Daniel Good Rare Books and Engravings
1720 Allegory of the South Sea Bubble, stock market, Pieter van den Berge, etching
1720 Allegory of the South Sea Bubble, stock market, Pieter van den Berge, etching
The South Sea Bubble has been called: the world’s first financial crash, the world’s first Ponzi scheme, speculation mania and a disastrous example of what can happen when people fall prey to ‘group think’. That it was a catastrophic financial crash is in no doubt and that some of the greatest thinkers at the time succumbed to it, including Isaac Newton himself, is also irrefutable. Estimates vary but Newton reportedly lost as much as £40 million of today’s money in the scheme.
The tree of shares withering and dying
Etching by Pieter van den Berge, (c 1720)
Leaf size: ca. 18,5 x 11,5 cm
Plate : ca. 15,5 x 10 cm
Pieter van den Berge was a draughtsman, engraver and mezzotinter. He worked in Amsterdam mainly after Gérard de Lairesse (q.v.), also on geographical and political subjects. Also publisher of his own plates.
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