@techreport{cad501b3d3114ee099fbc7c2f6351828,
title = "Immovable capital goods in medieval Muslim lands: Why water-mills and building cranes went missing",
abstract = "Immovable capital goods such as water-mills were in widespread use in Muslimlands in the early medieval period, just as in the Latin West. In the later Middle Ages,however, vertical windmills and cranes, then widely employed in Europe, were notintroduced there, while the number of water-mills dwindled. This decline was concentrated inspecific parts of the Muslim world, which rules out time-invariant and generic causes likereligion. We show that it was the growing insecurity of property rights and introduction of aspecific system of land tenure (ikta) that prevented application of such labor-saving capital goods.",
keywords = "capital goods, Middle East, Middle Ages, great divergence",
author = "{van Bavel}, B.J.P. and E. Buringh and J.E.C. Dijkman",
year = "2015",
language = "English",
series = "Working paper series",
publisher = "Centre for Global Economic History",
type = "WorkingPaper",
institution = "Centre for Global Economic History",
}