From Timbuktu to Venice: The Global Currency Shock of 1324
The Global Stage Before Mali’s Gold Shock Before the 14th century, Venice was already a financial superpower . The city-state controlled Mediterranean shipping lanes, dominated salt and spice traffic, and operated extensive loan networks that financed crusades, pilgrimages, nobles, and popes. Venice’s bankers functioned as proto-central banks, lending at calculated interest to kingdoms without any political army behind them—only ports and credit. Professor Frederic C. Lane explained that Venice’s political stability made its treasury unusually dependable : “Venice attracted capital because it was one of the rare Italian cities whose constitutional structure prevented the concentration of wealth into the tyrannical hands of a single family.” Lane, Venice: A Maritime Republic . The gold that serviced this system came primarily from Europe and North Africa —but was limited. Venetian coins, financiers, and insurers operated in an economy where the value of gold was stable, car...