Open In App

The Pre-Modern World

The pre-modern era lasted from the 15th through the 18th centuries. Many centralized governments were held throughout that era time, as were the beginnings of various independent countries as nation-states, and so on. 

Globalization is a 50-year-old economic system but the making of the global world has a long history of trade, migration, of people of work , the movement of capital  and many more. To understand the phases through which this world where we live has emerged.



The Pre-Modern World

Throughout history, human communities have become increasingly intertwined. Travelers, businessmen, priests, and pilgrims have traveled long distances for a variety of purposes since ancient times:

These individuals transported products, money values, talents, ideas, innovations, and even infections and sickness with them. In the early 3000 BC, bustling maritime commerce linked the Indus Valley civilization to modern-day West Asia. Cowries (the Hindi crowd or sea shells) were used as a form of currency all the way from the Maldives to China and East Africa for more than millennia. The long-term spread of disease-carrying germs may be traced as far back as the seventh century.



Pre-Modern World and Silk Road

In the pre-Modern era there are three things that will help us to understand the making of a global world is:

  1. Silk Route
  2. Food Travels
  3. Diseases and Trade

Silk Routes Link the World  

Silk route is defined as the route taken by traders to carry silk cargoes from china to the west. The Silk Routes are an excellent illustration of pre-modern trade across different areas of the world. The name silk road also refers to the prominence of westbound Chinese silk shipments over this route.

Important features of Silk Routes are,

Food Travels  

Conquest, Disease, and Trade  

Hence, Europe has emerged as the center of world trade.

FAQs on The Pre-Modern World

Q 1. Describe the importance of silk routes in pre-modern trade, cultural interaction, and religious exchange.

Answer: 

The significance of silk routes is as follows:

  1. The silk routes are excellent instances of pre-modern commerce and cultural linkages across distant sections of the world, connecting Asia with Europe and North Africa.
  2. Silk shipments from China, Indian spices and textiles, and gold and silver from Europe were transported to various regions of the world through the silk routes.
  3. These paths were used by Buddhist preachers, Christian missionaries, and, subsequently, Muslim preachers.
  4. These routes proved to be an excellent source of commercial and cultural connections across remote areas of the world.

Q 2. Give two reasons for Europeans’ interest in Africa.

Answer:

The following are two reasons for attraction:

  • Africa had a lot of territory and a lot of mineral resources. It had a small population.
  • The Europeans hoped to construct plantations and mines in Africa to produce crops and minerals for export to Europe.

Q 3. What are the consequences of scraping grain laws in the United Kingdom?

Answer:

  • Following the repeal of the grain restrictions, food could be imported into Britain at a lower cost than it could be produced in the country.
  • British agriculture was insufficiently steady to compete with imports. Vast swaths of land were suddenly left uncultivated, and thousands of men and women were out of employment. They moved to cities or other nations in quest of job.
  • As food costs declined, so did consumption in the United Kingdom. Faster industrial expansion in Britain began in the mid-nineteenth century, which resulted in better earnings and, as a result, more food imports.

Q 4. Who were the indentured laborers?

Answer: 

Indentured labourers were bound labourers who were under contract to work for an employer for a set period of time in order to pay for their journey to a new nation or home. They were recruited by employers’ agents, who were compensated with a little commission.

Q 5. What are three factors that pushed Indians and Chinese to serve as indentured servants on plantations and in mines?

Answer: 

The following factors pushed them to serve as indentured servants:

  1. The decline of the cottage industry.
  2. A rise in land rentals.
  3. Unemployment, poverty, and debts are all factors to consider.
  4. Because of these factors, the poor were driven to move in quest of job. Prospective migrants were enticed by the recruiters’ false promises and became indentured labourers.

Article Tags :