As early as 2000 B.C., the Babylonians had developed a banking system. There is
evidence to show that the temples of Babylon were used as banks and such great temples as
those of Ephesus and of Delbhi were the most powerful of the Greek banking institutions. But
the spread of irreligion soon destroyed the public sense of security in depositing money and
valuables in temples, and the priests were no longer acting as financial agents.
The Romans
did not organize State Banks as did the Greeks, but their minute regulations, as to the conduct
of private banking, were calculated to create the utmost confidence in it. With the end of the
civilization of antiquity, and as a result of administrative decentralization and demoralization
of the Government authority, with its inevitable counterpart of commercial insecurity,
banking degenerated for a period of some centuries into a system of financial make shifts. But
that was not the only cause. Old prejudices die hard, and Aristotle’s dictum, that the charging
of interest was unnatural and consequently immoral was adhered to fanatically. Even now
some Mohammedans, in obedience to the commands contained in that behalf in their
religious books, refuse to accept interest on money loans.
The followers of Aristotle’s dictum
forgot that the ancient world, the Hebres included, although it had to system of banks that
would be considered adequate from the modern point of view, and maintained moneylenders
and made no sin of interest, but only of usury. However, upon the revival of civilization,
growing necessity forced the issue in the middle of the 12th century, and banks were
established at Venice and Genoa, though in fact they did not become banks as we understood
them today, till long after. Again the origin of modern banking may be traced to the money
dealers in Florence, who received money on deposit, and were lenders of money in the 14th
century, and the names of the Bardi, Acciajuoli, Peruzzi, Pitti and Medici soon became famous
throughout Europe, as bankers. At one time, Florence is said to have had eighty bankers,
though it could boast of no public bank.
Some experts briefed the history of modern banking as:
The first public banking
institution was The Bank of Venice, founded in 1157. The Bank of Barcelona and the bank of
Genoa were established in 1401 and 1407 respectively. These are the recognized forerunners
of modern commercial banks. Exchange banking was developed after the installation of the
Bank of Amsterdam in 1609 and Bank of Hamburg in 1690. The credit for laying the
foundation of modern banking in England goes to the Lombard’s of Italy who had migrated to
other European countries and England. The bankers of Lombardy developed the money
lending business in England. The Bank of England was established in 1694. The development
of joint stock commercial banking started functioning in 1833. The modern banking system
actually developed only in the nineteenth century
No comments:
Post a Comment