This paper examines the forms and functions of credit and microcredit in fourteenth-century Vercelli, highlighting the central role of trust and reputation in sustaining both urban and rural economies. In a period marked by recurrent monetary shortages, credit—in money, grain, or other goods—was a fundamental mechanism for ensuring social and economic stability. Drawing on archival materials from the Hospital of St. Andrea, the study focuses on three emblematic cases: the baker Enrico da Greggio, the nobleman Martino da Robbio, and the priest Salerno Ferraroto. Each represents a different dimension of the credit network: individual entrepreneurship, collective indebtedness, and charitable redistribution. Enrico’s activity as a small-scale lender illustrates the integration of artisans into local financial systems; Martino’s dealings with the rural community of Viverone reveal how communal debt could evolve into the transfer of property and, ultimately, into acts of charity; Salerno’s testament demonstrates how personal credits were transformed into pious legacies for the benefit of the poor. Together, these examples show that credit in late medieval society was not merely an economic tool but also a vehicle of social cohesion, moral obligation, and community building—linking economy, faith, and solidarity within a shared framework of trust.
Relazioni, fiducia e comunità. Il microcredito diffuso a Vercelli e nel Vercellese nel Trecento
Luciano Maffi;Antonio Olivieri
2026-01-01
Abstract
This paper examines the forms and functions of credit and microcredit in fourteenth-century Vercelli, highlighting the central role of trust and reputation in sustaining both urban and rural economies. In a period marked by recurrent monetary shortages, credit—in money, grain, or other goods—was a fundamental mechanism for ensuring social and economic stability. Drawing on archival materials from the Hospital of St. Andrea, the study focuses on three emblematic cases: the baker Enrico da Greggio, the nobleman Martino da Robbio, and the priest Salerno Ferraroto. Each represents a different dimension of the credit network: individual entrepreneurship, collective indebtedness, and charitable redistribution. Enrico’s activity as a small-scale lender illustrates the integration of artisans into local financial systems; Martino’s dealings with the rural community of Viverone reveal how communal debt could evolve into the transfer of property and, ultimately, into acts of charity; Salerno’s testament demonstrates how personal credits were transformed into pious legacies for the benefit of the poor. Together, these examples show that credit in late medieval society was not merely an economic tool but also a vehicle of social cohesion, moral obligation, and community building—linking economy, faith, and solidarity within a shared framework of trust.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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07_Maffi-Olivieri, Relazioni, fiducia e comunità. Il microcredito diffuso a Vercelli e nel Vercellese nel Trecento.pdf
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