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 Text 2                 
                                                 
 Exercises      
           
The Birth of               
  the Modern World               
             
                      The seventeenth and eighteenth       
                    centuries saw an extraordinary migration of peoples from England       
                    and the continent of Europe to the New World. In those years,       
                    the modern European world was formed. Its formation was marked       
                    by growth of trade and commerce, the rise of the middle 
                  class, the evolution of national states, the reformation       
                    of the Christian Church, and the development of 
                  representative government. These changes, gradually developing       
                    over many years, led directly to the discovery and the settlement       
                    of the New World.       
                      The feudal system had depended       
                    upon the organization of society into two classes, those who       
                    owned the land and those who worked it. It also depended upon       
                    the institution of  Church, headed by the Pope in Rome.       
                    The Church was a kind of super-government, holding together       
                    the different elements of European society in Christian unity.       
                           
                       The final breakup of the       
                    feudal system had three main causes. First, feudalism overlooked       
                    the fact that men are not created with the same talents, ideas       
                    or imagination. Second, the Church found it increasingly difficult       
                    to keep control over all the parts of the European society.       
                    Third, Christian Europe, at the end of the eleventh century,       
                    changed its whole pattern of life by engaging in the .       
                    After experiencing other ways of living, they did not want       
                    to return to the narrow world that they had left. This physical       
                    freedom and movement of large numbers of people helped toward       
                    ending the close society of the        
                    world.        
                      Economically, the most 
                    immediate change to result from the Crusades was the rise 
                    of trade and commerce. When the Crusaders went to the Near 
                    East, they were introduced to many things that made living 
                    more pleasant. It took little imagination for men to see the 
                    possibilities of developing trade by bringing such Eastern 
                    goods to the people of Europe. Venice was the first of the 
                    European cities to realize this, but it was not long before 
                    other Mediterranean cities 
                    began transporting Eastern goods back to Europe. Soon Westerners 
                    found their lives changed by such trade.        
                      At first, these goods were       
                    carried to places where they were bartered. To barter means       
                    to trade goods for goods. But the barter system soon proved       
                    impractical for two basic reasons. One was that the bartering       
                    process would not always work. The solution to this problem       
                    was in the wider use of money, since without a commonly accepted       
                    and practical means of determining value and price, the growth       
                    of trade would remain slow.        
                      The other reason was the       
                    inconvenient system of carrying the goods to the buyer, rather       
                    than having the buyer come to the goods. Only small amounts       
                    could be carried over long distances. The solution to this       
                    problem was in the development of trading centers. New towns       
                    generally grew up along well-traveled roads or on the river       
                    banks where communication and transportation were easy.        
                      With the gradual breakup       
                    of feudalism, however, a new group came into existence consisting       
                    of townsmen who made their living from banking and trade and       
                    the workers who provided goods and services for them. The       
                    activities and ideas of this growing group affected almost       
                    every aspect of life - political, social, economic, intellectual,       
                    and spiritual. Money, not land, became the source of wealth       
                    to these people, and it is to their group that the modern       
                    world largely owes its birth.        
                       In earlier years, land       
                    had been the only source of wealth, and the rich were only       
                    those who held and controlled property. Because land was usually       
                    passed from the father to the first-born son under the feudal       
                    law, the system offered little or no chance for the poor man       
                    to acquire the land he would need to make himself prosperous.       
                    However, with the rise of bankers and traders in the society,       
                    money became a more important source of wealth, and a man       
                    with talent and imagination could at last break the bonds       
                    on him by birth.        
                       Following closely on these       
                    economic changes came a breakup in the political foundations       
                    of the medieval world. Before the Crusades, kings had existed,       
                    but their role was more or less than of a figurehead,       
                    a chief in name only, in the complicated feudal system.        
                       In the period during and       
                    following the Crusades, the power of kings, however, began       
                    to grow. This happened for three main reasons. First, because       
                    of the absence of Crusaders from Europe or because of their       
                    death abroad, most of their property was left unprotected       
                    and taken over by the kings. Second, kings made use of the       
                    developing towns to add to their power. With the money collected       
                    from the towns, the king could then afford to raise an army       
                    loyal to himself with which to protect the towns. Third, kings       
                    began to levy taxes on their subjects instead of demanding       
                    service, which had been the custom in earlier times. The taxes       
                    enabled a king to buy services, thus increasing his power.       
                    Gradually, political authority was gathered into the hands       
                    of the king, and slowly the national states of modern Europe began to appear.        
                       Although English kings       
                    continued to build up their royal authority in many ways from       
                    1215 to the seventeenth century, on the whole, they respected       
                    the principle of the Magna Carta. British royal authority was based on 
                  the principle of contract between the ruler and the ruled.       
                    And this was to be of great importance to the future history 
                  of the New World.       
                      Along with the social,       
                    economic, and political changes that overturned medieval Europe       
                    came the most exciting and liberating change of all: the revolution       
                    of men's minds. The intellectual movement which began in Italy       
                    in the fourteenth century and had swept through all of Europe       
                    by the sixteenth century is called . Renaissance means rebirth, and intellectually,       
                    men were indeed born again in this period. It was a many-sided       
                    movement that introduced a search for truth and knowledge       
                    that has never stopped.        
                      The medieval view to life       
                    had been a narrow one. This view, in general, was that God       
                    had created the world and man could not change its conditions.       
                    The Renaissance spirit, however, was in direct contrast to       
                    this view. The world was man's to explore, to use, and to       
                    change as he chose. This view to life encouraged action and       
                    gave people confidence in themselves and in their powers of       
                    reasoning. They dared to ask questions and wanted to find       
                    out the answers for themselves.        
                      This sudden curiosity about       
                    the world exploded in two main directions: the exploration       
                    of the physical world and the re-examination of religious       
                    beliefs. The former led to the discovery of faraway places       
                    all over the globe, including the New World, and the latter led to a change in the       
                    last great medieval institution, the single Christian Church.       
                    First, we will examine the exploration of the physical world.       
                           
                      In the mid-fifteenth century,       
                    a great number of long ocean voyages took place. There were       
                    several practical reasons for this sudden exploration of the       
                    unknown. For one thing, Venice had built a        
                    on the Mediterranean trade and kept others from sharing this       
                    wealth. Eastern goods were in great demand in Europe, and       
                    Venice, being the chief source of supply, could charge high       
                    prices. As England, France, Spain, and Portugal appeared as       
                    nations, they wanted to break Venice's hold on this trade       
                    and to get their share of it. Their ships could not fight       
                    in the Mediterranean so they sent out explorers to seek other       
                    routes to the East.        
                      Another reason that some       
                    sailors dared to sail beyond the sight of land into the great       
                    Atlantic Ocean was the improvement in navigation. Better  
                  maps reduced fears of the unknown, and the earlier invention  
                  of the compass took the guess work out of sailing a ship on  
                  course.      
                      The last reason for the       
                    many sea voyages of this period was simply the great spirit       
                    of adventure which swept over the people of Europe. One voyage       
                    led to another, and a growing sense of competition encouraged       
                    each nation to send its ships to sea. In 1492, Christopher       
                    Columbus, encouraged and financed by the king and queen of       
                    Spain, sailed west in search of the East Indies and discovered       
                    instead the islands of the Caribbean which he called the 
                  West Indies. He had, however, found the New World.       
                           
                      Not to be outdone by Spain,       
                    England sent John Cabot, an Italian explorer who had become an English       
                    citizen, across the Atlantic in 1497 and again in 1498 to       
                    explore the coast of North America. Upon  
                  his voyages, England rested its claims to the lands which  
                  would finally become the United States.       
                    In less than 100 years, from 1492 to 1534, Europeans had discovered       
                    two new continents of North and South America and had broadened       
                    their land to include the whole globe.       
                      This revolutionary spirit       
                    of exploration which led men to expand their physical world,       
                    also encouraged them to take a new look at their spiritual       
                    world. The questions and conclusions of these spiritual explorers       
                    led to , the movement to reform the Roman 
                  Catholic Church. Just as the discovery of new lands       
                    was the result of the sea explorers, the evolvement of new       
                    ways of explaining the Christian beliefs was the result of       
                    intellectual explorers.        
                      One of the basic causes       
                    for this religious questioning was that by the beginning of       
                    the fifteenth century, education in Europe was spreading.       
                     had been translated from Latin into other       
                    languages. More and more people for the first time were able       
                    to read the Bible, and as a result, they began to develop       
                    their own ideas as to the meaning of Christianity. For this       
                    and other reasons, the sixteenth century saw the breakup of       
                    the one Roman Catholic Church into many different sects.        
                      With the Reformation, the       
                    modern European world was born. Almost  
                  every way of life in the medieval period was washed away by  
                  the tide of change. The rigid class social       
                    system had been replaced by the more flexible society of the       
                    middle class. National states had replaced many of the feudal       
                    powers. Trade and commerce had been allowed to expand at an       
                    ever-increasing rate. Man had sailed to new worlds, and the       
                    European had rebelled against old ideas and gained the freedom       
                    to seek truth in the world around him through the powers of       
                    his own mind.        
                      (1 726 words)        
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