『History of Money, Banking, and Trade』のカバーアート

History of Money, Banking, and Trade

History of Money, Banking, and Trade

著者: Mike D
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A historical look at the development and evolution of money, banking, and trade. From the ancient civilizations to the present.

© 2026 History of Money, Banking, and Trade
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  • Episode 56. Rome Becomes Powerful When Its Money Does
    2026/06/16

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    Rome is not just marble temples and marching legions. It is benches in the Forum where money changers listen to coins ring, wax tablets that lock in loans, and quiet banking networks that keep grain ships moving and armies paid. Once you look at ancient Roman finance up close, the empire starts to feel less like destiny and more like a set of financial choices, incentives, and constraints.

    We walk through what finance actually does, reallocating value through time, spreading risk, directing capital, and scaling trust so bigger transactions can happen. Then we get personal: Cicero’s moralized view of commerce reveals why Roman elites publicly sneer at banking while privately relying on it. That tension sets the stage for Julius Caesar’s debt-fueled rise, the treasury raid that turns state reserves into military operating cash, and coinage reforms that standardize money while making power visible through a living portrait and the gold aureus.

    From there, we zoom into the mechanics: counterfeit detection with touchstones and the “ring test,” the market discipline that money changers can impose when rulers debase coinage, and the Publicani system that outsources taxation and infrastructure to investor partnerships. Finally, we use real evidence from wax tablet archives in Puteoli and Pompeii to show Roman banking and trade finance in practice, before landing on Augustus and the tax reforms that create a more predictable imperial revenue base and help enable the Pax Romana.

    If you like history of money, banking, and trade that connects everyday transactions to the rise and fall of states, subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find the show.

    Support the show

    To support the podcast through Patreon https://www.patreon.com/HistoryOfMoneyBankingTrade

    Visit us at https://moneybankingtrade.com/

    Visit us on YouTube https://www.youtube.com/@MoneyBankingTrade





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    45 分
  • Episode 55. The Punic Wars: Rome, Carthage, and Power
    2026/05/26

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    Rome and Carthage don’t start as mortal enemies, they start as trading partners signing treaties that quietly reveal who holds real power at sea. From the very first agreement, Carthage looks like the obvious favorite: a Phoenician-descended commercial empire with ships everywhere, deep trade routes, and wealth flowing in from silver and gold. Rome looks local, landlocked by comparison, and boxed into someone else’s maritime rules.

    We follow how that imbalance breaks down into the Punic Wars, and why the outcome isn’t just about tactics. You’ll hear how Sicily becomes the spark, how Rome copies Carthaginian ship design, and how the Corvus turns naval combat into the kind of close-quarters fight Roman infantry can win. Then we shift to the real constraint behind every ancient campaign: paying for it. Bronze money floods, costs spiral, and both states face the same brutal problem of wartime finance, from improvised “war bonds” to desperate loans.

    The story climaxes with Hannibal’s Spain-backed revival, the Alps crossing, the shock of Trasimene and Cannae, and Rome’s refusal to negotiate even while the treasury collapses. That’s where the denarius enters as a decisive financial technology, and where Iberian silver becomes the strategic prize that changes everything after Scipio’s victories. We close on the uncomfortable lesson Rome learns too late: commerce and credit can rebuild a defeated rival faster than armies can predict, feeding the paranoia that ends with “Carthago Delante Est” and the annihilation of a prosperous city.

    If you want more deep history of money, banking, trade, and the financial infrastructure behind empire, subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review.

    Support the show

    To support the podcast through Patreon https://www.patreon.com/HistoryOfMoneyBankingTrade

    Visit us at https://moneybankingtrade.com/

    Visit us on YouTube https://www.youtube.com/@MoneyBankingTrade





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    1 時間 11 分
  • Episode 54. From She Wolves To Silver Coins In Ancient Rome
    2026/05/05

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    Rome doesn’t introduce itself with a feel-good origin story. We start with the myth Rome tells about itself, from Aeneas and divine ancestry to the she-wolf on the Palatine, and then we sit with the part most civilizations would hide: Romulus killing Remus. That choice tells you what Romans wanted to believe about power, legitimacy, and why their rise was “meant” to happen.

    From there, we move from legend to evidence. We look at what archaeology can and cannot prove about early Rome, why settlements form where trade concentrates, and how Etruscan civilization shapes Rome’s institutions, aesthetics, and cultural toolkit. Along the way we keep returning to a core theme in economic history: trade doesn’t just exchange goods, it exchanges ideas, techniques, and the habits that later become formal systems.

    Then we get concrete about the Roman Republic and the wealth-driven hierarchy underneath it: consuls designed to prevent kings, senatorial status shaped by censors, patricians with pedigree but not always money, and equestrians who dominate finance, state contracting, and tax farming. We unpack the publicani as rent-seeking power brokers, the Lex Claudia as a lesson in elite plausible deniability, and the broader economy built on freedmen labor, social mobility across generations, and slavery at massive scale.

    Finally, we trace the path from cattle and credit to bronze, silver, and the denarius, the mint at Juno Moneta, and a Roman coinage system that spreads because conquest spreads. If you like the history of money, Roman coinage, ancient banking, and the real economics of empire, subscribe, share the show with a friend, and leave a review.

    Support the show

    To support the podcast through Patreon https://www.patreon.com/HistoryOfMoneyBankingTrade

    Visit us at https://moneybankingtrade.com/

    Visit us on YouTube https://www.youtube.com/@MoneyBankingTrade





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    1 時間
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