A History of Money

A HISTORY OF MONEY

From Ancient Times to the Present Day

Glyn Davies

pp xix720 Third edition reprinting November 2005
paperback ISBN 0-7083-1717-0
hardback ISBN 0-7083-1773-1

book cover Reviews of the first edition:
` . . . highly readable . . . ' (Financial Times)

` . . . a thoroughly good read . . . ' (Economic Journal)

` . . . if you are a numismatist looking for a book that will explain the economy then this is it. I would not have been disappointed at £45 . . . all I can say is Highly recommended.' (Sacra Moneta)

‘ . . . a masterful examination . . . It’s a helter-skelter ride through history, swooping and touching on civilization and how they did business, funded their treasuries and paid their servants including armies . . .’ (World Money Laundering Report)

This is a straight-forward, readable account, written with the minimum of jargon, of the central importance of money in the ordinary business of the life of different peoples throughout the ages from ancient times to the present day. First published in hardback in 1994 and selected by the American Libraries Association as an Outstanding Academic Book. This revised and updated paperback edition also deals with the Barings crisis and the report by the Bank of England on Barings Bank; up-to-date information on the state of Japanese banking; changes in the financial scene in the US; the UK housing market and the problem of negative equity. The paradox of why more coins than ever before are required in an increasingly cashless society is clearly explained, as is the role of the new `Euro' coin as the lowest common denominator in Europe's controversial single currency system. The final section provides evidence to suggest that for most of the world's richer countries the era of persistent inflation may well be at an end.

`This work of monumental proportions is both well conceived and executed . . . Davies writes with a sparkling wit, and his prose is elegant and flowing. This book is a total success. Both undergraduate and graduate students can learn much from this excellent work, which will be useful to economists, political scientists, and even anthropologists. (Choice)

`If you want a chronological history of money, here it is. If the development of banking is required, that is available. And if you want to worry about the exploding world population, the book provides some interesting theories . . . ' (Banking World)

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