The economy of lower Yangzi delta in late imperial China [electronic resource] : connecting money, markets, and institutions / edited by Billy K.L. So.
Material type: TextSeries: Academia Sinica on East AsiaPublication details: New York : Routledge, 2013Description: xiv, 309 p. : illISBN: 9780203101834 (electronic bk.)Subject(s): Yangtze River Delta (China) -- Economic conditions | China -- Economic conditions -- 1644-1912Genre/Form: Electronic books.DDC classification: 330.51/13203 LOC classification: HC428.Y3 | S6 2013Online resources: Click to ViewIncludes bibliographical references and index.
Economic values and social space in historical lower Yangzi delta economy : an introductory essay / by Billy K. L. So -- Money, productivity, and price : a matter of economic values -- Cycles of silver in Chinese monetary history / by Richard von Glahn -- Cotton textile production in Jiangnan during the Ming-Qing era and the matter of market-driven growth / by Harriet Zurndorfer -- Agricultural productivity in early modern Jiangnan / by Guanglin Liu -- Copper, silver, and tea : the question of eighteenth-century inflation in the lower Yangzi delta / by Sui-wai Cheung -- An early modern economy in China : a study of the gdp of Huating-Lou area, 1823-29 / by Bozhong Li -- Urbanization, institutions, and networks: a matter of social space -- On the emergence and intensification of the pattern of rural-urban continuum in late imperial Jiangnan society / by Shiba Yoshinobu -- Institutions in market economies of premodern maritime China / by Billy K. L. So -- The rise of Huizhou merchants : kinship and commerce in Ming China / by Joseph P. McDermott -- Conditions and risks of water transport in the late Ming Songjiang region as seen in the cases collected in Maoyilu's Yunjian Yanlue / by Ka-chai Tam -- Brokers and "guild" organizations (huiguan) in China's maritime trade with Japan in high Qing / by Angela Schottenhammer.
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, MI : ProQuest, 2015. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest affiliated libraries.
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