Created in sixteenth-century Europe by a handful of merchant-bankers, fairmoney was the first example of a fully virtual currency functioning within a specific historical context. It enabled increasingly efficient international payments in a fragmented monetary landscape and functioned through a stakeholder-based consensus mechanism reminiscent of the proof-of-stake systems underpinning many contemporary cryptocurrencies. Fair money operated as a peer-to-peer unit of account, defined and accepted by its users, and was used to settle multilateral obligations without the need for physical cash settlements. The fully decentralized nature of its ledgers and accounting systems ensured the auditability of transactions while maintaining privacy, stability, and interoperability across different currencies and markets. Initially designed to support international trade within the Genoese exchange fairs, fairmoney eventually assumed the characteristics of an investment vehicle and later became a target of speculation, leading to its transformation into a highly opaque capital market serving a restricted circle of merchant-bankers aligned with the interests of the Spanish crown. This case study provides a historical genealogy of virtual currency, illustrating the tensions between international monetary stability, speculation, and governance that continue to shape debates around cryptocurrencies and stablecoins today.

A Proto-Virtual Currency? The Role of Exchange-Fair International Money in Renaissance Europe / T. Brollo, G. De Luca (PALGRAVE STUDIES IN THE HISTORY OF FINANCE). - In: Monetary and Non-Monetary Payment Systems : Forms and Practices in Europe and the Colonial World from 14th to 20th Century / [a cura di] G. De Luca, M. Romani. - Prima edizione. - Cham : Palgrave Macmillan, 2026. - ISBN 978-3-032-11809-7. - pp. 147-190 [10.1007/978-3-032-11810-3_7]

A Proto-Virtual Currency? The Role of Exchange-Fair International Money in Renaissance Europe

G. De Luca
2026

Abstract

Created in sixteenth-century Europe by a handful of merchant-bankers, fairmoney was the first example of a fully virtual currency functioning within a specific historical context. It enabled increasingly efficient international payments in a fragmented monetary landscape and functioned through a stakeholder-based consensus mechanism reminiscent of the proof-of-stake systems underpinning many contemporary cryptocurrencies. Fair money operated as a peer-to-peer unit of account, defined and accepted by its users, and was used to settle multilateral obligations without the need for physical cash settlements. The fully decentralized nature of its ledgers and accounting systems ensured the auditability of transactions while maintaining privacy, stability, and interoperability across different currencies and markets. Initially designed to support international trade within the Genoese exchange fairs, fairmoney eventually assumed the characteristics of an investment vehicle and later became a target of speculation, leading to its transformation into a highly opaque capital market serving a restricted circle of merchant-bankers aligned with the interests of the Spanish crown. This case study provides a historical genealogy of virtual currency, illustrating the tensions between international monetary stability, speculation, and governance that continue to shape debates around cryptocurrencies and stablecoins today.
Exchange Fairs Currency; Virtual Currency; Bisenzone; 15th-17th cc.
Settore STEC-01/B - Storia economica
2026
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/1241075
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