Financial Vipers of Venice: Alchemical Money, Magical Physics, and Banking in the Middle Ages and Renaissance

Joseph P. Farrell
4.34
90 ratings 14 reviews
In this sequel to Joseph P. Farrell's Babylon's Banksters , the banksters have moved from Mesopotamia via Rome to Venice. There, they have manipulated popes and bullion prices, clipped coins, sacked Constantinople, destroyed rival Florence, waged war, burned "heretics," and suppressed hidden secrets threatening their financial supremacy . . . until Giordano Bruno and Christopher Columbus broke the banking cartel's control of information and bullion. We might wonder—with some justification—how an excursion into such magical mediaeval matters could possibly shed light on the contemporary debate on finance, commerce, credit, and debt taking place around the world. As will be seen in these pages, the modern global economy, with its bonds, annuities, bills of exchange, alchemical paper "fiat money," bullion, wage-slavery, national debts, private central banking, stock brokerages, and commodities exchanges, in a sense began in the Middle Ages, for all these institutions began for quite perceptible and specific reasons during that time. The centerpiece in this debate is of course what, and who, does it really represent? And how did it manage to begin as a purely metaphysical phenomenon, with deep ties to a cosmological and indeed topological and alchemical metaphor of the physical medium, thence to transmute itself into the conception that money is bullion, and thence once again to transmute itself back into a purely metaphysical construct of credit and debt denominated on tokens of paper?
Genres: HistoryNonfictionEconomicsOccultPoliticsFinance
269 Pages

Community Reviews:

5 star
52 (58%)
4 star
23 (26%)
3 star
12 (13%)
2 star
0 (0%)
1 star
3 (3%)

Readers also enjoyed

Other books by Joseph P. Farrell

Lists with this book

Leading Hybrid and Remote Teams: A Manual on Benchmarking to Best Practices for Competitive Advantage
Darwin's Black Box: The Biochemical Challenge to Evolution
Date Runner: Calculate Your Best Match
Interesting Non-Fiction Books
455 books • 136 voters
Apocalypse Culture
Voluptuous Panic: The Erotic World of Weimar Berlin
Lords of Chaos
Feral House & Amok Books
159 books • 55 voters
The da Vinci Code
Angels & Demons
Socialism Is Dead! Long Live Socialism!: The Marx Code—Socialism with a Human Face:
Frances Yates and the Hermetic Tradition
Timaeus
Giordano Bruno and the Hermetic Tradition
Essential Hermetic Reads
33 books • 6 voters