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Article: A short history of taxation beards, boots, beehives ... candles, nuts, hats, horses, chimneys, water--Tsar Peter taxed them all. But he is still styled 'the great' in modern histories of Russia, perhaps because of the mighty works his taxes produced. This is the eternal fate of taxation: to be the abused or abusive means towards noble or ignoble ends, never quite able to escape its association with extortion and war.
- Article from:
- New Internationalist
- Article date:
- October 1, 2008
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In the beginning
The word 'tax' first appeared in the English language only in the 14th century. It derives from the Latin taxare which means 'to assess'. Before that, English used the related word 'task', derived from Old French. For a while, 'task' and 'tax' were both in common use, the first requiring labour, the second money. 'Tax' then developed its meaning to imply something wearisome or challenging. So words like 'duty' were used to suggest a more appealing purpose. Political spin has just as long a history as taxation, and neither has been detained unduly by the meaning of words.
The written record
China has one of the longest of all ...