170 Ch. 5 • Rise of the Atlantic Economy: Spain and England
Overseas trading remained a risky business, however; storms, wars, and
pirates all posed considerable risks. England, Spain, Portugal, and France
spent fortunes maintaining fortresses and trading ports in colonies and
along trading routes. Funds available to finance global treks could quickly
disappear in times of political crisis or international conflict, and distant
markets for European goods, never very certain, could quickly dry up.
Appropriately enough, the first English company to receive royal authoriza
tion for a monopoly on colonial trade was called the London Merchant
Adventurers. Spanish kings, in particular, were notorious for declaring bank
ruptcy and thus repudiating all debts after borrowing money from wealthy
subjects based on the expectation—sometimes in vain—of the arrival of val
ued colonial goods or bullion.
The major European powers had only limited means of exerting authority
over their merchants and other subjects in distant places. Trading strategies
followed negotiations and, often, angry confrontations between royal offi
cials and aggressive trading lobbies. This, in addition to the daunting prob
lems of distance, discouraged early attempts to establish the kind of
full-fledged colonies in Asia and Africa that Spain and then England had in
the Americas. Moreover, diseases indigenous to regions to which Europeans
traveled as well as those they carried with them made life not only dangerous
but often short, particularly in tropical climates.
Price Revolution and Depression
The rise in population and the economic boom of the sixteenth century
brought a considerable rise in prices, particularly during the last few decades
of the century. It seemed to one Spaniard that “a pound of mutton now costs
as much as a whole sheep used to.” Between 1500 and 1600, the price of
wheat rose by 425 percent in England, 650 percent in France, and 400 per
cent in Poland. Prices rose dramatically even before the arrival of silver from
Latin America, a cause of continued inflation during the second half of the
century. The cost of living far outdistanced wage increases as real income fell
for ordinary people. Among those who suffered were small landholders in En
gland, relatively poor nobles in France and Italy whose tenants had long-term
leases, and landless laborers and wage earners in city and country alike.
Those affected adversely by the price revolution were quick to blame
rapacious landlords, greedy merchants, hoarders of grain, selfish masters in
the crafts, usurers, and the spirit of acquisition engendered, some believed,
by the Reformation. Basic long-term causes included the infusion of gold
and particularly silver brought principally by the Spanish from the Ameri
cas, currency debasement undertaken by monarchs to help finance wars,
and the population increase itself, which placed more pressure on scarce
resources.
A long depression followed the economic expansion of the sixteenth cen
tury. This in itself reflected the relative decline of Mediterranean trade, sym