999 resultados para Bonhours, Dominique, 1628-1702


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Contient : « Armorial de Provence » ; Résumé d'un nobiliaire de Provence, précédé d'une table des noms de personnes. — Ces deux premiers articles proviennent de Dominique Robert ; Notice sur le comté de Nice et généalogies, rangées par ordre alphabétique, des principales familles du comté de Nice ; « Histoire générale des maisons nobles de Provence, Comtat d'Avignon, de la principauté d'Orange et du comté de Nice,... par Me Pierre d'Hozier,... publiées et augmentées par M. Charles d'Hozier de La Garde, son fils. — A Aix, chés Charles David, » 1666, in-fol., impr. ; avec notes mss. de Ch. d'Hozier

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Crowding-out during the British Industrial Revolution has long been one of the leadingexplanations for slow growth during the Industrial Revolution, but little empirical evidence exists to support it. We argue that examinations of interest rates are fundamentally misguided, and that the eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century private loan market balanced through quantity rationing. Using a unique set of observations on lending volume at a London goldsmith bank, Hoare s, we document the impact of wartime financing on private credit markets. We conclude that there is considerable evidence that government borrowing, especially during wartime, crowded out private credit.

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London s financial market underwent dramatic change after 1700. More limitedthan Paris or Amsterdam in the seventeenth century, London became the leadingfinancial centre in Europe in the eighteenth century. There is an extensive andgrowing literature on the causes of this change, but comparatively little on thechange itself. This article provides detailed information on the operation of theLondon financial market around 1700 by describing the operations of a nascentLondon bank.

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The financial revolution improved the British government s ability to borrow, andthus its ability to wage war. North andWeingast argued that it also permitted privateparties to borrow more cheaply and widely.We test these inferences with evidencefrom a London bank.We confirm that private bank credit was cheap in the earlyeighteenth century, but we argue that it was not available widely. Importantly, thegovernment reduced the usury rate in 1714, sharply reducing the circle of privateclients that could be served profitably.

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Collection : [Ancien Paris] ; 228