Monday, March 30, 2020

An Introduction to the History of Capitalism 600-1900 AD
by Benedikt Koehler, David Abulafia, Victoria Bateman, Huw Bowen, Nicholas Crafts
with an introduction by Hywel Williams

THE CULTURE OF PROSPERITY | APRIL 2015

ABOUT THE LEGATUM INSTITUTE
The Legatum Institute is an international think-tank and educational
charity focussed on promoting prosperity. We do this by researching
our core themes of revitalising capitalism and democracy. The Legatum
Prosperity IndexTM, our signature publication, ranks 142 countries in terms
of wealth and wellbeing.

Through research programmes including The Culture of Prosperity,
Transitions Forum, and the Economics of Prosperity, the Institute seeks
to understand what drives and restrains national success and individual
flourishing. The Institute co-publishes with Foreign Policy magazine,
the Democracy Lab, whose on-the-ground journalists report on political
transitions around the world.

The Legatum Institute is based in London and an independent member of
the Legatum Group, a private investment group with a 27 year heritage
of global investment in businesses and programmes that promote
sustainable human development.

Culture of Prosperity
The values that motivate individuals, societies and nations are reflected and
encapsulated in the cultural achievements that endure. These are the means
by which successive generations have achieved greater self-knowledge and
the study of their significance, both in the past and the present, animates
‘The Culture of Prosperity’.

History of Capitalism
In the wake of the banking collapse of 2008 capitalism has had to
surmount a profound economic crisis while also confronting severe attacks
on its code of ethics. This three-year course will investigate the origins
and development of a movement of thought and endeavour which has
transformed the human condition.
CONTENTS
Introduction 2
by Hywel Williams

Early Islam and the Birth of Capitalism 4
by Benedikt Koehler

A Global Transition: From the Mediterranean to the Atlantic 12
by David Abulafia

A The Changing Axis of Economic Power in the Early Modern Period 22
by Victoria Bateman

Making Money, Making Empires: The Case of the East India Company 32
by Huw Bowen

Industrialisation: Why Britain Got There First 38
by Nicholas Crafts


About the Authors

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