The Modern Era
Historians
sometimes refer to the era between the premodern (or medieval) and late
modern eras as the “early modern world.” The world during this era was
increasingly united by the projection of European power abroad,
especially in the Americas. Although early modern Europeans still had
little knowledge of, let alone hegemony (influence) over, the inland
regions of Africa and Asia, the links created and dominated by Europeans
made the entire world a stage for fundamental historical processes.
Historians debate, or pass over in silence, the problem of determining
the precise starting and ending dates of the early modern world and have
produced only the vaguest consensus. Roughly, the era of the early
modern world began during the fifteenth century with the Timurid
(relating to the Turkic conqueror Timur) and Italian cultural
renaissances. The year 1405 serves as a convenient starting date because
it marks not only the death of Timur, the last great central Asian
conqueror to join farmers and nomads into a single empire, but also the
first of the Chinese admiral Zheng He’s (c. 1371–1435) naval expeditions
to the “Western Oceans.”
The era might be taken to end in the late
eighteenth century with the French and Industrial revolutions, both
European events of global consequence in the late modern world. The
uncertainty of this periodization derives in part from the concept of an
early modern Europe, with its own uncertain chronological boundaries,
and in part from the unconsidered way in which both phrases entered
historical scholarship.
Origins of the Concept
Although conceptually the phrase early modern
world is an extension of the phrase early modern Europe, the initial
histories of both phrases have some surprises. The earliest known
appearance of the phrase early modern world occurs in Willard Fisher’s
“Money and Credit Paper in the Modern Market” from The Journal of
Political Economy (1895).
The Modern Era
Reviewed by Muhammad Umar
on
August 29, 2015
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