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Creation, Interaction and Expansion of Economic Systems

Creation, Interaction and Expansion of Economic Systems. Mr. Millhouse AP World History Hebron High School. Creation, Interaction and Expansion of Economic Systems. This theme includes: Agricultural and pastoral production Trade and commerce Labor systems Industrialization

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Creation, Interaction and Expansion of Economic Systems

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  1. Creation, Interaction and Expansion of Economic Systems Mr. Millhouse AP World History Hebron High School

  2. Creation, Interaction and Expansion of Economic Systems • This theme includes: • Agricultural and pastoral production • Trade and commerce • Labor systems • Industrialization • Capitalism and Socialism

  3. Foundations Unit8000 BCE – 600 CE

  4. Neolithic Revolution • Traditional Economy • Hunting and gathering • Sedentary agriculture developed between 10,000 and 8,000 BCE • 1st developed in southwestern Asia • Earliest method was slash-and-burn agriculture • Subsistence agriculture • Herding animals (pastoralism) Slash-and-burn agriculture in northeast India

  5. Development of Agriculture

  6. Economic Regions

  7. Early Village Economy • Farming led to the rise of permanent villages • Jericho • Village life led to specialized labor • Development of early industry • Pottery, metallurgy, and textiles

  8. Ancient Civilizations • Mesopotamia, Egypt, & Indus River Valley • Irrigation led to improved agriculture • Development of cities contributed to rise of trade • China • Regular rains & fertile soil minimized irrigation • Olmec • Develop in rainforest; water control systems • Chavin • Develop in mountains; complex irrigation

  9. Nile-Indus Corridor

  10. Pre-classical labor systems • Slavery • Existed in all early civilizations but was relatively unimportant • Most slaves gained through military conquest • Egypt • Used corvée labor to build pyramids & temples • Peasants were bound to the land • Men were organized into labor gangs of 50-100

  11. Pre-classical labor systems • Mesopotamia • Large number of slaves due to militaristic nature of society • Peasants lost their freedom over time • Rise of debt slavery • China • Zhou dynasty peasants paid a percentage of their crops to aristocrats in exchange for protection • Manorial system

  12. Classical Civilizations • Han China • Monopolized production of iron, salt, and liquor • Rise of the Silk Road • Mauryan India • Ashoka built irrigation systems and roads to promote trade • Mayans • Terrace farming improved production of cotton, maize, and cacao

  13. Classical Civilizations • Ancient Greece • Cities, such as Athens, become centers of trade • Economy depended heavily on slavery • Rome • Latifundia – large landed estates focused on commercial agriculture (olive oil, wine, wheat) • North Africa was the major grain producing region • Depended on slave labor • Roman roads promoted trade and linked empire to Silk Road

  14. Cotton The Silk Roads

  15. Classical era labor systems • China • Free peasants were the backbone of the labor force • Peasants ranked just below bureaucrats but above artisans and merchants • Qin Shi Huangdi ended the manorial system • “Recruited” labor to build the Great Wall • Silk weaving supplemented farm income • “Men as tiller, woman as weaver” • During the Han dynasty, slaves made up less than 1% of the total population

  16. Classical era labor systems • Greece & Rome • Slaves never constituted more than 50% of the population • Slaves worked as domestic servants, miners, and farmers • In Greece, slaves could serve as tutors • In Rome, development of commercial agriculture led to the rise of slavery • Rome also used slaves as gladiators and chariot racers

  17. Classical era labor systems • India • Caste system was based largely on job classification • Farmers did not rank high in prestige • Merchants had a higher social standing than they did in China or the Mediterranean • Slaves played almost no role in the economy • Sudras (lowest caste) and untouchables took the place of slaves

  18. Post-Classical Unit600 – 1450

  19. Arabs • Did not rely heavily upon agriculture • Abbasid sakk (checks) encouraged trade • Urbanization: Baghdad • Dar al-Islam facilitated expansion of trade • Islamic law protected merchants • Revival of the Silk Road • Growth of Indian Ocean trade • Dhows increase the volume of maritime trade

  20. Indian Ocean trade routes Chinese junk East Africa gold salt slaves Arab dhow

  21. Labor in the Islamic World • Islamic slaves were viewed as humans rather than just property (chattel) • Slavery was seen as a method of conversion • Slaves were acquired from Africa or central Asia • Abbasid introduced the use of Turkish slave-soldiers • Mamluks • Janissaries (Ottoman Empire)

  22. Post-Classical Empires • Byzantine Empire • Manufactures glassware, jewelry, & silk • Trade a major part of the economy • Mediterranean Sea, Silk Roads, Russia, etc. • Urbanization: Constantinople • Sudanic Africa (Ghana, Mali, Songhai) • Trans-Saharan trade • Use camel caravans to trade gold, slaves, and ivory for horses, manufactured goods, and salt • Urbanization: Timbuktu

  23. Trans-Saharan trade routes

  24. Post-Classical Empires • Swahili Coast • Trade gold and parts of exotic animals to Islamic and Indian merchants for products from Persia, India, and China • Urbanization: Mogadishu, Kilwa, etc. • Great Zimbabwe • Supplies gold to the Swahili coast

  25. Tang/Song China • Emphasis on internal trade • Champa rice & terrace farming • Grand Canal & flying money • Song “pre-Industrial” era • Commercial economy focused on the production of silk, porcelain, & steel • Urbanization: Hangzhou

  26. Post-Classical Empires • Mongols • Pastoralists • Promoted trade on Silk Road via Pax Mongolica • Marco Polo • Japan • Villages relied on rice cultivation • World’s leader in silver production • Trade silver to China for manufactured products • Development of feudalism caused peasants to become serfs

  27. Medieval Europe • Manorialism • Self-sufficient agricultural estates worked by serfs • Three-field system & moldboard plow • Trade revived after 1000 CE • Rise of merchant & craft guilds • Crusades led to an increase in demand for Asian products • Rise of Italian merchants & the Hanseatic league • Urbanization: Italian cities & Paris

  28. Hanseatic League (1400s-1600s)

  29. Post-Classical Empires • Aztecs • Chinampas • Pochteca monopolized long-distance trade • Tribute system • Inca • Built 9,500 miles of roads to facilitate trade • Inca socialism • Use terrace farming to grow potatoes • Mita labor

  30. Early Modern Era1450 - 1750

  31. Rise of World Trade • European exploration • Seeking easier access to Asian luxury products • Columbus discovery of the Americas • Vasco da Gama reached India in 1498 • Spain established Manila in 1571 • Manila galleons connect Asian markets to American silver • Trade Empires • Spain/Portugal in the 16th century • Netherlands (Dutch) in the 17th century • England (Great Britain) in the 18th century

  32. European Colonization

  33. World Trade after 1571

  34. Dutch Trade Empire

  35. Western Europe • Commercial Revolution • Rise of a middle class (bourgeoisie) and proletariat • Mercantilism • Rise of manufacturing • Encouraged colonization • Joint Stock Companies • Privately owned with government support • Ex. Dutch East India Co., Royal African Co., Virginia Company

  36. Economy of New Spain • Encomiendas • Manorial system in the New World • Declined with the death of the natives • Plantations • Majority of labor provided by African slaves

  37. Economy of New Spain • Mining • Silver “the Heart of the Empire” • Largest mine was Potosi • Mita labor • Haciendas • Estates focused on cash crops & livestock

  38. Africa & the Slave Trade • Commercial relationship developed between West African kingdoms & Europe • Triangle Trade or the Atlantic System • Slavery was common in Africa • Slave Trade • Trade continued with Muslim merchants • Increase demand caused by sugar plantations • Atlantic slave trade altered traditional African trade routes

  39. African Slave Trade

  40. Emancipation of Slaves

  41. Ming Dynasty • Economic Recovery • Rebuilt irrigation systems destroyed by the Mongols • Increased production of silk textiles & porcelain • “Silver Sink” • Single-whip tax system • Chinese demand for silver contributed to rise of world trade • Limited trade to Macao/Canton

  42. Voyages of Zheng He • Established tributary relationships throughout the Indian Ocean • Exchanged silk & porcelain for other luxuries

  43. Tokugawa Japan • Portugal established trade relations in 1543 • Trade silver to China in exchange for luxury products • 2nd in silver exports behind Spain • Began isolation in 1640s • Allowed Dutch & Chinese to trade at Nagasaki • Urbanization led to rise of a merchant class

  44. Russia • Peter the Great modernized the economy focused on mining and metallurgy • Serfdom • Began under Mongol occupation • Provided cheap labor for Russian agriculture • Could be bought and sold

  45. Mughal Empire • Continued manufacturing cotton textiles • British establish trading posts at Madras and Bombay in the early 1600s • British East India Company continued to expand their interests into the 1700s

  46. The Modern Era1750-1914

  47. Causes of the Industrial Revolution • Favorable natural resources • Population Pressure • Abundance of labor • Growth of large manufacturing sector • Cottage industry (putting-out system) • Advantages in world trade • Technological innovation • Government support of business

  48. Industrial Technology • Cottage Industry (putting-out system) • Mechanization of weaving • Cotton that took an Indian worker 500 hours to spin took a machine in England 80 minutes to spin • Iron smelting • Bessemer steel process • Energy • Steam engine and electricity • Transportation • Canals, steamboat, railroads

  49. Economic Effects of Industrialization • Labor changes • Factory labor was dangerous and toilsome • Initially women & children work in factories • Rise in white collar jobs for new middle class • High unemployment rates • Labor unions were formed to protect workers • Rise of consumer culture • Standard of living increases • Frequent economic depressions

  50. Economic Effects of Industrialization • New economic theories • Capitalism • Direct attack on mercantilism • Positivism • Socialism • The Communist Manifesto by Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels • Communism

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