Escape From Rome

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Escape From Rome Page 80

by Walter Scheidel


  Kocka, Jürgen, 22

  Korea, 230, 251, 260, 266–67, 275, 435, 565n2

  Koyama, Mark, 306, 573n102, 587n224, 595n32, 599n6

  Kublai Khan (Mongol ruler), 182–83, 186, 285

  Kushan empire, 40, 223, 295, 560n5

  laissez-faire tendencies, 313, 407, 505, 507

  land distribution: Carolingian empire, income from land grants in, 159; China (fifth through seventh centuries), 247, 248; Franks, 240–41; German empire, 235, 238, 240–41, 562n30; Mongol empire, 563n30; Roman empire, 56–57, 66, 67, 71–72

  Landes, David, 6, 17, 359, 599n1

  language and writing, 308–13; China, 308–9, 310, 312–13, 573n4, 594n23; English, 312; Greek, 311, 522–23, 573nn5–6, 601n39; Islamic world and, 311, 329, 483; post-Roman Europe, 311–13; Romance languages, 312, 510, 517; Roman empire and spread of Latin language, 66, 67, 309–13, 476, 510, 515–18; Southeast Asia, 329; spread of knowledge and, 476

  Latin language, 66, 67, 309–13, 476, 510, 515–18

  Lattimore, Owen, 275, 280, 572n89

  Leo III (pope), 154

  Levant. See Middle East and North Africa

  Levine, Ari D., 575n44

  Lewis, Mark, 319

  Liao Qidan, 285, 288, 571n70

  liberty and dignity for ordinary people, 489–90

  Lieberman, Victor, 265, 275, 297–98, 303, 330, 573n4

  life expectancy, 7, 537–38n9

  literacy rate, 8, 373, 375, 375, 477, 485–86, 492, 538n11, 596n42. See also knowledge and scientific inquiry

  Lithuania, 193, 292, 571n72

  Little Divergence, 231, 370, 373

  Liu, William, 399, 584n168

  Livy, 100, 116–17

  Locke, John, 474

  Lombard League, 168

  Lombards, 135, 137, 153, 155, 156, 238, 312

  Lorge, Peter, 327

  Lotharingia, 156, 181, 240, 353

  Louis the Pious (Frankish king), 156, 244

  Louis XIV (French king), 78–79, 208

  Luther, Martin, 197, 200, 474

  Ma, Debin, 394

  Macedon: as Carthaginian ally, 551n31; in counterfactual to Roman empire, 114–17, 521, 553n11; Roman conquest of, 92, 95–97, 99, 104; troop numbers for, 550n12, 551n30, 553n18. See also Alexander the Great

  macro-regions: described, 33–34, 34; imperial state formation in, 43–48, 45. See also East Asia; Europe; Middle East and North Africa; South Asia

  Madagascar, 430

  Magellan, Ferdinand, 431, 440, 465

  Maghreb, 43, 91, 93, 132, 139, 143–46, 150–51, 204, 207, 293, 302, 311, 317, 512. See also Middle East and North Africa

  Magyars, 158, 164, 168, 182, 187, 246, 293–94

  Mair, Victor, 282, 569n45

  Majapahit empire, 47

  Malacca, 431, 434, 438, 441, 443–44

  Malaya, 47

  Mamluks, 184–85, 204, 360, 416, 431

  Manchus. See Qing empire

  Mandarin dialects, 308–9, 312

  Mann, Michael, 360

  Mao Zedong, 338

  marginal zones or contact zones, 279–80, 298, 572n89

  maritime exploration and expansion: China’s lack of interest in or need for, 433, 441–46, 591n77; comparison of Chinese and European missions, 439–40; counterfactual scenarios for, 454–71; by European states, 429–32, 590n51; by Ming China, 433–39; Ottoman lack of interest in or need for, 447–48; polycentrism’s role in, 449–53; in Roman empire, 505; South Asia’s lack of interest in or need for, 446–47. See also New World

  Marks, Robert, 496

  Mary Stuart, 202, 203

  Massimiliano, Onorato, 358

  mathematics, 479–80, 524, 601n42

  Maurya empire, 39, 43, 219, 295, 432

  McCloskey, Deirdre, 489–91, 538n13, 596n44

  McNeill, John Robert, 263–64

  Medes, 299–300

  Meeks, Elijah, 106

  MENA. See Middle East and North Africa (MENA)

  Menzies, Gavin, 468

  mercantilism, 268, 344, 353–56, 376–81, 392, 404, 447–51, 497, 581nn109–10, 582n121; fiscal-naval-mercantilist state in England, 385–90, 492–93; unifying set of customs and rule for, 516. See also commercial transactions and credit

  Merovingians, 148, 153–54, 161, 163, 237

  Mesopotamia, 83–84, 144, 301. See also Iraq

  Middle Ages. See post-Roman Europe; specific kingdoms

  Middle East and North Africa (MENA): collapse at end of Bronze Age, 221; commercial growth and trade in, 417; defined, 33, 541n7, 541n9; ecology of, 293, 301–2; foreign conquest of, 415; fragmentation of, 207, 415; geography of, 260, 266, 270; imperial state formation in, 45, 45–47, 333; language and writing in, 311; Mongols in, 182, 191, 415; patterns of empire, 10, 13, 38–42, 43, 254–55, 293; polycentrism not applicable to, 418–19; population of, 34, 35, 39, 504; Roman empire controlling, 84, 142; size of, 33; steppe effect and, 302, 333; tax practices in, 255–56, 565n70. See also Arab conquests; specific countries

  military mobilization: in Achaemenid empire, 299; in Anglo-Saxon England, 239; in Arab conquests, 145–46; in China, 242–44, 246–51, 257, 397–99; compared to Roman empire, 213–14; fiscal-naval-mercantilist state in England, 385–90; in France (late seventeenth century), 78–79, 208; in German empire, 169–70; in Han empire, 248; importance of, 564n64; in modern times, 368; in Mongol empire, 176, 214, 557n2, 557n5, 557n17; in Napoleonic France, 214; in Ottoman empire, 204–6, 453, 507; in post-Roman Europe, 239, 243–44, 257, 339; in Qin empire, 224; in Roman empire, 63–64, 77–81, 81, 84, 135, 224, 543n16, 546n49, 550n10, 550nn18–22, 551n24; in Roman empire compared to in post-Roman Europe, 239

  Ming empire: agrarian focus of, 443; compared to Roman empire, 507; decentralization during, 230, 407; duration and scope of, 229, 282, 569n48; dynastic discord in, 435; economic policies inhibiting growth in, 400–402, 440; imperial governance in, 407; maritime commerce restrictions in, 402, 434, 438, 443, 496; Mongols and, 285, 399, 438; naval expeditions during, 433–39; neo-Confucianism in, 480; rise of, 433, 569n48; taxes and funding in, 233, 237, 409, 421, 433; walls to fend off attacks in, 285, 289, 437; Yongle emperor, 434, 435, 437, 438, 590n40

  Mitterauer, Michael, 496

  modernity: California school of scholarship on, 575n1; conditions inhibiting, 479–85, 487, 490; conditions over long term leading to, 14, 128, 501, 526–27; Eurocentrism and, 501–2; fragmentation of power as source of, 9, 360–63; polycentrism as essential to development of, 15; price to humanity for, 502; Roman empire’s contribution to, 520; values of modernization, 488–91

  Mokyr, Joel, 473, 476, 478, 485, 497, 515, 516, 593n5, 594n21, 595n38, 596n44, 597n68, 598n85

  Mongke (Mongol ruler), 175, 183, 185, 186

  Mongol empire, 12, 168, 174–92, 184; in Asian countries other than China, 192; Baghdad sacked by, 191; in Central Europe, 175–78, 185; Chagatai khanate in Central Asia, 183; in China, 4, 175, 182–83, 189–90, 230, 285, 286, 398–99, 440, 558n20; compared to Roman empire, 213; counterfactual scenario for, 185–92, 215, 560n16; in Eastern Europe, 174–75, 178; fragmentation of Latin Europe and, 179, 187; inability to maintain a large-scale empire in Europe, 214–15; integrity of ruling class in, 214; internal discord and instability of, 183–85; land allotments in, 563n30; in Middle East (Levant), 182, 191, 301; mobilization of forces in, 176, 214, 288, 557n2, 557n5, 557n17; naval expeditions conducted by, 443, 444; population of, 288, 541n3; reasons for retreat from Europe, 178–79; steppe effect and, 181–82, 183, 192, 245, 278, 556n1, 557–58n18, 557n9; stone fortifications and castle construction as barrier to, 180–81, 188, 557n16, 558n20. See also Genghis Khan; Kublai Khan

  monopoly: monopolistic policymaking in China, 400–407, 440; non-monopolization as fundamental to rise of the West, 391; polycentrism vs., 338–44, 339. See also empire

  Montesquieu, Baron de, 259, 260, 261, 265, 337

  Moore, Robert Ian, 231–32

  Morris, Ian: on Chinese lack of need to pursue overseas exploration, 441; counterfa
ctual to Roman empire proposed by, 114; on Norse ability to reach America (compared to Chinese ability), 462, 468, 592n99; social development index of, 4, 6, 537nn5–7

  Mughals, 39, 179, 219, 257, 298, 343, 416–17, 432, 452, 483–84, 507, 572n86, 587n221, 590n31

  Muscovy, 193, 292

  Muslims. See Arab conquests; Islam and Islamization

  Napoleon Bonaparte: battle size compared to Roman battles, 79; counterfactual scenario for, 211–12, 215; empire duration and scope under, 36, 37, 483; failure to overcome English and European opposition, 18, 210

  nature. See ecology; geographic constraints

  naval exploration. See maritime exploration

  Needham, Joseph, 266, 594n23

  Netherlands: bourgeoisie’s freedom and dignity in, 489–90; eclipsed by Britain’s rise, 492; economic rise of, 371, 391, 415, 580n81; joining England in war against Spain, 202–3; literacy rate in, 373, 477, 596n42; military and war costs of, 369–70, 376–77; New World trade and imperialism of, 203, 422, 426, 444, 449, 451; Protestantism in, 202; taxes in, 369–70, 579n65

  Netz, Reviel, 601n42

  Newton, Isaac, 478

  New World: agrarian empires, 441–48; Atlantic trade, expansion of, 422; bullion imported from, 194, 233, 421–22, 423, 425, 496; China and, 468–71; cotton imports from, 424–25, 427; counterfactual scenario for seventeenth-century colonies in, 209; counterfactual scenario of flipping Old World on its axis so East is West, 459–67, 460–61, 463; European expansionism, 420–25, 449–53; globalist perspective, 420–25; incumbents, 431–40; limits of globalism, 425–28; marginals, 429–31; New Spain, establishment of, 193, 196–97; Pre-Columbian imperial state formation in, 46; sugar imports from, 424–25, 589n17; timber imports from, 424–25

  Nicaean creed, 519

  Nicholas I (Constantinopolitan patriarch), 573–74n10

  Nine Years’ War, 208

  nobility: in France, 241; in German empire, 169–70, 237–38, 241, 244, 245; inhibiting modernization and innovation, 487, 490; rise of aristocracy in England, 239; rise of aristocracy in Europe, 169–70, 237–41; in Roman empire, ruling class of noble houses, 68–71, 79, 88–89, 225; society of estates in Europe, 349–51; in Spain, 241; in Tang China, 411; values of, no effect on lives of ordinary people, 596n54

  nomadic societies, 276–79, 283, 287–89, 291–96, 299, 305, 568n40. See also specific groups

  North, Douglass, 380

  North, John, 73

  North Africa. See Middle East and North Africa

  Northern Song. See Song empire

  Northern Wei, 230, 246–47, 282, 284, 318–19, 399

  North Sea region (post-1500), 202, 370–77, 391, 477, 496, 579n71, 582n132. See also England/Britain; Netherlands

  O’Brien, Patrick K., 589n22

  Odoacer, 254, 562n30, 565n68

  Ögödei (Mongol ruler), 174, 178, 179, 183, 186

  Ophellas, 91

  Orestes, 562n30

  Orientalism, 392–93, 583n138, 587n221

  Ostrogoths, 132, 134, 137, 153, 254, 562n30

  Otto I (German ruler), 164, 187

  Otto II (German ruler), 164–65, 168

  Otto III (German ruler), 165

  Ottoman empire, 204–8, 205; commercial growth and trade in, 417, 578n48; compared to Roman empire, 213, 507; compared to Umayyad caliphate, 205; counterfactual scenario for, 206–8; duration of, 12, 35; European relationships with, 195, 196, 201–2, 206; extent of empire, 12, 193, 204–5, 267, 301, 415, 452; hegemony and conservatism in, 483; imperial consolidation under, 38, 43; inability to maintain a large-scale empire in Europe, 214–15; integrity of ruling class in, 214; military mobilization and naval strength of, 204–6, 453, 507, 565n73; obstruction of intellectual innovation in, 484; overseas exploration not of interest to, 447–48; population of, 219; tax revenues in, 206, 417, 565n73

  Ottonian empire. See German empire

  overseas exploration. See maritime exploration and expansion

  Oxford Roman Economy Project, 505

  Oxford World History of Empire, 16

  Pala empire, 40

  Palma, Nuno, 597n64

  Papal States, 166. See also Catholic Church

  parliamentarianism, 14, 350–51, 376

  Parthasarathi, Prasannan, 585n191, 587n221

  Parthians, 100, 223, 299–300, 521, 560n5, 601n36

  pastoralists, 255, 274, 281, 283, 287, 295, 299, 301–2, 306, 568n40, 569n45

  patent law, 486–87

  patriarchal structures, 498, 544n31

  patrimonialism, 68, 225–27, 366, 544n31

  Paul, gospels of, 518–19, 523

  Peace of Augsburg (1555), 370–71

  Peace of Westphalia (1648), 371

  Pechenegs, 290, 291

  Pepin, 154

  Pepin the Short, 160

  Peroz I (Sasanian king), 300

  Philip II (Habsburg ruler), 195, 199, 201–3, 202, 213, 378

  Philippi, battle of (42 BCE), 79

  Philippines, 444, 445

  Phoenicians, 429, 431–32

  Phrygian language, 311

  Pines, Yuri, 323–26, 328, 574nn27–29, 575n33, 585n185

  Poland: Mongol incursion into, 175–77, 180–81, 185, 187; Pact of Koszyce, 350; in tenth century, 268

  political economy, 387, 392, 413, 442, 470, 486–88, 581n110

  Pollack, Sheldon, 484

  Polybius, 546n57

  polycentrism: in Central America, 46; church’s role as driver of, 348, 519–20; defined, 530; development dynamics of, 339, 419, 497, 510; Enlightenment and, 473–79; essential to (Second) Great Divergence and Industrial Revolution, 15, 337; intermittent in imperial settings, 17; Mongol presence in Europe and, 190; overseas exploration and, 449–53; in post-Roman Europe, 12, 16, 37, 43, 214, 338, 501, 503, 508; significance of, 9, 338–44, 339; tax practices and, 256. See also fragmentation of power

  Polynesian explorations of the Pacific, 430–31, 469, 593n103

  Pomeranz, Kenneth, 424, 427, 428, 482, 597n67

  population: basis for determination of, 533–35; controversy over estimates, 599n3. See also specific empires and countries

  Portugal: Eastern expansion and trade of, 431, 438–39, 444; exploration of New World and colonies established by, 421, 426, 430–31, 449; Genoa and, 450; international trade of, 422, 457–58; as threat to Ottoman trade routes, 447–48. See also Iberian peninsula

  post-Roman Europe: compared to China, 17, 23, 228, 243, 254–58, 320–28, 329–32, 331, 343–44, 562n30; cultural evolution and, 327; ethnic loyalty in, 330; fiscal decay, effects of, 257; governance in, 349; language and writing in, 311–13; local resistance to tax remissions to central authority, 235, 237; polycentrism in, 12, 16, 37, 43, 214, 338, 501, 503, 508; possible successors to Rome, failure to emerge, 127–28, 214, 333; principal sources of social power in, 339–40; state formation in, 12, 63, 131; tax collection in, 234–39, 254, 257. See also Carolingian empire; East Roman restoration (sixth century); fragmentation of power; polycentrism

  poverty reduction, 7, 538n9

  Prados de la Escosura, Leandro, 589n22, 598n85

  primogeniture, 240, 555n40, 563n33

  property rights, protection of, 360, 380–81, 496

  Protestantism, 196–98; counterfactual scenario for, 200–201, 203, 512–13; immigration to England, 378; spread of knowledge and, 477; work ethic and, 477, 491

  Prussia, 208, 211, 484

  Ptolemaic empire, 95–101, 104–5, 117, 521; annual military outlays of, 550n21; navy of, 552n33, 554n18; overseas exploration by, 458; troop numbers for, 551n30, 553n18

  Puritanism, 478

  Pyrrhus (Epirote king), 91, 118, 546n57

  Pytheas, 430

  Qing empire: agrarian focus of, 443; bureaucratic structures and, 587n218; clans in, 411; contact with British, 442; duration and scope of, 229, 452, 470; imperial governance in, 407; maritime commerce restrictions in, 402–3, 443; military mobilization and warfare in, 399; neo-Confucianism in, 480; obstruction of intellectual innovatio
n in, 484; rebellion risks in, 443, 586n205; state revenues used to support warfare in, 585n189; steppe effect and, 281–82, 285–86, 399, 584n162; Taiping rebellion (1850s and 1860s), 287, 412, 586n205; taxes and revenue collection in, 233, 237, 407, 409; walls to fend off attacks in, 289

  Qin kingdom/empire: ascent of, 281, 283, 560n4; breaking power of aristocrats and setting up civil service system, 225, 244; core China defined by territory of, 229; demise of, 242, 325; ethnic identity in, 282; geography of, 283; language and writing in, 308; Legalism in, 320–21; manpower mobilization in, 224; merchant class in, 397; military mobilization in, 72, 81, 222, 224, 551n29; state formation in, 222; tax structure in, 225

  Rawski, Thomas, 394

  Reformation, 370–71, 375, 473–74, 477, 478, 489–90, 512

  religion and beliefs, 13, 313–20; in China, 317–22, 328; counterfactual of religious unity in Europe, 512–13, 524; English establishment of national religion, 378; European ascendancy of Christianity, 314–17; religious toleration in European countries (seventeenth century), 484, 497. See also Reformation; specific religions and belief systems

  “Republic of Letters,” 475, 516, 595n38

  Ringmar, Erik, 391, 496

  Robinson, James, 496, 525, 602n45

  Romance languages, 312, 510, 517

  Roman empire: abolition of debt bondage in, 69; adaptations in the core, 68–69; allies and, 59, 60, 67, 73, 79; bureaucracy in fourth century CE, 226–27; capacity for collective action in, 64; capitalized coercion mode of, 63; Christianity during, 314–15; citizenship rights in, 59, 65–66, 73, 75, 79; civilian governance confined to metropolitan core, 68; colonization schemes in, 66–67, 71, 545n42, 548n75; commercial transactions and credit in, 504; compared to Chinese empire, 72, 221–27, 294, 320, 505, 507; compared to Ottoman empire, 213, 507; co-optation and mobilization of citizenry, 10, 59–65, 62, 75, 549n6; cultural assimilation in, 66; demise of, 16, 128, 223, 338, 344, 363, 541n11, 599n1; domestic conflict, 120–22; in early fourth century BCE, 53; economic development in, 505–6; erosion of, thoroughness of, 131, 136–37; explaining creation of, 21, 51–52; extent and expansion of, 34, 75–77, 76, 83, 83–84, 223, 432, 456, 538n15, 543n9, 566n21; factors leading to demise of, 130; failure of similar empire to return after its fall, 9, 10, 11, 16, 127, 131, 503; final phase of expansion and end of conquest, 82–88, 83, 548n72; geography and, 266; growth and triumph, 75–86, 76, 560n5; Huns’ takeover of, 130–31, 133; integration and evolution of Roman commonwealth, 65–68; international trade and trade routes of, 455–58, 504, 592n89; land distribution to soldiers of, 56–57, 66, 67, 71–72; language and writing in, 66, 67, 309–13; legacies of, 14–15, 510–26; legal influence on post-Roman Europe, 514, 516; logic of continuous war, 67, 72–73, 544n31; longevity of, 11, 88, 122, 128–29; manpower as critical to military success, 77–81, 81, 84, 224, 225, 546n49, 550n10, 550nn18–22, 551n24; military leadership of, 57, 68, 70, 85, 547n70; military outlays and payments of, 135, 507, 550nn20–21; modern development resulting from, 503; monarchy in, 226, 234; naval supremacy of, 11, 63, 77, 96, 104–9, 107, 120, 122–23, 432, 456; Oxford Roman Economy Project, 505; parallel of state formation to East Asia, 220, 221–24; patrimonial and clientelistic society in, 68, 225–27, 544n31; patterns of empire and, 35, 35–38, 36; peace (pax Romana) duration during, 504; plunder as funding of, 61, 64, 72, 80; population of, 34–38, 35–38, 55, 62, 74, 76, 76–77, 219, 504, 542n12, 549n6; positive effect on European development, 4; power and leadership concentrated in Rome, 225; public good provision in, 68; religion allied with war-making in, 69; roots of, 11, 52–58, 222; ruling class of noble houses in, 68–71, 79, 88–89, 225; Samnite federation, conflict with, 75–76, 111, 116, 546n55; slave society in, 69, 74, 599n6; Social War (91–89 BCE), 64, 78, 120; starting advantages enjoyed by, 138; stratified layers of classes and roles in, 86, 87; success in and incentives for war in, 57, 70–72; sustainability of continuous war in, 65, 73–74; taxation and revenue in, 61, 64, 72, 80, 81, 234, 235, 506, 600n10; technological innovation in, 504–5; in third century BCE, 60, 222; uniqueness of, 10–11, 13, 18, 19, 35, 122–24, 212, 215, 521–22; urban development in, 504; Veii conflict (early fourth century BCE) and, 57–58, 75, 521; war machine of, 67, 79–82, 119–20, 547nn66–67. See also counterfactual to Roman empire; Roman periphery

 

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