The Rise of European Empires

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The one constant theme from any period in history we examine seems to be that of change. As Europe began to take shape, it did so with an expansion and contraction rate that was dramatically impacted by changes in political organizations, positive and negative economic forces, and through shifts in social structure. The path to the creation of the European empires was a long and tedious journey. Sixth century feudalism gave way to the creation of a central authority. The thirteenth century was scarred by the Black Death but it brought about economic changes that would resonate well into the Renaissance period of the fifteenth century. Nation-states began their formation as the need for a centralized government dictated. With each step during this period, the faces of social, economic and political organization changed – all leading to the rise of the European empires.
Prior to fifteenth century Europe, nation states, or countries as we know them today, did not exist. With the decentralization of local governments and the increase of feudalism spurred from the sixth century - “a social system tied together by kinship, regional alliances, [and/or] personal bonds” consisting of fiefs, vassals and lords – there was a marked need for a centralized and more stable form of government. In the tenth century, there was a disintegration of the Carolingian state, which resulted in fragmented political entities consisting of: (1) the elective papacy and empire with their sacred view of political power; and, (2) large hereditary kingdoms that arose within the old Carolingian world and along its borders. Around the twelfth century, the aristocratic society began to lose its stronghold of domination, and the central authority began to shift t...

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