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Lecture 3: The Age of Commerce and Industry
17
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Page 1: The Age Of Commerce And Industry

Lecture 3: The Age of Commerce and Industry

Page 2: The Age Of Commerce And Industry

Introduction: Prometheus unbound?

Revisionist view of industrialization:

1) scale of technological change

2) population growth

3) growth of commerce

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1) The Age of Machinery

Britain’s reputation as first industrial nation rests on 3 factors:

i) timing

ii) technological innovation

iii) population growth

Does this accurately reflect what we now know about the 18th century economy?

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No industrial take off in the 1780s

 Estimated rates of growth in Gross National Product for Britain, 1700-1870 (Nicholas Crafts)

 

Period National income per capita

1700-60 0.3

1760-1800 0.17

1800-1830 0.52

1830-1870 1.98

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The age of factories and machinery?

William Blake ‘dark satanic mills’, Jerusalem (1804)

Traditional view =

• technological and mechanical innovation transformed economy

• craftsmanship replaced by unskilled labour

• Huge factories

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Steam engine invented 1712, only 1200 in use in Britain 1800

Spinning jenny, spinning mule, powerloom, Jacquard loom = portable and operated by hand

Britain in 1841: only 10% of cotton mills more than a 100 workers

1871: average manufactory less than 10 employees

Big 18th century factories = state owned, arsenals, dockyards

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Persistence of artisan and craft production

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‘Boom’ regions in 18th/early 19th century

• Britain: Pennines, Black Country

• Continental Europe: Rhine and Meuse valleys, Belgium, Silesia, Northern Italy, Catalonia

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2) Population Growth

• Expansion of European population and growth of major cities

• Thomas Malthus (1766-1834) fear of famine

• Findings of Cambridge Population Group for England:

i) more gradual rate of population growth over 18cy

ii) changes in ‘nuptiality’ responsible for population growth

iii) population growth increasingly took place in towns, not countryside

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Modernization of agricultural sector

• Enclosure acts, crop rotation, improved seeds, reclamation of land

• Agricultural improvement societies – Arthur Young (1741-1820)

• Population grew because agriculture grew to feed them

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3) Commerce and consumption

• Increasing emphasis on ‘demand’ side of 18th century economy (trade and consumption) rather than ‘supply’ (population growth, technology)

• New global economy: fastest growing cities = capitals but also ports:

Bordeaux, Marseilles, Nantes

• Trade in goods from China and India – re-exported to maritime colonies

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New world of luxury goods

• Britain: tea consumption = 0.32 lb per head in 1730s by 1800 = 1.36lb

• End of century tea, sugar = staples of labouring classes

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An industrious revolution?

• Jan de Vries: desire for luxury goods changes working patterns and household economics

• Hans-Joachim Voth – study of work time in England.

London: days worked increased from 208 in 1750 to 306 in 1800

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Conclusion: The Age of Commerce

1) Evolution of artisan and craft economies, punctuated by boom regions

2) Population change caused by a decline in the age at which people married and decision to have larger families

3) Growth of demand for consumer goods