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E-grāmata: Origins of Accounting Culture: The Venetian Connection

Edited by , Edited by (University G.d'Annunzio of Chieti-Pescara, Italy), Edited by , Edited by , Edited by
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The Origins Of Accounting Culture aim at studying the origins of the accounting culture in Venice, with a specific focus on accounting education. The period covered by the work ranges from Luca Pacioli to the foundation (in 1868) of the Royal Advanced School of Commerce (Regia Scuola Superiore di Commercio), that in 2018 is celebrating its 150 anniversary as Ca’ Foscari University of Venice.

Ever since the Middle Ages, Venice was home of a number of favourable circumstances that have been accumulating over the years. As a trading city par excellence, Venice allowed the spreading of the bookkeeping at first among firms and then in the public administration that was much in need of sophisticated accounting principles for the purpose of controlling its activities.

Venice was among the first cities to implement Gutenberg print method and it quickly became the most important city in the world in the publishing industry, allowing printing and spreading the first handbooks about double-entry bookkeeping and merchant studies.

The Origins Of Accounting Culture goes beyond the study of Luca Pacioli and tackles in a more organic and holistic way the social and economic conditions that allowed the accounting culture to spread in Venice. This book will be a vital resource to academics and researchers in the fields of Accounting, Accounting History, Economic Development and related disciplines.

List of Editors
viii
Introduction: Accounting Culture in Venice Through the Lenses of the Centuries: An Introductory View 1(18)
Massimo Sargiacomo
Stefano Coronella
Chiara Mio
Ugo Sostero
Roberto Di Pietra
SECTION 1 Accounting Treatises
19(126)
1 The Venetian Treatises: A Frame
21(29)
Stefano Coronella
Lucrezia Santaniello
2 A Venetian Treatise Before Pacioli by Marino De Raphaeli
50(16)
Alan Sangster
3 The Spread of the Double-Entry Bookkeeping Method in the Sixteenth Century: The Quaderno doppio col suo giomale novamente composto et dilegentissimamente ordinate secondo il costume di Venetia of Dominico Manzoni (Venice, 1540)
66(18)
Libero Mario Mari
Francesca Picciaia
4 Giovanni Antonio Moschetti's Universal Trattato: An Unexplored Contribution to Accounting Theory and Practice
84(17)
Michele Bigoni
Tania Aloisi
Warwick Funnell
Gianluca Risaliti
Roberto Verona
5 Bookkeeping Treatises in Seventeenth-Century Venice: The Contributions of Francesco Garatti (1686-1688)
101(25)
Valerio Antonelli
Raffaele D'alessio
Emanuela Mattia Cafaro
6 Niccolo D'Anastasio and His Scrittura Doppia Ridotta Scienza
126(19)
Fabio Caputo
Stefano Coronella
Rossella Leopizzi
Andrea Venturelli
SECTION 2 Companies
145(124)
7 Accounting and Power Relationships at the Origin of the Venetian Hospital of Santi Giovanni e Paolo
147(25)
Roberto Di Pietra
Salvatore Russo
8 Managing the Largest Printing Business in Europe: The Remondini in Bassano (Seventeenth to Nineteenth Century)
172(24)
Carlo Marcon
Giovanni Favero
Ugo Sostero
9 Carive's Accounting System: An Evolutionary Perspective on Its Early Years
196(25)
Moreno Mancin
Carlo Marcon
Marco Fas An
Michele D'alessandro
10 Firm, Industry and Institutional Dimensions of the Glassmaking Industry in Venice: The Case of Barovier & Toso
221(16)
Chiara Mio
Marco Fasan
11 Accounting and the Venetian Merchants
237(14)
David Alexander
Chiara Saccon
12 The Fraudulent Investor: An Accounting Investigation of a Venetian Manufactory, 1778-1784
251(18)
Maris A. Agostini
Riccardo Cella
Giovanni Favero
SECTION 3 Accounting Education
269(121)
13 Education and Bookkeeping in Fifteenth-Century Venice: Revisitation and Some Interdisciplinary Insights
271(14)
Laura Girella
Michela Cordazzo
14 The Rise of a Culture of Management Control: The Case of the Scuola Grande di San Rocco in the Sixteenth Century
285(24)
Maria Lusiani
Marco Vedovato
Chiara Pancot
15 Al Nome De Dio E Bon Guadagno--Pacioli, Venice, Education, and Bookkeeping
309(18)
Alan Sangster
16 On the Scope and Significance of the Venetian Accounting Innovations From the Sixteenth Century: Pedagogic Practices, Accounting Statements and Modes of Thinking and Acting
327(19)
Ann-Christine Frandsen
Keith Hoskin
17 Fabio Besta: Accounting Education and Accounting History Dissemination
346(27)
Massimo Sargiacomo
Stefania Servalli
Paolo Andrei
18 Historical Origins and Evolution of Small and Medium Practices in the Northeast of the Italian Peninsula
373(17)
Marisa Agostini
Michela Cordazzo
Chiara Saccon
Index 390
Massimo Sargiacomo is full professor of Accounting and Public Management in the Department of Management and Business Administration at G. DAnnunzio University of Chieti-Pescara, Italy

Stefano Coronella is full professor of Accounting in the Department of Business and Economics at Parthenope University of Naples, Italy.

Chiara Mio is full professor of Accounting in the Department of Management at Ca Foscari University of Venice, Italy

Ugo Sostero is full professor of Accounting in the Department of Management at Ca Foscari University of Venice, Italy

Roberto Di Pietra is full professor of Accounting in the Department of Business and Law at the University of Siena, Italy