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THE WESTERN
EXPERIENCE
Ninth Edition
MORTIMER CHAMBERS
University of California, Los Angeles
BARBARA HANAWALT
The Ohio State University
THEODORE K. RABB
Princeton University
ISSER WOLOCH
Columbia University
RAYMOND GREW
University of Michigan
LISA TIERSTEN
Barnard College
Boston Burr Ridge, IL Dubuque, IA Madison, WI New York San Francisco St. Louis
Bangkok Bogot Caracas Kuala Lumpur Lisbon London Madrid Mexico City
Milan Montreal New Delhi Santiago Seoul Singapore Sydney Taipei Toronto
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www.mhhe.com
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Brief Contents
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
AND
GREEK CIVILIZATION 33
OF
HELLENISTIC GREECE 65
CHRISTIANITY 119
AND
THE MAKING
OF
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
RESTORATION
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
BREAKDOWN
OF AN
THE FLOWERING
OF
AND THE
RENEWAL
IN AN
IN
REFORMATIONS
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
THE EMERGENCE
OF THE
THE WEALTH
NATIONS 527
vi
AND
PLAGUE 305
AND A
CRISIS 429
THE AGE
OF
RELIGION 365
ECONOMIC EXPANSION
WAR
AGE
OF
EUROPEAN CULTURE,
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
IN
CONSOLIDATION
OF
OF
IN THE
AGE
OF THE
SCIENTIFIC
ENLIGHTENMENT 555
OF
NAPOLEON 615
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Brief Contents
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
LEARNING
TO
LIVE
NATIONAL STATES
PROGRESS
AND
WITH
AND
CHANGE 671
AND THE
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LIST OF MAPS XIX
LIST OF BOXES XXI
PREFACE XXIV
Chapter 1
THE FIRST CIVILIZATIONS 3
THE NEW KINGDOM 17
A VIEW OF EGYPTIAN SOCIETY 19
PALESTINE 20
EGYPT 13
Chapter 2
THE FORMING OF GREEK CIVILIZATION 33
CRETE AND EARLY GREECE
(CA. 30001100 B.C.) 34
CRETAN CIVILIZATION 34
CRETE AND THE GREEKS 37
MYCENAEAN CIVILIZATION (CA. 16001100 B.C.) 38
THE POLIS 47
ORGANIZATION AND GOVERNMENT 47
THE ECONOMY OF THE POLEIS (CA. 700400 B.C.) 49
SPARTA AND ATHENS (CA. 700500 B.C.) 50
GREEK RELIGION 41
PUBLIC GAMES 43
COLONIZATION (CA. 750CA. 550 B.C.) 44
THE ALPHABET 44
ARCHAIC LITERATURE 45
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Chapter 3
CLASSICAL AND HELLENISTIC GREECE 65
CLASSICAL GREEK CULTURE (CA. 500323 B.C.)
66
PHILIP II OF MACEDONIA 77
ALEXANDER THE GREAT 78
GREEK PHILOSOPHY 66
GREEK TRAGEDY 71
GREEK COMEDY: ARISTOPHANES 73
HISTORICAL WRITING 73
THE FAMILY IN CLASSICAL GREECE 74
Chapter 4
THE ROMAN REPUBLIC 91
THE UNIFICATION OF ITALY (TO 264 B.C.) 92
Chapter 5
THE EMPIRE AND CHRISTIANITY 119
THE EMPIRE AT ITS HEIGHT 120
THE SUCCESSORS OF AUGUSTUS 120
THE FIVE GOOD EMPERORS 121
ROMAN IMPERIAL CIVILIZATION 124
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Chapter 6
THE MAKING OF WESTERN EUROPE 157
THE NEW COMMUNITY OF PEOPLES 158
Chapter 7
THE EMPIRES OF THE EARLY MIDDLE AGES (8001000):
CREATION AND EROSION 181
BYZANTINE CULTURE 195
DECLINE OF THE BYZANTINE EMPIRE 195
ISLAM 182
THE ARABS 182
MUHAMMAD 182
THE RELIGION OF ISLAM 183
EXPANSION OF ISLAM 184
ISLAMIC ECONOMY AND SOCIETY 187
ARABIC CONTRIBUTIONS TO GLOBAL CULTURE 187
DECLINE OF MEDIEVAL ISLAMIC CIVILIZATION 189
Chapter 8
RESTORATION OF AN ORDERED SOCIETY 215
ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL CHANGES 216
FEUDALISM 216
LIFE OF THE NOBILITY 219
MANORIALISM 222
PEASANT LIFE 224
EXPANSION OF EUROPE 225
COMMERCIAL EXPANSION 226
REBIRTH OF URBAN LIFE 227
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Chapter 9
THE FLOWERING OF MEDIEVAL CIVILIZATION 249
FRANCE 268
THE IBERIAN KINGDOMS 269
GERMANY: THE HOLY ROMAN EMPIRE 270
Chapter 10
THE URBAN ECONOMY AND THE CONSOLIDATION OF STATES 279
CITIES, TRADE, AND COMMERCE 280
PHILOSOPHY 299
DANTE 299
Chapter 11
BREAKDOWN AND RENEWAL IN AN AGE OF PLAGUE 305
POPULATION CATASTROPHES 306
DEMOGRAPHIC DECLINE 306
PLAGUE 307
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Chapter 12
TRADITION AND CHANGE IN EUROPEAN CULTURE,
13001500 337
THE NEW LEARNING 338
Chapter 13
REFORMATIONS IN RELIGION 365
PIETY AND DISSENT 366
Chapter 14
ECONOMIC EXPANSION AND A NEW POLITICS 395
EXPANSION AT HOME 396
POPULATION INCREASE 396
ECONOMIC GROWTH 396
SOCIAL CHANGE 398
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Chapter 15
WAR AND CRISIS 429
RIVALRY AND WAR IN THE AGE OF PHILIP II 430
PHILIP II OF SPAIN 430
ELIZABETH I OF ENGLAND 430
THE DUTCH REVOLT 431
CIVIL WAR IN FRANCE 435
Chapter 16
CULTURE AND SOCIETY IN THE AGE
OF THE SCIENTIFIC REVOLUTION 459
SCIENTIFIC ADVANCE FROM COPERNICUS
NEWTON 460
TO
Chapter 17
THE EMERGENCE OF THE EUROPEAN STATE SYSTEM 491
ABSOLUTISM IN FRANCE 492
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Chapter 18
THE WEALTH OF NATIONS 527
DEMOGRAPHIC AND ECONOMIC GROWTH 528
A NEW DEMOGRAPHIC ERA 528
PROFIT INFLATION: THE MOVEMENT OF PRICES 530
PROTOINDUSTRIALIZATION 530
Chapter 19
THE AGE OF ENLIGHTENMENT 555
THE ENLIGHTENMENT 556
THE BROADENING REVERBERATIONS OF SCIENCE 556
BEYOND CHRISTIANITY 558
THE PHILOSOPHES 559
DIDEROT AND THE ENCYCLOPEDIA 562
JEAN-JACQUES ROUSSEAU 563
Chapter 20
THE FRENCH REVOLUTION 581
REFORM AND POLITICAL CRISIS 582
ENLIGHTENED ABSOLUTISM IN CENTRAL AND EASTERN
EUROPE 582
JOSEPH II AND THE LIMITS OF ABSOLUTISM 583
UPHEAVALS IN THE BRITISH EMPIRE 584
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Chapter 21
THE AGE OF NAPOLEON 615
FROM ROBESPIERRE TO BONAPARTE 616
Chapter 22
FOUNDATIONS OF THE NINETEENTH CENTURY:
POLITICS AND SOCIAL CHANGE 641
THE POLITICS OF ORDER 642
THE CONGRESS OF VIENNA 642
THE PILLARS OF THE RESTORATION: RUSSIA, AUSTRIA,
PRUSSIA 647
THE TEST OF RESTORATION: SPAIN, ITALY, AND FRANCE 649
Chapter 23
LEARNING TO LIVE WITH CHANGE 671
IDEAS OF CHANGE 672
ROMANTICISM 672
SOCIAL THOUGHT 676
THE EARLY SOCIALISTS 680
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Chapter 24
NATIONAL STATES AND NATIONAL CULTURES 705
THE OPENING PHASE 706
THE FATAL DISSENSIONS 709
THE FINAL PHASE 710
Chapter 25
PROGRESS AND ITS DISCONTENTS 737
THE SECOND INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION 738
URBANIZATION AND DEMOGRAPHIC CHANGE 743
Chapter 26
NINETEENTH-CENTURY EMPIRES 773
THE DECLINE OF THE MERCANTILE COLONIAL WORLD 774
NEW SOURCES OF COLONIAL LEGITIMACY 776
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Chapter 27
WORLD WAR I AND THE WORLD IT CREATED 821
THE COMING OF WORLD WAR 822
Chapter 28
THE GREAT TWENTIETH-CENTURY CRISIS 861
AUTHORITARIAN REGIMES 879
THE GREAT DEPRESSION 881
FROM
Chapter 29
THE NIGHTMARE: WORLD WAR II 901
THE PATH TO WAR 902
THE LAST EUROPEAN WAR, 19391941 905
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Chapter 30
THE NEW EUROPE 941
THE NEW INSTITUTIONS 942
GLOSSARY G-1
TEXT CREDITS C-1
INDEX I-1
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Maps
1.1
7.2
1.2
Ancient Egypt 15
7.3
1.3
7.4
7.5
7.6
8.1
1.4
2.1
2.2
Mycenae 39
2.3
2.4
8.2
2.5
8.3
2.6
8.4
2.7
8.5
2.8
8.6
3.1
9.1
9.2
9.3
3.2
3.3
10.1
10.2
4.1
11.1
4.2
11.2
4.3
11.3
4.4
11.4
4.5
11.5
5.1
11.6
5.2
11.7
5.3
12.1
5.4
12.2
5.5
13.1
5.6
6.1
14.1
6.2
6.3
14.2
7.1
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14.3
21.3
14.4
21.4
22.1
15.1
24.1
15.2
24.2
15.3
24.3
16.1
26.1
16.2
26.2
16.3
26.3
26.4
27.1
17.2
27.2
17.3
27.3
17.4
27.4
17.5
29.1
29.2
29.3
29.4
30.1
18.1
18.2
18.3
30.2
20.1
30.3
20.2
21.1
30.4
21.2
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Boxes
Primary Source Boxes
CHAPTER 1
CHAPTER 11
CHAPTER 2
CHAPTER 12
CHAPTER 3
Socrates Is Sentenced to Death 70
Oedipus Self-Mutilation 72
Thucydides: The Melian Dialogue 74
The Training of a Wife 76
CHAPTER 13
CHAPTER 4
CHAPTER 14
CHAPTER 5
CHAPTER 15
CHAPTER 6
CHAPTER 16
CHAPTER 7
CHAPTER 17
CHAPTER 8
The Terminology of Feudalism and Manorialism 219
A Twelfth-Century Description of London 229
Louis VI Subdues a Violent Baron 233
Gregory VIIs Letter to the German Nobility after
Canossa 238
CHAPTER 9
Abelards Sic et Non 254
Excerpts from the Magna Carta 267
The Techniques of the Inquisition 274
CHAPTER 10
The Craft of Weavers of Silk Kerchiefs at Paris 284
Unam Sanctam 296
The Beguinage of Saint Elizabeth in Ghent (1328) 297
CHAPTER 18
Laissez-Faire Ideology 533
Richard Arkwrights Achievement 536
The Condition of the Serfs in Russia 540
A British Defense of Slavery and the Plantation
Economy 545
CHAPTER 19
Joseph II on Religious Toleration 559
What Is Enlightenment? 561
Mary Wollstonecraft on the Education of Women 565
Rousseaus Concept of the General Will 566
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CHAPTER 20
Two Views of the Rights of Man 594
Robespierres Justification of the Terror 606
A Portrait of the Parisian Sans-Culotte 608
CHAPTER 21
Family and Gender Roles under the Napoleonic Civil
Code 624
Spanish Liberals Draft a Constitution, 1812 633
Napoleon Justifies Himself in 1815 638
CHAPTER 22
CHAPTER 26
Macauleys Minute on Indian Education 779
The Earl of Cromer: Why Britain Acquired Egypt 794
Karl Pearson on National Life from the Standpoint of
Science 805
Hobsons Interpretation of Imperialism 812
CHAPTER 27
CHAPTER 23
CHAPTER 28
CHAPTER 24
The Frankfurt Constitution 713
Mazzinis Nationalism 720
Bismarcks Social Program 728
CHAPTER 29
A Gas Chamber 914
Churchill Sees an Iron Curtain 928
The Soviet Union Denounces the United States While
Calling for Arms Reduction 931
CHAPTER 30
CHAPTER 25
Making the Deals That Created a Cartel 740
Huxleys Social Darwinism 748
CHAPTER 17
CHAPTER 7
CHAPTER 20
CHAPTER 11
CHAPTER 22
CHAPTER 14
CHAPTER 29
Chronological Boxes
CHAPTER 1
CHAPTER 5
CHAPTER 2
CHAPTER 7
CHAPTER 4
CHAPTER 8
CHAPTER 6
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CHAPTER 9
CHAPTER 23
CHAPTER 10
CHAPTER 24
CHAPTER 12
CHAPTER 25
CHAPTER 11
CHAPTER 13
The Reformation and Counter-Reformation 392
CHAPTER 15
CHAPTER 26
Scramble for Africa 792
CHAPTER 27
CHAPTER 16
CHAPTER 28
CHAPTER 20
Turning Points in the French Revolution 607
CHAPTER 21
CHAPTER 29
Major Moments of World War II 910
CHAPTER 30
CHAPTER 22
Challenges to the Vienna Settlements 647
CHAPTER 20
CHAPTER 7
CHAPTER 26
CHAPTER 14
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Preface
When The Western Experience was originally conceived, we sought to write a textbook that would introduce students to the growing field of social history and
exciting new ways of thinking about history. We
wanted the textbook not merely to set forth information but to serve as an example of historical writing.
That means we cared a lot about the quality of the
writing itself and also that we wanted the chapters to
be examples of a historical essay that set up a historical
problem and developed arguments about that problem
using historical evidence. We also recognized that for
American students the Western Civilization textbook
needed to provide an overview of that civilization, giving students an introduction to the major achievements in Western thought, art, and science as well as
the social, political, and economic context for understanding them. And lastly, we were determined that
our book would treat all these various aspects of history in an integrated way. Too many books, we felt,
dealt with cultural or social change entirely separately,
even in separate chapters, and we sought to demonstrate and exemplify the connections. To that end, The
Western Experience is designed to provide an analytical
and reasonably comprehensive account of the contexts
within which, and the processes by which, European
society and civilization evolved.
Now in the ninth edition, this book has evolved
with the strength of prior revisions, including Barbara
Hanawalts impressive rewriting and reordering of the
six chapters that cover the Middle Ages for the seventh
edition. To continue that evolution, we are proud to
welcome another distinguished scholar, Lisa Tiersten
of Barnard College, to our author team. She has written
a new chapter on nineteenth-century empires (chapter
26), one of the first among western civilization textbooks, and she has undertaken the substantial revision
and reorganization of chapters 25 and 27. With a fresh
voice and lucid approach, Dr. Tiersten has greatly enriched the coverage in these chapters by incorporating
recent research on gender, bourgeois and consumer culture, imperialism, technology, and globalization.
xxiv
EXPERIENCING HISTORY
Everyone uses history. We use it to define who we are
and to connect our personal experience to the collective memory of the groups to which we belong, including a particular region, nation, and culture. We invoke
the past to explain our hopes and ambitions and to justify our fears and conflicts. The Charter of the United
Nations, like the American Declaration of Independence, is based on a view of history. When workers
strike or armies march, they cite the lessons of their
history. Because history is so important to us psychologically and intellectually, historical understanding is
always shifting and often controversial.
Historical knowledge is cumulative. Historians may
ask many of the same questions about different periods
of history or raise new questions or issues; they integrate the answers, and historical knowledge grows. The
study of history cannot be a subjective exercise in
which all opinions are equally valid. Regardless of the
impetus for a particular historical question, the answer
to it stands until overturned by better evidence. We
now know more about the past than ever before, and
we understand it as the people we study could not. Unlike them, we know the outcome of their history; we
can apply methods they did not have, and often we
have evidence they never saw.
Humans have always found pleasure in the reciting
and reading of history. The poems about the fall of
Troy or the histories of Herodotus and Thucydides entertained the ancient Greeks. The biographies of great
men and women, dramatic accounts of important
events, colorful tales of earlier times can be fascinating in themselves. Through these encounters with history we experience the common concerns of all
people; and through the study of European history, we
come to appreciate the ideals and conflicts, the failures
and accidents, the social needs and human choices
that formed the Western world in which we live.
Knowing the historical context also enriches our appreciation for the achievements of European culture,
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Preface
A BALANCED, INTERPRETIVE,
AND FLEXIBLE APPROACH
At the same time, we recognize that the professional
scholars preference for new perspectives over familiar
ones makes a distinction that students may not share.
For them, the latest interpretations need to be integrated with established understandings and controversies, with the history of people and events that are part
of our cultural lore. We recognize that a textbook
xxv
should provide a coherent presentation of the basic information from which students can begin to form their
historical understanding. We believe this information
must be part of an interpretive history but also that its
readersteachers, students, and general readers
should be free to use it in many different ways and in
conjunction with their own areas of special knowledge
and their own interests and curiosity.
USE OF THEMES
Throughout this book, from the treatment of the earliest civilizations to the discussion of the present, we
pursue certain key themes. These seven themes constitute a set of categories by which societies and historical change can be analyzed.
Social Structure In early chapters, social structure involves how the land was settled, divided among its inhabitants, and put to use. Later discussions of how
property is held must include corporate, communal,
and individual ownership, then investment banking
and companies that sell shares. Similarly, in each era
we treat the division of labor, noting whether workers
are slave or free, male or female, and when there are
recognized specialists in fighting or crafts or trade. The
chapters covering the ancient world, the Middle Ages,
and the early modern period explore social hierarchies
that include nobles, clergy, commoners, and slaves or
serfs; the treatments of the French Revolution, the Industrial Revolution, and twentieth-century societies
analyze modern social classes.
The Body Politic Another theme we analyze throughout this book is what used to be called the body politic.
Each era contains discussions of how political power is
acquired and used and of the political structures that
result. Students learn about the role of law from ancient codes to the present, as well as problems of order,
and the formation of governments, including why government functions have increased and political participation of the population has changed.
Technology From cultivation in the plains of the
Tigris and Euphrates to the global economy, we follow
changes in the organization of production and in the
impact of technology. We note how goods are distributed, and we observe patterns of trade as avenues of
cultural exchange in addition to wealth. We look at the
changing economic role of governments and the impact
of economic theories.
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text but not make the gulf too wide between popular and
high or formal culture. Finally, we write about many of
the great works of literature, art, architecture, and music.
Because of the difficulties of selection, we have tried to
emphasize works that are cultural expressions of their
time but that also have been influential over the ages and
around the globe.
Attention to these seven themes occasions problems
of organization and selection. We could have structured
this book around a series of topical essays, perhaps repeating the series of themes for each of the standard
chronological divisions of European history. Instead, we
chose to preserve a narrative flow that emphasizes interrelationships and historical context. We wanted each
chapter to stand as an interpretive historical essay, with
a beginning and conclusion. As a result, the themes
emerge repeatedly within discussions of a significant
event, an influential institution, an individual life, or a
whole period of time. Or they may intersect in a single
institution or historical trend. Nevertheless, readers can
follow any one of these themes across time and use that
theme as a measure of change and a way to assess the
differences and similarities between societies.
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Streamlined Narrative
throughout the Book
All of the chapters in the ninth edition have been substantially shortened and streamlined. We have worked
to make difficult concepts more understandable and to
remove material that interfered with the general flow
of the text.
In the past fifteen years, European historians increasingly have acknowledged the centrality of imperial
experience to European history. Spanning a long nineteenth century from 1780 to 1914, this chapter not only
explores the impact of major European economic, cultural, and political developments on imperial practice
and attitudes, but also explores the profound impact of
imperialism on Europe itself (making use of new scholarship on gender and popular culture, for example, to
show how empire increasingly touched upon the lives
of everyday Europeans). The chapter thus argues that
empire did not happen out there, but at the center of
nineteenth-century European society and culture. This
chapter includes fresh new illustrations and photographs, primary source boxes, and a Global Moment box
on the Indian Rebellion of 1857.
PEDAGOGICAL FEATURES
Each generation of students brings different experiences, interests, and training into the classroom
changes that are important to the teaching-learning
process. The students we teach have taught us what
engages or confuses them, what impression of European history they bring to college, and what they can
be expected to take from a survey course. Current political, social, and cultural events also shape what we
teach and how we teach. Our experience as teachers
and the helpful comments of scores of other teachers
have led to revisions and new additions
throughout the book as we have sought to
make it clearer and more accessible with THEY HAVE A MASTER CALLED LAW
out sacrificing our initial goal of writing a
reasonably sophisticated, interpretive, and
As King Xerxes leads his army into Greece in 480 . ., he asks a former king of Sparta, who is accompanying him,
analytic history.
whether the Greeks will really fight against the Persians.
BC
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Implicit in any assessment of the reign of Louis XIV in France is a judgment about the nature of absolutism and
the kind of government the continental European monarchies created in the late seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. From the perspective of Frenchman Albert Sorel, a historian of the French Revolution writing at the end of
the nineteenth century, the Revolution had been necessary to save France from Louis heritage. For the American
John Rule, a historian who concerned himself primarily with the development of political institutions during the
seventeenth century, the marks of Louis XIVs rule were caution, bureaucracy, and order.
Sorel: The edifice of the state enjoyed incomparable brilliance and splendor, but it resembled a Gothic cathedral in
which the height of the nave and the arches had been
pushed beyond all reason, weakening the walls as they
were raised ever higher. Louis XIV carried the principle of
monarchy to its utmost limit, and abused it in all respects
to the point of excess. He left the nation crushed by war,
mutilated by banishments, and impatient of the yoke
which it felt to be ruinous. Men were worn-out, the treasury empty, all relationships strained by the violence of tension, and in the immense framework of the state there
remained no institution except the accidental appearance
of genius. Things had reached a point where, if a great king
did not appear, there would be a great revolution.
Global Moment
THREE EMPIRES AND
AN ELEPHANT
Although trade and diplomatic ties between the West and
the East diminished in the period of the seventh through
the tenth centuries, merchants, pilgrims, envoys, and religious officials still traveled extensively and spread
news. If we look at events surrounding the year 800, we
find that diplomatic missions among the Franks (a Germanic kingdom), the Byzantines (the Eastern Roman Empire), and the Abbasid caliphate (an Arabic-speaking
Muslim empire) continued. The main actors in these negotiations and contacts were Charles the Great or Charlemagne (r. 768814), king of the Franks and, as of
Christmas Day 800, Roman emperor in the West; Irene (r.
796802), who became empress of Roman Empire in the
East after she blinded her son, who subsequently died;
and the Caliph Harun al-Rashid (786809), heir to the Abbasid Dynasty, centered in Baghdad in Persia.
These three rulers dominated the area around the
Mediterranean, but their empires were vastly different
in terms of economic sophistication, religion, and int ll t l d lt l hi
t Ch l
Among the many exotic gifts that Harun al-Rashid gave to Charlemagne
was, perhaps, this crystal pitcher. It is certainly a piece of late eighth or
early ninth century craftsmanship from Persia. It has long been assumed
that this pitcher was among the gifts.
To come
1800
1820
1840
1860
1880
1900
1898 Fashoda Crisis
1900 Boxer Rebellion in China
18991902
Boer War in southern Africa
19041905
Russo-Japanese War
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Preface
Chapter Twenty
xxix
Well into the eighteenth century, the long-standing social structures and political institutions of Europe were
securely entrenched. Most monarchs still claimed to
hold their authority directly from God. In cooperation
with their aristocracies, they presided over realms composed of distinct orders of citizens, or estates as they
were sometimes known. Each order had its particular
rights, privileges, and obligations. But pressures for
change were building during the century. In France, the
force of public opinion grew increasingly potent by the
1780s. A financial or political crisis that could normally be managed by the monarchy threatened to
snowball in this new environment. Such vulnerability
was less evident in Austria, Prussia, and Russia, however, where strong monarchs instituted reforms to
streamline their governments. Similarly, in Britain the
political system proved resilient despite explosions of
discontent at home and across the Atlantic.
Unquestionably, then, the French Revolution constituted the pivotal event of European history in the late
eighteenth century. From its outbreak in 1789, the Revolution transformed the nature of sovereignty and law in
France. Under its impetus, civic and social institutions
were renewed, from local government and schooling to
family relations and assistance for the poor. Soon its
ideals of liberty, equality, and fraternity resonated across
the borders of other European states, especially after war
broke out in 1792 and French armies took the offensive.
The French Revolutions innovations defined the
foundations of a liberal society and polity. Both at
home and abroad, however, the new regime faced formidable opposition, and its struggle for survival propelled it in unanticipated directions. Some unforeseen
turns, such as democracy and republicanism, became
precedents for the future even if they soon aborted.
Other developments, such as the Reign of Terror,
seemed to nullify the original liberal values of 1789.
The bloody struggles of the Revolution thus cast a
shadow over this transformative event as they dramatized the brutal dilemma of means versus ends.
Cahiers and Elections For the moment, however, patriot spokesmen stood far in advance of opinion at the
Anabaptists Individuals who, citing that the Bible
grass roots. The king had invited all citizens to meet in
nowhere mentions infant baptism, argued that the
their local parishes to elect delegates to district elecsacrament was effective only if the believer understood
toral assemblies and to draft grievancewhat
petitions
was happening and that therefore adults ought to be
(cahiers) setting forth their views. The great rebaptized.
majority ofOpponents argued that infant baptism was
rural cahiers were highly traditional in tone
and comnecessary
so that a baby would not be denied salvation if
plained only of particular local ills or highit taxes,
exdied young.
pressing confidence that the king would redress
them.
anarchists Radical activists who called for the abolition
O l
f
hi
f
i i lik P i i of the
k dstate, sometimes by violent means.
i
ii
The Art
The ninth edition of The Western Experience continues the precedent of earlier
editions, with more than four hundred fullcolor reproductions of paintings and photographs and over one hundred clearly
focused maps.
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Preface
The Maps
ARAL
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The maps in The Western Experience are already much admired by instructors. Each carries an explanatory caption that enhances the
text coverage to help students tackle the content without sacrificing subtlety of interpretation or trying to escape the fact that history is
complex. In the ninth edition, each caption
has been further improved with a thought
question.
PAE ONI A
Battles
MAP 3.2 THE EMPIRE OF ALEXANDER THE GREAT AND THE ROUTE OF HIS CONQUESTS
Alexander formed the largest empire known down to his own time. He even conquered some territory across the
Indus River in India. What were the two major Persian cities near the Persian Gulf?
For an online version, go to www.mhhe.com/chambers9 > chapter 3 > book maps
QUESTIONS
FOR
FURTHER THOUGHT
Chronological Charts
Nearly every chapter employs charts and chronological
tables that outline the unfolding of major events and
social processes and serve as a convenient reference for
students.
The Persian Wars
CHRONOLOGY
499, autumn
498
496
494
Fall of Miletus.
493
492, spring
490, mid-August
486, November
Battle of Salamis.
Battle of Plataea.
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Preface
xxxi
AVAILABLE FORMATS
To provide an alternative to the full-length
hardcover edition, The Western Experience
Ninth Edition, is available in two-volume
and three-volume paperbound editions.
Volume I includes chapters 117 and
covers material through the eighteenth
century.
Volume II includes chapters 1530 and
covers material since the sixteenth
century.
Volume A includes chapters 112, Antiquity and the Middle Ages.
Volume B includes chapters 1121, The
Early Modern Era.
Volume C includes chapters 1930, The
Modern Era.
SUPPLEMENTARY INSTRUCTIONAL
MATERIALS
McGraw-Hill offers instructors and students a wide variety of ancillary materials to accompany The Western
Experience. Please contact your local McGraw-Hill representative for details concerning policies, prices, and
availability.
McGraw-Hills Primary Source Investigator (PSI) CDROM This CD-ROM, bound into each copy of The
Western Experience, provides students with instant access to hundreds of world history documents, images, artifacts, audio recordings, and videos. PSI helps students
practice the art of doing history on a real archive of
historical sources. Students follow the three basic steps
of Ask, Research, and Present to examine sources, take
notes on them, and then save or print copies of the
sources as evidence for their papers or presentations. After researching a particular theme, individual, or time
period, students can use PSIs writing guide to walk
them through the steps of developing a thesis, organizing their evidence, and supporting their conclusion.
More than just a history or writing tool, the PSI is
also a student study tool that contains interactive
maps, quiz questions, and an interactive glossary with
audio pronunciation guide.
Student Study Guide/Workbook with Map Exercises,
Volumes I and II Includes the following features for
each chapter: chapter outlines, chronological diagrams,
four kinds of exercisesmap exercises, exercises in
document analysis, exercises that reinforce the books
important overarching themes, exercises in matching
important terms with significant individualsand essay topics requiring analysis and speculation.
The Online Learning Center At www.mhhe.com/
chambers9. The Online Learning Center is a fully interactive, book-specific website featuring numerous
student study tools such as multiple-choice and truefalse practice quizzes; interactive, drag-and-drop games
about significant individuals and chronologies; key
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Preface
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Frank Baglione, Tallahassee Community College; Paul Goodwin, University of Connecticut; Robert Herzstein, University of South
Carolina; Carla M. Joy, Red Rocks Community College; Kathleen Kamerick, University
of Iowa; Carol Bresnahan Menning, University of Toledo; Eileen Moore, University of Alabama at
Birmingham; Frederick Murphy, Western Kentucky University; Michael Myers, University of Notre Dame;
Robert B. Patterson, University of South Carolina at Columbia; Peter Pierson, Santa Clara University; Alan
Schaffer, Clemson University; Marc Schwarz, University
of New Hampshire; Charles R. Sullivan, University of
Dallas; Jack Thacker, Western Kentucky University;
Bruce L. Venarde, University of Pittsburgh.
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Page 1
THE WESTERN
EXPERIENCE