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Original Articles

‘A doe in the city’: Women shareholders in eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century Britain

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Pages 265-291 | Published online: 18 Aug 2006

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Susana Martínez-Rodríguez & Laura Lopez-Gomez. (2023) Gender Differential and Financial Inclusion: Women Shareholders of Banco Hispano Americano in Spain (1922–35). Feminist Economics 29:3, pages 225-252.
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Herrade Igersheim & Charlotte Le Chapelain. (2022) Women leaders in industry in nineteenth-century France: The case of Amélie de Dietrich. Business History 0:0, pages 1-24.
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Susana Martínez-Rodríguez. (2020) Mistresses of company capital: Female partners in multi-owner firms, Spain (1886–1936). Business History 62:8, pages 1373-1394.
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Maria-Gabriella Baldarelli, Mara Del Baldo & Stefania Vignini. (2019) The first women accounting masters in Italy: between tradition and innovation. Accounting History Review 29:1, pages 39-78.
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Liselotte Eriksson. (2014) Beneficiaries or policyholders? The role of women in Swedish life insurance 1900–1950. Business History 56:8, pages 1335-1360.
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Mariana Pargendler & Henry Hansmann. (2013) A new view of shareholder voting in the nineteenth century: evidence from Brazil, England and France. Business History 55:4, pages 585-600.
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Thomas A. Lee. (2012) ‘A helpless class of shareholder’: newspapers and the City of Glasgow Bank failure. Accounting History Review 22:2, pages 143-159.
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Bethan Lloyd Jones. (2010) Was the nineteenth-century Denbighshire coalfield a worthwhile investment? An analysis of the investors and their returns. Accounting, Business & Financial History 20:2, pages 231-261.
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Malcolm Anderson. (2008) Accounting History Publications 2006/2007. Accounting, Business & Financial History 18:3, pages 357-374.
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Articles from other publishers (25)

Janette Rutterford, Dimitris P. Sotiropoulos & Carry van Lieshout. (2022) Individual investors and social ownership structures in the UK before the 1930s: Joint holdings and trustee investment. The Economic History Review 76:2, pages 661-692.
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JAMES TAYLOR. (2020) Inside and Outside the London Stock Exchange: Stockbrokers and Speculation in Late Victorian Britain. Enterprise & Society 22:3, pages 842-877.
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Graeme G. Acheson, Gareth Campbell, Áine Gallagher & John D. Turner. (2020) Independent women: investing in British railways, 1870–1922 † . The Economic History Review 74:2, pages 471-495.
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Carmen María Hernández-Nicolás & Susana Martínez-Rodríguez. 2020. Female Entrepreneurs in the Long Nineteenth Century. Female Entrepreneurs in the Long Nineteenth Century 337 360 .
MATTHEW HOLLOW. (2018) A Nation of Investors or a Procession of Fools? Reevaluating the Behavior of Britain’s Shareholding Population through the Prism of the Interwar Sharepushing Crime Wave. Enterprise & Society 20:1, pages 132-158.
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Francesca Picciaia. (2017) “In spite of everything?” Female entrepreneurship from a historical perspective. Journal of Management History 23:4, pages 436-451.
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Eliane Silva Sampaio, Delfina Rosa Rocha Gomes & Marcelo De Santana Porte. (2017) História da contabilidade e o gênero feminino: o caso Anna Jansen, a rainha do maranhão (Sec. XIX). De Computis - Revista Española de Historia de la Contabilidad 14:26, pages 59.
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Maria G Baldarelli & Mara Del Baldo. (2016) Accounting and charity: How to read the “pink” in accounting in the first half of the twentieth century through a real life case. Accounting History 21:2-3, pages 144-166.
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Béatrice CraigBéatrice Craig. 2016. Women and Business Since 1500. Women and Business Since 1500 154 166 .
Jane JF Hronsky, Geoffrey H Burrows & Phillip E Cobbin. (2015) A fine education but no “bluestocking”: Harriett Amies, pioneer female accounting professional. Accounting History 20:2, pages 118-137.
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Susie Steinbach. (2012) “Can We still Use ‘Separate Spheres’? British History 25 Years After Family Fortunes”. History Compass 10:11, pages 826-837.
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JOSEPHINE MALTBY. (2011) ‘The wife's administration of the earnings’? Working-class women and savings in the mid-nineteenth century. Continuity and Change 26:2, pages 187-217.
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Stefania Licini. (2011) Assessing female wealth in nineteenth century Milan, Italy. Accounting History 16:1, pages 35-54.
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JANETTE RUTTERFORD, DAVID R. GREEN, JOSEPHINE MALTBY & ALASTAIR OWENS. (2011) Who comprised the nation of shareholders? Gender and investment in Great Britain, c. 1870-1935. The Economic History Review 64:1, pages 157-187.
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HELEN DOE. (2009) Waiting for her ship to come in? The female investor in nineteenth‐century sailing vessels. The Economic History Review 63:1, pages 85-106.
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Janette Rutterford, Josephine Maltby, David R. Green & Alastair Owens. (2009) Researching shareholding and investment in England and Wales: Approaches, sources and methods. Accounting History 14:3, pages 269-292.
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JOHN D. TURNER. (2009) Wider share ownership?: investors in English and Welsh Bank shares in the nineteenth century 1 . The Economic History Review 62:s1, pages 167-192.
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Serge Noiret. (2008) Publications on financial history 2006. Financial History Review 15:2, pages 203-261.
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DAVID PRATT, P. R. SCHOFIELD, HENRY FRENCH, PETER KIRBY, MARK FREEMAN, JULIAN GREAVES & HUGH PEMBERTON. (2008) Review of periodical literature published in 2006. The Economic History Review 61:1, pages 183-230.
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Peter Foreman. (2016) Accounting History Publication List 2006. Accounting History 12:4, pages 465-470.
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Matthew Hale, Richard Hawkins & Catherine Wright. (2007) List of publications on the economic and social history of Great Britain and Ireland published in 2006. The Economic History Review 60:4, pages 773-826.
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Katrina Honeyman. (2011) Doing Business with Gender: Service Industries and British Business History. Business History Review 81:03, pages 471-493.
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Janette Rutterford & Josephine Maltby. (2007) “The nesting instinct”: women and investment risk in a historical context. Accounting History 12:3, pages 305-327.
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Maria Victoria Uribe Bohorquez & Isabel‐María García‐Sánchez. (2021) Women in Accounting: A Historical Review of Obstacles and Drivers on a Patriarchal and Classist Path. SSRN Electronic Journal.
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Graeme Acheson, Gareth Campbell, Aine Gallagher & John D. Turner. (2020) Independent Women: Investing in British Railways, 1870-1922. SSRN Electronic Journal.
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