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The Latin West 1200- 1500 AP World History Ch 16.2
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Page 1: The Latin West 1200-1500 AP World History Ch 16.2.

The Latin West 1200-1500

AP World History

Ch 16.2

Page 2: The Latin West 1200-1500 AP World History Ch 16.2.
Page 3: The Latin West 1200-1500 AP World History Ch 16.2.

Part 2 Urban Revival

• 900 CE no town or city in Europe could compare to the cities in the Byzantine Empire

• By the 1500’s cities in western Europe and around the Mediterranean rapidly experienced commercial, cultural and administrative changes

Page 4: The Latin West 1200-1500 AP World History Ch 16.2.

Causes of Urban Revival

• The increased growth of trade and manufacturing after 1200

• Lead to the growth of Urban areas in the Latin West

Page 5: The Latin West 1200-1500 AP World History Ch 16.2.

Major Cities

• Developed due to trade or manufacturing

• Trade allowed cities in northern Italy to prosper.

• Venice was the dominant city for trade in the Far East

Page 6: The Latin West 1200-1500 AP World History Ch 16.2.
Page 7: The Latin West 1200-1500 AP World History Ch 16.2.

Flanders

• Region in northern Europe what is now Belgium

• Main city Bruges • became a large,

major textile manufacturing and trading area.

Page 8: The Latin West 1200-1500 AP World History Ch 16.2.
Page 9: The Latin West 1200-1500 AP World History Ch 16.2.

Technology

• Late 1200’s, the spinning wheel arrives in England.

• Transforms the economy from wool export to textile exports by the mid 1400’s.

• Competition promoted the spread of manufacturing and encouraged the development of new specialty goods.

Page 10: The Latin West 1200-1500 AP World History Ch 16.2.
Page 11: The Latin West 1200-1500 AP World History Ch 16.2.

Flanders trade ship route

Page 12: The Latin West 1200-1500 AP World History Ch 16.2.

Characteristics of trading cities in the Middle Ages

• Offered people more social freedom than rural places

• “Chartered Cities” where residents could claim freedom from serfdom after one year.

• Quickly able to adapt to changing market conditions (diversified)

• Home to most of Europe’s Jews

Page 13: The Latin West 1200-1500 AP World History Ch 16.2.

Metal Working• Grew because of:• Watermills• Improved mining

techniques from central Europe

• Blast furnaces• New sources of metals• Blast furnaces powered by

machine driven bellows provided the high temperatures needed to produce high-quality iron by the late 1300’s.

• Water also powered stamping mills that broke up iron and trip hammers that pounded it into shape.

Page 14: The Latin West 1200-1500 AP World History Ch 16.2.
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Industry and Environmental Change

• Rapid growth of industry caused:

• Deforestation

• Water pollution by industries like tanneries

• Damming of rivers

• The creation of quarry pits and mines

Page 16: The Latin West 1200-1500 AP World History Ch 16.2.

Deforestation occurs due to farming, building, fuel production and making of charcoal for glass and iron industry.

Page 17: The Latin West 1200-1500 AP World History Ch 16.2.

Interesting facts

• Building boom France during 1200 - 1400’s causes more stone to be quarried than during the age of the Egyptians.

• The first pollution laws were passed by English Parliament in 1388.

Page 18: The Latin West 1200-1500 AP World History Ch 16.2.

Civic Life

Page 19: The Latin West 1200-1500 AP World History Ch 16.2.

Hanseatic League

• Based in Germany• An association of

trading cities in northern Europe is created.

• Promoted increased trade through Russia in the East and England to the West.

Page 20: The Latin West 1200-1500 AP World History Ch 16.2.

Guilds

• An association of craft specialists in the same trade.

• Dominate manufacturing in cities and become powerful political and economic institutions.

• Example Silversmiths, woodworkers, leatherworkers.

• They will become “Trade Unions” in later centuries.

Page 21: The Latin West 1200-1500 AP World History Ch 16.2.
Page 22: The Latin West 1200-1500 AP World History Ch 16.2.
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Guilds

• Set prices for goods.• Trained apprentices and promoted

business interests in politics.• Denied membership to outsiders and

Jews.• Perpetuated male dominance of the most

skilled jobs

Page 24: The Latin West 1200-1500 AP World History Ch 16.2.

Nepotism

• The practice of hiring and promoting family members ahead of others in a business.

• kept families of guild members as most powerful leaders of industry.

Page 25: The Latin West 1200-1500 AP World History Ch 16.2.

International Fairs

• Regional markets that met once or twice a year.

• “Champagne Fairs” in French wine regions.

• Manufactured goods, livestock and farm produce were bought and sold.

• The king of France guaranteed safe passage for all traders going to these markets after 1100.

• Goods from known world were exchanged.

• Also important for currency exchange.

Page 26: The Latin West 1200-1500 AP World History Ch 16.2.

Merchant Banks

• Most significant growth industry of 1400’s.

• European Financial Institution that engages in Investment Banking, Counseling, Advising and in Mergers and Acquisitions.

• Created very wealthy merchant-banker class.

Page 27: The Latin West 1200-1500 AP World History Ch 16.2.

Merchant Bank Families

• Medici Family• Most powerful

banking family in Italy

• Patrons (supporters) of the arts

• Florence was home• The Galileo Project |

Galileo | Patrons | Medici Family

Page 28: The Latin West 1200-1500 AP World History Ch 16.2.

Merchant Bank Families

• The Fuggers of Augsburg

• German family had 10 times wealth of Medici

• Jacob Fugger Portraits

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Merchant Banks

• Services included:

1.Checking accounts

2.Shareholding companies

3.Money changing

4.Loans

5.Making investments

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Locate - Florence Home of the Locate - Florence Home of the MediciMedici

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What Trade Organization were the What Trade Organization were the Fuggers Close to?Fuggers Close to?

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Page 33: The Latin West 1200-1500 AP World History Ch 16.2.

European Jews• Cities were home for most of

Europe’s Jews.• Jews were targets of

persecution, blamed for the spread of the plague.

• Before they were expelled in 1492, Spain held the largest population of Jews in Europe.

• 1492 Spanish kings expel all Jews and nobles confiscate their wealth and properties in the name of religious purity.

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European Jews

• The Catholic Church played no official role in the persecution of Jews

• The church was officially the protector of Jews.

• three pages from a book of historical maps, drawn by Riza ibn Muklebi in 1686.

• show the migration of Jews expulsed from Spain to Istanbul in 1492. Text in Arabic and Ladino.

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Spanish expulsion of Jews 1492Spanish expulsion of Jews 1492

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• Locate• London• Flanders• Venice• Champagne

Region• Hanseatic

League Territory

• Florence• Spain• Augsburg

Page 38: The Latin West 1200-1500 AP World History Ch 16.2.

End Part 2