Medici Money: Banking, metaphysics and art in fifteenth-century Florence
J**S
No title.
A useful fact checker to accompany the Netflix series on the Medicis. Better than “The Rise and Fall of…” by Christopher Hibbert, which I bought in October. Will be keeping this one.
J**Z
Interresting
It was well written, had to read it for a banking course. Will even read again.
J**.
Pleasant reading
Interesting and knowledgable book with evident research in the topic. Reading it is a real pleasure.
S**
Great book
Such a great book, highly recommended
N**N
A well-written history book (for a change)!
The focus of the book is the rise, and fall, of the Medici bank, rather than the Medici themselves. However, the former explains a lot about the latter. It takes you through the founding of the business, as a not-wholly reputable business conducted by merchants and sailing very close to the winds of usury, to the over-stretching of the bank and its demise. However, by this time, the Medici had become indispensible to the financing of wars, which had enabled them to become politically very powerful. Ironically, they could now afford to neglect the very business that had initially been responsible for their power and concentrate on dynastic marriages among the nobility of Europe (by the sixteenth century, Marie and then Catherine de Medici had become queens of France).Along the way, the reader is introduced to the scions of the Medici family, including the two best known, Cosimo (also styled pater patriae) and Lorenzo (il magnifico) and something about their patronage of the arts at the time of the Italian renaissance. Concentrating on the running of the bank, the book has fascinating insights, such the significance of natural cash imbalances in different parts of the banking empire and what thet meant for the business when it was highly risky to physically transport gold coin from one location to another in Europe.Medici Money was well-written, easy to read and most enjoyable. Naturally, it was writen by an author, not a professional historian. Don't expect a dry, academic book with every statement footnoted to sources. Do expect the author to sometimes interject his opinions and to make statements without backing them up (we just have to trust that he has done his research thoroughly). That's a trade-off, of course, but one I would like to see occur more frequently. The non-specialist reader may well learn more about history in this way and, most importantly, be encouraged to explore history further.Bravo, Tim Parks! It's made me want to explore your novels.
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