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Imperialism moves westward

In: A History of the Global Economy

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This chapter moves attention westward, focusing on the emergence of maritime empires in the Mediterranean world. It describes the strong degree of continuity as empire follows empire. It makes particular reference to the Phoenicians and the Greeks, notably the Athenian Empire, but also an earlier period of decentralised control and a later ephemeral empire under Alexander the Great. The main attention is directed at the Roman Empire, which was as much a maritime as a landed empire. There is an analysis of the contribution that innovations made to the rise and sustaining of the Roman Empire. The chapter ends with a brief review of the Islamic caliphates, which in the political sense, not the religious or cultural, represented an ephemeral empire. It notes the increasingly unstable context in the Middle East as the epicentre of empire moved westward.

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  • ., 2018. "Imperialism moves westward," Chapters, in: A History of the Global Economy, chapter 12, pages 206-223, Edward Elgar Publishing.
  • Handle: RePEc:elg:eechap:18481_12
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    Development Studies; Economics and Finance;

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