Islamic Egypt 640-1517 1998
DOI: 10.1017/chol9780521471374.013
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The monetary history of Egypt, 642–1517

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Cited by 43 publications
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“…The work of Boaz Shoshan (1983) on grain prices, from which he considerably expanded the data on prices and exchange rates for late medieval Egypt, focused on the role of monetary factors in the economic turbulence of the 1400s. Shoshan was one of a series of scholars-Giles Hennequin (1974), Adel Allouche (1994), Warren Schultz (1998Schultz ( , 2011, and John Meloy (2001)-who studied various aspects of the monetary system in the wake of the Black Death. Among this group there seems to have been a quiet consensus that the monetary woes of the 1400s were in many ways bound up with falling economic production.…”
Section: Studying the Economic Impact Of The Black Death In Egyptmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The work of Boaz Shoshan (1983) on grain prices, from which he considerably expanded the data on prices and exchange rates for late medieval Egypt, focused on the role of monetary factors in the economic turbulence of the 1400s. Shoshan was one of a series of scholars-Giles Hennequin (1974), Adel Allouche (1994), Warren Schultz (1998Schultz ( , 2011, and John Meloy (2001)-who studied various aspects of the monetary system in the wake of the Black Death. Among this group there seems to have been a quiet consensus that the monetary woes of the 1400s were in many ways bound up with falling economic production.…”
Section: Studying the Economic Impact Of The Black Death In Egyptmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The work of Boaz Shoshan (1983) on grain prices, from which he considerably expanded the data on prices and exchange rates for late medieval Egypt, focused on the role of monetary factors in the economic turbulence of the 1400s. Shoshan was one of a series of scholars-Giles Hennequin (1974), Adel Allouche (1994), Warren Schultz (1998Schultz ( , 2011, and John Meloy ( 2001)-who studied various aspects of the monetary system in the wake of the Black Death. Among this group there seems to have been a quiet consensus that the monetary woes of the 1400s were in many ways bound up with falling economic production.…”
Section: Studying the Economic Impact Of The Black Death In Egyptmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The work of Boaz Shoshan (1983) on grain prices, from which he consider ably expanded the data on prices and exchange rates for late medieval Egypt, focused on the role of monetary factors in the economic turbulence of the 1400s. Shoshan was one of a series of scholars-Giles Hennequin (1974), Adel Allouche (1994), Warren Schultz (1998Schultz ( , 2011, and John Meloy ( 2001)-who studied various aspects of the monetary system in the wake of the Black Death. Among this group there seems to have been a quiet consensus that the monetary woes of the 1400s were in many ways bound up with falling economic production.…”
Section: Studying the Economic Impact Of The Black Death In Egyptmentioning
confidence: 99%