Only recently have historians of early modern Europe begun to link the seemingly arcane details of state finance with the development of political ideas and institutions. These essays contribute to this new fiscal history by focusing on the growth of representative institutions and the mechanics of European state finance. In order to raise additional revenues during a period of almost continuous warfare, rulers were forced to enter into new fiscal arrangements with their subjects, in return for which their subjects demanded, and often received, a greater share of political power.
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