Description
Efnisyfirlit
- Half-title
- Series information
- Title page
- Copyright information
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- List of Tables
- List of Maps
- List of Source boxes
- List of Methods and debates boxes
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Structure of the book
- Sources for early modern history
- Chapter Summary
- Questions
- Further Reading
- Primary Sources
- Notes
- Part I
- 1 Europe in the world of 1450
- Travel beyond Europe
- Individuals in society
- Politics and power
- Cultural and intellectual life
- Religious institutions, ideas, and practices
- Economics and the environment
- Chapter Summary
- Questions
- Further Reading
- Primary Sources
- Note
- 2 Individuals in society, 1450-1600
- The body
- The life cycle: childhood and youth
- The life cycle: sexuality
- The life cycle: marriage
- The life cycle: widowhood and old age
- The life cycle: death
- Family, kin, and community networks
- Chapter Summary
- Questions
- Further Reading
- Primary Sources
- Notes
- 3 Politics and power, 1450-1600
- Military technology and organization
- Standing armies and navies
- Taxes, bureaucracies, and marital politics
- The British Isles
- France
- Spain and Portugal
- The Holy Roman Empire
- The Ottoman Empire
- Eastern and northern Europe
- Italy
- Power at the local level
- Chapter Summary
- Questions
- Further Reading
- Primary Sources
- Notes
- 4 Cultural and intellectual life, 1450-1600
- Schools and education
- Political theory
- Humanism
- Vernacular literature and drama
- Music and art
- Chapter Summary
- Questions
- Further Reading
- Primary Sources
- Notes
- 5 Religious reform and consolidation, 1450-1600
- The early Reformation
- The Reformation in England
- The radical Reformation
- Social change and the Reformation
- Religious wars
- Calvinism
- The Catholic Reformation
- Later religious wars
- Chapter Summary
- Questions
- Further Reading
- Primary Sources
- Note
- 6 Economics and the environment, 1450-1600
- Capitalism, economic theory, and population growth
- Rural society
- Wealth polarization in the western European countryside
- Neo-serfdom and slavery in eastern Europe
- Metals, coal, and mining
- Cloth and cod
- Banking and moneylending
- Urban life
- Poverty and crime
- Chapter Summary
- Questions
- Further Reading
- Primary Sources
- Note
- 7 Europe in the world, 1450-1600
- Mediterranean and Indian Ocean connections
- Chinese and Portuguese voyages
- Columbus’s background and voyages
- Early voyagers after Columbus
- Europeans in Asia: merchants and missionaries
- Europeans in Africa: slavers and sugar growers
- Europeans in the Americas: conquerors and miners
- Global connections and the Columbian exchange
- Difference and hierarchy
- Chapter Summary
- Part Summary, 1450-1600
- Questions
- Further Reading
- Primary Sources
- Notes
- Part II
- 8 Individuals in society, 1600-1789
- The social body: orders and classes
- The writing body: letters and diaries
- The inner body: emotions and passions
- The studied body: anatomy and medical theory
- The treated body: medicine and public health
- The reproducing body: childbirth and contraception
- The deviant body: sex crimes and scandals
- Chapter Summary
- Questions
- Further Reading
- Primary Sources
- Notes
- 9 Politics and power, 1600-1789
- Absolutism in theory and practice
- Warfare and alliances
- France
- Spain and Portugal
- The British Isles
- The Dutch Republic
- The Ottoman Empire
- Habsburg lands
- Brandenburg-Prussia
- Sweden and Poland
- Russia
- Enlightened rulers
- Chapter Summary
- Questions
- Further Reading
- Primary Sources
- Notes
- 10 Cultural and intellectual life, 1600-1789
- Learned societies, salons, newspapers, and networks
- Ancient authorities and new methods in science
- The revolution in astronomy
- Mathematics, motion, and the mind of God
- Reason, knowledge, and property
- Natural rights and their limits in the Enlightenment
- Literature and drama
- Art and architecture
- Music and dance
- Chapter Summary
- Questions
- Further Reading
- Primary Sources
- Notes
- 11 Religious consolidation and renewal, 1600-1789
- Protestant state churches
- Church and state in Catholicism
- Spiritualism and pietism
- Moravians and Methodists
- Gender issues in western Christianity
- Eastern Orthodoxy
- Witchcraft
- Judaism
- Islam
- Chapter Summary
- Questions
- Further Reading
- Primary Sources
- Notes
- 12 Economics and the environment, 1600-1789
- Agricultural change and rural protests
- Population growth
- Proto-industry, manufactories, and guilds
- Mechanized textile production
- Industrialization
- Credit, banking, and money
- Chapter Summary
- Questions
- Further Reading
- Primary Sources
- Notes
- 13 Europe in the world, 1600-1789
- Explorations
- Trade and colonies in the Indian Ocean
- Trade and colonies in the Caribbean
- Trade and colonies in the Atlantic
- Colonies, difference, and race
- The effects of colonialism
- Chapter Summary
- Epilogue
- Questions
- Further Reading
- Primary Sources
- Notes
- Index




