LAND BANKS.
37
tion established in 1609 in Amsterdam. A number
of other creations of longer or shorter existence
followed. Many projects were worked out, dis
cussed and promoted, but not until 1765 was an
edict issued in Berlin, promulgating the erection
of the Koenigliche Giro & Len Banco, and at the
same time a similar institution started business
in Breslau. It does not interest us for the present
that the activity of these banks, which, as note
issuing and loan institutions, were intended to
assist trade and commerce, was disappointing,
owing to faulty organisation and mismanagement.
Land Banks.
In the meantime, the necessity of broadening
the basis of credit for landed properties was more
and more recognised, and it is due to the initiative
of Frederick the Great that Land Institutions—
as we shall call for brevity’s sake these Land
Mortgage Credit Associations—were organised on
a plan suggested by a Berlin merchant named
Biihring, the underlying principle of which was to
replace a single mortgage by mortgage obligations.
Such mortgage obligations were well secured,
inasmuch as the whole provincial union was
liable for the issue. Furthermore, being bearer
securities, they were more easily realisable.
However, this new institution was founded only