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Index
Title Page Copyright Contents Introduction How to Study the Premodern Market: The Concept of Market Exchange
1 Markets and their agents in premodern times 2 What is a market? 3 How to organize the market? 4 How to define the market? 5 Conclusion: Premodern concepts of market exchange References
Source editions Secondary literature
Notes
Towards a Different Type of Market Exchange in the Early Middle Ages: The Sacrum Commercium and its Agents
1 Early medieval definitions of “market” and the connotations of the market with tumult, disorder, and sin 2 The sacrum commercium and its agents
2.1 Christus mercator and sacrum commercium 2.2 Martyrdom as negotiatio and the martyr as felix and bonus mercator 2.3 A treasure in heaven 2.4 The exchange of earthly and heavenly goods as felix commercium and the idea of the bonus mercatus
3 Conclusion: Reasons for the existence and the use of mercantile semantics in the early Middle Ages References
Source editions Secondary literature
Notes
Imagined Investors: Markets, Agents, and the Saxon Mining Administration
1 Mining, markets, and the Kux system 2 Imaginaries and tropes: The imagination of shareholders 3 Impression management, mining ordinances, and the problem of trust References
Archival sources Source edition Secondary literature
Notes
The “destroyers of trade”, “our good and dear Inhabitants”, and “all persons of what quality or nation however they may be”: Early Modern Colonial Market Culture
1 Introduction 2 Markets and their actors: Competing economic interests in New Netherland 3 The “destroyers of trade”, “our good and dear Inhabitants”, and “all persons of what quality or nation however they may be”: Market regulations in New Netherland 4 Market actors beyond classical categories: Reflections on a colonial moral economy in the seventeenth century 5 Conclusion References
Archival sources Source editions Secondary literature
Notes
Markets and their Agents in History: Some Theoretical Reflections
1 Introduction 2 Methodological implications 3 Different levels of the market 4 Market economy: An institutional perspective 5 Market economy: A Braudelian approach 6 Empirical evidence of markets in history 7 Market agents 8 Hermeneutics of economic history 9 Conclusion References Notes
List of authors Index of names Index of places
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