European accounting scholars have made significant contributions to the history of accounting. Some of these contributions were not translated into English and as such were not integrated in the evolving comprehensive coverage of the evolution of the accounting function. The purpose of this paper is to review the evolution of accounting under different civilizations based on the writings of various European scholars. The paper, divided into four sections corresponding to the known civilizations the Sumerian, Egyptian, Greek and Roman, traces the history of accounting over four thousand years describing, illustrating and analyzing how records were kept and used and the various differences between different accounting practices. Special focus is made on the development of accounting under the Egyptian and Roman Empires. In particular, some scholars have supported the hypothesis that the double entry bookkeeping could have been invented even during the Roman Empire. To this end, the paper incorporates the contributions of some scholars in particular of F. Melis1 , G. Rossi2, P. Bariola3, D’Errico4, H. G. Amedee5

Provasi, R., Farag, S. (2013). Accounting in Ancient times: A Review of classic References. In III International Conference on Luca Pacioli in Accounting History. Conference Proceedings (pp.1347-1359). Istanbul.

Accounting in Ancient times: A Review of classic References

PROVASI, ROBERTA ANNA;
2013

Abstract

European accounting scholars have made significant contributions to the history of accounting. Some of these contributions were not translated into English and as such were not integrated in the evolving comprehensive coverage of the evolution of the accounting function. The purpose of this paper is to review the evolution of accounting under different civilizations based on the writings of various European scholars. The paper, divided into four sections corresponding to the known civilizations the Sumerian, Egyptian, Greek and Roman, traces the history of accounting over four thousand years describing, illustrating and analyzing how records were kept and used and the various differences between different accounting practices. Special focus is made on the development of accounting under the Egyptian and Roman Empires. In particular, some scholars have supported the hypothesis that the double entry bookkeeping could have been invented even during the Roman Empire. To this end, the paper incorporates the contributions of some scholars in particular of F. Melis1 , G. Rossi2, P. Bariola3, D’Errico4, H. G. Amedee5
paper
Ancient Accounting system, Luca Pacioli
English
International Conference on Luca Pacioli in Accounting History
2013
Provasi, R; Farag, S;
Batuhan Guvemli, B
III International Conference on Luca Pacioli in Accounting History. Conference Proceedings
9786056401503
2013
Vol II
1347
1359
none
Provasi, R., Farag, S. (2013). Accounting in Ancient times: A Review of classic References. In III International Conference on Luca Pacioli in Accounting History. Conference Proceedings (pp.1347-1359). Istanbul.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/67158
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