1 / 19

Chapter 15 Part 7

Chapter 15 Part 7. The Commercial Revolution 1500-1700. Causes of the Commercial Revolution. Roots: The Hanseatic League Population Growth = more consumers 1500…70 million 1600…90 million Price Revolution : long, slow upward trend in prices Increased food prices

nayef
Download Presentation

Chapter 15 Part 7

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 15Part 7 The Commercial Revolution 1500-1700

  2. Causes of the Commercial Revolution • Roots: The Hanseatic League • Population Growth = more consumers • 1500…70 million • 1600…90 million • Price Revolution: long, slow upward trend in prices • Increased food prices • Increased volume of money • Higher prices = increase in supply

  3. Nation States • Tried to increase economic power

  4. Rise in Capitalism • Laissez-faire capitalism • Entrepreneurs • Bourgeoisie at the forefront

  5. Features of the Commercial Revolution • Banking: • The Medici in Italy • The Fuggers in Germany • Funded all kinds of economic activity • 16th Century: Antwerp: Europe’s banking and commercial center • 17th Century: Amsterdam (after Dutch revolt when Antwerp was destroyed)

  6. The Hanseatic League • Middle Ages to 16th Century • Controlled trade in much of Northern Europe Was a mercantile association of many German cities and towns

  7. Chartered Companies • The State provided monopolies • British East India Co. • Dutch East India Co. • Often had fleets of ships and military and governmental powers

  8. Joint Stock Companies • Groups of investors who pooled resources for a common venture • London Co. • Plymouth Co. • Forerunners of modern corporations • Early examples of capitalism

  9. Stock Markets • The Bourse in Antwerp • Investors purchased shares of stock • Then, as value of the company grew, so did the value of the stock • So…investors realized a profit

  10. The First Enclosure Movement • England • Enclosed land for sheep herding and wool production • More profitable than growing food • But food prices went up because there was less of it!

  11. The Emergence of Cottage Industries • The “Putting Out” system • Cottagers were often farmers who lost their livelihood due to the enclosure movement began to produce goods at home and sold them to merchant capitalists • First for cloth production: spinning and weaving • Then household goods: buttons, musical instruments, printing, muskets, etc. • Families often subcontracted spinsters

  12. New Consumer goods • Sugar, rice, etc

  13. Mercantilism 17th Century • To the self-sufficiency of the nation • Favorable balance of trade • Bullionism • Promote internal industries • Lure skilled workers into one’s country • Colonies for resources and markets for surplus goods

  14. The Commercial Revolution • Slowly transformed Europe from an isolated rural society to a more developed urban society • Serfs in Western Europe were able to improve their social status • Since wealth could be taxed, it led to powerful nation-states • Could now finance voyages of discovery

  15. The Price Revolution • Part of the Commercial Revolution • Rising population = rising demand = rising prices • Gold and silver from the New World was partially responsible

  16. The Price Revolution • Inflation stimulated production because producers got “more” money for their products • Peasants benefitted when surplus became cash crops • Bourgeoisie made their money through trade and manufacturing so they could increase their social and political status

  17. BUT • The Nobility (of the Sword) did NOT benefit from inflation • They were stuck with fixed incomes from feudal rents and their standard of living diminished over time • The Bourgeoisie grew in political and economic significance

  18. The Bourgeoisie were doing very well • First in the Italian city-states • Was the most powerful class in the Netherlands • In France, their political power grew at the expense of the nobility • More and more influence in English politics

  19. The Commercial Revolution Results: • Most in Western Europe saw an increased standard of living • Especially the middle class • There was more food, a greater variety of food, the same goes for household utensils

More Related