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Men in three cornered hats and suits of the time period clamor in a square, throwing stock shares while a large ledger stands in the center announcing prices

The Wind-Buyers, Who for Wind, Lose Money and Goods, and Ruin Their Wives and Children

designed to appear as scattered papers on a desk are depictions of traders crowding streets and coffee houses. There is also a playing card, a poem entitled: Bubble Poem and a copy of the London Gazette

Anonymous;  The Bubblers Medley, or a Sketch of the Times: Being Europe’s Memorial for the Year 1720; 1823 (restrike of 1721 plate); Etching and engraving; Miriam and Ira D. Wallach Division of Art, Prints, and Photographs

Empire of the Imagination

The Mississippi Bubble marked the arrival of what appeared to be an economic miracle in France. Seemingly overnight, insolvency gave way to prosperity. In Paris, dizzying affluence occasioned a building spree, as well as the coining of the words nouveau riche and millionaire. Driving such transformation was the introduction of a new currency: paper money. France’s banknotes, issued in lieu of metal coinage, were backed by projected profits in New World commerce. Between 1719 and 1720, France’s credit skyrocketed. Under John Law’s supervision, the Company of the West absorbed the entirety of the kingdom’s foreign enterprises. Rechristened the Company of the Indies, this vast, state-run conglomerate merged with the Royal Bank, rendering France’s credit inseparable from the fortunes of its corporate empire.

The bubble that Law orchestrated quickly spread throughout Europe. As in France, England had its creditors swap their debt for stock ownership in the state’s trading corporation. Anxious to safeguard the South Sea Company’s soaring value, in early 1720 England restricted the growth of competing corporations and caused investor confidence to plunge. But the bull market charged on, migrating to the Netherlands, where the vogue for publicly-traded insurance and other maritime ventures took hold. By this time, France was paying the price for having flooded the kingdom with banknotes well in excess of what it could redeem in coin. Within months, critics like the French philosopher and novelist Montesquieu were skewering the speculative economy as “an empire of the imagination.”

The New York Public Library believes that this item is in the public domain under the laws of the United States, but did not make a determination as to its copyright status under the copyright laws of other countries.

Items in Empire of the Imagination

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  • designed to appear as scattered papers on a desk are depictions of traders crowding streets and coffee houses. There is also a playing card, a poem entitled: Bubble Poem and a copy of the London Gazette

    Empire of the Imagination Introduction

  • Men in three cornered hats and suits of the time period clamor in a square, throwing stock shares while a large ledger stands in the center announcing prices

    The Wind-Buyers, Who for Wind, Lose Money and Goods, and Ruin Their Wives and Children

  • designed to appear as scattered papers on a desk are depictions of traders crowding streets and coffee houses. There is also a playing card, a poem entitled: Bubble Poem and a copy of the London Gazette

    The Bubblers Medley

  • a hectic street scene showing the vices of the Quincampoix -- France's stock trading center

    Rue Quincampoix in the Year 1720

  • a tent-sized jesters cap protects dealers haggling prices and also keeps out the poor and downtrodden

    Flora’s Fools Cap

  • a relatively tattered and extremely primitive bill on plain, unbleached paper

    French royal banknote, 100 livres Tournois

  • Handwritten note on half sheet of paper that entitles Mr. Grigsby to three percent of the profits of  Newton's South Sea shares

    Isaac Newton pay order

  • designed to appear as scattered papers on a desk are depictions of traders crowding streets and coffee houses. There is also a playing card, a poem entitled: Bubble Poem and a copy of the London Gazette

    Empire of the Imagination