economy etiketine sahip kayıtlar gösteriliyor. Tüm kayıtları göster
economy etiketine sahip kayıtlar gösteriliyor. Tüm kayıtları göster

11 Şubat 2009 Çarşamba

Reason to Resist In Europe (1550 – 1700)

Reason to Resist In Europe (1550 – 1700)

Reason to Resist In Europe (1550 – 1700)
Europeans lived more precariously in the seventeenth century than in any period since the Black Death.

One benchmark of the crisis was population decline. In Mediterranean, Spanish population fell from 8.5 to 7 million and Italian population from 13 to 11 million. The ravages of the Thirty Year’s War most clearly felt in central Europe.

Population decline had many causes and rather remarkably, direct casualties from warfare were a very small component. The direct effect of war, the disruption of agriculture, and the spread of disease were far more devastating.

Spain alone lost a half million people at the turn of the century and another half million between 1647 and 1652. Severe outbreaks on 1625 and 1665 hit England, while France endured three consecutive years of epidemics from 1629 to 1631.

All sectors of the European economy from agriculture to trade stagnated or decline in early seventeenth century. Not surprisingly, peasants were hardest hit.

The entire period from 1647 to 1653 was the worst ever in parts of France. Five consecutive bad harvests decimated the countryside.

Predictably acute economic crisis led to rural revolt, as the French peasants reeled from visitations of plaque, frost and floods, the French state was raising the taille, the tax that fell most heavily upon the lower orders.

A series of French rural revolts in the late 1630s focused on opposition to tax increases.

These revolts began in the same way, with the murder of a local tax official, the organization of a peasant militia and the recruitment of local clergy and notables. The rebels forced temporarily concessions from local authorities, but they never achieved lasting reforms.

Each revolt ended with the re-imposition of order by the state. In England the largest rural protests, like the Midland revolts in 1607, centered upon opposition to the enclosure of grain fields and their conversion to pasture.

The most spectacular popular uprisings occurred in Spanish-occupied Italy. In the spring of 1647 the Sicilian city of Palermo exploded under the pressure of a disastrous harvest, rising food prices and relentless taxation. A city of 130,000 inhabitants, Palermo imported nearly all of its food stuff.

As grain prices rose, the city government subsidized the price of bread running up huge debts in the process. When the town government could no longer afford the subsidies they decided to reduce the size of the loaf rather than increase its price.

This did not fool the women of the city, who rioted when the first undersized loaves were placed on sale. Soon the entire city was in revolt. Commoners who were not part of the urban power structure led the revolt in Palermo. For a time they achieved the abolition of Spanish taxes on basic food stuff.

Their success provided the model for a similar uprising in Naples, the largest city in Europe.

The Neapolitan revolt began in 1647 after the Spanish placed new tax on fruit. A crowd gathered to protest the new imposition, burned the customs house, and murdered several local official. The protester were first led by a fisherman and then by a blacksmith, and again the rebels achieved the temporary suspension of Spanish taxation.
Reason to Resist In Europe (1550 – 1700)

10 Aralık 2008 Çarşamba

The Ethiopia – Eritrea War (1998 – 2000)

The Ethiopia – Eritrea War (1998 – 2000)

The Ethiopia – Eritrea War (1998 – 2000)
Much of the progress made by Ethiopia and Eritrea in the decade since independence was undermine and even reversed at the end of 1997. In November, Eritrea introduced its own currency to replace the old Ethiopian birr. The new currency, the nakfa, represents not just an historic break with Ethiopia, but an economic one too – annulling the de facto currency union that had been in operation until then.

A despite over Eritrea’s whole exchange-rate system followed, and in early 1998 bickering began over bilateral trade relations. Resulting tensions between the countries escalated into a major military conflict that erupted in May June 1998 over a disputed border post near Badme.

Eritrea then occupied the town of Badme, followed in June by the towns of Shiraro, Zala Ambassa and Tsorena. An interim settlement proposed by the OAU was accepted by Ethiopia. At the same time, a much criticized mass deportation of people of Eritrea origin began from Ethiopia. After Ethiopia’s recapture of Badme in February 1999, Eritrea agreed to accept the plan. However, the fighting continued with major battles occurring on the Tsorena-Zala Ambassa front.

In June 2000, after a further ten months of failed international diplomacy in which Eritrea refused to approve changes to the peace plan proposed by the UN and OAU envoys, Ethiopia launched a major offensive that recapture all territory. It was on to occupy parts of central and western Eritrea as well. An amended settlement was then accepted by Eritrea which implemented a ceasefire and the installation of a OAU-UN buffer zone on Eritrean soil.

In December 2000, a formal peace settlement was signed in Algiers. In April 2001, a 25km deep demilitarized strip which ran the length of the internationally recognized border on the Eritrean side, was set up under UN supervision.
The Ethiopia – Eritrea War (1998 – 2000)

27 Ağustos 2008 Çarşamba

Bloody Sunday (Russia 1905)

Bloody Sunday (Russia 1905)

Bloody Sunday (Russia 1905)
In 1914 Russia was considered backward by the standard of Western industrial society. Russia still recalled a recent feudal past.

Twelve years earlier in 1905 the workers of St. Petersburg (the Germanic name was change to its Russian equivalent, Petrograd, in 1914 with the outbreak of hostilities with the Central Powers) protested hardships due to cyclical downturns in the economy.

Urban workers appealed to the Tsar as “little father” for relief for their hardships. On Sunday in January 1905 the tsar’s troops fired on a peaceful mass demonstration in front of Winter Palace. A thousand were killed, including many women and children, who were appealing to the tsar for relief.

The event, which came to be known as Bloody Sunday, set-off a revolution that spread to Moscow and the countryside.

 In October 1905 the regime responded to the disruptions with a series of reforms that legalized political parties and established the Duma, or national parliament Peasants, oppressed with their own burdens of taxation and endemic poverty, launched mass attacks on big landowners throughout 1905 and 1906.

The government met workers’ and peasants’ demands with return a repression in 1907. In the half-decade before the Great War, the Russian state stood as an autocracy of Parliamentary concession blended with severe police control.
Bloody Sunday (Russia 1905)