Two Bankers, One Crisis: The 1672 Default That Created Modern Finance
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概要
On January 2nd, 1672, two bankers woke up to the same news: the King of England had just frozen £1.3 million in debt payments. Sovereign default.
Both men had lent to the Crown. Both had survived civil war, plague, and the Great Fire. One would build a dynasty lasting 250 years. The other would die bankrupt, in exile, in Holland.
What was the difference?
In this episode, I tell the story of Edward Backwell and Francis Child — two goldsmith-bankers operating on the same London streets, facing the same crisis, with completely opposite outcomes.
Backwell was the giant. He was called "the principal founder of the banking system in England." The kingdom itself was said to depend on him. He had lent a quarter of England's annual income to one borrower: the King.
Child was smaller. Quieter. His diversified approach looked like timidity — until the day it looked like survival.
This episode covers:
- How King Charles I's 1640 theft accidentally invented modern banking
- Why goldsmith vaults weren't actually safer than the Royal Mint
- The birth of fractional reserve banking as a security innovation
- Edward Backwell's rise from yeoman's son to England's most powerful financier
- The fatal bet: 22% of all sovereign lending concentrated in one man
- The Stop of the Exchequer and the first major bank run in history
- Francis Child's paranoid strategy — and why it built a 250-year dynasty
- The surprising family connection that united the ruined and the survivors
- Why I named my firm Lombard Equities after this story
The pattern Backwell fell into — concentrating in what seemed like the safest possible borrower — has destroyed the greatest financiers in history, from the Bardi and Peruzzi in 1345 to operators in our own era.
The lessons haven't changed. Neither has human nature.
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📚 Read the full article on Substack: thetimelessinvestor.substack.com
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🎥 Watch on YouTube: https://youtu.be/g_YTV3JbcxQ