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The Field and the Forge - Population, Production, and Power in the Pre-industrial West (Paperback)
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The Field and the Forge - Population, Production, and Power in the Pre-industrial West (Paperback)
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The Field and the Forge offers a new approach to the pre-industrial
past in Europe and the Mediterranean basin from the Roman Republic
to the fall of Napoleon. Based on an original synthesis of
'structural' economic and demographic history with traditionally
'event driven' political and military history, it takes as its
starting point E. A. Wrigley's concept of 'organic economies' and
their reliance on the land for energy and raw materials. The
opening section considers the ensuing constraints on productivity,
transportation, and the spatial organization of the economy. The
second section analyses the constraints imposed by muscle-powered
military technology and by the organic economy on the tactical,
operational, and strategic use of armed force, and the consequences
of the spread of firearms in recorded history's first energy
revolution. This is followed by an analysis of the military and
economic constraints on the political integration of space through
the formation of geographically extensive political units, and the
volume concludes with a section on the demographic and economic
consequences of the investment of manpower and resources in war.
Existing accounts of organic economies emphasize their restricted
potential to support economic and political development, but this
volume also considers why so much potential remained unrealized.
Endemic mass poverty curtailed demand, limiting incentives for
investment and innovation, and keeping output growth below what was
technologically possible. Resource shortages prevented rulers from
establishing a fiscal apparatus capable of appropriating such
resources as were physically available. But economic inefficiency
also created a pool of under-utilized resources that could
potentially be mobilized in pursuit of political power. The volume
gives an innovative account of this potential - and why it was
realized in the ancient world rather than the medieval west -
together with a new analysis of the gunpowder revolution and the
inability of rulers to meet the consequential costs within the
confines of an organic economy.
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