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Article
The Common Penny (1495-99) as a Source of German Social and Demographic History
Central European History (1977)
  • Steven Rowan, Ph.D., University of Missouri-St. Louis
Abstract
The returns of a tax called the common penny (gemeiner Pfennig) survive in considerable number, and when they are fully exploited they will help to make pre-Reformation Germany much more intimately known than ever before. Registers of this levy are likely to turn up in archives where they might not be expected. It is important, as a result, to know how to recognize and use these materials, most of which still remain to be identified. I will briefly review the common penny and its collection, and then I will demonstrate its potential as a resource for the study of social and demographic history.

Disciplines
Publication Date
June, 1977
DOI
10.1017/S0008938900018379
Citation Information
Steven Rowan. "The Common Penny (1495-99) as a Source of German Social and Demographic History" Central European History Vol. 10 Iss. 2 (1977) p. 148 - 164
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/steven-rowan/38/