maria canawati
Chapter 14: Economic Transformations: Commerce and Consequence, 1450–1750
I. Europeans and Asian Commerce
A. A Portuguese Empire of Commerce
1. Economic weaknesses but military strengths
2. Mombasa, Hormuz, Goa, Malacca, and Macao
3. “Trading post empire” and cartaz pass system
4. Entry into Asian trade
5. Decline after 1600
B. Spain and the Philippines
1. Lure of the Spice Islands
2. Magellan’s voyage (1519–1521)
3. Spanish rule (1565–1898)
4. Mindanao and Islam as an ideology of resistance
5. Manila and the Chinese
C. The East India Companies
1. Organized monopolies that could make war
2. Dutch seizure of the Spice Islands and Taiwan
3. British work with Mughals in India in textile trade
4. “Carrying trade” and bulk commodities
D. Asians and Asian Commerce
1. Limited European impact in Asia
2. Japan initially open but Tokugawa Shogun closed
3. Active Asians: Chinese, Southeast Asian women, Armenians, and Indians
II. Silver and Global Commerce
A. Discovery of Bolivian and Japanese silver deposits
B. Spanish American silver to Manila and then China
C. Chinese taxes paid in silver
D. PotosÃ
E. Rise and fall of Spanish economy
F. “General crisis” of the seventeenth century
G. Japan’s silver management
H. Commercialization, specialization, and deforestation in China
I. China and India out-produce Europe
III. The “World Hunt”: Fur in Global Commerce
A. North American and Siberian fur sources
B. European population growth and “Little Ice Age”
C. European goods traded for American furs
D. Impact on Native American societies
E. Siberian furs to Europe, China, and the Ottomans
F. Impact on Siberians
IV. Commerce in People: The Atlantic Slave Trade
Saturday, February 25, 2017
maria canawati
Chapter 13: Political Transformations: Empires and Encounters, 1450–1750 I. European Empires in the Americas A. The European Advantage 1. Geography and winds 2. European marginality, land-hunger, and social drives 3. Organization and technology 4. Local allies 5. Germs B. The Great Dying 1. 60–80 million people without immunities 2. Old-World diseases 3. Demographic collapse C. The Columbian Exchange 1. People brought germs, plants, and animals 2. Corn and potatoes to Europe, Africa, and Asia 3. American tobacco and chocolate, Chinese tea, and Arab coffee 4. Silver, slaves, and sugar 5. Europe the biggest winner II. Comparing Colonial Societies in the Americas A. In the Land of the Aztecs and the Incas 1. Encomienda, repartimiento, and hacienda 2. Creoles and peninsulares: “Purity of blood” 3. Mestizo and castas 4. Indians B. Colonies of Sugar 1. Portuguese Brazil’s monopoly (1570–1670) 2. Labor intensive and an international mass market 3. African slaves and mulattoes C. Settler Colonies in North America 1. British get the leftovers 2. British society in transition 3. Class equality with gender inequality 4. Pure settler societies with little racial mixing 5. Protestantism and weak royal control III. The Steppes and Siberia: The Making of a Russian Empire A. Experiencing the Russian Empire 1. Conquest and yasak 2. Settlers put pressure on pastoralists B. Russians and Empire 1. Russia becomes multiethnic 2. Wealth of empire 3. Peter the Great (r. 1689–1725) and the West 4. Contact with China and Islam 5. What kind of empire? IV. Asian Empires A. Making China an Empire 1. Qing expansion in the West (1680–1760) 2. Colonial? 3. Economic downturn in Central Asia B. Muslims and Hindus in the Mughal Empire 1. 20 percent Muslim 2. Akbar (r. 1556–1605) 3. Ahmad Sirhindi (1564–1624) 4. Aurangzeb (1658–1707) C. Muslims and Christians in the Ottoman Empire 1. “The Sword of Islam” 2. Decrease in women’s autonomy yet many rights 3. New importance of Turkic people in the Islamic World 4. Balkan, Armenian, and Orthodox Christians 5. Devshirme 6. Fear and admiration in the Christian West V. Reflections: The Centrality of Context in World History A. Contextual thinking B. Not all empires are equal
Chapter 13: Political Transformations: Empires and Encounters, 1450–1750 I. European Empires in the Americas A. The European Advantage 1. Geography and winds 2. European marginality, land-hunger, and social drives 3. Organization and technology 4. Local allies 5. Germs B. The Great Dying 1. 60–80 million people without immunities 2. Old-World diseases 3. Demographic collapse C. The Columbian Exchange 1. People brought germs, plants, and animals 2. Corn and potatoes to Europe, Africa, and Asia 3. American tobacco and chocolate, Chinese tea, and Arab coffee 4. Silver, slaves, and sugar 5. Europe the biggest winner II. Comparing Colonial Societies in the Americas A. In the Land of the Aztecs and the Incas 1. Encomienda, repartimiento, and hacienda 2. Creoles and peninsulares: “Purity of blood” 3. Mestizo and castas 4. Indians B. Colonies of Sugar 1. Portuguese Brazil’s monopoly (1570–1670) 2. Labor intensive and an international mass market 3. African slaves and mulattoes C. Settler Colonies in North America 1. British get the leftovers 2. British society in transition 3. Class equality with gender inequality 4. Pure settler societies with little racial mixing 5. Protestantism and weak royal control III. The Steppes and Siberia: The Making of a Russian Empire A. Experiencing the Russian Empire 1. Conquest and yasak 2. Settlers put pressure on pastoralists B. Russians and Empire 1. Russia becomes multiethnic 2. Wealth of empire 3. Peter the Great (r. 1689–1725) and the West 4. Contact with China and Islam 5. What kind of empire? IV. Asian Empires A. Making China an Empire 1. Qing expansion in the West (1680–1760) 2. Colonial? 3. Economic downturn in Central Asia B. Muslims and Hindus in the Mughal Empire 1. 20 percent Muslim 2. Akbar (r. 1556–1605) 3. Ahmad Sirhindi (1564–1624) 4. Aurangzeb (1658–1707) C. Muslims and Christians in the Ottoman Empire 1. “The Sword of Islam” 2. Decrease in women’s autonomy yet many rights 3. New importance of Turkic people in the Islamic World 4. Balkan, Armenian, and Orthodox Christians 5. Devshirme 6. Fear and admiration in the Christian West V. Reflections: The Centrality of Context in World History A. Contextual thinking B. Not all empires are equal
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