Rating:
Date added: 3.1.2015
201 817
FB2PDFEPUB
With the introduction of the euro much recent attention has been focused on the role of currencies and their national and international significance. Whilst much has been made of the euros achievements in harmonising Europes financial dealings, itMoreWith the introduction of the euro much recent attention has been focused on the role of currencies and their national and international significance. Whilst much has been made of the euros achievements in harmonising Europes financial dealings, it is often forgotten that it is by no means the first pan-national currency to enter circulation. Indeed, as the various contributions to this volume make plain, the euro can in many ways be regarded as a step back to the future, that is, a further international currency in a long historical tradition that includes the Athenian tetradrachm, the Spanish peso and the French franc.Covering a timespan of some two and a half millennia, the contributions within this volume fall within four broad chronological sections, the first comprising three contributions that consider aspects of the European experience from classical antiquity until the high middle ages. The discussion then leaps forward chronologically to the modern age, given a focus by three contributions devoted to nineteenth-century European developments. These, in turn, are set within a wider spatial perspective by two essays that review, first, the classical gold standard, primarily in terms of peripheral economies experience, and, second, the Bretton Woods system. Fourth, and lastly, the euros origins and birth are explored in three further contributions.By taking such a long term view of supra-national currencies, this volume provides a unique perspective, not only to the introduction and development of the euro, and its predecessors, but also on the broader question of the relationship between trade and common currencies. From the Athenian Tetradrachm to the Euro: Studies in European Monetary Integration by Philip L. Cottrell