Lucy Moore
Loom & Bust
The Queen’s Embroiderer: A True Story of Paris, Lovers, Swindlers, and the First Stock Market Crisis
By Joan DeJean
Bloomsbury 375pp £30
Exactly three hundred years ago, Paris was the centre of a radical fiscal experiment. The Scottish economist – or, perhaps more correctly, speculator – John Law had been given powers by the regent of the young Louis XV to create the first French national bank. He replaced specie with paper money and began issuing stock certificates for a state-sponsored endeavour that would become known as the Mississippi Company. Inflation soared and intoxicating, acquisitive chaos reigned on the rue Quincampoix, home of France’s brand-new stock exchange. As Joan DeJean puts it, ‘During the dot-com bubble, the NASDAQ index rose from 500 to just over 5,000, but that spectacular climb took place over [nine years] … In just five months, Law’s stock rose from 500 to over 10,000. The velocity of the original stock bubble made Parisians sick with investment fever.’ The word ‘millionaire’ was coined during this period to describe the happy investors in Law’s scheme. Needless to say, it all ended badly.
A sure way of identifying one of the newly minted lords of the rue Quincampoix was through his richly embroidered clothing, heavy with gold and silver thread. At this time, when one livre could buy ten pounds of white bread, a single outfit hand-embroidered with silver thread cost 900 livres,
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