Society & Culture - Posted by Stanford on Friday, August 3, 2012 16:41 - 5 Comments
Medieval business was less keen on greed

"A medieval businessman would surely be impressed by the successes of his modern descendants, but he would also despise them as men without honor or virtue," says historian Laura Stokes. (Credit: Wikimedia Commons)
STANFORD (US) — Beliefs about how much greed is good, or even acceptable, have made a turnaround in the last 500 years, according to a historian.
Stanford University historian Laura Stokes is uncovering how attitudes toward “acceptable greed” have done a turnaround in the past 500 years. Self-serving behavior deemed necessary on Wall Street today might have been despised in medieval Europe. Someone who used wealth to justify violating social norms might even have been murdered.
Capitalism, Stokes has found, managed to flourish in the intensely community-conscious culture of medieval times. Men of business successfully built up financial empires based on trade and credit, even though unbridled greed was universally condemned.
The question that perplexes Stokes, an assistant professor of history, is how these enterprising men could be admired by their peers, when greed was frowned upon.
In short, blatantly selfish economic behavior was simply unacceptable. In describing the contradiction between present-day business attitudes and a medieval mindset, Stokes says, “A medieval businessman would surely be impressed by the successes of his modern descendants, but he would also despise them as men without honor or virtue.”
Stokes, a historian of early modern Europe, began her research when she came across unusually extensive documentation on financial disputes from the medieval era. While poring through the documents at the Staatsarchiv Basel-Stadt—an archive of the city of Basel, Switzerland—she was intrigued by the amount of text dedicated to preserving every detail of these interactions—down to specific “he said, she said” conversations.
It was compelling, she explains, because even when people were relating financial experiences that happened 20 years prior, “They were offering quoted speech as if the events had happened the day before.”
Excited by this detail, Stokes delved more deeply into the records to look for a pattern in the language people used to describe their financial disputes. In examples of court depositions, she found that people emphasized the collective damage done to the community over their own losses.
In a 16th-century quarrel between cousins, “one man criticized another’s greedy behavior, saying, ‘Cousin, cousin, you’ve acted poorly and committed injustice,’” Stokes says.
Medieval mortgage crisis
The story of Klein Hans Fisher, who owed a massive debt on his mortgage, highlights the difference between our modern financial mindset and the medieval one.
As the court records show, a wealthy businessman in Lucerne had issued Fisher the mortgage in the late 16th century. Some time later, Fisher fell behind on his payments. Rather than seize the land from Fisher, the businessman, who was also the Lord Mayor Badmer, gave it to Fisher’s sons and worked out a rental agreement with them so they would keep the land in the family.
The records indicate that Fisher visited the land at harvest time and took the “rent” payment due to Lord Badmer. As Stokes explains, “Hans Fisher visits the land and takes the excess harvest for himself, along with some farming equipment, leaving his sons with no rent to pay Lord Badmer.”
But Badmer does not exercise his legal right to repossess the land—that would have been unacceptable behavior. “Not only farmers, but also the rich men in the city understood that land belonged to families in ways that debt could not erase,” Stokes says.
Beating and lying
In another, more dramatic, example of the community rejection of selfish business practices, murder was seen as the only response severe enough to deal with a pompous businessman, Uly Mörnach.
He was a property owner who insisted he had the power and the right to do what he wanted with his property. As Stokes found by sifting through the archives of the city of Basel, “He insisted on a kind of individualistic … perspective on his own life.”
Although his impressive property holdings might be admired in today’s culture, his contemporaries saw him as downright despicable for the way he threw his financial weight around. In one instance, she found, he beat up an old woman when he discovered her taking some water from his meadow. When the woman pressed charges, Mörnach lied about the matter in court, and laughed about it later to his friends.
In medieval society, his disregard for the rules of social responsibility and the value of community honor was a misstep that disturbed his neighbors deeply, so much so that they collectively conspired to murder him—with many of them escaping legal repercussions.
Sinful behavior
Stokes has found religious studies to be an invaluable area of academic insight into understanding patterns of social attitudes in 16th-century Europe. “Theology,” Stokes says, “is actually fundamentally important to me to understand greed and the crimes associated with it later, in terms of sin and moral rights.”
Stokes, however, is careful to note that social attitudes and religious attitudes, while related, are by no means the same. Her primary interest and material for the exploration of the history of greed is not the religious condemnation of the practice as much as it is about the shared moral code that she has found across religious beliefs in collective communities.
“The heart of the arguments of the people I’m researching,” she explains, “are socially indigenous value sets—not from an outside institution.”
And, while quite different, “these value sets are present in today’s society,” says Stokes. Despite a heavy emphasis on greed in modern business culture, we still value social responsibility. As Stokes points out, “We admire most our great philanthropists who can balance both.”
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5 Comments
Michael Gray
Adam Smith
Selective propaganda. Medieval life was filled with greed starting from the sovereign on down.
And what about trade guilds, where if you hadn’t been through the proper apprenticeship you COULDN’T go into trade for yourself? That was a form of greed. It’s called keep out as many as possible from the club.
The author picks one example of forbearance on a mortgage and that’s proof? Trust me, many many people were thrown out of their homes with not a single thought given to them. Many business people swindled the public — just as many were honest because they dealt daily with their customers and knew they needed to maintain a good business reputation or they’d drive themselves OUT of business.
Not all businesspeople were greedy and dishonest — and not all were lily white either.
Anecdotal socialist claptrap trying to convince us capitalism is bad. And this is called scholarship?
James
If you read the article again the author said that capitalism thrived in the middle ages. And for that matter never said it was bad either. Just that capitalism took on a different social characteristic in those times then it does now. If you don’t appreciate this article as scholarship that is you opinion, however, if you are going to give criticism, give it in a manner that is backed up by scholarship not faith or common sense. By doing such you show understanding of what criticism is. Your “criticism” had none of this.
As it happens niether does mine, that is if you don’t consider this article as scholarship.
Garrett
This is intriguing (and has nothing to do with Capitalism @Adam Smith). Greed has always existed but today, business is constructed around it. See Nouriel Roubini who said ” Greed is good so long as it is tempered by fear of losses.” This underscores her point that the medieval business man would see the modern businessman as lacking virtue or honor, even if they marveled at modern achievement. Still, I think the religious orientation of the time had a larger affect on this behavior than is given credit.
Rob
@ Adam Smith. You do grasp, I hope, that this is but an article on research undertaken by Ms. Stokes, not the body of research itself. Your outburst seems petulant, even juvenile.


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Stokes gets it partly right. From whence did the “Socially Indigenous Value Sets” arise? Yes – these were part of the culture. What shaped the culture?