First, we want to examine forms and logics of incurring debts, whether debts were formally or informally documented and if and how they were brokered. Regarding different kinds or agreements we will chart the effects of (life) annuities, mortgage debts, pledges and guarantees. Second, looking at specific stipulations we want to find out whether dates of repayments and/or interest rate payments were settled; whether universal or specific hypothecary securitization was common; whether lending was for investments, for consumption or repayment of other debts. Third, in terms of personal relation-ships we examine possibilities and problems connected with lending inside and outside family and kin. Finally, we ask what modes of repayment and/or restructuring of debt – via exchange, pur-chase, etc. – can be traced in the sources.
Particular focus will be placed on inheritance shares, marriage portions or dowries as debts and their effects: how were such family debts carried further and how were they transferred? Were they paid out and if so how? What consequences did they have compared to other debts? Who was liable for which debts? What gender-specific impact does this question have? It is our goal to look at family debt – often ‘hidden’ or underestimated in historiography – in conjunction with commercial and consumer debt.
Programme :
Thursday, 15 September 2022
13.00 Reception
13.30 Welcome & Introduction
14.00–17.30 Panel I Credit Requirements: Necessity or Facilitator?
Chair: Margareth Lanzinger
14.00 Heinrich Lang (Leipzig/Vienna): Accounting Debts: Camilla Salviati Serristori and the Ambiguous Heritage of Giovanni Serristori’s Assets and Financial Liabilities in 1531
14.45 Matteo Pompermaier (Stockholm): Consumer Credit in Early Modern Venice: Forms and Logics of Households’ Debt
15.30 Coffee Break
16.00 Siglinde Clementi (Bozen/Bolzano): Marriage on Credit. Disbursement Modalities of Marriage Goods in the Early Modern Tyrolean Nobility
16.45 Janine Maegraith (Vienna): Financing Wealth Transfers in Early Modern Tyrol
Friday, 16 September 2022
09.30–12.15 Panel II: Transit(ional) Areas: Mountains, Residents and Migrants
Chair: Claudia Rapberger
09.30 Riccardo Rossi (Zürich): Wandering Debts and Settled Accounts: The Role of Credits in the Itineraries of Actors and Goods in the Three Leagues, 1660s–1790s
10.15 Laurence Fontaine (Paris): Solidarities, Control and Contingencies. The Multiple Faces of Debt in the Mountain Communities of the Upper Dauphine in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries
11.00 Coffee Break
11.30 Margareth Lanzinger (Vienna): Innkeepers as Creditors and Debtors in the Eighteenth Century
Lunch Break
14.00–17.30 Panel III: Urban Spaces: Documented Debts and Informal Agreements
Chair: Janine Maegraith
14.00 Christian Hagen (Kiel): A Money Market Inside and Outside the City Walls – Creditors and Debtors in Late Medieval Vienna
14.45 Maria Weber (München): Doing Debt in Early Sixteenth Century Augsburg
15.30 Coffee Break
16.00 Elise Dermineur (Stockholm): Non-Intermediated Credit in Early Modern France
16.45 Matthias Donabaum (Vienna): Orphans and Credit in Lower Austria, c. 1740–1790
Saturday, 17 September 2022
09.30–12.15 Panel IV Bankruptcy: When Things Go Wrong
Chair: Matthias Donabaum
09.30 Erich Landsteiner (Vienna): Big Money and Cruel Kin. The Bankruptcy of Jobst and Jacobina Croy in Vienna 1591
10.15 Florian Andretsch (Vienna): Punishment or Bailout? The Governmental and Familial Management of a Lower Austrian Noble House’s Bankruptcy at the Eve of the Reform Era
11.00 Coffee Break
11.30 James Shaw (Sheffield): Family Networks, Bankruptcy and Insolvency in Eighteenth- and Nineteenth-Century Sheffield
12.15 Final Discussion
Informations pratiques :
Veranstalter : Margareth Lanzinger, Matthias Donabaum, Janine Maegraith
Veranstaltungsort : Seminarraum Geschichte 1, Universität Wien, Hauptgebäude, Universitätsring 1 PLZ 1010
15.09.2022 – 17.09.2022
Source : H-Soz-Kult