RickFGS
Deity
I´m not going further on the matter, but Brazil (part of portuguese empire then) alone produced 2/3 of the world´s gold at 1700´s, so you figure how much we had by yourself, and keep calling us a "poor backwater country" if you want.
And portuguese gold (from western Africa, mainly, at the time) flowed mostly to France and the HRE area.
And of course that gold was but a tiny fraction of the world's stock at the time. But relatively large in the gold-starved 16th century Europe, enough that even the trading cities of the Baltic minted coins imitating the portuguese currency.
I´m not going further on the matter, but Brazil (part of portuguese empire then) alone produced 2/3 of the world´s gold at 1700´s, so you figure how much we had by yourself, and keep calling us a "poor backwater country" if you want.
Care to elaborate?Oh, and don´t forget, that the "mighty" federal german of nowadays still has 100 years more left to pay for war reparations to the allies from WWII war crimes, not so mighty if we start to use our heads afteralll hein?
I agree about the Middle Age, I'm less sure about the Ancient times. The Roman Empire was really powerful and economically very well-organized.
I'd say China dominated from the fall of the Roman Empire to the conquest of the Americas by Spain. Then Spain took the leadership considering the fantastic wealth they've brought from the new continent.
Afterwards, I'd say France briefly took the leadership again during the 17th/18th century... then Britain. I indeed believe Germany took the leadership briefly in the early 20th century and then it's been the US. China will most likely surpass the US again during this century.
RickFGS said:I´m not going further on the matter, but Brazil (part of portuguese empire then) alone produced 2/3 of the world´s gold at 1700´s, so you figure how much we had by yourself, and keep calling us a "poor backwater country" if you want.
I did not knew this, this is interesting, could you give me some links/books on this matter (Baltic states part)?
Check the standard work on portuguese coinage, Alberto Gomes' catalog, it mentions some of that history. And the german wikipedia actually has a nice web page.
I have yet to get one of those
And where did you dig up those over-inflated claims about Portugal anyway? The one about buying the german military warmachine ten times over is so outrageous that I'm really curious to know who' seeding that!
Incidentally, and to put a little actual history into the topic, the 16th century portuguese kingdom certainly was a big buyer of "german war machines", or at least a major recruiter of german mercenaries: most gunners on the portuguese ships sent to India were hired in the flemish cities. Some of that gold flowed as payment for those services. That was how a small kingdom managed to stick its nose into three other continents at the same time, otherwise it would lack even the soldiers to do it. I also favour the theory that the quick fall of several outposts to the Dutch after the iberian union was a consequence of the closing of that mercenary market. The damn spanish got everyone busy in their stupid wars with just about every other european state.
Of course, the king did try his best to keep all those soldiers sent to Asia stuck in there, so as not to have to pay on the return... Manuel I was an even greedier bastard that John II.![]()
You know, I am Portuguese and I can easily detect several mistakes there. For example, regarding Flanders: do you happen to know where the crusaders who helped the first portuguese king conquer Lisbon came from? Hint: some of them came from Flanders...
To stick just with the gunners issue: the consensus is that most gunners (though not the other soldiers) were northern european mercenaries. I don't have my books with me now, but there is ample documented evidence of that, I can dig it up later. Portugal also had to import cooper from Sweden, via Flanders, for its canon foundries (and for trade in India). Not to mention timber for masts from Sweden, tin from England , and lots of other steel weapons from Germany and Spain, the local production being usually insufficient.
We did had better shipbuilders for a time (at least I think we never did a Vasa!), but that was about it.
Now, are you going to post actual sources for those claims?
Except of course, at the time England was a tiny, peripheral kingdom. Portugal was less so, but 1.4 million in 1500 did not a large country make.- also, don´t forget we were no tiny kingdom, England at the time (1500) had a population of 1.8 Million people, while Portugal counted some 1.4 Million, the difference was not that great, unfortanely our natural tendency to regard ourselves as a tiny kingdom roams over the years of misseducation.
I´m not going further on the matter, but Brazil (part of portuguese empire then) alone produced 2/3 of the world´s gold at 1700´s, so you figure how much we had by yourself, and keep calling us a "poor backwater country" if you want.
Since we have very little idea of the population of the Empire at the time it would be foolish to make a GDP estimate. But for information on the economic situation - our best guesses as to How It All Worked - I'd recommend the collection of essays edited by Paul Magdalino on Byzantium around the year 1000 and Jean-Claude Cheynet's work on the Anatolian aristocracy. Katherine Holmes on Basileios II and the Governance of the Byzantine Empire may also be useful.So, to get away from the negativity vibe going on now:
Anyone know an estimate for the economic position of the Byzantine Empire at, say, the time of Basil II?
"The conquest of India"![]()
1. "brainwashing books and documentaries" = any historical source that isn't nationalist Portuguese crap. Lol
2. Amount of gold really doesn't say much about the per capita productivity of a society. At most Spanish gold meant they could (theoretically) buy more of the goods of their neighbors. Gold, unlike agricultural yields, textiles, oil, has an exchange value but very little use value. Ceteris paribus, there is no significant per capita increase without technological innovation (read: the Industrial Revolution)
Yes, we conquered India, all the major cities and industrial ports were under our rule, the indian sultan could not even order coinage to be minted before the portuguese viceroy gave his permit, from whom do you think England STOLED it three centuries later.
The only crap here is the so called german empire: A - it was never an empire, since it never influeced anyone outside its borders,
and B - it was never german, since it was Holy Roman before, Prussian after and when it was in fact german, it lasted 6 years of pure murderess madness, so no thank you germans, stay indoors please.
Yes, we conquered India, all the major cities and industrial ports were under our rule, the indian sultan could not even order coinage to be minted before the portuguese viceroy gave his permit, from whom do you think England STOLED it three centuries later.
It´s incredible how an Aussie doens´t even know were the british empire comes from.
Hint: Better start reading books, they look better inside your head than in the bookshelfs or as table supports.