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29 October, 02:50

The European drive to enter the world economy of the 1500s led to a frenzied effort to procure

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  1. 29 October, 03:00
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    By 1500 the population in most areas of Europe was increasing after two centuries of decline or stagnation. The bonds of commerce within Europe tightened, and the "wheels of commerce" (in the phrase of the 20th-century French historian Fernand Braudel) spun ever faster. The great geographic discoveries then in process were integrating Europe into a world economic system. New commodities, many of them imported from recently discovered lands, enriched material life. Not only trade but also the production of goods increased as a result of new ways of organizing production.
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