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020 _a9781529209280 (e-book)
040 _cCvSU Main Campus Library
_erda
041 _aeng
050 _aHD610
_bC2C26 2020
100 _930503
_aCasson, Catherine
_eauthor
245 _aCompassionate capitalism :
_bbusiness and community in medieval England /
_cby Catherine Casson, Mark Casson, John Lee, and Katie Phillips.
260 _a Bristol :
_bBristol University Press,
_c2020
300 _a1 online resource (xvii, 382, pages) :
_bcolor illustrations.
336 _2rdacontent
_atext
337 _2rdamedia
_acomputer
338 _2rdacarrier
_aonline resource
500 _ahttps://www.universitypressscholarship.com/
505 _aI. Introduction -- 2. Dynamics of the property market -- 3. Economic topography -- 4. Family profiles -- 5. Family dynasties: success and failure -- 6. Cambridge in a regional and national context -- 7. Legacy: Cambridge in the 14th and 15th centuries
520 _aThis book examines the evolution of compassionate capitalism in medieval England, using a unique and comprehensive source of information, the Cambridge Hundred Rolls. It demonstrates how compassionate capitalism developed through the bequest of rental income on property to charitable and religious institutions, such as hospitals, abbeys and friaries. This rental income was generated by the dramatic growth of an urban property market, through which wealthy merchants invested the profits of trade in property development. Compassionate capitalism was a driving force in the medieval economy from the mid-1200s to the Black Death of 1348. The Cambridge Hundred Rolls record a comprehensive survey of the town in 1279, profiling property location, ownership and use, the gifting of rents and the transmission of property between generations. It identifies over 30 leading family dynasties and the factors behind their rise and decline. By synthesising this information it is possible to reconstruct the economic topography of the town and to compare the occupational structure of different parishes. This leads to a fundamental revaluation of the topography of medieval Cambridge and the role of property markets in urban development. It also reveals the influence of religious teaching on the management of economic assets by family dynasties.
541 _aFund 164
_bCE-Logic
_cPurchased
_dFeb 16, 2022
_eOEBP000233
_fP. Roderno
_hPHP 7,332.10
_p2022-02-057
_q22-1054
650 0 _94297
_aLand use
_zEngland
_zCambridge
650 0 _93169
_aIndustries
_x Social aspects
_zEngland
_zCambridge
650 0 _94045
_aSocial responsibility of business
_zEngland
_zCambridge
650 0 _930504
_a Social entrepreneurship
_zEngland
_zCambridge
650 0 _930505
_aCambridge (England)
_xEconomic conditions
700 _930506
_a Casson, Mark
_eauthor
700 _930507
_aLee, John S.
_eauthor
700 _930508
_aPhillips, Katie
_eauthor
856 _uhttps://academic.oup.com/policy-press-scholarship-online/book/40251?searchresult=1
_yClick here to read Full-Text E-Book
856 _uhttps://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSfSoAj3qM4b_ttQMZLuimqgwkfHDH1NyJ7S4eyjHD7Vr4j7EQ/viewform
_yLog-in to the website is required to read this e-book. Click here to request access.
942 _2lcc
_cOEB
999 _c61621
_d61621