Exam preparation materials

Chapter 13. Social Transformation and Statebuilding in the Eighteenth Century

IN THIS CHAPTER

Summary: In the eighteenth century, new wealth from overseas trade transformed European society and created territorial rivalries between European states.

Key Ideas

• The development of a triangle of trade connecting Europe, the Americas, and Africa created large amounts of new wealth in the European economy.

• The development of market-oriented agriculture and cottage industry broke traditional limits on European population growth and economic productivity.

• The increased wealth led rulers of European states to attempt to expand their territorial holdings through war and diplomacy.

Key Terms

triangle of trade

the Middle Passage

manorial system

cash crops

enclosure

cottage industry

putting-out system

flying shuttle

spinning jenny

cotton gin

the Pragmatic Sanction

War of the Austrian Succession

Diplomatic Revolution

Seven Years War

Introduction

In the eighteenth century, Great Britain and, to a lesser extent, France surpassed Spain, Portugal, and Holland as the dominant economic powers in Europe. They did so by controlling the majority of the increasingly lucrative triangle of trade that connected Europe to Africa and the Americas. The resulting wealth and prosperity set in motion a series of innovations that radically changed European agricultural and manufacturing production, which in turn produced changes in the social structure of Europe. Competition between Britain and France, and the desire of their eastern European rivals to catch up, led to innovations in diplomacy and war, the twin processes by which eighteenth-century European rulers built and expanded their states.

The Triangle of Trade

The phrase triangle of trade refers to a system of interconnected trade routes that quadrupled foreign trade in both Britain and France in the eighteenth century. Here are three characteristics of the triangle of trade:

• manufactured goods (primarily guns and gin) were exported from Europe to Africa

• slaves were exported to serve as labor in European colonies in North America, South America, and the Caribbean

• raw materials (especially furs, timber, tobacco, rice, cotton, indigo dye, coffee, rum, and sugar) were exported from the colonies to Europe in exchange for the slaves and manufactured goods

Prior to the eighteenth century, the primary destination of Africans taken into slavery by their rivals had been either the Mediterranean basin or Asia. The eighteenth-century expansion of the European colonies greatly increased the demand for African slaves and reoriented the slave trade to the west. The majority of slaves were destined for the West Indies and Brazil, with about 10 percent going to colonies in North America. The transportation of African slaves across the Atlantic on European trade ships was known as the Middle Passage. As many as 700 slaves per ship were transported, chained below deck in horrific conditions. It is estimated that somewhere between 50,000 and 100,000 Africans were transported each year during the height of the eighteenth-century slave trade.

Breaking the Traditional Cycle of Population and Productivity

The enormous wealth generated by the British and French colonies and the triangle of trade created pressure for social change that eventually affected the whole population. The effects were felt more strongly in Britain and led to changes that, taken together, constituted the first phase of an Industrial Revolution that began in Britain and then spread eastward throughout Europe, breaking the traditional cycle of population and productivity.

The traditional cycle worked like this:

• Population and productivity rose together, as an increase in the number of people working in an agricultural economy increased the agricultural yield.

• Eventually, the agricultural yield reached the maximum amount that could be produced given the land available and the methods in use.

• For a while, population would continue to rise but eventually, as the number of people far outstripped the agricultural yield, food would become scarce and expensive.

• Scarcity and high prices would eventually cause the population to decline.

• When the population was safely below the possible productivity, the cycle would begin again.

In the eighteenth century, several developments related to new wealth combined to break the cycle:

• Agriculture became market-oriented.

• Rural manufacturing spread capital throughout the population.

• Increased demand led to technical innovation.

The new market orientation of agriculture created a shift from farming for local consumption to a reliance on imported food sold at markets. The introduction of rural manufacture put larger amounts of currency into the system and made the working population less dependent on land and agricultural cycles, thereby breaking the natural check on population growth.

Market-Oriented Agriculture

The rise in population created more mouths to feed. The existence of a vast colonial empire of trade created an increasingly wealthy merchant class who both bought land from, and affected the behavior of, traditional land-holding elites. The result was the destruction of the traditional manorial system in which land-owning elites (lords of the manor) held vast estates divided into small plots of arable land farmed by peasants for local consumption and vast grounds known as commons where peasants grazed their livestock. That system was slowly replaced by a market-oriented approach in which cash crops were grown for sale and export.

The shift to cash crops created pressure that led to the reorganization of the social structure of the countryside. The traditional land-owning elites abandoned their feudal obligations to the peasantry and adopted the attitude of the merchant class. Cash crops created a demand for larger fields. Landowners responded by instituting a process known as enclosure because of the hedges, fences, and walls that were built to deny the peasantry access to the commons, which were now converted to fields for cash crops. Later, the land owners extended enclosure into other arable lands, breaking traditional feudal agreements and gradually transforming much of the peasantry into wage labor. By the middle of the eighteenth century, three-quarters of the arable land in England had been enclosed informally or “by agreement” (though the peasantry had not, in fact, been given any choice); after 1750, the process continued more formally as land was enclosed via acts of Parliament.

Rural Manufacturing

The increase in population also created greater demand for the other necessities of life, particularly clothing. In the feudal system, all aspects of textile production had been under the control of guilds (which were organizations of skilled laborers, such as spinners and weavers), who enjoyed the protection of the town officials. Membership in a guild was gained only through a lengthy apprenticeship. In that way, the guilds kept competition to a minimum and controlled the supply of textiles, thereby guaranteeing that they could make a decent living. In the eighteenth century, merchants faced with an ever-expanding demand for textiles had to find a way around the guild system; the result was a system of rural manufacturing known variously as cottage industry or the putting-out system.

In the putting-out system, merchants went into the countryside and engaged the peasantry in small-scale textile production. Each month, the merchant provided raw material and rented equipment to peasant families. At the end of the month, he returned and paid the family for whatever thread or cloth they had produced. Initially, peasant families supplemented their agricultural income in this way; eventually, some of them gave up farming altogether and pooled their resources to create small textile mills in the countryside. As the system grew, the guilds of the town were unable to compete with the mills; cottage industry replaced the urban guilds as the center for textile production.

The new system of rural manufacturing went hand-in-hand with the shift to market- oriented agriculture; the destruction of the manorial system could not have been accomplished if some of the cash flowing into the economy had not found its way into the hands of the rural population. The creation of cottage industries provided the cash that enabled rural families to buy their food rather than grow it themselves.

However, the social change that accompanied the destruction of both the manorial system and the guilds also brought hardship and insecurity. The enclosure movement meant that thousands of small landholders, tenant farmers, and sharecroppers lost their land and their social status. Forced to work for wages, their lives and those of their families were now at the mercy of the market place. The destruction of the guilds produced similar trauma for the artisans and their families. For both the peasantry and the artisans, the economic and social changes of the eighteenth century meant the destruction of their traditional place and status in society: they were now faced with both new opportunities and great insecurity.

Technical Innovations in Agriculture and Manufacturing

It is important to remember that technical innovations are always responses to new challenges; the people of earlier centuries did not fail to innovate because they were less intelligent; they simply had no need for the innovations. The ever-growing population and demand for food and goods in the eighteenth century created a series of related demands that eventually led to technical innovations in both agriculture and manufacturing. Single innovations often created a need for further innovation in a different part of the process.

The key technical innovation in the agricultural sector in the eighteenth century was the replacement of the old three-field system, in which roughly one-third of the land was left fallow to allow the soil to replenish itself with the necessary nutrients, with new crops such as clover, turnips, and the potato, which replenished the soil while producing foodstuffs that could be used to feed livestock in winter. More and healthier livestock contributed products such as dairy and leather.

In the manufacturing sector, a number of interconnected technical innovations greatly increased the pace and output of the textile industry.

• In 1733, John Kay invented the flying shuttle, which doubled the speed at which cloth could be woven on a loom, creating a need to find a way to produce greater amounts of thread faster.

• In the 1760s, James Hargreaves invented the spinning jenny, which greatly increased the amount of thread a single spinner could produce from cotton, creating a need to speed up the harvesting of cotton.

• In 1793, the American Eli Whitney invented the cotton gin, which efficiently removed seed from raw cotton, thereby increasing the speed with which it could be processed and sent to the spinners.

These technical innovations greatly increased the pace and productivity of the textile industry. The need to supervise these larger, faster machines also contributed to the development of textile mills, which replaced the scattered putting-out system by the century’s end.

Eastern Ambition

The prosperity and power of Britain and France caused their eastern European rivals to try to strengthen and modernize their kingdoms.

Prussia

In Prussia, Frederick William I built a strong centralized government in which the military, under the command of the nobles, played a dominant role. In 1740, his successor Frederick II (the Great) used that military to extend Prussia into lands controlled by the Hapsburgs. Challenging the right of Maria Theresa to ascend to the throne of Austria (which was a right guaranteed her by a document known as the Pragmatic Sanction), Frederick II marched troops into Silesia. In what came to be known as the War of the Austrian Succession (1740—1748), Maria Theresa was able to rally Austrian and Hungarian troops and fight Prussia and its allies, the French, Spanish, Saxons and Bavarians, to a stand-off.

Russia

In Russia, the progress towards modernization and centralization made under Peter the Great had largely been undone in the first half of the eighteenth century. However, under the leadership of Catherine the Great, Russia defeated the Ottoman Turks in 1774, thereby extending the Russia’s borders as far as the Black Sea and the Balkan Peninsula. In 1775, Russia joined with Prussia and Austria to conquer Poland and divide its territories among the three of them.

War and Diplomacy

In eighteenth-century Europe, statebuilding was still primarily conducted through war and diplomacy. The competition between Britain and France in the triangle of trade meant that they would contend militarily for control of colonies in North America and the Caribbean, but the desire to weaken one another also led them to become entangled in land wars in Europe.

The expansionist aims of Frederick II of Prussia led to a shift in diplomatic alliances that is now referred to as the Diplomatic Revolution:

• Prussia, fearful of being isolated by its enemies, forged an alliance in 1756 with its former enemy Great Britain.

• Austria and France, previously antagonistic towards one another, were so alarmed by the alliance of Prussia and Great Britain that they forged an alliance of their own.

Colonial and continental rivalries combined to bring all of the great European powers into a conflict that came to be known as the Seven Years War (1756—1763). The conflict pitted France, Austrian, Russia, Saxony, Sweden, and (after 1762) Spain against Prussia, Great Britain, and the German state of Hanover. Land and sea battles were fought in North America (where it is sometimes known as the French and Indian War), Europe, and India. The European hostilities were concluded in 1763 by a peace agreement that essentially re-established prewar boundaries. The North American conflict, and particularly the fall of Quebec in 1759, shifted the balance of power in North America to the British. The British had similar success in India.

As the eighteenth century progressed, the nature of European armies and wars changed in ways that would have profound implications for the ruling regimes. The standing army was different in several ways:

• The size of the standing army increased.

• The officer corps became full-time servants of the state.

• Troops consisted of conscripts, volunteers, mercenaries, and criminals who were pressed into service.

• Discipline and training became harsher and more extensive.

Weapons and tactics changed to accommodate the new armies:

• Muskets became more efficient and accurate.

• Cannon became more mobile.

• Wars were now decided not by a decisive battle, but by superior organization of resources.

• Naval battles were now often more crucial than land battles.

• Rapid Review

In the eighteenth century, Britain and France came to dominate the lucrative triangle of trade that imported valuable raw materials from North America and the Caribbean to Europe in exchange for slaves acquired from Africa. The influx of capital generated by the colonial trade served as a spur for unchecked population growth made possible by an agricultural revolution and the creation of a system of rural manufacturing. The changes in agricultural and manufacturing production destroyed the last vestiges of an economic system (manorialism) and a social system (feudalism) that dated back to the medieval period. In that process, both the traditional European peasantry and the guildsmen were converted to wage labor.

The intensifying rivalry between Britain and France, and the growing ambition of their eastern European counterparts, led to a series of mid-century wars, including the War of the Austrian Succession and the Seven Years War. Rivalries also led to a series of innovations in diplomacy and warfare.

• Chapter Review Questions

1. Which of the following was NOT true of the triangle of trade?

(A) timber

(B) tobacco

(C) cotton

(D) silk

(E) slaves

2. Enclosure

(A) changed the balance of military power

(B) refers to the shackling of slaves below deck on the Middle Passage

(C) denied peasants access to commons and farm land in England

(D) made mills the center of textile production

(E) destroyed the guilds

3. Which of the following did NOT contribute to the breaking of the traditional population cycle in Europe?

(A) the shift of agriculture to a market orientation

(B) the three-field system

(C) rural manufacturing

(D) the conversion to wage labor

(E) technical innovation

4. Cottage industry

(A) refers to the building of cottages in the countryside for the working population

(B) helped to reinforce the traditional checks on population growth

(C) refers to the establishment of large-scale, factory based industrial production

(D) is a component of the feudal system

(E) refers to the engagement of the rural population in small-scale textile production

5. Which of the following was a key technical innovation in agricultural production in the eighteenth century?

(A) new crops such as clover, turnips and the potato

(B) the flying shuttle

(C) the spinning jenny

(D) the cotton gin

(E) the three-field system

6. The most significant impact of the introduction of rural manufacturing in the eighteenth century was

(A) improved quality of clothing

(B) a decrease in agricultural output

(C) the spur to the economy provided by increased production and the spread of capital throughout the population

(D) the creation of the triangle of trade

(E) a shift in the population from towns to the countryside.

7. Which of the following is NOT true of the War of the Austrian Succession?

(A) It began when Frederick the Great of Prussia challenged Maria Theresa’s right to ascend to the throne of Austria.

(B) It violated the terms of the Pragmatic Sanction.

(C) Austria allied with Prussia to hold off French ambitions.

(D) Maria Theresa was able to rally the Hungarians to her cause.

(E) It was essentially fought to a stand-off.

8. As a result of the Seven Years War,

(A) the French monarchy fell

(B) Maria Theresa ascended to the throne of Austria

(C) Prussia was weakened

(D) the Ottoman Turks were further weakened

(E) Great Britain emerged as the dominant European power outside of the European continent

• Answers and Explanations

1. D. Although there was a silk trade between China and Europe, it was not part of the eighteenth- century triangle of trade. Choices A, B, and C are correct because tobacco, timber, and cotton were imported into Europe from the Americas. Choice E is correct because slaves were bought in Africa and sold in the Americas and West Indies.

2. C. Enclosure refers to the decision by English landowners to deny peasants access to both the commons and their traditional farming plots so that the lands could be converted to cash crops. Choice A is incorrect because the term enclosure does not refer to military organization. Choice B is incorrect because the term enclosure does not refer to the inhumane methods of transporting slaves. Choice D is incorrect because the term enclosure does not refer to textile production. Choice E is incorrect because it was the development of cottage industry, and not the enclosure movement, that destroyed the crafts guilds.

3. B. The three-field system, whereby one-third of the land was left fallow, was part of the traditional agricultural cycle which helped to establish limits on productivity and, therefore, on population increase. Choice A is incorrect because market- oriented agriculture meant a shift from farming for local consumption to a reliance on imported food sold at markets, thereby helping to break the natural limit on agricultural productivity which enforced a limit on population growth. Choice B is incorrect because the advent of rural manufacturing put cash into the pockets of the laboring class, enabling them to buy food and, therefore, helping to remove the natural constraint on population growth. Choice D is incorrect because the conversion of the agricultural work force to wage labor also furthered the spread of capital throughout the economy. Choice E is incorrect because technical innovation in agriculture ensured a healthy economy and increased the availability of food, thereby helping to remove natural constraints on population increase.

4. E. Cottage industry is the term that denotes the development of small-scale textile production in the countryside in the eighteenth century. Choice A is incorrect because cottage industry does not refer to the building of cottages. Choice B is incorrect because cottage industry refers to the engagement of the rural population in small-scale textile production which helped to break the traditional checks on population growth. Choice C is incorrect because cottage industry does not refer to the establishment of large-scale, factory-based industrial production, which was a nineteenth-century development. Choice E is incorrect because cottage industry helped to destroy the remaining vestiges of the feudal system.

5. A. The key technical innovation in the agricultural sector in the eighteenth century was the introduction of new crops such as clover, turnips and the potato, which replenished the soil while producing foodstuffs that could be used to feed livestock in winter. Choices B and C are incorrect because the flying shuttle and the spinning jenny were technical innovations in the textile industry. Choice D is incorrect because, although cotton is an agricultural product, the cotton gin did not increase its production; it increased the speed with which it could be harvested, thereby increasing the speed with which it could be supplied to the textile producers. It is, therefore, properly understood as an innovation in the textile industry. Choice E is incorrect because the three-field system was replaced in the eighteenth century by new crops.

6. C. The most significant impact of the introduction of rural manufacturing in the eighteenth century was that it acted as a spur to the economy by increasing production and spreading capital throughout the population. Choice A is incorrect because the introduction of rural manufacturing had no significant effect on the quality of clothing, though it did increase the amount produced. Choice B is incorrect because the introduction of rural manufacturing had no negative effect on agricultural output. Choice D is incorrect because rural manufacturing played no role in the creation of the triangle of trade. Choice E is incorrect because, although the economies and social fabric of towns were damaged by the destruction of the guild system that resulted from the introduction of rural manufacturing, there was no significant shift in the population from towns to the countryside.

7. C. The War of the Austrian Succession (1740—1748) was fought between Prussia and its allies, the French, Spanish, Saxons and Bavarians, and The Austrian and Hungarian troops, who supported the right of the Hapsburg heir, Maria Theresa, to ascend to the throne; French aggression was not a factor. The other four choices are all accurate statements about the War of the Austrian Succession.

8. E. British victories in the Americas and in India allowed it to emerge from the Seven Years War as the dominant European power beyond the boundaries of the continent. Choice A is incorrect because the French monarchy did not fall as a result of the Seven Years War, though the financial strain put on the government was a contributing cause of the French Revolution. Choice B is incorrect because Prussia was Britain’s Continental ally in the Seven Years War and its power was not weakened by the outcome. Choice D is incorrect because the Ottoman Turks were not directly involved in the Seven Years War; their empire was further weakened by defeat in a conflict with Russia in 1774 that was unrelated to the Seven Years War.

If you find an error or have any questions, please email us at admin@erenow.org. Thank you!