The Silk Ledger
Marco Polo walked into Peking in 1275 and saw something Europe wouldn't believe for 700 years. He went home a liar. Marco Polo walked into Kublai Khan's capital in 1275 and saw the first paper money in history. Mulberry bark, soaked and pressed, stamped with the Khan's red seal, declared the only money allowed across an empire stretching from the Pacific to the Volga. Refusal carried the death penalty. Polo recorded every detail in *Il Milione* and was called a liar for the next seven centuries. He was right. By the 1350s, late-Yuan emperors had printed too many notes to fund wars and palaces. One sack of rice that cost a single note under Kublai needed one hundred and fifty notes fifty years after his death. The empire fell in 1368. The paper trick didn't. Eighty years later, salt smugglers who had defied the monopoly that propped up the paper money founded the Ming dynasty — and copied the same trick. What Marco Polo saw in Kublai's capital is what every wallet on earth now carries. Europe took seven hundred years to believe him.
6 episodios
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