Life and customs were hard in Lombardy [at the beginning of the 13th century]. Men wore cloaks of leather without any adornments, or clothes of rough wool with no lining. With a few pence, people felt rich. Men longed to have arms and horses. If one was noble and rich, one’s ambition was to own high towers from which to admire the city and the mountains and the rivers. The virgins wore tunics of pignolato [rough cotton] and petticoats of linen, and on their heads they wore no ornaments at all. A normal dowry was about ten lire and at the utmost reached one hundred, because the clothes of the woman were ever so simple. There were no fireplaces in the houses. Expenses were cut down to a minimum because in summer people drank little wine and wine-cellars were not kept. At table, knives were not used; husband and wife ate off the same plate, and there was one cup or two at most for the whole family. Candles were not used, and at night one dined by light of glowing torches. One ate cooked turnips, and ate meat only three times a week. Clothing was frugal. Today, instead, everything is sumptuous. Dress has become precious and rich with superfluity. Men and women bedeck themselves with gold, silver, and pearls. Foreign wines and wines from distant countries are drunk, luxurious dinners are eaten, and cooks are highly valued.
— Galvano Fiamma, 13th century, as quoted in The Taste of Conquest by Michael Krondl
While Galvano Fiamma was complaining about the changes in lifestyle brought about by the conquerors returning home with wealth from the Crusades, he could just as easily be bemoaning the wealth that would be attendant to a steady stream of adventurers hauling boxes of gold and jewels from the depths of a nearby megadungeon. Gary Gygax spoke briefly of such inflation, but when I saw the above quote, I thought it said it much more eloquently than I could.
So you did take the recommendation! Excellent!
I've always been a fan of , from time to time, making it difficult for the party to sell their "big score." Just how many merchants around the little town (or even the world actually) are able to buy that 10,000 gp diamond? Or would be willing to do so?
The selling/liquidation of such treasures should become adventures in and of themselves.
I did, and I'm loving the book, since I'm both a foodie and a Medievalist. Thanks much!
How funny. Not only do adventurers do economic damage, but moral damage as well as people accumulate wealth. I'll have to keep that in mind next time I run some D&D.
Adventurers do moral damage (and sometimes even economic damage) by being themselves adventurers…
One could argue that adventurers are damage-dealers period. They enter someplace quietly dangerous and shake things up. They counter a greater damage-dealer that has no limit and so is a threat to society. Peace is the adventurer-dividend, plus the wealth that trickles out of their spendthrift hands. They are slash and burn agriculture. They are the stress on muscle that makes it grow. They are the vicious fire-sale murderers of the status quo.