Article ID: CBB630033652

‘Your flexible friend’: the bill of exchange in theory and practice in the fifteenth century† (2021)

unapi

The bill of exchange was the most important written instrument in the international financial world of the later middle ages. Using the evidence of nearly 2,000 bills of exchange, protested bills of exchange, and letters of advice recorded in the ledgers of Filippo Borromei & Partners of Bruges and London, 1436–8, we argue that it was a far more flexible instrument than has previously been thought. The maturity of bills could be changed by agreement rather than necessarily using the standard usance periods, and payment by instalments occurred, extending the length of the ‘loan’ considerably. In practice, exchange rates varied from day to day and within the day itself, while bills were offered as sureties for the fulfilment of other contracts. We also confirm the arguments of other historians that the main purpose of this instrument was the transfer of capital back and forth across western Europe, usually along well-known axes such as London to Venice or Bruges to Barcelona, with exchange and re-change playing only a minimal role in the Borromei's operations. As at the Lyon fairs 100 years later, the ‘flexible friend’ helped make the world of international, regional, and local trade and finance go round.

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Authors & Contributors
Thea Goldring
Telesca, Giuseppe
Cassis, Youssef
Greenfield, Jerome
Jackson, Trevor
Sawyer, Laura Phillips
Journals
Eighteenth-Century Studies
Business History Review
Transfers
Journal of Global History
History of European Ideas
French History
Publishers
University of London, Royal Holloway College (United Kingdom
Wydawnictwo Sejmowe
V&R Unipress
University of Pennsylvania Press
University of Chicago Press
Springer International
Concepts
Economics
Currency; coinage; monetary systems
Finance
Banks and banking
Financial crises
Economic history
People
Law, John (1671–1729)
Veblen, Thorstein Bunde
Vespucci, Amerigo
Say, Jean Baptiste
Newton, Isaac
Leibniz, Gottfried Wilhelm von
Time Periods
18th century
19th century
16th century
15th century
Early modern
Medieval
Places
London (England)
Europe
Paris (France)
France
United States
Great Britain
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