Humans have long engaged in
borrowing and lending. There is evidence that these activities took place 5,000
years ago, in Mesopotamia (present-day Iraq) at the very dawn of civilization.
But modern banking systems did not emerge until the 14th century in northern
Italy.
The word “bank” comes from the
Italian word for the “bench” on which the bankers sat to conduct business. In
the 14th century the Italian peninsula was a land of city-states that benefited
from the influence and revenue of the papacy in Rome. The peninsula was ideally
located for trade between Asia, Africa, and the emerging nations
of Europe. Wealth began to accumulate,
especially in Venice and Florence. Venice relied on sea power: institutions
were created there to finance and insure voyages. Florence focused on
manufacturing and trade with northern Europe, and here merchants and financiers
came together at the Medici Bank.
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Florence was already home to other
banking families, such as the Peruzzi and the Bardi, and to different types of
financial bodies— from pawnbrokers, who lent money secured by personal
belongings, to local banks that dealt in foreign currencies, accepted deposits,
and lent to local businesses. The bank founded by Giovanni di Biocide’ Medici
in 1397 was different.
The Medici Bank financed long-distance
trade in commodities such as wool. It differed from existing banks in three
ways. First, it grew to a great size. In its heyday under the founder’s son,
Cosimo, it ran branches in 11 cities, including London, Bruges, and Geneva.
Second, its network was decentralized. Branches were managed not by an employee
but by a local junior partner, who shared in the profits.
The Medici family in Florence
were the senior partners, watching over the network, earning most of the profit,
and retaining the family trademark, which symbolized the bank’s sound
reputation. Third, branches took in large deposits from wealthy savers,
multiplying the lending that could be given out for a modest amount of initial
capital, and so multiplying the bank’s profits.