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Students on a theater trip in Iceland.

Academics

HoPE seminar: Rebecca L. Spang

University Room: Omid & Gisel Kordestani Rooftop Conference Center (Q-801)
6, rue du Colonel Combes 75007
Tuesday, March 18, 2025 - 17:30 to 18:30

We are happy to invite you to the next session of the ҵ Seminar on the History of Political Economy in collaboration with the Center for Critical Democracy Studies. Rebecca L. Spang (Distinguished Professor of History, Indiana University) will give a talk based on her paper “Whose Problem was Small Change? Eighteenth-Century Money in Comparative Perspective.”

Title: “Whose Problem was Small Change? Eighteenth-Century Money in Comparative Perspective.”
Date and time: Tuesday March 18, 5:30pm (Paris time)

Venue: Room Q-801, Quai d’Orsay building, The American University of Paris (entrance through 6 rue du Colonel Combes 75007)

Please register for this event.

Abstract: Historians of medieval and early modern Europe have long been familiar with the “big problem of small money” (see Cipolla; Sargent and Velde). European authorities in this period set rates at which metals would be minted into various coins but they left the decision to mint (rather than hold metal in other forms) up to the private sector. A coin’s value in exchange was determined by its metal content. Smaller denominations were chronically under produced or drained out of local circulation. This paper offers a comparative analysis of eighteenth-century Britain and the Qing Empire to ask whose problem was small change and how was it resolved. Unlike their European counterparts, Chinese empires of the pre-modern era prioritized the production of small-denomination coin and instead faced periodic difficulty with the supply of big money—a difficulty addressed under the Yuan (thirteenth and fourteenth centuries) with the first widely circulated paper money.

Please note that Rebecca L. Spang will be also delivering a lecture titled “Restaurants and Revolution in Eighteenth-Century Paris” on Monday 17 March in C-102 from 18h30 to 20h.