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Europe After the Black Death

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Europe After the Black Death. Early Modern Europe and the Demographic Transition. Timeline ... European Timeline, Post Black Death. 1456: Gutenberg Bible: ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Europe After the Black Death


1
Europe After the Black Death
  • Early Modern Europe and the Demographic Transition

2
Timeline
3
Timeline
Prehistory
4
Timeline
Ancient Civilization
5
Timeline
Post Classical
6
Timeline
Modern and Post Modern Era
7
European Timeline, Post Black Death
  • 1456 Gutenberg Bible Invention of Movable
    Type
  • Discovery of the New World 1492
  • Ca 1500 Renaissance
  • Protestant Reformation 1517
  • 1607 Founding of Virginia (Jamestown Colony)
  • 1620-1630 Founding of Plymouth Colony and
    Massachusetts Bay

8
Timeline
  • 17th Century (1600s) The Golden Age of the Dutch
    Republic
  • 1640-1660 English Revolution
  • 17th - 18th Centuries (1600-1700s) Reign of the
    Louis Louis XIV (1661-1715)
  • 1776 American Revolution
  • 1789 French Revolution
  • Late 18th Century Industrial Revolution in
    England

9
Protestant Reformation 1517
  • Martin Luther (and others) challenge the primacy
    of the Papacy and Catholic ideas...
  • Splits the unity of Western Christendom
  • Reorganizes the relationship between individual
    and God
  • Reorganizes the relationship among church, state
    and family

10
Discovery and Colonization of the New World (and
Trade with Far East)
  • Expands the horizons of Europe and expands
    European civilization
  • Brings new products to Europeans (sugar, coffee,
    tea, tobacco, corn, spices, china, silk, paper,
    gunpowder, pasta)
  • Fosters the expansion of the trading economy and
    urban society, particularly in the Netherlands
    and Britain

11
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12
Expansion of Science, Reading and Knowledge
  • Development of printing and book publishing
  • Expansion of literacy and hence schooling
  • Expansion of science and technology
  • Astronomy
  • Navigation

13
Rise of Democratic Society
  • Invention of the idea of the rights of man and
    challenge to absolutist ideals
  • Development of conceptions of liberty, equality,
    fraternity, freedom of speech, conscience,
    religion
  • Countertrends The reintroduction of slavery as a
    labor system

14
European Social Classes
  • Nobility or Aristocracy
  • Gentry (propertied, but not necessarily noble)
  • Middle Classes, Bourgeois, Burghers (Urban
    Professionals)
  • Tradesmen, artisans, peasants, small holders
  • Poor

15
What is yet to come...
  • The Industrial Revolution first seen in Britain
    in the late 18th century
  • steam engine
  • railroads
  • new forms of communication, e.g., telegraph,
    telephone
  • factory system of production

16
Western European Marriage Pattern
  • Late marriage (age)
  • Neolocal marriage (marriage generates a new
    household)
  • Relatively low completed fertility for the
    society as a whole
  • Long generations

17
The Demographic Transition and Population Growth
  • Families in societies weve discussed so far are
    both residential and economic units
  • Population Growth can be understood from the
    perspective of
  • families a function of the birth, death,
    marriage and migrations of their members.
  • nations a function of fertility and mortality
    and migration of individuals

18
Regulating Resources
  • In Europe, the equilibrium between economic
    resources and population was maintained through
    the regulation of marriage
  • Western European marriage pattern
  • late age of marriage (23 for women), low
    fertility because of delayed childbearing
  • neo local residence
  • long generations
  • non universal marriage (90 or less of pop)

19
Demographic Transition
  • Traditional societies are characterized by
    high mortality and high fertility High death
    rate and high birth rate per woman.
  • In between.the demographic transition, declining
    mortality, followed by declining fertility,
    leading to rapid population growth
  • Modern societies are characterized by low
    mortality and low fertility

20
Demographic Transition
21
Surviving Childhood
22
Mechanisms.
  • In Europe, some people couldnt marry because
    there werent sufficient resources to support a
    new household. There was a tendency for younger
    sons and daughters to be downwardly mobile
    poorer people had smaller families, suffered more
    health problems and died younger.
  • In the mid 18th century, mortality fell.
    Epidemic disease became less lethal, and people
    began to live longer.

23
The World of Young People...
  • What would happen if young people could find an
    economic livelihood independent of their parents
    and family of origin?
  • The practice of fostering out children, of
    young people going into service to help the
    family, or to earn enough to marry, was an old
    one.
  • Wage labor and proto industrialization grew in
    the countryside, making it possible for young
    people to find work outside of the parental home,
    say from age 15-25.

24
Continued
  • Initially they worked for a yearly wage, or in a
    boarding and lodging arrangement, but
    increasingly earned cash income.
  • Employers gradually moved employees and servants
    out of the house or to the margin of the
    household, and dispensed with obligations for
    moral regulation (cf. the Brun household).

25
Continued.
  • In Europe, a new social class emerged from the
    ranks of both the poor and the peasantry or
    agricultural population namely proletarians, or
    workers who lived by wage labor, and did not
    own the enterprises they worked in.
  • In frontier areas, including colonies like the
    American colonies, young people came as
    indentured servants, usually owing 4-7 years of
    work to pay for their passage (1600s and 1700s),
    and received rights in land to become farmers
    when they finished. See also this contract.

26
Impact...
  • These new changes in the life chances of young
    people changed marriage patterns. First, some
    young people were out of the control of their
    elders and traditional methods of marriage
    arrangements. Such marriages were made by the 2
    families, involved courtship perhaps and
    transfer of property.
  • What made young people obey their elders was the
    need for financial and economic resources that
    came with the marriage.

27
Impact...
  • Once those financial and economic resources could
    be secured by the young people themselves,
    parents lost control. The result was a drop in
    the age of marriage, increased premarital
    sexuality as evidenced by out of wedlock
    conception, and reduced stigma to such
    conceptions. A conception could be legitimated
    by a marriage before the child was born. But out
    of wedlock births also rose.

28
Impact...
  • All this led to a population boom in Europe from
    1750 to 1900, as the population grew from 163
    million to 408 million, even while 50 million
    emigrants left. Europe, North and South America
    went from having 23 of the worlds population in
    1750 to about 35 in 1900.
  • The relationship between wealth and family size
    reversed. In societies before 1500 the rich had
    bigger families post 1850, the less well off had
    bigger families, because the children could leave
    home and find work and improve their economic
    situations.

29
Conclusion.
  • The European marriage system, under appropriate
    circumstances, contributed both to economic
    growth, and to population boom.
  • Malthus prediction did not come true.
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