Virtual money and monetary policy - From the Sixteenth Century Scudo di Marche to criptocurrency

21 november
With Tommaso Brollo (University of Verona)
Digital currencies, cryptocurrencies, and, more recently, Central Bank Digital Currencies have been prominent over the past decade. Are they truly something new? When we talk about monetary systems from four or five centuries ago, florins, sequins and ducats probably spring to mind, with their images of saints and crosses. At sixteenth-century international exchange fairs, however, a very different system was in place. The currency in use was intangible, a virtual system in the ledgers of private merchant bankers, and was used for trade across Europe for over a century. At once far removed from us and yet so close to our reality, it may help us better understand what is taking place in our time.

Tommaso Brollo studied in Trento and Milan, and has a PhD in Economics from the University of Siena. As a post-doctoral researcher at the University of Verona, his work focuses on economic history and the history of economic thought, and particularly on the history of money, credit and finance in the early modern age. His published work includes a new Italian edition of De Moneta, the fourteenth-century treatise by Nicole Oresme, co-curated, with Paolo Evangelisti (Trieste, 2020).

Informazioni

Palazzo Esposizioni Roma – Sala Auditorium

Admission via steps in via Milano 9a

Admission free while places last with reservation
Reservations may be made on this website from 9.00 am on the day before the chosen performance until one hour before the performance is due to begin. If for any reason you are unable to come, please remember to cancel the reservation in your basket so that someone else can book the place you’re freeing up. Please show up at least 10 minutes before the performance starts, otherwise your reservation will no longer be considered valid and your place will be given to the first person waiting in line at the entrance.

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rassegna
Experts talk about money and finance
11.15__03.20.2024
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ongoing
postponed until June 30
October 31, 2023 > June 30, 2024