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The Atlantic in World History (Paperback)
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The Atlantic in World History (Paperback)
Series: New Oxford World History
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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As the Atlantic Ocean was transformed from a terrifying barrier
into a highway uniting four continents, the lives of people all
around the ocean were transformed. After 1492 merchants and
political leaders around the Atlantic refocused their attention
from trade highways in their interiors to the coasts. Those who
emigrated, willingly or unwillingly, had their lives changed
completely, but many others became involved in new trades and
industries that necessitated consolidation of populations. American
gold and silver contributed to the emergence of nation-states. New
foods enriched diets all over the world. American foods such as
fish, cassava, maize, tomatoes, beans, and cacao fed burgeoning
populations. Sugar grown around the Atlantic transformed tastes
everywhere. Tobacco was the first great consumer craze. Furs
provided the raw material for fashionable broad hats. Chains of
commodity exchange linked the Atlantic to the Pacific; they also
linked Americans to the Mediterranean and the goods of the Middle
East. Creation of Atlantic economies required organization of labor
and trade on a scale previously unknown. Generations of Europeans
who signed up for servitude for a number of years in order to pay
their passage over were gradually supplanted by enslaved Africans,
millions of whom were imported into slavery. Wars, fueled by the
need for ever more slaves, spread throughout West and Central
Africa. The African end of the slave trade produced powerful rulers
and great confederations in Africa. Consolidation of displaced
tribal groups and remnants of populations depleted by epidemic
disease led to the emergence of the Six Nations of the Iroquois
League in northern North America, and the Creeks, Cherokees, and
others in the south. Those who made a choice to travel across the
Atlantic did so for economic advancement, but many also were
influenced by religious concerns. Conflict between Roman Catholics
and Protestants in Europe, and the power of political leaders to
force conformity, caused many to feel that their right to worship
was under threat. They were willing to accept servitude to make
emigration possible, in order to protect their religious lives.
Attempting to create and control vast networks of settlement and
trade enhanced the rise of nation-states in Europe and contributed
to the growth of national identities. The wars of independence in
the late eighteenth and nineteenth centuries changed the nature of
relationships, but did not end them. Abolitionism serves as a vivid
example of the collision of religious, philosophical, and economic
realities and the ways in which the Atlantic context posed new
possibilities and new answers.
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