9
Pages 197-201

Pages 197-201. Lasted from 1000 to 1300 was Europe’s economic revival. Began in the country side with peasants adopting new farming technologies to make

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Pages 197-201. Lasted from 1000 to 1300 was Europe’s economic revival. Began in the country side with peasants adopting new farming technologies to make

Pages 197-201

Page 2: Pages 197-201. Lasted from 1000 to 1300 was Europe’s economic revival. Began in the country side with peasants adopting new farming technologies to make

• Lasted from 1000 to 1300 was Europe’s economic revival.

• Began in the country side with peasants adopting new farming technologies to make fields more productive– New iron plows instead of wooden ones carved deeper into

the heavier soil– New harnesses to allow horses to pull plows instead of oxen– Horses moved faster allowing peasants to farm more land– Windmills were implemented to grind grain into flour– Lords pushed peasants to clear forests & drain swamps for

more farmland– They used a 3 field method

• 1st field was for grain• 2nd for legumes (beans & peas)• 3rd was allowed to fallow (unplanted to recover)

• These new methods allowed for new food & during this period the population of Europe doubled

Page 3: Pages 197-201. Lasted from 1000 to 1300 was Europe’s economic revival. Began in the country side with peasants adopting new farming technologies to make

• The growing population needed food that was not available on the manor, peasants needed iron, & the wealthy wanted wool, furs, & spices from Asia.

• Traders traveled in armed caravans for safety• They followed regular trade routes• In Constantinople merchants bought Chinese silks,

Byzantine gold & jewelry, & Asian spices• Trade fairs took place once a year near navigable

rivers or where trade routes intersected– People flocked to these with peasants trading farm goods

& animals & enjoyed food & entertainment (jugglers & acrobats). They could not buy swords, sugar, or silks.

Page 4: Pages 197-201. Lasted from 1000 to 1300 was Europe’s economic revival. Began in the country side with peasants adopting new farming technologies to make

• Trade fairs closed in Autumn when the weather made roads impassable.

• Small trade centers developed into the first real medieval cities.

• Populations ranged from 10,000- 100,000 • Towns this size had not been seen since to Roman

Empire• Italy & Flanders

– Two of the richest towns– Centers of wool & textile industries

• Merchants would set up a charter (written document used to set up rights & privileges of the town) – Most granted townspeople the right to chose leaders – Most declared people who lived there over a year and a

half free

Page 5: Pages 197-201. Lasted from 1000 to 1300 was Europe’s economic revival. Began in the country side with peasants adopting new farming technologies to make
Page 6: Pages 197-201. Lasted from 1000 to 1300 was Europe’s economic revival. Began in the country side with peasants adopting new farming technologies to make

• Banks grew with the reappearance of money due to people wanted capital (money for investment)

• Merchants joined into partnerships (group pulled funs to finance large-scale ventures)– Reduced risks because no one had to use all of their

capital

• Insurance for shipments emerged as well• Bill of exchange was invented (merchant

deposited money with a banker in his home city & was issued a bill of exchange to be used in another bank in another city)

Page 7: Pages 197-201. Lasted from 1000 to 1300 was Europe’s economic revival. Began in the country side with peasants adopting new farming technologies to make

• New ways of doing business were part of the commercial revolution that transformed the economy

• The use of money undermined serfdom– Peasants sold goods and paid rent in cash instead

of labor so that lords had money to buy fine goods• By 1300, most peasants were tenant

farmers who paid rent for their land• By 1000, a middle class of merchants,

traders, & artisans formed between nobles & peasants that was despised

• The Church forbade lending money at interest during the Middle Ages

Page 8: Pages 197-201. Lasted from 1000 to 1300 was Europe’s economic revival. Began in the country side with peasants adopting new farming technologies to make

• Merchants & artisans formed guilds to pass laws and levy taxes.

• To become a member:– At age 7 or 8 a child became an apprentice

(trainee) for 7 years. The apprentice was not paid wages, but was provided bed and board

– They would then most likely become journeymen (salaried workers) for the guild

– Women worked in dozens of crafts mostly the same trade as her father, & when he passed away would inherit his workshop

Page 9: Pages 197-201. Lasted from 1000 to 1300 was Europe’s economic revival. Began in the country side with peasants adopting new farming technologies to make

Towns were protected by high walls Jumbles of narrow streets were lined with

tall houses. Even the richest towns had no garbage

collection or sewer systems. People flung their waste into the streets

Some had laws requiring butchers to dump waste at the edge of town.