Western Civilization.p

(Jacob Rumans) #1

wax, timber, pitch, tar, iron, and all the other products
of the northern world. Organized into hansas, or mer-
chant leagues, they prospered greatly throughout the
High Middle Ages.
Ghent, Bruges, Ypres, and the other Flemish cities
concentrated primarily on the manufacture of cloth.
Their position near the mouths of the Meuse and
Rhine made them natural ports that connected the Eu-
ropean interior with England, Scandinavia, and north-
ern Spain. Some of them also rivaled the Hanse in the
salt trade, which was vital because salt was the primary
means of preserving food. By the end of the thirteenth
century, the Low Countries had become a highly ur-
banized center of wealth that rivaled Italy in commer-
cial importance. Other, smaller, centers of trade and


manufacturing developed along the main trade routes
or wherever a local product achieved some level of
renown.
Manufacturing in the Middle Ages did not nor-
mally employ elaborate machinery or the techniques of
mass production and cannot, therefore, be described as
truly industrial, though some of the larger wool shops
in Italy or Flanders employed as many as 150 workers.
Goods were produced by artisans who, after the tenth
century, were typically organized into guilds or associa-
tions that attempted to regulate price and quality in a
particular trade. Because they included not only jour-
neymen but also the masters who owned the shops and
the apprentices who would one day be admitted to full
membership, guilds combined a variety of functions.

184 Chapter 10


A

A

A

A

S

S S

S
S

S

S

S

S

S

Constantinople

Lisbon
Córdoba

Toledo
Valencia

Barcelona

Bordeaux
Genoa

Lyons Milan
Florence

Venice

Rome
Naples

Paris

Bruges
Ghent

Hamburg

Lübeck

Leipzig
Frankfurt
Nuremberg
Augsburg

Danzig

Cracow
Vienna

Novgorod

Kiev

Astrakhan

Trebizond
Tabriz
Mosul

Baghdad
Damascus
Alexandria

Tripoli

Tunis

Edinburgh

Winchester London

Dublin

Stockholm

Bergen

Budapest

Belgrade

Dnie
perR.

Balearic
IslandsSardinia

Sicily

Crete Cyprus

Atlantic
Ocean

North
Sea

Black Sea

Red
Sea

Pe
rsi
an
Gu
lf

Mediterranean Sea

Ca
sp
ia
n
Se
a

Ni
le
R.

Vistu
la
R.

Corsica

Danu
be
R.

Ba

ltic

Sea

Volga
R.

0 300 600 Miles

0 300 600 900 Kilometers

Area of cloth production
Area of linen production
Area of silk production
Trade routes
S
A

Salt
Alum
Wine

Gold
Silver
Other metals

MAP 10.1
Medieval Trade Routes
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