Start in the smoky huts where Mesopotamians scratched debt tallies on wet clay, turning "owe you one goat" into the first IOUs that glued tribes tighter than blood oaths. Lydia's King Croesus didn't just get rich-he minted the world's debut gold-silver coins around 600 BC, sparking a frenzy that rolled empires from Athens bazaars to Rome's clipped denarii, where emperors debased the metal till inflation bit like a bad hangover. These weren't shiny saviors; they were the grease on chariot wheels, fueling pharaohs' pyramid crews and Viking hoards buried under rune stones, proving even gods got…mehr
Start in the smoky huts where Mesopotamians scratched debt tallies on wet clay, turning "owe you one goat" into the first IOUs that glued tribes tighter than blood oaths. Lydia's King Croesus didn't just get rich-he minted the world's debut gold-silver coins around 600 BC, sparking a frenzy that rolled empires from Athens bazaars to Rome's clipped denarii, where emperors debased the metal till inflation bit like a bad hangover. These weren't shiny saviors; they were the grease on chariot wheels, fueling pharaohs' pyramid crews and Viking hoards buried under rune stones, proving even gods got greedy when the mints hummed.Fast to the Middle Ages' coin-clipping chaos: Templars moonlighting as Europe's first bankers, funneling crusader loot from Jerusalem to Paris vaults till Philip the Fair torched them for the till. Tulips in 1630s Holland weren't flowers-they were futures contracts gone feral, Dutch burghers betting homesteads on bulbs that wilted to weeds overnight, a bubble pop that echoed through South Sea scams and Wall Street whispers. Usury bans from popes and mullahs pushed Jews into the money-lending shadows, birthing family dynasties like the Rothschilds, who whispered wars won on war bonds slipped across salon soirees.By the 20th century, it got weird: FDR's gold confiscation in '33, yanking rings from grannies' fingers to stuff Fort Knox, or Bretton Woods' dollar peg that held till '71, when the world woke up to fiat funny money printed like parade confetti. Enter Bitcoin's Satoshi ghost in '08, coding a ledger that laughs at central banks, turning pizza payments into pirate gold. This book's no ledger-it's a barstool yarn of booms and busts, reminding you every wallet's a graveyard of forgotten fortunes.
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