The Legal Innovation That Created Urban Economic Zones
This nomination for the monarchs and feudal lords who, from the 11th century, granted formal charters to towns, creating legal franchises with defined privileges. These charters granted towns rights such as the ability to hold a market, levy tolls, manage their own courts, and exempt residents from certain feudal duties. This transformed settlements into chartered towns or boroughs, distinct legal and economic entities. The charter was a foundational business document: it lowered transaction costs by providing a clear legal framework, attracted merchants and artisans with the promise of freedom and profit, and stimulated medieval urbanization. By creating these pockets of relative economic liberty and self-regulation, the chartered town proved that targeted legal innovationgranting specific economic privileges and autonomycould be a powerful tool for stimulating growth, concentrating capital, and building the urban networks that became the backbone of the commercial revolution.