Toward A Global Economy: Trade Connects Southern and Northern Europe
Toward A Global Economy: Trade Connects Southern and Northern Europe
Toward A Global Economy: Trade Connects Southern and Northern Europe
Introduction:
● Despite the dangers that sailors encountered, the knowledge and experience they
gained by sailing in the open ocean was invaluable to Portugal. They helped guide
further explorations as well as trade, and informed improvements in ship design and
navigational tools.
● By the end of the 1400s, the Portuguese had sailed around the southern tip of Africa
to India and other lands bordering the Indian Ocean.
Section 1:
Trade Connects Southern and Northern Europe:
● Trading centers in southern and northern Europe, over time, established strong ties
with one another.
● By 1400, direct trade had largely replaced commercial fairs, with merchant ships
carrying goods back and forth between European port cities in the north and south.
As a result of this regular direct trade, Europe began to unify economically.
National States Arise:
● Through the 1400s and 1500s, unified nation-states slowly emerged
● These newly formed nation-states were sovereign and territorial. That is, they were
self-governing and independent, and they ruled over a specific geographical area.
● This competition gave Europe an advantage over other regions of the world because
it led to innovation.
● As the competition for trade increased, governments sought partnerships with
businesses. Merchants, bankers, and investors provided the resources that a state
needed to succeed with its ventures overseas.
● In addition to competing economically, European states often competed militarily.
● Beginning in the 1300s, European states underwent a military revolution. They began
to use gunpowder weapons, and as monarchs consolidated power, their militaries
grew in size and strength.
● To support this military buildup, European states raised massive amounts of revenue
through taxation and borrowing. To collect and distribute revenue and otherwise
administer the state’s government and military affairs, complex bureaucracies arose.
Section 2: