kipper$42527$ - definição. O que é kipper$42527$. Significado, conceito
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O que (quem) é kipper$42527$ - definição

FINANCIAL CRISIS IN 17TH CENTURY
Kipper und wipperzeit; Kipper und Wipper period; Tipper and See-Saw Time; Kipper- und Wipperzeit; Kipper and Wipper period; Kipper and Wipper; Kipper and Wipper era; Kipper coins

Kipper the Dog         
  • Kipper on a street in York, England, on May 4, 2006
CHILDREN'S BOOK SERIES BY MICK INKPEN
Kipper the dog
Kipper the Dog is a character in a series of books for preschool-age children by British writer Mick Inkpen. The books consist of 34 titles (as of July 2005), which have sold over 8 million copies and have been translated into over 20 languages.
The Kipper Kids         
BRITISH DUO
Harry Kipper; Harry kipper; Martin von Haselberg; Kipper Kids; Martin Rochus Sebastian von Haselberg; Martin Von Haselberg
The Kipper Kids were a duo composed of Martin Rochus Sebastian von Haselberg (born 20 January 1949) and Brian Routh (born 9 March 1948) two artists known for the extreme and often comedic performance art they made together in the 1970s and after. Von Haselberg lives and works in New York, U.
kipper         
  • The fish processing factory in the village of [[Seahouses]], [[Northumberland]], is one of the places where the practice of kippering herrings is said to have originated
  • Kippers for breakfast in England
  • "Red herring": Cold-smoked herring (Scottish kippers), brined and dyed so that their flesh achieves a reddish colour
FISH DISH
Kipper (legends); Kippers; Kippered; Kipper Snacks; Kipper season; Orange kipper; Orange kippers; Kippering; Red herring (kipper); Red herring (fish); Kippered herring; Manx Kippers
(kippers)
A kipper is a fish, usually a herring, which has been preserved by being hung in smoke.
N-COUNT

Wikipédia

Kipper und Wipper

Kipper und Wipper (German: Kipper- und Wipperzeit, literally "Tipper and See-saw time") was a financial crisis during the start of the Thirty Years' War (1618–1648). Starting around 1621, city-states in the Holy Roman Empire began to heavily debase currency in order to raise revenue for the Thirty Years' War, as effective taxation did not exist. More and more mints were established until the debased metal coins were so worthless that children allegedly played with them in the street, which became the basis for Leo Tolstoy's short story "Ivan the Fool".

The name refers to the use of tipping scales to identify not-yet-debased coins, which were then taken out of circulation, melted, mixed with baser metals such as lead, copper or tin, and re-issued. Often the states did not debase their own currency, but instead manufactured low-value imitations of coins from other territories and then spent them in yet other territories as far as possible from their own lands, hoping that the resulting damage would then occur to the economy of those other regions rather than their own. This worked for a while; but after a time, the general public caught on to the manipulation, resulting in pamphlets denouncing the practice, local riots and the refusal of soldiers and mercenaries to fight unless paid in real, non-debased money. Also the states began to get back their own debased coins in taxes and customs fees. Due to these problems the practice largely stopped around 1623; however, the damage done was so large that it created financial disarray in almost all the city-states in the area. The same thing re-occurred on a smaller scale near the end of the century and again during the middle of the 18th century; however, the debasement spread from Germany to Austria, Hungary, Bohemia, and Poland.