176, pp. 537–66.Google Scholar
Curia, E. L., Macroeconomía del desarrollo: ensayos sobre política monetaria y cambiaria e inflación en Argentina, Buenos Aires: Realidad Argentina.Google Scholar
Groisman, F. and Marshall, A., ‘Determinantes del grado de desigualdad salarial en la Argentina: un estudio interurbano’, Desarrollo Económico, 45/178, pp. 281301.Google Scholar
Halperín Donghi, T., Guerra y finanzas en los orígines del Estado argentino (1791–185, Buenos Aires: Prometeo Libros.Google Scholar
Hora, R., Del comercio a la tierra y mas alla: los negocios de Juan Jose y Nicolas de Anchorena (1810–1856)', Desarrollo Económico, 44/176, pp. 567600.Google Scholar
Marti, G. M., ‘Argentina y su insercion en el mundo financiero a fines de 1890. El sistema de bancos garantizados’, Trimestre economico, 77/285, pp. 55112.Google Scholar
Rougier, M., ‘Estado, empresas y credito en la Argentina: los origenes del Banco Nacional de Desarrollo, 1967–1973’, Desarrollo Económico, 43/172, 2004, pp. 515–44.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Weber, G., La conexión alemana: el lavado del dinero nazi en Argentina, Buenos Aires: Edhasa.Google Scholar
Un decenio de cambios, 1995–2005, La Paz: Banco Central de Bolivia.Google Scholar
Bakre, O. M., ‘First attempt at localising imperial accountancy: the case of the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Jamaica (ICAJ) (1950s-1970s’, Critical Perspectives on Accounting, 16/8, pp. 9951018.Google Scholar
Craigwell, R., Moore, W. and Coppin, K., ‘Financial innovation and efficiency in the Barbadian banking industry’, Money-affairs, 18/2, pp. 83100.Google Scholar
Crespo, A., Alfonso Gumucio Reyes: la pasión creadora, La Paz: Centro de Estudios Sociales.Google Scholar
Gavira Marquez, M. C., ‘Produccion de plata en el mineral de San Agustin de Huantajaya (Chile) 1750 –1804’, Chungara, 37/1, pp. 3758.Google Scholar
Higman, B. W., Plantation Jamaica, 1750–1850: capital and control in a colonial economy, Kingston: University of the West Indies Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lasso Valdés, E., Anécdotas y testimonios sobre la crisis bancaria en Panamá, 1987–1990, Panama: Universal Books.Google Scholar
Marchán R, C., Historia del Banco Central del Ecuador: de banco de gobierno a banco emisor y vuelta al pasado (1927–2000), Quito: Banco Central del Ecuador.Google Scholar
Medina-Smith, E. J., La fuga de capitales en Venezuela, 1950–1999, Caracas: Banco Central de Venezuela.Google Scholar
Petro, G., El caso del Banco del Pacífico, Bogota: Intermedio.Google Scholar
Proctor, J. A., The forgotten mint of colonial Panama: a look into the production of coins in America during the 16th century and Panma's Spanish royal house for minting coins, Laguna Hills: Jorge A. Proctor.Google Scholar
Rivarola Paoli, J. B., La Real Hacienda: la fiscalidad colonial, siglos XVI al XIX., Asunción: Ediciones y Arte.Google Scholar
Sanchez Fung, J. R., ‘Exchange rates, monetary policy and interest rates in the Dominican Republic during the 1990s boom and new millennium crisis’, J. of Latin American Studies, 37/4, pp. 727–38.Google Scholar
Sigala Venegas, L. H. and Sigala Paparella, L. E., ‘La rentabilidad del negocio azucarero en Venezuela. el caso de los precios y los productores del rio turbio’, Rev. de Indias, 65/233, pp. 271–81.Google Scholar
Winkelried-Quezada, D., ‘Tendencias comunes y analisis de la politica monetaria en el Peru’, Monetaria. 283, pp. 279317.Google Scholar
Eltis, D., Lewis, F. D. and Richardson, D., ‘Slave prices, the African slave trade, and productivity in the Caribbean, 1674–1807’, Economic History Rev., 58/4, pp. 673700.Google Scholar
Minda, A. and Truquin, S., ‘International regulation and supervision: a solution to bank failure in Latin America?’, Ibero Americana, 35/1, pp. 935.Google Scholar
Neiburg, F., ‘Inflacion y crisis nacional. culturas economicas y espacios publicos en la Argentina y Brasil’, Anuario de Estudios Americanos, 62/1, pp. 113138.Google Scholar
Santillan Salgado, R. J, Coiteux, M., Brandl, M. W., Garrido, C., Roy, J. and Hebb, G. M., ‘Banking, capital markets and monetary policy in the NAFTA countries: a recent survey’, Latin American Business Review, 6/1, pp. 1123.Google Scholar
Aboites, L. and Jáuregui, L., Penuria sin fin: historia de los impuestos en México siglos XVIII-XX, Mexico: Instituto Mora.Google Scholar
Amuedo-Dorantes, C. and Pozo, S., ‘On the use of differing money transmission methods by Mexican immigrants’, International Migration Rev., 39/3, pp. 554–76.Google Scholar
Baskes, J., ‘Colonial institutions and cross-cultural trade: “repartimiento” credit and indigenous production of cochineal in eighteenth-century Oaxaca, Mexico’, J. of Economic History, 65/1, pp. 186210.Google Scholar
Bátiz Vázquez, J. A., ‘El archivo historico Banamex: su genesis’, América Latina en la Historia Económica. Boletín de Fuentes, 23, pp. 95104.Google Scholar
Blázquez Domínguez, C. and Ordóñez López, C. A., La sucursal del Banco Mercantil de Veracruz en Xalapa, 1904–1910, Veracruz: Instituto Veracruzano de Cultura.Google Scholar
Del Angel-Mobarak, G. A., Bazdresch Paradan, C. and Suárez Dávila, F. (eds.), Cuando el Estado se hizo banquero: consecuencias de la nacionalización bancaria en México, Mexico, DF: Fondo de Cultura Económica.Google Scholar
Huybens, E., Jordan, A. L. and Pratap, S., ‘Financial market discipline in early-twentieth-century Mexico’, J. of Economic History, 65/3, pp. 757–78.Google Scholar
Marichal, C., ‘Crisis bancarias en América Latina: Perspectiva histórica’, in del Ángel, G. A. (ed.), La banca en América Latina: lecciones del pasado. Retos al futuro, Mexico: Centro de Investigación y Docencia Económicas, 2004, pp. 41–5.Google Scholar
Marichal, C., ‘Una historia de la banca de desarrollo en México’, Crisis y alternativas de la banca de desarrollo en México, Mexico: Memoria del primer foro de reflexión de los trabajadores de Bancomext, 2004, pp. 2330.Google Scholar
Marichal, C., ‘Influences françaises sur la formation de la Banque Mexicaine: le Banco Nacional de México, 1884–1914’, Economies et Sociétés, 2004, 31, pp. 1097–118.Google Scholar
Miranda, J., El tributo indígena en la Nueva España durante el siglo XVI, Mexico: Colegio de Mexico.Google Scholar
Moreno Acevedo, E. and Quezada, S., ‘Del deficit a la insolvencia. finanzas y real hacienda en Yucatan, 1760–1816’, Mexican Studies, 21/2, pp. 307–31.Google Scholar
Nuñez Estrada, H., Reforma y crisis del sistema bancario, 1990–2000: quiebra de Banca Serfin: enfoque organizacional, Mexico: Plaza y Valdés.Google Scholar
Quiroz, E., Entre el lujo y la subsistencia: mercado, abastecimiento y precios de la carne en la ciudad de México, 1750–1812, Mexico: Colegio de Mexico: Instituto de Investigaciones Dr. José María Luis Mora.Google Scholar
Richardson, J. W., ‘Toward democracy: a critique of a World Bank loan to the united Mexican states’, Rev. of Policy Research, 22/4, pp. 473–82.Google Scholar
Riguzzi, P., ‘Sistema financiero, banca privada y credito agricola en Mexico, 1897–1913: un desencuentro anunciado?’, Mexican Studies, 21/2, pp. 333–67.Google Scholar
Rodríguez, M. G., La nostalgia y la modernidad, empresarios y empresas regionales en México, siglos XIX y XX, Durango: Instituto de Investigaciones Históricas de la Universidad Juárez del Estado de Durango.Google Scholar
Ruiz Gomez, J. J., ‘Sistema bancario mexicano: regreso al futuro’, Información comercial espanola, 821, pp. 191212.Google Scholar
Tortolero, A., ‘Moneda, credito y exposiciones: el inasible triangulo de la modernidad en la agricultura mexicana, 1876–1920’, Jahrbuch fur Geschichte Lateinamerikas, 42, pp. 115–44.Google Scholar
Turrent-Diaz, E., ‘Las tres etapas de la autonomia del banco central en Mexico’, Analisis Economico, 20/43, p. 4781.Google Scholar
Alacevich, M., ‘Post-war economic policies for development: Lauchlin B. Currie and the World Bank in Colombia’, Storia del pensiero economico, 34/1, pp. 7392.Google Scholar
Barriga del Diestro, F., ‘La moneda que vio nacer, crecer y morir a Colombia 1813–1836’, Boletín de Historia y Antigüedades, 92/831, pp. 809–44.Google Scholar
Caballero, A. C., ‘Las crisis financieras del ultimo cuarto del siglo XX’, Coyuntura economica, 35/2, pp. 195206.Google Scholar
Fernandez, M. C., ‘La politica monetaria y los ciclos economicos en Colombia en los ultimos 35 anos’, Coyuntura economica, 35/2, pp. 101–8.Google Scholar
Renteria-R, C., ‘El presupuesto de 1970 y el presupuesto de 2005: evidencia de decisiones economicas y fiscales de los ultimos 35 anos’, Coyuntura economica, 35/2, pp. 135–48.Google Scholar
Restrepo Salazar, J. C., Finanzas y financistas, Bucaramanga: Sic Editorial.Google Scholar
Sanchez, F., ‘Desigualdad del ingreso 1976–2004’, Coyuntura economica, 35/2, pp. 289–94.Google Scholar
Urrutia, M. M., ‘Cambio en los instrumentos de politica monetaria’, Coyuntura economica, 35/2, pp. 93100.Google Scholar
Villar, G. L, ‘Flujos de capital privado en Colombia 1970–2005’, Coyuntura economica, 35/2, pp. 159–66.Google Scholar
Abreu Bolzan, M., Tribunal de Contas do Estado: Estado do Rio Grande do Sul: 70 anos, 1935–2005, Porto Alegre: Tribunal de Contas do Estado do Rio Grande do Sul.Google Scholar
Aldrighi, D. M. and De Saes, F. A. M., ‘Financing pioneering railways in Sao Paulo: the idiosyncratic case of the Estrada de Ferro Sorocabana (1872–1919)’, Estudos Economicos, 35/1, pp. 133–68.Google Scholar
Barros Leite, C. E., A evolução das ciências contábeis no Brasil, Rio de Janeiro: FGV.Google Scholar
Cassiano, K. M. and Cribri Neto, F., ‘Uma analise da dinamica inflacionaria Brasileira’, Rev. brasileira de economia, 59/4, pp. 535–66.Google Scholar
Hanley, A. G., Native capital: financial institutions and economic development in Sao Paulo, Brazil, 1850–1920, Stanford: Stanford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lima De Cerqueira, F. C. G., ‘Uma analise critica da literatura sobre a oferta e a circulacao de moeda metalica no Brasil nos seculos XVI e XVII’, Estudos Economicos, 35/1, pp. 169201.Google Scholar
Moreira Sindeaux de Oliveira, C. and Ramos Vianna, P. J., Desenvolvimento regiona: 50 anos do BNB, Fortaleza: Banco do Nordeste.Google Scholar
Triner, G. D. and Wandschneider, K., ‘The Baring crisis and the Brazilian Encilhamento, 1889–1891: an early example of contagion among emerging capital markets’, Financial History Rev., 12/2, pp. 199225.Google Scholar
Villela, A., ‘Política tarifária no II reinado: evoluçao e impactos, 1850–1889’, Nova economia. Rev. do departamento de ciências econômicas da universidade federal de Minas Gerais, 15/1, pp. 3573.Google Scholar
Blustein, P., And the money kept rolling in (and out): Wall Street, the IMF, and the bankrupting of Argentina, New York: Public Affairs.Google Scholar
Bragoni, B., ‘Mercados, monedas y credito a la luz del funcionamiento de una entidad bancaria (Mendoza, 1866–1879)’, Desarrollo economico, 44/177, pp. 5574.Google Scholar
Brunet, I. and Schilman, F., ‘Modelo de valorizacion financiera (Argentina, 1976–2001)’, Sistema, 188, pp. 97112.Google Scholar
Campos, M., ‘El cierre de la caja de conversion en 1929: una decision de politica economica’, Desarrollo Económico, 44/176, pp. 537–66.Google Scholar
Curia, E. L., Macroeconomía del desarrollo: ensayos sobre política monetaria y cambiaria e inflación en Argentina, Buenos Aires: Realidad Argentina.Google Scholar
Groisman, F. and Marshall, A., ‘Determinantes del grado de desigualdad salarial en la Argentina: un estudio interurbano’, Desarrollo Económico, 45/178, pp. 281301.Google Scholar
Halperín Donghi, T., Guerra y finanzas en los orígines del Estado argentino (1791–185, Buenos Aires: Prometeo Libros.Google Scholar
Hora, R., Del comercio a la tierra y mas alla: los negocios de Juan Jose y Nicolas de Anchorena (1810–1856)', Desarrollo Económico, 44/176, pp. 567600.Google Scholar
Marti, G. M., ‘Argentina y su insercion en el mundo financiero a fines de 1890. El sistema de bancos garantizados’, Trimestre economico, 77/285, pp. 55112.Google Scholar
Rougier, M., ‘Estado, empresas y credito en la Argentina: los origenes del Banco Nacional de Desarrollo, 1967–1973’, Desarrollo Económico, 43/172, 2004, pp. 515–44.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Weber, G., La conexión alemana: el lavado del dinero nazi en Argentina, Buenos Aires: Edhasa.Google Scholar
Un decenio de cambios, 1995–2005, La Paz: Banco Central de Bolivia.Google Scholar
Bakre, O. M., ‘First attempt at localising imperial accountancy: the case of the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Jamaica (ICAJ) (1950s-1970s’, Critical Perspectives on Accounting, 16/8, pp. 9951018.Google Scholar
Craigwell, R., Moore, W. and Coppin, K., ‘Financial innovation and efficiency in the Barbadian banking industry’, Money-affairs, 18/2, pp. 83100.Google Scholar
Crespo, A., Alfonso Gumucio Reyes: la pasión creadora, La Paz: Centro de Estudios Sociales.Google Scholar
Gavira Marquez, M. C., ‘Produccion de plata en el mineral de San Agustin de Huantajaya (Chile) 1750 –1804’, Chungara, 37/1, pp. 3758.Google Scholar
Higman, B. W., Plantation Jamaica, 1750–1850: capital and control in a colonial economy, Kingston: University of the West Indies Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lasso Valdés, E., Anécdotas y testimonios sobre la crisis bancaria en Panamá, 1987–1990, Panama: Universal Books.Google Scholar
Marchán R, C., Historia del Banco Central del Ecuador: de banco de gobierno a banco emisor y vuelta al pasado (1927–2000), Quito: Banco Central del Ecuador.Google Scholar
Medina-Smith, E. J., La fuga de capitales en Venezuela, 1950–1999, Caracas: Banco Central de Venezuela.Google Scholar
Petro, G., El caso del Banco del Pacífico, Bogota: Intermedio.Google Scholar
Proctor, J. A., The forgotten mint of colonial Panama: a look into the production of coins in America during the 16th century and Panma's Spanish royal house for minting coins, Laguna Hills: Jorge A. Proctor.Google Scholar
Rivarola Paoli, J. B., La Real Hacienda: la fiscalidad colonial, siglos XVI al XIX., Asunción: Ediciones y Arte.Google Scholar
Sanchez Fung, J. R., ‘Exchange rates, monetary policy and interest rates in the Dominican Republic during the 1990s boom and new millennium crisis’, J. of Latin American Studies, 37/4, pp. 727–38.Google Scholar
Sigala Venegas, L. H. and Sigala Paparella, L. E., ‘La rentabilidad del negocio azucarero en Venezuela. el caso de los precios y los productores del rio turbio’, Rev. de Indias, 65/233, pp. 271–81.Google Scholar
Winkelried-Quezada, D., ‘Tendencias comunes y analisis de la politica monetaria en el Peru’, Monetaria. 283, pp. 279317.Google Scholar
Boone, C., ‘State, capital, and the politics of banking reform in Sub-Saharan Africa’, Comparative Politics, 37/4, pp. 401–20.Google Scholar
Cresti, F., ‘Scambi e commerci tra la Libia mediterranea e l'Africa subsahariana secondo i documenti europei (XVIII - metà XIX secolo)’, Africa, 60/1, pp. 115–42.Google Scholar
Gordon, D., ‘Growth without capital: a renascent fishery in Zambia and Katanga, 1960s to recent times’, J. of Southern African Studies, 31/3, pp. 495511.Google Scholar
Ghazaleh, P., ‘Commis, artisans, ouvriers. Les métamorphoses du salariat dans l'Egypte du XIXe siècle’, Rev. du monde musulman et de la Mediterranée, 105–6, pp. 4768.Google Scholar
Funnell, W., ‘Accounting on the frontline: cost accounting, military efficiency and the South African war’, Accounting and Business Research, 35/4, pp. 307–26.Google Scholar
Gidlow, R., ‘South African gold sales policies during the 1980s’, South African J. of Economic History, 20/1, pp. 117.Google Scholar
Mokoena, T. M., Rangasamy, L., Swanepoel, J. A. and Visser, F. J., ‘South African consumer price inflation in a historical and global context’, South African J. of Economic History, 20/1, pp. 109–30.Google Scholar
Okeahalam, C. C., ‘Strategic alliances and mergers of financial exchanges: the case of the SADC’, J. of Southern African Studies, 31/1, pp. 7593.Google Scholar
Austin, G., Labour, land, and capital in Ghana: from slavery to free labour in Asante, 1807–1956, Rochester, NY: University of Rochester Press.Google Scholar
Decker, S., ‘Decolonising Barclays Bank DCO? Corporate Africanisation in Nigeria, 1945–69’, J. of Imperial and Commonwealth History, 33/3, pp. 419–40.Google Scholar
Deveau, J-M., L'or et les esclaves: histoire des forts du Ghana du XVIe au XVIIIe siècle, Paris: UNESCO/Karthala.Google Scholar
Gharbi, M. L., Crédit et discrédit de la banque d'Algérie: seconde moitié du XIXème siècle, Paris: L'Harmattan.Google Scholar
Giurovich, D. and Keenan, J., ‘The UNDP, the World Bank and biodiversity in the Algerian Sahara’, J. of North African Studies, 10/3–4, pp. 593604.Google Scholar
Jurk, G., ‘Als Berater der Bank von Mosambik’, Wir haben Spuren hinterlassen!, Münster: LIT-Verlag.Google Scholar
Muhumuza, W., ‘Unfulfilled promises? NGOs’ micro-credit programmes and poverty reduction in Uganda', J. of Contemporary African Studies, 23/3, pp. 391416.Google Scholar
Nzenguet, I. and Gilchrist, A., Colonisation, fiscalité et mutations au Gabon, 1910–1947, Paris: L'Harmattan.Google Scholar
Vahed, G., ‘Passengers, partnerships, and promissory notes: Gujarati traders in colonial Natal, 1870–1920’, International J. of African Historical Studies, 38/3, pp. 449–79.Google Scholar
Van der Heyden, U., ‘Es darf nichts passieren! Entwicklungspolitisches Engagement der DDR in Mosambik. Zwischen Solidaritat und Risiko’, Wir haben Spuren hinterlassen!, Münster: LIT-Verlag.Google Scholar
Zaccaria, M., ‘L'oro dell'Eritrea, 1897–1914’, Africa, 60/1, pp. 65114.Google Scholar
Boone, C., ‘State, capital, and the politics of banking reform in Sub-Saharan Africa’, Comparative Politics, 37/4, pp. 401–20.Google Scholar
Cresti, F., ‘Scambi e commerci tra la Libia mediterranea e l'Africa subsahariana secondo i documenti europei (XVIII - metà XIX secolo)’, Africa, 60/1, pp. 115–42.Google Scholar
Gordon, D., ‘Growth without capital: a renascent fishery in Zambia and Katanga, 1960s to recent times’, J. of Southern African Studies, 31/3, pp. 495511.Google Scholar
Ghazaleh, P., ‘Commis, artisans, ouvriers. Les métamorphoses du salariat dans l'Egypte du XIXe siècle’, Rev. du monde musulman et de la Mediterranée, 105–6, pp. 4768.Google Scholar
Funnell, W., ‘Accounting on the frontline: cost accounting, military efficiency and the South African war’, Accounting and Business Research, 35/4, pp. 307–26.Google Scholar
Gidlow, R., ‘South African gold sales policies during the 1980s’, South African J. of Economic History, 20/1, pp. 117.Google Scholar
Mokoena, T. M., Rangasamy, L., Swanepoel, J. A. and Visser, F. J., ‘South African consumer price inflation in a historical and global context’, South African J. of Economic History, 20/1, pp. 109–30.Google Scholar
Okeahalam, C. C., ‘Strategic alliances and mergers of financial exchanges: the case of the SADC’, J. of Southern African Studies, 31/1, pp. 7593.Google Scholar
Austin, G., Labour, land, and capital in Ghana: from slavery to free labour in Asante, 1807–1956, Rochester, NY: University of Rochester Press.Google Scholar
Decker, S., ‘Decolonising Barclays Bank DCO? Corporate Africanisation in Nigeria, 1945–69’, J. of Imperial and Commonwealth History, 33/3, pp. 419–40.Google Scholar
Deveau, J-M., L'or et les esclaves: histoire des forts du Ghana du XVIe au XVIIIe siècle, Paris: UNESCO/Karthala.Google Scholar
Gharbi, M. L., Crédit et discrédit de la banque d'Algérie: seconde moitié du XIXème siècle, Paris: L'Harmattan.Google Scholar
Giurovich, D. and Keenan, J., ‘The UNDP, the World Bank and biodiversity in the Algerian Sahara’, J. of North African Studies, 10/3–4, pp. 593604.Google Scholar
Jurk, G., ‘Als Berater der Bank von Mosambik’, Wir haben Spuren hinterlassen!, Münster: LIT-Verlag.Google Scholar
Muhumuza, W., ‘Unfulfilled promises? NGOs’ micro-credit programmes and poverty reduction in Uganda', J. of Contemporary African Studies, 23/3, pp. 391416.Google Scholar
Nzenguet, I. and Gilchrist, A., Colonisation, fiscalité et mutations au Gabon, 1910–1947, Paris: L'Harmattan.Google Scholar
Vahed, G., ‘Passengers, partnerships, and promissory notes: Gujarati traders in colonial Natal, 1870–1920’, International J. of African Historical Studies, 38/3, pp. 449–79.Google Scholar
Van der Heyden, U., ‘Es darf nichts passieren! Entwicklungspolitisches Engagement der DDR in Mosambik. Zwischen Solidaritat und Risiko’, Wir haben Spuren hinterlassen!, Münster: LIT-Verlag.Google Scholar
Zaccaria, M., ‘L'oro dell'Eritrea, 1897–1914’, Africa, 60/1, pp. 65114.Google Scholar
Tschoegl, A. E., ‘Foreign banks in the Pacific: a note’, J. of Pacific History, 60/2, pp. 223–35.Google Scholar
Bakir, C., ‘The exoteric politics of bank mergers in Australia’, Australian J. of Politics and History, 51/2, pp. 235–56.Google Scholar
Berry, M. and Hall, J., ‘Institutional investment in rental housing in Australia: a policy framework and two models’, Urban Studies, 42/1, pp. 91111.Google Scholar
Birkett, W-P. and Evans, E., ‘Control of accounting education within Australian universities and technical colleges 1944–1951: a uni-dimensional consideration of professionalism’, Accounting, Business and Financial History, 15/2, pp. 121–43.Google Scholar
Boyce, G., Over half a million careful owners: a 75 year history of PSIS, 1928–2003, Wellington: Dunmore Publishing for PSIS.Google Scholar
Boyce, S., ‘“In spite of Tooley Street, Montagu Norman, and the reserve bank's governor”: recolonization or the eclipse of colonial financial ties with Britain in the 1930s?’, New Zealand J. of History, 39/1.Google Scholar
Crawford, R., ‘Supporting banks, liberals and the “Australian way”: the freelands and the 1949 election’, History Australia, 2/3.Google Scholar
Davidson, L. S., Australia's first bank: fifty years from the Wales to Westpac, Sydney: New South Wales University Press.Google Scholar
Gruen, D. and Sayegh, A., ‘The evolution of fiscal policy in Australia’, Oxford Rev. of Economic Policy, 21/4, pp. 618–35.Google Scholar
Keneley, M., ‘Control of the Australian life insurance industry: an example of regulatory externalities within the Australian financial sector 1870–1945’, Australian Economic History Rev. 451, pp. 122.Google Scholar
Oats, L., ‘Distinguishing closely held companies for taxation purposes: the Australian experience 1930–1972’, Accounting, Business and Financial History, 15/1, pp. 3561.Google Scholar
Tschoegl, A. E., ‘Foreign banks in the Pacific: a note’, J. of Pacific History, 60/2, pp. 223–35.Google Scholar
Bakir, C., ‘The exoteric politics of bank mergers in Australia’, Australian J. of Politics and History, 51/2, pp. 235–56.Google Scholar
Berry, M. and Hall, J., ‘Institutional investment in rental housing in Australia: a policy framework and two models’, Urban Studies, 42/1, pp. 91111.Google Scholar
Birkett, W-P. and Evans, E., ‘Control of accounting education within Australian universities and technical colleges 1944–1951: a uni-dimensional consideration of professionalism’, Accounting, Business and Financial History, 15/2, pp. 121–43.Google Scholar
Boyce, G., Over half a million careful owners: a 75 year history of PSIS, 1928–2003, Wellington: Dunmore Publishing for PSIS.Google Scholar
Boyce, S., ‘“In spite of Tooley Street, Montagu Norman, and the reserve bank's governor”: recolonization or the eclipse of colonial financial ties with Britain in the 1930s?’, New Zealand J. of History, 39/1.Google Scholar
Crawford, R., ‘Supporting banks, liberals and the “Australian way”: the freelands and the 1949 election’, History Australia, 2/3.Google Scholar
Davidson, L. S., Australia's first bank: fifty years from the Wales to Westpac, Sydney: New South Wales University Press.Google Scholar
Gruen, D. and Sayegh, A., ‘The evolution of fiscal policy in Australia’, Oxford Rev. of Economic Policy, 21/4, pp. 618–35.Google Scholar
Keneley, M., ‘Control of the Australian life insurance industry: an example of regulatory externalities within the Australian financial sector 1870–1945’, Australian Economic History Rev. 451, pp. 122.Google Scholar
Oats, L., ‘Distinguishing closely held companies for taxation purposes: the Australian experience 1930–1972’, Accounting, Business and Financial History, 15/1, pp. 3561.Google Scholar