World Civilization Assignment 3 - World history
*ONLY USE THE SOURCES PRESENTED/ NO OUTSIDE SOURCES*
What is the mercantilist economic theory? Explain what mercantilists understood as wealth. What are the implications for this perception of wealth when it comes to things like trade, and the acquisition of goods for trade? From the two short reading excerpts provided in module 9, explain the economic justifications provided by the pro-slavery lobby for the continuation of the practice. Since sugar was the commodity produced by the Caribbean plantations and it was a commodity in great demand in Europe, could we argue that Caribbean slave plantation systems were promoted and protected by the European states partially as a result of mercantilist beliefs (you need to basically connect, sugar, mercantilism, slavery…)
To avoid having you drift off-topic, I have devised a series of questions that will hopefully make sure you are on track. If you have completed the essay you can use these as a checklist.
1- What are the basic economic principles/features of Mercantilism? What did it recommend a government do? Use our lecture on mercantilism to answer this question and define mercantilism very clearly. Make sure that you highlight how mercantilist measured wealth.
Do not turn this into a discussion about the place of the colonies in the mercantilist system (that is a different issue outside of our scope.)
2- Once you have spelled out the basic economic features of mercantilism, consider the following questions: Where the sugar colonies profitable? Did they add to a nations wealth? You can use lecture as well as assigned readings to answer this and to find evidence and numbers.
3-If sugar is a valuable and sought-after commodity, what happens if a nation does not produce its own, but has to import it?
4-Starting with the Portuguese what model of sugar plantations had they established that had proven to be very profitable? In the planters’ minds were there alternatives different from slavery to get the labor force that plantations needed? Why did they consider African slaves the ideal workforce for these plantations?
Make sure that your thesis statement clearly makes an argument for a connection between mercantilism, sugar and the acceptance of slavery as, at the very least, a necessity.
As always be sure to cite and quote, and for the love of all that you hold dear, do submit unoriginal work, you will most likely be caught and accordingly sanctioned!
Instructions:
Your essay should be no longer than 4 pages. Use 12 point script and please double space. Please utilize normal pre-set (1 inch) margins.
When citing the material, especially when using direct quotes, please use footnote citations. (In Word go to References and Footnote and then type your source information.) Works cited page is not a substitute for footnotes. If you need guidance or help with this please do not hesitate to come to visit with me or the TA’s.
Use Chicago Manual of Style for referencing. You can find brief guides readily available online.
Please use your textbook, your notes and the Wilberforce article for this essay. Do not use outside sources.The European Enlightenment
The Age of Reason
1
Dating The Enlightenment
• The most given dates for the Enlightenment vary somewhat between
1650-1814, or 1700-1789.
• The difficulty with dating comes about because it is near impossible
to draw a clean demarcation line between the Scientific Revolution
(which is associated by some with the Late Renaissance) and the
Enlightenment.
• The Enlightenment is according to many an extension of the Scientific
Revolution.
• The Scientific Revolution was focused on the physical world, while the
Enlightenment attempted to apply the new scientific methods to the
social and political realms.
2
The New Science
• 1605 Francis Bacon publishes “The Advancement of Science” and
follows this up in 1620 “Novum Organum.”
• According to Bacon “the duty of the scientist was to observe and test
nature for himself following the inductive method.”
• The inductive method basically turns the deductive method on its
head. It is often referred to as the “bottom up” approach. “ In
inductive reasoning, we begin with specific observations and
measures, begin to detect patterns and regularities, formulate some
tentative hypotheses that we can explore, and finally end up
developing some general conclusions or theories.”
The description of the inductive method used here comes from:
http://www.socialresearchmethods.net/kb/dedind.php.
3
From Science to Politics
• By the late 17th century the new scientific method had royal and
aristocratic patronage.
• Charles II of England establishes British Royal Society for the Sciences
1662.
• French Royal Academy of Sciences established in 1666.
• Yet despite royal patronage, the application of this new scientific
method to social and political questions during the enlightenment
would often (but not always) challenge the status quo, including
monarchial forms of government.
4
Great Thinkers of the Enlightenment
• What follows is a poor small sampling of the many great thinkers of
the enlightenment
• In addition to slides that follow please read pp526-527 in text book
(primary source selections)
5
Thomas Hobbes (b.1588-d.1679)
• Thomas Hobbes was an English political philosopher and is regarded by some as
one of the founders of western political thought.
• 1651 publishes Leviathan
• Best known for his concept of the social contract as a foundation for governance.
A contract that exists between ruled and ruler, in which the ruled agree to certain
constraints on their freedoms in order to live in an ordered society. This in
essence is an acknowledgement of the idea of rule by consent.
• However, Hobbes given his own observations of humans, his belief in their
inherent cruel impulses (greed, selfishness …) believed that only a strong
government in the form of an absolute monarch could successfully govern them.
• The social contract once entered into was all but inviolate. Hence, revolutions are
not justified except in all but Transatlantic Slavery System
Slave Plantation and Sugar
• Sugar: “Granulated Gold.”
• Even as late as 1670 Barbados
(Caribbean) was Britain’s largest colony
in Americas. Also by far its most
profitable.
• All the colonial powers sought to
replicate Portuguese success with sugar
plantations in Brazil.
• This meant the importation of ever
more African slaves.
Old Institution New Form
• Humanity has known slavery in one form or
another for the vast majority of its existence.
• Transatlantic slave trade is unique though.
• How: Racial Exclusiveness.
• West African slaves seen as better able to
resist tropical diseases, more suitable for hot
humid conditions, and less troublesome:
Trend of dehumanizing.
• Throughout 18th century slave importation
outstripped white migration.
Conditions: Facts
• 20‐40\% died in the collection raids (most of
these raids at hands of other Africans.)
• 15\% or so died in route (2X average for
travelers.)
• Branded with owner’s seal upon purchase.
• 16 hour workdays.
• Limiting food – for profit – to keep pliant
• Early on most slaves imported to work on
Caribbean sugar plantations died within 3
years.
Attitudes
• “As near to beasts may be setting their souls
aside”
• Late 18th century slave codes in place:
Classification as “Chattel” or tangible movable
property (furniture or domestic animals or a
car etc)
• Better treatment only when slaves become
more valuable.
Options Open to Slaves
• Passive Resistance: Play stupid, break
tools…basically slow down the workday.
• Escape: Establishment of Maroon
communities. The Maroon wars in Jamaica
between 1729 and 1739 ended only by treaty.
• Slave Revolts: These were actually quite
frequent.
Maroon Communities
• These communities were stablished in the most isolated
and hard to reach places to escape recapture.
• In the 18th century Jamaica, which was taken form the
Spanish in 1655, becomes England’s largest sugar
colonies.
• Maroon communities in Jamaica, some dating back to
the Spanish period, could be quite large with some
having populations upwards of a 1000.
• They fiercely resisted all attempts at recapture. In fact
the “Maroon Wars” in Jamaica between 1729 and 1739
so affected the country’s economy that these
communities were granted their freedom
Maroon Communities cont.
• In Brazil, a group of maroon villages, or Quilombos, situated
deep in the interior were known as the Quilombos of
Palmares. This settlement possibly harbored as many as
20,000 escaped slaves and their descendants by the late
seventeenth century. It fell to the Portuguese in 1694.
• These communities became refuge for other groups fleeing
the authorities.
• The term Quilombo is supposed to have its origins in Angola
(possibly from the Bantu language,) and referred to
communities formed out of people of diverse tribes that came
together for protection.
• Most Quilombos were destroyed by the powers that be,
however Mercantilism
A Particular Economic Mindset
1
Definition (Webster)
• mercantilism
• Function: noun Date: 1838
• An economic system developed during the
decay of feudalism to unify and increase the
power and especially the monetary wealth of
a nation by a strict governmental regulation
of the entire national economy usually
through policies designed to secure an
accumulation of bullion, a favorable balance
of trade, the development of agriculture and
manufactures, and the establishment of
foreign trading monopolies
To put things in perspective, let me explain that mercantilism is an early form of
capitalism, but it is not the free trade capitalism with which we are familiar. It is
described sometimes as “state capitalism.” The state is in essence in bed with the
capitalists, and the capitalists support the state.
2
Sir Thomas Mun
• Mun was, one of the leading lights of mercantilism. The
following quotes are from his tract Englands Treasure by
Foreign Trade (1630)
“The ordinary means to increase our wealth and treasure is by
foreign trade, wherein we must ever observe this rule: to sell
more to strangers yearly tan we consume of theirs in value…
Although a Kingdom may be enriched by gifts received, or by
purchase taken from some other Nations, yet these are things
uncertain and of small consideration when they happen. The
ordinary means therefore to increase our wealth and treasure is
by Foreign Trade.”
3
Mun
4
Definition Developed
• Excerpt from Article in the Concise Encyclopedia of
Economics by Laura LaHaye.
• Mercantilism is economic nationalism for the
purpose of building a wealthy and powerful state.
ADAM SMITH coined the term “mercantile system” to
describe the system of political economy that
sought to enrich the country by restraining imports
and encouraging exports. This system dominated
Western European economic thought and policies
from the sixteenth to the late eighteenth centuries.
The goal of these policies was, supposedly, to
achieve a “favorable” balance of trade that would
bring gold and silver into the country and also to
maintain domestic employment.
5
Bullion
• It helps to know that at that time wealth was
thought of in terms of accumulated precious metals
or bullion (gold and silver)
• This was supposed to exist in limited quantities.
• If your opponent got a hold of it, you lost out, as
there was less for you.
• Wealth equals power. So if your enemy has more
wealth he has more power than you.
• Hence you design a policies to make sure you have
the majority of the bullion.
6
Ramifications?
• Most of the mercantilist policies were the
outgrowth of the relationship between the
governments of the nation-states and their
mercantile classes. In exchange for paying
levies and taxes to support the armies of the
nation-states, the mercantile classes induced
governments to enact policies that would
protect their business interests against fDifferent Patterns of
Colonization
Examples of Dutch, French and English Colonies in North America.
1
Economics and Type of Colonization
• The way in which European states colonized North America and the
way they interacted with the native population they came in contact
with seems to have been determined by the economic systems of
wealth creation adopted in each colony.
• We are going to examine three examples in this lecture to try and
illustrate what is meant by the argument above.
2
Dutch in New Netherland
• In 1609 Dutch East India Company sent an expedition to North America to attempt to
find a fabled passageway to the Pacific.
• This expedition was commanded by an English captain, John Hudson and the river he
sailed came to be known as the Hudson River.
• the first Dutch settlement in the Americas was founded in 1615. This was Fort Nassau, on
Castle Island along the Hudson, near present-day Albany.
• In 1621 the Dutch West India was formed and granted a monopoly over trade in the
Americas. Additional fort built on the Delaware River
• 1624 a group of about 30 Dutch families arrived in the new world. Around 1626 they
settled on an Island at the mouth of the Hudson river (today’s Manhattan island.) The
Dutch Built Fort New Amsterdam, which eventually becomes the capital city of New
Amsterdam. The settlement would eventually spread to what we know as Brooklyn,
Bronx, and Long Island.
• Salves were also brought to the colony around 1625
• By 1633 the Dutch had established forts as far as what as modern day city of Hartford,
on the Connecticut River
3
Dutch North American Colonies Circa 1656
“1685 reprint of a 1656 map of the Dutch North American colonies showing extent of
Dutch claims, from Chesapeake Bay and the Susquehanna River in the South and
West, to Narragansett Bay and the Providence-Blackstone Rivers in the East, to the St.
Lawrence River in the North”
4
Dutch and the Natives
• No great gold and silver mines to exploit.
• No great cities to conquer.
• As a small settlement the Dutch primarily relied on fur trade with the
natives.
• As a small settlement of families there was no great expansion or
intermingling with natives.
• However, peaceful relations had to be maintained as there was economic
reliance on the natives who brought the fur to trade with the Dutch.
• 1664 England takes over the Dutch Colony of New Amsterdam and
renames in New York.
5
French in the New World
• Jacques Cartier in the first half of the 16th century began exploration
of the St Lawrence River.
• He and later Samuel de Champlain stumbled upon the Great Lakes.
• In 1608 the French founded colony of New France which was
centered around Quebec.
• Initially most French migrants were young single men traders and
adventurers or missionaries, rather than families.
• Even as late as 1666 the census of New France showed 2034 men and
1181 women*
* Statistics for the 1666 Census. Library and A
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