Monday, December 2, 2019
The New Age After The 1500S Essays (2036 words) -
  The New Age After The 1500S    After 1500 there were many signs that a new age of world   history was beginning, for example the discovery of America and the   first European enterprises in Asia. This new age was dominated by   the astonishing success of one civilization among many, that of   Europe. There was more and more continuous interconnection between   events in all countries, but it is to be explained by European   efforts. Europeans eventually became masters of the globe and they   used their mastery to make the world one. That resulted in a unity of   world history that can be detected until today. Politics,   empire-building, and military expansion were only a tiny part of what   was going on. Besides the economic integration of the globe there was   a much more important process going on: The spreading of assumptions   and ideas. The result was to be One World. The age of independent   civilizations has come to a close.  The history of the centuries since 1500 can be described as a   series of wars and violent struggles. Obviously men in different   countries did not like another much more than their predecessors did.   However, they were much more alike than their ancestors were, which   was an outcome of what we now call modernization. One could also say   that the world was Europeanized, for modernization was a matter of   ideas and techniques which have an European origin. It was with the   modernization of Europe that the unification of world history began. A   great change in Europe was the starting-point of modern history.  There was a continuing economic predominance of agriculture.   Agricultural progress increasingly took two main forms: Orientation   towards the market, and technical innovation. They were   interconnected. A large population in the neighborhood meant a market   and therefore an incentive. Even in the fifteenth century the   inhabitants of so called ?low countries? were already leaders in the   techniques of intensive cultivation. Better drainage opened the way to   better pasture and to a larger animal population. Agricultural   improvement favored the reorganization of land in bigger farms, the   reduction of the number of small holders, the employment of wage   labor, and high capital investment in buildings, drainage and   machinery.  In the late sixteenth century one response to the pressure of   expanding population upon slowly growing resources had been the   promoting of emigration. By 1800, Europeans had made a large   contribution to the peopling of new lands overseas. It was already   discernible in the sixteenth century when there began the long   expansion of world commerce which was to last until 1930. It started   by carrying further the shift of economic gravity from southern to   north-western Europe, from the Mediterranean to the Atlantic, which   has already been remarked. One contribution to this was made by   political troubles and wars such as ruined Italy in the early   sixteenth century. The great commercial success story of the sixteenth   century was Antwerp's, though it collapsed after a few decades in   political and economic disaster. In the seventeenth century Amsterdam   and London surpassed it. In each case an important trade based on a   well-populated hinterland provided profits for diversification into   manufacturing industry, services, and banking. The Bank of Amsterdam   and The Bank of England were already international economic forces in   the in the seventeenth century. About them clustered other banks and   merchant houses undertaking operations of credit and finance. Interest   rates came down and the bill of exchange, a medieval invention,   underwent an enormous extension of use and became the primary   financial instrument of international trade.   This was the beginning of the increasing use of paper, instead   of bullion. In the eighteenth century came the first European paper   currencies and the invention of the check. Joint stock companies   generated another form of negotiable security, their own shares.   Quotation of these in London coffee-houses in the seventeenth century   was overtaken by the foundation of the London Stock Exchange. By 1800   similar institutions existed in many other countries. It was also the   time of some spectacular disastrous investment projects, one of which   was the great English South Sea Bubble. But all the time the world was   growing more commercial, more used to the idea of employing money to   make money, and was supplying itself with the apparatus of modern    
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