VERY ENGLISH DECEIT EPUB ED EB
eBook - ePub

VERY ENGLISH DECEIT EPUB ED EB

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eBook - ePub

VERY ENGLISH DECEIT EPUB ED EB

About this book

The ebook of the critically acclaimed popular history book: the story of the South Sea Bubble which in Balen's hands becomes a morality tale for our times. A classic collision of political ambition, mercenary greed and financial revolution.

The early years of the 18th-century produced two great monuments: one, Christopher Wren's new cathedral of St Paul's, an enduring testament to principled craft and masterful construction; the other, an empty fraud of such magnitude that its collapse threatened to overturn monarchies and governments. Its failure delayed the introduction of modern market economies by two generations. Yet the full scale of this monumental deceit was quietly covered up and hidden, its enduring legacy a poorly understood colloquialism: the South Sea Bubble.

It was all planned by one ambitious promoter, who had decided to launch 'a company for carrying on an undertaking of great advantage, but nobody to know what it is'. This eighteenth-century mission statement has now acquired an almost uncanny resonance: these words could aptly have been applied to the bursting of the internet bubble and the collapse of Enron. With the financial scandals that have beset global companies recently, such as Rank Xerox and Worldcom, this tale is all the more relevant today.

Balen reveals the full story of corruption and scandal that attended the birth of the first shareholder economy, and with it uncovers a parable for our times.

Note that it has not been possible to include the same picture content that appeared in the original print version.

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Yes, you can access VERY ENGLISH DECEIT EPUB ED EB by Malcolm Balen in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in History & Finance. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

Publisher
Fourth Estate
Year
2012
Print ISBN
9780007292783
eBook ISBN
9780007393909
Topic
History
Subtopic
Finance
Index
History

Index

The pagination of this electronic edition does not match the edition from which it was created. To locate a specific passage, please use the search feature of your e-book reader’s search tools.

Note: Page numbers in italic refer to the modern parallels in the chapter headings

Abingdon, Earl of 189
Act of Settlement (1701) 47, 56
Act of Union (1707) 27
Aislabie, John, Chancellor of Exchequer 52, 85, 93, 120
expulsion and imprisonment 221
fraudulent profit on shares 120, 183, 216, 218
launch of South Sea scheme 87–8
and rescue plan 151, 174
resignation 193–4
retirement at Studley Royal 238
sale of royal charters 82
Walpole’s intervention for 232
Amsterdam, Bank of 22–3
Anne, Queen 18, 19, 41, 42
Civil List 81
dismissal of Harley 41–2
annuities, Company spending on 118
annuity holders, national debt 36, 51, 86
Antwerp
Citadel of 202, 203
Knight’s ‘escape’ from 207–9
Argyll, John, 2nd Duke of, director 50
Astell, William, director 194
Atwill and Hammond bank 155
Austrian Empire 205, 235
and attempted extradition of Knight 205, 206
Bank of England 4, 19, 33, 38, 118
establishment of 14–15
opposition to South Sea scheme 85, 89–91
rescue plan 150–2, 173–4, 176
rival offer for national debt 90–1, 92, 93
Whig domination of 19, 89
Bank of Scotland 24
bankruptcies 154, 156–7
banks 26, 61
closures 155
gold and silver reserves 63, 70, 173–4
Law’s Banque Générale 59–60, 70
role in Law’s System 60
see also Bank of England; Sword Blade Bank
Barbadoes coffee house 18
Barings Bank 185
Bateman, Mr., sub-Governor 50–1
Beck, Sir Justus, bankruptcy 154
Belhaven, Lord 125
Bernard, Samuel, French financier 58
Billingsley, Case 117, 127, 144
Blackwell, Sir Lambert, director 115
Blunt, Charles, suicide 158
Blunt, John 10–11,62,237
assets seized 230–2
baronetcy 118–19
called before Lords’ inquiry 189
discussions with Harley 33–4
effect of French crash on 143–5
evidence to Committee of Secrecy 194–6, 200
fraudulent dealings exposed 215–16, 218
and launch of South Sea scheme 85–6, 87, 90–2
national lotteries 34–6
and offer for national debt 83–7, 90–1
origins and rise of 29–32
personal fortune 104–5, 122
royal patronage for Company 50–1
share support manoeuvres 127
and Sword Blade Company 32, 50
and Walpole 45
witness at Stanhope’s trial 220
see also Money Subscriptions; South Sea Company
Bolingbroke, Henry St John, Viscount 39–40, 60, 179
bonfires, public
of banknotes (France) 138
Mississippi Company papers 239
Bostock, Nathaniel, banker 155
Bowles, Mr., printer 103, 107
Brabant, duchy of 204, 205, 206
and requested extradition of Knight 206–9
Bradley, Richard 168
Brand, Madam 124
bribery
at Court 47, 195
extent of 100, 118, 195, 216–17
of MPs 86,91–2, 181, 183
see also corruption
Bridgewater, Duke of 11...

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Title Page
  3. Dedication
  4. Contents
  5. Prologue
  6. I: The Dome
  7. II: A National Lottery, and a Rake’s Progress
  8. III: Blunt Advice
  9. IV: Walpole and the Maypole
  10. V: Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?
  11. VI: The New Economy
  12. VII: Greed Is Good
  13. VIII: Paper Fortunes
  14. IX: Bonfire of the Vanities
  15. X: Time and Tide and a Fall from Grace
  16. XI: Not a Penny Stirring
  17. XII: A Lasting Foundation
  18. XIII: In the Darkness of the Night
  19. XIV: Hall of Mirrors
  20. XV: Friends in High Places
  21. XVI: Doubtful and Desperate Debts
  22. XVII: The Architecture of Eternity
  23. Postscript
  24. Bibliography
  25. Index
  26. Acknowledgements
  27. About the Author
  28. Author’s Note
  29. Copyright
  30. About the Publisher