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1 - The Global Economic History of European Expansion Overseas

from Part I - The Economic Background

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 March 2008

Patrick O’brien
Affiliation:
Oxford University
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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Metanarratives about European expansion overseas had appeared even before Columbus claimed Hispaniola for Spain’s Reis Catholicas and da Gama rounded the Cape of Good Hope on his murderous voyage to Calicut. By far the oldest, voluminous and most enduring metanarrative has been dominated by a concern to comprehend the history and nature of European impulses to trade with and to colonize the territories, assets, and populations of other continents. Another recent, more circumscribed discourse in political economy (which will be surveyed and reconstructed by this chapter) can be advertised as an inconclusive attempt to assess the macroeconomic costs and benefits accruing to Europe’s national economies and to Western Europe as a whole from an intensified engagement with Asia, Africa, the Americas, and Australasia. The intensification of an ancient but sporadic and limited involvement with the places, populations, and regional economies of continents outside Europe really began with the Portuguese conquest of Ceuta in 1415 and persisted over some four centuries of mercantilism down to an “imperial meridian” (1783–1825). At that conjuncture in world history (which marked a transition in geopolitics from a mercantilistic to a liberal international economic order), the five European powers most seriously involved with expansion overseas (Portugal, Spain, the Netherlands, France, and Britain) had lost sovereignty over most of their former colonies and trading posts in the Americas, but continued to retain and to extend their empires in South and Southeast Asia, Australasia, and Africa down to an era of decolonization after the Second World War.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2005

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References

Blaut, James, The Colonizers Model of the World (New York, 1993)Google Scholar
Braudel, Fernand, Civilization and Capitalism 15th–18th Century, vol. 2 (London, 1984)Google Scholar
Frank, Andre Gunder, ReOrient. Global Economy in an Asian Age (London, 1997), chap. 7.Google Scholar
Landes, David, The Wealth and Poverty of Nations (London, 1998)Google Scholar
Pomeranz, Kenneth, The Great Divergence. Europe, China and the Making of the Modern World (Princeton, NJ, 2000)Google Scholar

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