Hi I’m John Green and this is Crash Course
European History.
So, last time, we were focusing on queens
and kings and rivalries.Today we’re gonna
take a break from struggles over religion
and political disputes that made for so much
violence and look instead at some basics of
everyday life--the foods people ate centuries
ago, the kinds of things people bought and
sold, and changes in the kinds of lives people
could hope to live.
I know developments in agriculture and commerce
may seem like sidelines to the main political
show—I mean, there’s a reason it’s called
Game of Thrones and not like, Game of Slightly
Improved Seed Quality--but I’d argue that
history is about how people lived, and what
we might learn from their lives.
And if you think about our lives today, our
leaders are important.
Our forms of government are important.
But as Miroslav Volf said, Politics touches
everything, but politics isn’t everything.
On a day-to-day basis, our lives are also
shaped by the kinds of goods and services
available to us, and our professional and
personal opportunities.
Whether you go to school, whether you get
enough to eat, the kinds of freedom you do
and do not enjoy... those are the big questions
we’re exploring today.
INTRO
The citizens of many European nations today
have long life expectancies, and a top standard
of living.
Europe also comprises the largest developed
economic market place and a major region of
trade.
But in 1500, that was hardly the case.
In the early fourteenth century a major famine
erupted, with further famines across the centuries.
We’ve talked about the Black Death.
Trade was local and regulated by guilds—that
is, by organizations of individual artisans
and traders that determined the number and
type of goods that could be produced and marketed.
In the late middle ages Europe was a subsistence
economy, with little if any agricultural surplus.
If princes could satisfy their appetite for
food and drink on a regular and reliable basis,
they were virtually alone in experiencing
a consistently happy and full stomach.
In 1500, Europe was not exceptional in life
expectancy or in many other measures of well-being.
But in the early modern period, roughly between
1500 and 1750 the situation gradually improved,.
And I know that seems impossible, given all
the religious strife, and wars, and massacres
we’ve discussed in this series so far.
But during this period, population actually
rose;
In Britain, for instance, the population almost
doubled between 1700 and 1800.
Historians attribute this rise to developments
in agriculture, sometimes called an agricultural
revolution that unfolded alongside all that
warfare.
And there was also a growth in commerce, often
called a commercial revolution, and of course,
the Columbian exchange, which made new nutritious
foods--from potatoes to corn--available to
Europeans.
But the agricultural revolution was also driven
by innovation that dramatically boosted agricultural
yields in Europe between 1500 and 1800.
Let’s go to the Thought Bubble.
For starters, it was discovered that planting
certain crops, like turnip and clover, could
replenish soil, which was one example of crop
rotation--farmers would plant one crop in
a field one year, and then another the next
year, rotating 2 or at times three crops to
add nutrients to the soil.
and the great thing about crop rotation is
that it decreased the amount of farmland that
needed to remain fallow each year--that is,
unplanted.
Secondly, with the Dutch pioneering some advances,
land reclamation occurred across Europe.
This entailed converting marshes and other
previously unusable land into farmland.
and Third, common lands were enclosed.
Enclosure occurred when wealthier farmers
bought up or simply took common land (land
that had been open to community use).
Private farms were able to innovate faster
than communities,
which required consensus in group decision-making.
And fourth, there were new inventions such
as the seed drill and a plow that could be
drawn by two instead of six or eight farm
animals.
The new plow cut down on expenses and the
seed drill made planting more accurate with
less wasted seed.
Both of these new tools, by the way, copied
Chinese inventions.
But while enclosure and more mechanized farming
practices did mean more overall food, and
therefore more overall wealth, not everyone
benefited, because a decrease in common land
meant that fewer people had direct access
to land for their own use.
Thanks, Thought Bubble.
So one example of all these innovations can
be seen in the life of [[TV: Elizabeth of
Sutherland]] Elizabeth, Countess of Sutherland,
who inherited some 800,000 acres in Scotland.
Stan, hold on a second.
Is that a trout in her hair?
Is is a feather?
Was there some kind of hair fish trend at
the time?
Let’s move on from lighthearted hair fish
jokes and talk about people being wrested
from their land.So, Elizabeth removed hundreds
of tenants from her estate, then created unified
acreage for farming and raising sheep with
the help of day laborers.
These landless workers were cheaper, and also
unlike the tenant farmers who had lived on
the land previously, day laborers did not
have longstanding claims to inhabit and work
the land, called “tenancy.”
The Countess was known for chasing villagers
away from their land with her own hands, and
also for innovations that increased productivity
even as Sutherland’s former tenants became
homeless.
So more overall food, but on land controlled
by fewer people.
So obviously, this Agricultural Revolution
entailed massive social dislocation that included
the rise of poverty, migration of disenfranchised
farmworkers to cities and also to other continents,
and even as overall agricultural production
rose, some among the poor starved.
And this period of European history is still
widely debated in part because ideas of private
property and inequality of wealth remain resonant
today, but whether this modernization helped
or hurt humanity again depends on your perspective.
To some, it was fatal.
To many, it meant trauma and impoverishment
as people were removed from lands their families
had farmed for generations.
But these changes also helped fuel greater
overall food production, population growth,
larger cities, and more space for all kinds
of specialized labor, from shoemaking to theater.
I mean, it’s no coincidence that Shakespeare
and Marlowe were writing as English agricultural
production started to increase.
Another ingredient in the rising population
and overall output of food was the inflow
of novel plants from the Americas and other
parts of the world.
Potatoes and maize, for example, were grown
on the marginal land that was previously seen
as unfit for agriculture.
Farmers started experimenting with all the
new crops, but especially with maize and potatoes
that could produce super-abundant...did the
world just open?
Is there a potato in the center?
There’s a lot of candidates for most important
plant of the last 500 years, but I’m gonna
say it’s the potato.
They contain lots of carbohydrates, and whatever
micronutrients are.
You can turn them into both French fries and
tater tots, the world’s two most important
foods.
But most importantly, you don’t need great
soil to have great potatoes.
Just ask Idaho!
[[TV: Rice]] In addition to the transfer of
crops, knowledge about agriculture was transferred
from Africa and the Americas to Europe.
Women in both the Americas and Africa had
made their regions food-rich, as European
traders and invaders testified, and their
knowledge of crops and irrigation techniques
allowed, for instance, rice to be grown in
much larger quantities in European colonies.
[[TV: Slave Trade]] Much of what Europeans
learned about agriculture from Africans came
from enslaved women agriculturalists.
Slavery has existed for millennia, but slaves
have experienced very different lives depending
on culture, and religion, and occupation,
and gender.
[[TV: Slaves at Work]] Before 1650, the Atlantic
slave ships took an annual total of 7,500
Africans to the Western Hemisphere—and that
number was comparable to other slave routes,
such as the one in South Asia or the Ottoman
Empire.
The vast majority went to Mexico and South
America.
European ships transported other slaves from
the Indian Ocean across the Pacific, many
of them to Mexico.
But, beginning in the late seventeenth century,
there was a massive upsurge in African slavery
that sought to replace the labor of the native
American populations that had been utterly
devastated by disease and warfare.
In particular, slave labor was used to fill
the world’s increasing demand for commodities
and consumer goods.
Europeans came to depend on sugar, and tobacco,
and coffee, and tea--all of which was produced
primarily via forced labor.
[[TV: Mansa Musa]] And racism developed alongside
the growth of the African slave trade.
At first, Europeans were in awe of African
wealth in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries,
as it motivated their first contacts.
They craved African gold and found African
men and women stately--“intelligent and
rich,” as one Portuguese trader wrote.
However, greed for profit took over and as
the indigenous Amerindian population declined,
the desire for slaves grew, and to justify
slavery, European descriptions of Africans
became contemptuous and dehumanizing.
[[TV: Slave Ship]] As dehumanization progressed,
Europeans treated Africans as morally and
intellectually inferior, and used those incorrect
constructions to justify their horrendous
treatment of Africans, packing them into slave
ships and subjecting them to the lethal middle
passage across the Atlantic.
African kings and independent African traders
fed the rising demand for slaves.
In those days of state consolidation African
rulers sought funds for weaponry, which Europeans
provided in exchange for slaves.
More advanced weaponry then allowed leaders
to capture additional people to sell to European
slavers for yet more weapons.
European slavers mostly operated along the
West African coast, while Arabs took slaves
from East Africa to sell to India or into
the Middle Eastern markets.
The Saharan slave trade went northward, transporting
many women slaves to serve as domestics and
as sex workers.
But the European slave was by far the largest,
and the dehumanizing racism that has endured
to this day.
[[TV: Slaves at Work]] In the eighteenth century,
one million slaves worked in the sugar industry
and diamond and gold mines of Brazil.
These industries were tremendously lucrative,
and in that sense, slavery both produced and
was a product of growing European wealth.
The conditions of slavery were truly dire:
Torture, beatings, overwork, and malnutrition
were routine.
And because the system itself did not treat
them as humans, enslaved people had very little
recourse, and there was always the knowledge
that you could be separated from your children,
from your family, at any time, because you
were treated legally and practically as property.
The slave trade itself was part of a web of
interactions that is still being understood.
Historians used to talk of the triangle trade:
shippers took small iron goods from Britain
to Africa, trading them for slaves; and then
shippers dropped off the slaves who survived
the passage in Brazil or the Caribbean, and
then filled their holds with local sugar or
molasses to take back to England.
But while there was a triangle, there were
also many other shapes.
West African rulers and consumers wanted cowrie
shells and Indian textiles as payment for
slaves.
These products took a much more circuitous
route than a simple triangle.
Cowrie shells, for example, were picked up
from merchants along the Pacific Ocean or
South Asian coasts, then “cured” and processed
in Sri Lanka, then shipped again.
With slaves coming to the New World across
the Pacific and commodities to pay for them
flowing in multiple directions, the slave
trade into the Americas was part of a global,
not just triangular, market.
In fact, multidirectional trade in many goods
increased in diversity and quantity.
In the seventeenth century literally millions
of pieces of porcelain went in Portuguese
ships to Dutch and other European ports.
And to get funds to buy that porcelain, European
shippers did a lot of local coastline shipping,
stopping at ports around the Indian Ocean
or at Chinese depots in the Philippines.
European consumers snapped up goods and merchants
grew wealthy.
The increase in consumption was truly unprecedented:
For example, in 1660 the East India Company
imported 23 pounds of tea to Britain; in 1750
it imported five million pounds.
[missing text]
[[TV: Indiaman]] Besides slavery and colonization,
innovation was also an important facilitator
of economic growth.
And I don’t just mean innovation in terms
of actual things, I also mean innovation in
terms of ideas...like corporations!
The East India companies such as those founded
in Britain, the Netherlands, and France focused
each kingdom’s international trade and raised
funds for investment.
Joint stock companies arose to finance merchant
ships.
The development of double entry bookkeeping
gave merchants and bankers a better idea of
inflows and expenditures.
However, there wouldn’t be laws limiting
liability of such companies until much later.
So, a ship lost at sea could still mean the
investors’ loss of homes and possessions.
Whereas now, when investors do things that
lose money, we just give them their money
back.
And talking of bankers brings us to the Fuggers,
or Fuggers.
The Fugger family of bankers, who once loaned
money to monarchs such as Charles V and Philip
II of Spain, who then spent everything on
defeating Protestants, the monarchy’s bankruptcy
made the bankers penniless too.
This whirl of commerce disrupted society by
producing new values and creating new groups
of wealthy, influential people.
Almost everywhere in Europe, people who weren’t
aristocrats became rich from global expansion
of trade.
Many of the aristocrats also became richer,
of course, but the wealth of new groups of
people upset long-held notions about the importance
of family lineage.
And capitalism--that is, the private ownership
of enterprises--changed everyday values and
turned activities toward making profit above
all else.
Capitalism created a new class of wealthy
traders and merchants, who competed for political
influence with those from hereditary status
groups such as the nobility.
We’ll hear more, of course, about the twists
and turns of capitalism across the centuries.
But by the beginning of the eighteenth century
capitalism was in a lively stage of development,
thanks to the abundance provided by the agricultural
and commercial revolutions and also by the
Atlantic slave trade, which wrenched some
eleven to twelve million Africans from their
homes and families.
Thanks for watching.
I’ll see you next time.
