Read The New Penguin History of the World Online

Authors: J. M. Roberts,Odd Arne Westad

The New Penguin History of the World (228 page)

Russia and,
615
,
620
navy and,
662
consults astrologer,
1030

Elizabeth (1709–62), tsarina of Russia (1741–62),
623

enclosure, agricultural,
554
,
562
,
705

energy

human,
91
,
316
steam, used by Hero,
220
animal,
516
water,
516
in agriculture,
706
for railways and shipping,
709
,
710
,
823
hydro-electric schemes,
950
ecological problem,
1006
watchful use,
1024
–5
acceleration of consumption,
1070
see also
electricity; oil

Engels, Frederick (1820–95), German socialist,
713
–14

England, English

(i) Anglo-Saxon; regeneration under Alfred,
409
–10; Norman administration,
506

(ii) early modern; trade with Persia,
392
; first trade posts in India,
439
–40,
442
,
637
; Papacy and,
494
,
499
,
501
; wars with France,
507
–8; royal power,
511
–12; peasant rebellions,
518
; trade growth,
561
,
556
–7,
558
; class structure,
563
–5,
566
; social changes,
563
–4; Tudor administrative techniques,
572
–3,
579
–80,
600
; Church in,
580
; Crown and parliament,
587
–9,
590
–1,
616
,
618
; wars with Spain,
603
–4; Dutch and,
605
,
607
,
659
–60,
661
–2; colonization in N. America,
650
–3

see also
Britain; United Kingdom

Enki, Sumerian god,
55

Enlightenment

definition,
686
–7
ideas and attitudes,
687
–94,
876

Enlil, Sumerian god,
55
,
64

environmental concern and change,
1023
–6,
1184
–5

Epicurus (341–270
BC
), Epicurean school of philosophy,
222
,
251

Erasmus, Desiderius (
c.
1466–1536), Christian humanist scholar,
539
–40,
545
,
575
,
577

Eratosthenes (276–194
BC
), Greek scientist,
220
,
223

Eridu, Sumerian settlement,
50
–1

Erigena, Johannes Scotus (
c.
815–77), Irish philosopher,
536

Eskimoes,
36
,
407
,
482
–3,
810

Estonia,
1155

Ethiopia

early kingdom,
478
,
481
Portuguese and,
633
retained independence,
792
,
822
,
825
,
1075
Italian invasion,
951
World War II and,
962
revolution,
1075
–6

Etruscans

Villanovan culture,
158
,
185
,
229
culture,
227
–9
origins,
228
–9

Euclid (323–283
BC
), Greek geometrician,
220
,
338
,
415
,
538

Euripedes (
c.
484–407
BC
), Greek tragedian,
208

Europa, legendary Greek heroine,
99

European Coal and Steel Community,
1107

European Economic Community (Common Market),
1108
–9,
1112
–1113

European Economic Co-operation,
1107

European Union,
1037
,
1113
,
1153
–6,
1153
–8

Europe, Eastern

German expansion,
527
–8
socio-economic contrasts with W.,
531
,
564
,
567
Turkish confrontation,
610
–13
nationalism in,
872
revolutionary movements in,
896
–8,
905
–6
Versailles settlement and,
902
authoritarian regimes,
912
polycentrism,
1104
post-1945 economy
1136
–7
fall of communism,
1132
,
1136
–43
post-fall of communism,
1150
–2
and EU expansion,
1155
see also
Byzantium; Slavs; individual countries

Europe, Western

(i) prehistory:
Homo sapiens
prototypes,
19
; Palaeolithic cultures,
22
; Palaeolithic art,
23
–6; first agriculture,
33
; prehistoric cultures,
153
–5; racial groups,
154
–8; prehistoric insignificance,
154
–5,
157

(ii) early medieval: Arab incursions,
231
; post-Roman Germanic cultures,
301
–5,
313
–14; medieval civilization shaped,
393
–421

(iii) Middle Ages: interpretations,
489
–90; role of Church,
490
–503; political pattern,
503
–12; social and economic pattern,
512
–23; aggressive Christianity,
524
–8; navigational enterprise,
531
–6; mental enlargement,
536
–45

(iv) early modern: demography,
549
–53,
797
–9,
863
–6; economy,
552
–62; class structure,
563
–6; women,
568
–9; growth of state authority,
570
–97; dynastic political geography,
599
–609; Ottoman threats,
609
–11; imperial expansion,
630
–56

(v) modern: world-wide spread of values,
630
–3,
789
–93,
795
; 19th-cent. revolutionary politics,
746
–61,
866
–7; demography,
699
–704,
997
; agricultural revolution,
704
–7; industrialization,
709
–12,
864
; urbanization and labour,
712
–17,
866
; economic ideologies,
717
–19,
867
; political geography after Napoleon,
742
; centre of world trade,
793
–6; female emancipation,
869
–70; mental attitudes,
876
–882

(vi) 20th cent.: tensions,
883
–4; build-up to world War I,
892
–6,
898
; peace settlement,
899
–904; political regimes,
905
–7; economic slump,
912
–14; changing patterns of thought,
947
–8; World War II,
955
–67; Single European Currency,
1112
,
1154
–5

supranational organizations,
1107
–8

Ezekiel (7th cent.
BC
), Hebrew prophet,
261

Ezra (mid-5th cent.
BC
), Hebrew prophet,
262

factories

19th-cent. growth,
711
new social patterns,
715
legislation on,
784
,
785
assembly-line technique,
1007

Falkland Islands,
1111
–12

famine

in Roman empire,
308
medieval,
518
early modern outbreaks,
553
,
555
in Ireland,
704
,
750
,
787
in Russia,
704
,
908
,
1005
in India,
982
World War I and,
895
World War II,
965
in Africa,
1075

Faraday, Michael (1791–1867), British scientist,
878

fascism

authoritarianism,
904
,
911
in Italy,
909
–11
intellectual impetus,
947

Fatmid caliphate in Egypt,
342
,
372

feminism,
1033
–4

Ferdinand V (1452–1516), king of Castile (1474–1516) and Aragon (1479–1516),
508

Fertile Crescent,
32
–3

cultural melting-pot,
45
,
47
,
48
,
49
,
60
,
88
Hittite hegemony,
107
nomad intrusions,
108
,
117
see also
individual areas

feudalism

chain of obligation,
418
–21
in Japan,
471
,
841
,
843
increasingly unreal structure,
519
–22,
563
Tudors and,
573
abolished in France,
706
,
732
,
735
survival of values,
706
,
735
ended in Central Europe,
753

financial services

banking,
515
,
517
,
556
joint-stock companies
556
–7,
796
Stock Exchanges,
556
–7,
796
insurance schemes,
557
expansion of,
665
,
795
facilitate industrial growth,
712
focused on London,
794
–5
damaged by World War I,
899
,
912

Finland,
869
,
959
,
1155

fire, earliest use of,
14
–15

fish, fishing, trade in,
558
,
1117

Flanders

textile centres,
515
metallurgy,
516
drainage in,
554
independent tendencies,
584

Florence,
515
,
516
,
602

Council of,
385
,
529

food supply and diet

earliest storing,
10
meat-eating,
15
extension of sources,
23
Neolithic revolution,
29
in Mesopotamia,
49
–50
Egyptian diet,
71
in Africa,
150
–1
limited Dark Age diet,
417
–18
medieval European,
514
demographic dependence on,
555
–6,
699
increased variety of,
665
transplantation of commodities,
670
–1
revolutionary increases in supply,
705
processing and preserving,
870
world,
1000
–1,
1025
,
1117
S.E. Asia,
1053
,
1054

Ford, Gerald (1913–2006), US president,
1105
,
1113

Ford, Henry (1863–1947), US automobile manufacturer,
1007
–8

France

Neanderthal population,
26
Roman province (Gaul),
236
,
238
,
240
,
241
,
247
Germanic invasions,
292
–3,
301
–4
Frankish settlement,
303
repel Arabs,
331
,
397
,
410
support Papacy,
395
Charlemagne’s empire,
397
–401
divided,
401
territorial units,
402
,
405
medieval political patterns,
506
–7
peasant rebellion,
518

(i) early modern: class structure,
563
; wars of religion,
581
;
Frondes
,
589
; Louis XIV’s absolute monarchy,
590
,
592
–3,
596
; against Habsburgs,
596
,
599
–600,
602
,
604
; Louis XIV’s foreign policy,
605
–6; in S.E. Asia,
636
; in India,
638
,
640
; in Caribbean,
648
; in Canada,
650
–2,
653
; in black Africa,
668
;
philosophes
,
690
,
692
–3; ‘feudal system’ abolished,
706
,
732
,
735
; industrialization,
712
; American Revolution and,
723
,
729
–30

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