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Printable Handouts
Navigable Slide Index
- Introduction
- Background
- Defining globalization’s birth (1)
- Global warming at the end of the last ice age
- World silver trade routes (16th-18th centuries)
- China as a primary end market
- The Potosi/Japan silver cycle
- Price of silver in China vs. rest of the world: 1590
- Schematic of Potosí
- Spanish trade routes
- American routes to China through Europe
- End of the Potosi-Japan cycle of silver
- Defining globalization’s birth (2)
- 1/3, 1/3, 1/3 argument
- American plants: ecological impacts on China
- “Magellan exchange” across the Pacific
- 18th century Chinese population explosion
- American crops and China’s population
- Rise of price and demand for silver in China
- End of the Mexican silver cycle
- Interdisciplinary globalization
- Globalization before the industrial revolution
- Direct European entry into maritime Asia
- Conclusions
This material is restricted to subscribers.
Topics Covered
- Globalization defined
- Eastern and western hemispheric isolation for over 10,000 years
- Key role of end-market China in globalization’s 16th-century birth
- Spanish American and Japanese mines
- European intermediaries
- Revolutionary ecological, epidemiological, cultural and demographic impacts globally
- Reverberations over five centuries
- Evidence of general technological superiority?
Talk Citation
Flynn, D.O. (2013, October 7). China and the birth of globalization [Video file]. In The Business & Management Collection, Henry Stewart Talks. Retrieved November 21, 2024, from https://doi.org/10.69645/ABOU8510.Export Citation (RIS)