Transcript Document

So Far This Year
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14th century
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Plague
Earliest Sparks of the Renaissance
Split between Eastern and Western Europe w
1st Hundred Years War
Italy is Solidifying its role as trading middle man
Mongols rule in Russia
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15th Century
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Renaissance Begins in Earnest
Northern Renaissance
Henry the Navigator is Exploring the coast of Africa
Constantinople Falls to the Ottoman Turks
Increased interest in Afrian Slaves
Habsburg-Valois Wars
Rise of Renaissance Princes/New Monarchs
Consolidation of Habsburg Empire
Mongols kicked out of Russia
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16th Century
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Age of Exploration
Spanish Golden Century
Transition from Mediterranean to Atlantic Power centers
Reformation/English Reformation
Council of Trent
1st half of the Wars of Religion
Ottoman Empire reaches its peak… threatens Eastern
Europe
Start of the Scientific Revolution
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17th Century
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2nd Half of the Wars of Religion (30 Years War)
Witch hunts
Rise of Absolutism in France, Prussia, Russia, Austria
Constitutionalism in England and the Netherlands
(English Civil War, Glorious Revolution)
France becomes culturally dominant
Spain falls
Netherlands has a Golden Age
Continuation of the Scientific Revolution
Early Enlightenment
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18th Century
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Heart of the Enlightenment
2nd Hundred Years War
Enlightened Absolutism
(2nd )Agricultural Revolution
Population Explosion
Early Industrial Revolution (ignited by Cottage Industry)
Explosion of the Atlantic Economy and Associated Trade
Wars
Capitalism Unseats Mercantilism
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2nd Agricultural Revolution
• 1st Agricultural Revolution
– Development of farming
• replaced hunting and gathering
• 10,000 BC
– Animal power
– Land can only produce so much (nitrogen exhaustion)
• Slash and burn agricultural or limited population size
• Medieval Improvements
– Open Field system
• Strips of farmland
– Not easy to turn an ox
– Communal
» Insurance against poor yield in one part of the field
– ‘The Commons’
– Fallow
• Field rotation
• Medieval Limitations
– Fallow is Inefficient
• 1/3 of fields aren’t used
– Famine cycle
– 1 bushel of seed yields 5-6 bushels of crop
• Modern farmers are closer to 40 bushels of crop
The Open Field System
2nd Agricultural Revolution (cont.)
• 2nd Agricultural
Revolution
Innovations
• End of the fallow
– Field rotation v crop rotation
• Nitrogen replacing crops
– Crops up, manure, up, crops
up cycle
• Enclosure
– Land taken up by the wealthy
and enclosed
• Land is more productive,
but…
• End of the common- no
more safety net
• Dutch
– Scientific because of
dykes
– Golden Age
• Wealth and stable
population
support
experimentation
with crops
• English
– Copy the Dutch
– Turnip Townsend
• Agricultural boom 
population boom
– As a result, standard of
living does not rise in
general
18th Century Poem
The law locks up the man or woman
Who steals the goose from off the common
But leaves the greater villain loose
Who steals the common from off the goose.
The law demands that we atone
When we take things we do not own
But leaves the lords and ladies fine
Who take things that are yours and mine.
17c European
Agrarianism
Leaders: The Dutch
The Cost of Enclosure: Fair?
English Farmer
Continental Farmer
The Cost of Enclosure: Unfair?
Heh, heh,
heh…
Cost of Enclosure: Author’s
Assessment
VS
Population Growth
• Factors that limit it are
slowly removed
– Black death dies out
mysteriously
– Better ability to spread
food about because of
improved infrastructure
• New world crops
– Slight improvements in
health from better
sanitation
• Standards of living did
NOT increase
18c
Population
Growth
Rate
Putting Out System
• Ironically, the increase in Agricultural Production actually
increased the numbers of poor peasants. Why?
– Growing population but stable amount of land
– Profits to be made in farming encouraged the wealthy to buy up
farmland
– Thus  Underemployed peasants (Proletariat- landless farmers)
• Enterprising merchants in the cities devised the Putting Out
System
– Take product to the countryside where landless farmers are
desperate for work
– Production in the homes
– Come back and pick up the product and sell it
– Capitalism before that word even existed
– Challenge to guild system
– Weakens the grip of governments’ mercantilist control over the
economy, which the governments don’t like, but feel they have no
choice.
• Why?
– What else do you do with mobs of hungry peasants?
• First spark of the Industrial Revolution
Cottage System
2nd
Start
Cottage
Sheep Farm
Merchant Buys Wool Merchant Drops Off Wool
4th
Town
Merchant Sells Textiles
Makes Profit
3rd
Cottage
Merchant Picks Up Textiles
2nd Hundred Years War
• English, Dutch, French, Spanish, and Portuguese fight
over the wealth of the New World and Atlantic Trade
• Mercantilism puts them at odds with each other
– Goods from the English colonies can only be traded to England on
English ships so that all of the profit stays with England, etc.
– This pisses off other countries and the colonists themselves. Why?
• Perhaps the first world wars
– fighting in Europe and the New World
– Fighting in Europe is part of general balance of power struggles
• By the 18th century, Portugal, Spanish, and Dutch were
fading powers
– Dutch had burned themselves out fighting Louis XIV, Spanish in
Wars of Religion, Portuguese had fought Spain and the Netherlands
– Two dominant powers were France and Britain
British Dominance of Atlantic Economy
• Britain, especially held that mercantilism should
help the people as well as the monarchy
• Roots in the Navigation Acts (interregnum)
– Aimed at Dutch (Manhattan) and then French
• England could get involved in wars in the New
World but avoid continental part of wars
– Gave them an advantage over the French
• English seamen could quickly become navy in
times of crisis
• Side Issue:
– England  England and Scotland  England, Scotland,
and Ireland
Battles in Europe and New World
Name in Europe
• War of the Spanish
Succession
– England felt hemmed in
by French and Spanish in
the New Word (see map)
– Ended by Peace of
Utrecht
– British win asiento and
some French land in New
World
• War of the Austrian
Succession
• Seven Years War
Name in Colonies
• Queen Anne’s War
• King George’s War
• French and Indian War
Battles in Europe and New World
Name in Europe
• War of the Spanish
Succession
• War of the Austrian
Succession
– Sparked by Frederick the
Great’s seizure of Silesia
– Fighting in India and
North America between
British and French
– Inconclusive Between
British and French
• Seven Years War
Name in Colonies
• Queen Anne’s War
• King George’s War
• French and Indian War
Battles in Europe and New World
Name in Europe
• War of the Spanish
Succession
• War of the Austrian
Succession
• Seven Years War
– Frederick the Great spared
by Peter III
– Key battle between French
and British
– (1st) Treaty of Paris
– France loses new world
possessions
– Spain and Britain get them
– India goes to Britain for
good
Name in Colonies
• Queen Anne’s War
• King George’s War
• French and Indian War
2nd HYW Isn’t Over Yet
• French and Indian War will help spark
American Revolution, which in turn helps
spark the French Revolution
• Both of these are, to a large degree,
continuations of a fight between England
and France over supremacy and control of
the Atlantic Economy
Capitalism
• Part of the Enlightenment
– Natural law of economics
• A rejection of mercantilism
– Argues that the government moves too slowly to
regulate the economy efficiently
• Basic Ideas of Capitalism
– Choices can be made more efficiently by actors in the economy
(rather than gov.)
• Entrepreneurs and citizens make choices
– These choices will be made correctly due to the natural law of the
invisible hand of the market
• supply and demand
• Enlightened self-interest
– Free trade brings greater wealth to everyone
• Not a zero-sum game
– There are occasional times when the government should interfere
with the economy
• Maintain internal and external order
• Provide a small number of goods that the market won’t provide naturally
– Example: freeways
– All merchants gain from a freeway, but who will invest the capital to pay for
them???
– Example: Fire stations
– If you don’t pay for them, won’t society have to work to put out a fire in your
house anyway?
There, there it is again—the
invisible hand of the marketplace
giving us the finger.
Animation of Smith’s Invisible Hand
Why
YUCK!
I willme
start a
business
making
lord?!
hamburgers.
YUM!
Ha, ha, ha.
Skinny
I will start a
#@%!#!
business
making
hamburgers.
Where was the
invisible hand?
$10,000
$10,000
$10,000
$10,000