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The Expansion of Europe Revisited: The European Impact on World History and Global Interaction, 1450–1800

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 June 2011

A.J.R. Russell-Wood
Affiliation:
(The Johns Hopkins University)

Extract

The period from the fifteenth century to the end of the eighteenth century witnessed the creation, expansion, contraction, and fall of empires, enhanced and expanded communications, creation and growth – as measured by volume, range and intensity – of trading diasporas, diffusion of major religions far beyond their points of origin, intercontinental and transoceanic dissemination of flora and fauna, major movements – both coerced and voluntary – of population, growing technological sophistication, and advanced in humankind's knowledge of natural, earth, and planetary sciences. It also witnessed religious strife, conquest and war, decimation of populations through disease and hunger, and continued subjugation and oppression of groups of people. Taken by themselves, none of these aspects had been absent before this period and many had manifested themselves, albeit in vastly differing degrees of intensity on a very broad spectrum, on the major landmasses of the world.

Type
Research Project
Copyright
Copyright © Research Institute for History, Leiden University 1994

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References

Notes

1 Toynbee, Arnold, A Study of History (2nd ed., London 1935) II, 204Google Scholar. Gilmore, Myron, The World of Humanism, 1453–1517 (New York 1952) 37Google Scholar. Mousnier, Roland, Us XVIe el XVIIe siécles. Les progrès de la civilisation européenne et le déclin de l'orient, 149–1715 (2nd revised ed., Paris 1956) 355.Google Scholar

2 Kennedy, Dane, ‘The expansion of Europe’, The Journal of Modern History 59/2 (1987) 331.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

3 Keen, Benjamin, The Aztec Image in Western Thought (New Brunswick 1971)Google Scholar. Lach, Donald F., Asia in the Making of Europe (3 vols., Chicago and London 19651993).Google Scholar