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What was the economy of preindustrial Europe based on?
Cottage industry, merchant guilds. and subsistence agriculture produced on small landholdings and dependent on peasant labor
Where did most people live in prior to the Industrial Rev in Europe?
Villages not cities
What led to deadly famines?
Low productivity agricultural practices and poor or nonexistent transportation caused periodic disruptions in the food supply
What did the population of Europe began to increase by the 18th century?
Significant changes in agriculture and the economic change toward industrialization
Why was there a vast increase in the numbers of the poor?
Displaced agricultural workers migrated to cities for work, cutting them off from traditional extended-family networks
What was one revolution in the 18th & 19th centuries?
The shirt in demographic patterns, the trends in birth and death rates and population size
Dramatic increase in size of population
By 1900, what was the estimated population of Europe?
423 million
Went from 110 million to 423 million
In 1700, how did birth rates compare to death rates? What about 1820?
1700 - birth rates were slightly higher than death rates
1820 - birth rates were largely greater than death rates - population explosion
What did Malthus publish?
An Essay on the Principle of Population
What did Thomas Malthus believe?
As the populations grew geometrically (by a constant multiple), the food supply could only increase arithmetically (by a constant amount)
We would run out of food
Did Thomas Malthus' predictions come true? Why?
No because there was a revolution in how food was farmed, improvements in health, changes in marriage patterns and migration to cities
For centuries, what did Europeans experience?
Chronic undernourishment
What happened during the late 17th and 18th centuries?
The Agricultural Revolution, a series of breakthroughs that increased agricultural population
What was land reclamation?
The process of changing lands to make them suitable for other uses - often farming
What was reclamation like in England and the Netherlands?
Building dikes or walls to prevent flooding from the sea
Who was Cornelius Vermuyden?
Dutch Engineer who was hired by England to drain the marshy fens of East Anglia
What did the Dutch lead way to?
Crop rotation, the practice of growing different crops in a specific area so that the land could remain in continuous use without depleting the soil
What did farmers in Flanders (Belgium) discover?
A four year crop rotation of wheat, barley, turnips, and clover would result in dramatically higher crop yields
What did Charles Townsend do?
British aristocrat who observed crop rotation in Netherlands and brought it back to Britain
What did improve farming technology allow?
More food to be produced by fewer workers
Who was Robert Bakewell?
British engineer
Invented selective breeding techniques
What did selective breeding improve?
Size and health of livestock
What was the Columbian Exchange?
Interchange of plants, animals, diseases, and culture between the Americas and Europe
Heavily impacted Europe
What was the enclosure movemenet?
New method of organizing and using land
What did the enclosure movement end?
The open field system
What did the Enclosure Acts in Britain allow?
Wealthy landowners to purchase the common areas, consolidate them into single farms, and enclose those farms with fences
Much of agriculture occurred here
How did the enclosures effect small-scale farmers and peasants?
Brought ruin to them because they needed produce to survive
Forced them to move to cities to search for jobs
What were Britain and other Western Countries of Europe improving for their increasing food supply?
Internal transportation systems
Built new roads and widened existing ones, creating turnpike networks suitable for wheeled transportation
Railroad networks
What did Britain and other Western Countries of Europe lift?
Road tolls - a remnant of feudal times
Who was Nicolas Appert?
French chef who created the sterile canning process for food transportation for Napoleon Bonaparte who needed food for his troops
Why did Europe's growing population become better-nourished and healthier?
Advancements in medical science
Developments in engineering - safer water, better sewage disposal, etc
What were diseases spread across Europe?
Tuberculosis, malaria, typhus, and typhoid fever
What were epidemics?
Widespread diseases
What did typhus and typhoid fever come from?
Unsanitary conditions and mainly affected the poor
What was the bubonic plague or the black death?
Epidemic that wiped out third of Europe's population in the 14th century and reappeared in 20 yr intervals
What was small pox?
Disease that affected all levels of society and killed off members of the royal family
Those who survived were disfigured or blind
What did many scientists discover after using new techniques to treat diseases?
Unsanitary conditions, in crowded urban areas, were connected to epidemics
What was used to combat small pox?
Variolation - an inoculation procedure of infecting someone with live smallpox virus taken from a blister
Who brought variolation to Britain?
Lady Mary Worley Montagu - inspired by her time in Turkey
What did Edward Jenner discover?
Created first vaccine to smallpox through cowpox
Known as the "father of immunology"
What were some practices against disease?
Quarantining and improved personal hygiene
What did increased urbanization facilitate?
Spread of disease and new public health and sanitation concerns
What did the European marriage pattern tend to limit?
Population growth - mainly for non nobility
What were the main features of the European marriage pattern?
Small age difference, late marriage age, establishment of nuclear household that is separated by parents
People waited to gather enough resources before marrying
What did urbanization release peasants from?
Social constraints imposed by family and village traditions
What did the growing middle class become less troubled by?
Financial consideration making it possible for men and women to marry for status, companionship, or even love
What were illegitimate births?
Popular during second half of 18th century
Babies that were born of parents not married
What did unwed mothers face with their children?
Brutal social stigma and were forced into prostitution and the abandonment of their children
Killing their children was a capital crime = death
What did the Catholic Church and Church of England oppose?
Birth control - some couples continued to use
What was the foundling hospital?
Institution that cared for unwanted children
Conditions were harsh - only about a 1/4 of children surviving to adulthood
What did home child births lead to?
High maternal and fetal mortality rates
In France and Scandinavia what did women choose?
Not to breast feed - thought it was bad for health
What were wet nurses?
Women hired to breastfeed children
What did Jean Jacques Rousseau urge in Emile?
Mothers to breastfeed their own children to later on, nurture and educate them
Also said that children were born innocent and should be taken care of well - not exposed to hardship
What were children regarded as before the 18th century?
Small adults who were expected to act the same as adults
What did the Enlightenment elevate>
Childhood and coincided with the rise of middle class possessing more resources to devote to children
What did John Locke discuss in his concept of tabula rasa?
Blank slate which included the belief that children's behavior and personality were learned
What painters painted the Enlightenment attitude of children as innocent and sweet?
Sir Joshua Reynolds
Thomas Gainsborough
What dd John Amos Comenius develop? What was it like before?
The first system of universal education and his ideas were extremely influential to Enlightenment thinkers
Before, university education focused on medicine or law
What was the first country to implement compulsory universal education?
Prussia - free education for boys and girls ages 6-13
What was France's education system like?
Dated to the Roman Empire - convent schools were operated by nuns such as the Ursulines educated girls from lower class and aristocracy
Who was Marquis de Condorcet?
Enlightenment intellectual and politician developed a plan for universal state education system in France
What did Napoleon lay the foundation for?
Modern school system in France - secular and nonsecular
What did Maria Theresa mandate?
Children 6 to 12 must attend school
Only upper class boys could continue after 12
What major cities began to expand between 1650 and 1750?
Paris, Naples, Amsterdam, and London
Amsterdam - many immigrants from Germany, France, Spain, and Portugal
What were the negative features of city life?
Overcrowded, dirty, noisy, crime, increase in prostitution and begging, and drinking problems
What was one of the wealthiest cities in the 1700s?
Lisbon, Portugal which had a great location on the Atlantic Ocean
What did Vienna, Austria become?
A cultural center with composers like Mozart and Beethoven who searched for patrons
What did shops and vendors bring from the flourishing economy?
New fashions, foods, and consumer goods
What did many urban areas expereince?
Riots in response to misery of the poor
What did philanthropic groups do?
Philanthropic groups like Society for Public Welfare promoted education
What do economic historians and social historians debate about?
Urbanization
Economic - steady overall rise in living standards and greater life expectancy
Social - destruction of village traditions and poverty
Both agreed that mass migration -> Industrial Rev
By the end of the 18th century, what did a high proportion of Western Europeans experience? What was it like before?
Unprecedented levels of relative material prosperity
Unmatched levels of material comfort and wealth
Before Europeans had been dominated by scarcity
What was a Consumer Revolution?
Revolution propelled by the disposable income of the growing middle class brining a powerful desire for consumer goods and an unfamiliar ability to afford at least some of them - mainly city dwellers
Everyone in all classes
What were merchants, financiers, and wage earners no longer dependent on?
Embraced consumption to staisfy desire rather than necessity
What did the wealthy see luxury items as?
A way to display their economic status
What did consumerism bring?
Jobs and stimulated commerce, creating even more wealth
What did the consumer economy become a permanent feature of?
Capitalist economies worldwide
What did increased trade within Europe and with Asia and Americas result in?
Increased supply and variety of customer goods
What did the lower class make to imitate upper classes?
Market for domestic (not foreign) imitation items
What sparked a domestic ceramic industry?
Asian ceramics - Chinese porcelain
Who was Kosiah Wedgwood?
He developed an imitation of ceramics that became very popular
What were other household consumer items in great demand? Why?
Mirrors, cotton and linen goods, silks, decorative prints, and jewlery
Showed status symbol
What new food were Europeans able to obtain?
Sugar
What were coffeehouses for? What was used instead of coffeehouses in villages?
Meeting place for all classes
Taverns and alehouses were used to socialize, converse, and drink alcohol
What were inns?
Taverns that allowed sleeping accommodations
What were theaters and opera houses designed to?
Cater to a new and broader audience - growing middle class
What was an alternative to coffeehouses?
Lending libraries leading to the idea of a public opinion on a issue
Public became increasingly literate
What printed materials became avaliable to communities?
Newspapers, periodicals, books, pamphlets, and Denis Diderot's Encyclopedie
What did a growing desire for consumer goods change about society's attitude?
Changed society's attitude towards labor - mainly women
Social patterns were rethought
What changed in homes?
Rooms were decorated and assigned specific funcitons
What was the boudoir?
First meant to be used for prayer
Later changed to private retreat for women to free herself from her husband and roles
What does the boudoir reflect?
Emerging concept of domesticity - idea of the home as a private sphere distinct from the encroachments of the public world
Where was this new concept of domestic space reflected in?
Sentimental novel, a popular 18th century literary genre that celebrated feeling over reason
What were the themes of sentimental novels?
Main characters were often females and virtue was a main theme
Women were either virtuous or their virtue was lost
Who were sentimental authors?
Samuel Richardson, Jonathan Swift, Jane Austen, and George Eliot (Mary Ann Evans)
What did Samuel Richardson write and focus on?
Pamela and Clarissa
Emphasized the vital role private domestic spaces served in the lives of his female characters
What did Jonathan Swift write?
The Lady's Dressing Room
What did the focus in painting, architecture, and music become?
Grandeur, ostentation, and unimaginable opulence
Magnificent
What was the Baroque movement inspired by?
Religious fervor of the Protestant and Catholic Reformations dominated European art