The book analyses the role of private bankers who were pivotal in
modernizing the economic and financial system of Italy in the XIX
century. To achieve this they needed to interact with the international
haute banque to organize and place the public loans and the large
investments associated with the joint-stock companies.
The theme of reputation, which is currently at the centre of the
historiographical debate, is fundamental for the study of the private
banker figures, whose professional success is linked to the limitless
trust accorded to them by their circle of personal contacts.
Historiography has studied the role of Italian bankers in the trade,
credit and international finance during the modern age (XVI-XVIII
centuries), but it has not analysed the banking system in the XIX
century and its national and international relations.
The case study of Banca Parodi of Genova fills the historiographical gap
concerning the role of private bankers and banking institutions in
Italy, highlighting the network between the Parodi family and the
international haute banque; one of the most emblematic cases is the
Rothschild family. The book presents a re-elaborates series of
unpublished data, placing them at the disposal of the scientific
community and analyses the role of private bankers in the development of
Italian banking institutions in the XIX century to launch a scientific
debate.