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Storia economica dell'Europa pre-industriale

Storia economica dell'Europa pre-industriale

di Carlo M. Cipolla 1974 491 pagine
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Punti chiave

1. Preindustrial Europe: A World of Scarcity and Vulnerability

The preindustrial world remained a world of numerically small societies.

Fundamental poverty. Before the Industrial Revolution, Europe was characterized by pervasive poverty, low population density, and extreme vulnerability to external shocks. Most people lived at subsistence level, with 60-80% of their income spent on food, leaving little for other necessities like clothing, housing, or savings. This stark reality meant that even minor disruptions could lead to widespread suffering and death.

Unequal distribution. Society was marked by a striking contrast between the abject misery of the masses and the affluence of a few very rich individuals. Fiscal records from Florence (1427) and Lyon (1545) show that 10% of the population controlled over 50% of the wealth. This extreme inequality meant that while the poor struggled, the wealthy could accumulate significant capital, often channeled into:

  • Military investments (castles, fortifications)
  • Religious investments (cathedrals, monasteries)
  • Luxury goods (palaces, art)

Limited resources. Production was constrained by low agricultural yields (wheat yields rarely exceeded 6:1 seed ratio), limited animal productivity (small cattle, low milk output), and a chronic shortage of inanimate energy sources. This scarcity, coupled with rudimentary technology and organization, trapped societies in a vicious cycle of poverty, where saving was difficult for the majority and investment opportunities were limited.

2. The Urban Revolution: Europe's Engine of Change

The rise of the cities in Europe in the tenth and twelfth centuries marked a turning point in the history of the West – and, for that matter, of the whole world.

Cities as frontiers. From the 10th to the 13th centuries, cities emerged as dynamic centers, offering an escape from rural serfdom and feudal constraints. They became "frontiers" where individuals sought economic and social advancement, fostering a new spirit of initiative and hard work. This urban growth was fueled by massive migration from rural areas, as people were drawn by the promise of freedom and opportunity, encapsulated in the German saying "Stadtluft machts frei" (Town air makes one free).

New social structures. Unlike cities in the classical world or in China, European medieval cities developed a distinct identity, separate from the surrounding rural-feudal world. They fostered a "horizontal arrangement" of cooperation among equals, leading to the formation of:

  • Guilds (Arti)
  • Confraternities
  • Universities
  • The Commune (a sworn association of citizens)
    This new social order challenged the traditional feudal hierarchy, with merchants and professionals gaining unprecedented social and political prominence.

Economic transformation. The urban revolution transformed every sector of economic life. Cities became hubs of trade, manufacturing, and finance, driving an increased division of labor and the monetarization of the economy. This shift in values and economic power laid the groundwork for future European development, distinguishing its trajectory from other civilizations where urban centers remained subservient to rural elites.

3. Population Dynamics: Growth, Plagues, and Rebalancing

Epidemics contributed most to the frequency and the intensity of catastrophic mortality.

Growth and vulnerability. From 1000 to 1300, Europe's population grew steadily, tripling in some regions, reaching about 80 million by the early 14th century. This growth, however, led to increasing demographic pressure on limited resources, pushing cultivation onto marginal lands and causing real wages to decline. Urbanization, while a sign of progress, created dangerously high population densities in cities with poor sanitation, making them breeding grounds for disease.

The Black Death's impact. The Black Death (1348-1351) was a catastrophic turning point, wiping out an estimated 25 million people (about a third of Europe's population) in just a few years. This pandemic, along with subsequent recurrent epidemics, wars, and famines, kept population levels stagnant for the next 150 years. These crises were not merely demographic events but profound rebalancing mechanisms, often leading to:

  • Labor shortages
  • Increased real wages for survivors
  • Abandonment of marginal lands

A mysterious retreat. Despite high fertility rates (crude birth rates often above 30-35 per thousand), Europe's population remained relatively small due to persistently high mortality, especially infant and adolescent mortality (150-350 deaths per 1000 births in the first year). Mysteriously, the deadliest killer, the plague, largely vanished from Europe after the late 17th century, an event not attributable to human medical advances but rather to an "obscure ecological revolution." This disappearance, coupled with technological and economic achievements, allowed Europe to embark on its demographic revolution without succumbing to Malthusian traps.

4. Technological Ingenuity: Harnessing Nature's Power

Undoubtedly “modern technology is the extrapolation of that of the Western Middle Ages, not merely in detail but also in the spirit that infuses it.”

Medieval innovation. Contrary to the notion of technological stagnation in classical times, the Dark Ages and subsequent medieval period saw a remarkable acceleration in technological innovation, particularly in mechanical aspects. Europeans demonstrated a strong capacity for assimilation, adopting and improving inventions from other cultures, such as:

  • The heavy plow (Slavic origin)
  • The horseshoe (Celtic origin)
  • New methods for harnessing draft animals (Chinese origin)
  • The windmill (Persian origin)

Harnessing inanimate energy. A key development was the widespread application of water and wind power beyond grain milling to diverse industrial processes. Water mills, for instance, were adapted for:

  • Fulling cloth (revolutionizing the textile industry)
  • Iron production
  • Sawing wood
  • Paper manufacturing
    This marked the beginning of Europe's shift from reliance on animal and human power to inanimate energy sources, a distant precursor to the Industrial Revolution.

A mechanical outlook. The period also saw original European inventions like spectacles, the mechanical clock, and firearms. This constant preoccupation with machines fostered a "mechanical outlook" that permeated art, philosophy, and science. This mindset, emphasizing experimentation and the application of mathematics, laid the intellectual foundation for the Scientific Revolution and the eventual convergence of science and technology.

5. Financial Innovation: Fueling Trade and Enterprise

The basic fact in the economic history of Europe from the eleventh century onward was that savings were activated for productive purposes to a degree inconceivable in previous centuries.

Mobilizing capital. From the 11th century, Europe saw significant advancements in business techniques that facilitated the transformation of savings into productive investment. The contratto di commenda (or collegantia in Venice) was a pivotal innovation, allowing individuals, from wealthy merchants to humble widows, to invest small or large sums in trading expeditions, spreading risk and mobilizing capital. This system functioned much like an early stock exchange, democratizing access to investment.

Evolving business structures. As trade became more routine, the commenda evolved into the compagnia, often family-based, which pooled assets for longer-term ventures. The introduction of bills of exchange further enhanced capital liquidity and international mobility, though it also increased financial risk. These innovations, coupled with a growing sense of business honesty and legal frameworks, fostered an environment conducive to large-scale commercial and manufacturing enterprises.

Banking and liquidity. Money-changers evolved into bankers, taking deposits and making payments, eventually operating on a fractional reserve basis. This creation of "ink money" significantly increased market liquidity, alleviating the chronic shortage of precious metals that had constrained the medieval economy. While prone to crises and bankruptcies due to inherent risks and lack of central bank support, these banking activities were crucial for financing the expanding European economy.

6. The Medieval Boom and Bust: Expansion, Crisis, and Recovery

The 150 years that followed the beginning of the fourteenth century were thus a time of wrack and ruin across Tuscany, Flanders, France, Castiglia, and Catalonia.

Thirteenth-century zenith. The period 1000-1300 witnessed a "Great Expansion" across Europe, driven by technological advances, urban growth, and internal/external colonization (e.g., the Reconquista in Spain, the Drang nach Osten in Germany). Leading regions like northern Italy and the southern Low Countries saw booming international trade, textile manufacturing, and construction. This era was characterized by rising real incomes for all social strata, leading to a general improvement in living standards and a pervasive sense of optimism.

Fourteenth-century downturn. The early 14th century brought a series of severe crises. Demographic pressure on land led to diminishing returns and falling real wages. Major financial centers like Florence experienced devastating bankruptcies (e.g., Bardi and Peruzzi banks in the 1340s), exacerbated by costly wars and political instability. The Hundred Years' War (1337-1453) ravaged France, destroying capital and populations.

Rebalancing and regional shifts. The Black Death (1348-1351) and subsequent epidemics, while catastrophic in human terms, rebalanced the labor-to-land ratio. This led to:

  • Increased real wages for workers
  • Improved living conditions for the lower classes
  • A shift in economic power, with some regions (e.g., Hanseatic League, Lombardy, Portugal, southern Germany) experiencing growth and innovation, even as others declined.

7. Global Horizons: American Silver and New World Products

The massive inflow of gold and silver from the Americas and the consequent expansion of effective demand might have been expected to stimulate the economic development of the country.

American treasure. From the early 16th century, vast quantities of gold and silver from Mexico and Peru flowed into Europe, primarily through Spain. This influx, estimated by E.J. Hamilton to be millions of kilograms, ended Europe's medieval shortage of precious metals and dramatically increased international liquidity. This "Price Revolution" (1500-1620) saw average prices rise by 300-400%, stimulating demand and production across Europe.

Global trade networks. American silver became the primary means for Europe to finance its chronic trade deficits with the Baltic and, crucially, with Asia. European powers, particularly the Dutch and English East India Companies, used silver to purchase highly sought-after Asian goods like spices, textiles, tea, and porcelain. This established complex, multilateral trade networks, with silver flowing eastward and commodities westward, making intercontinental trade a major driver of European economies.

New World products. The expansion brought a host of new products to Europe, profoundly impacting diet, medicine, and social habits. Key introductions included:

  • Foodstuffs: Tomatoes, maize, beans, and the potato (which later helped solve Europe's food problem).
  • Drugs/Medicaments: Guaiacum, cinchona, sarsaparilla, curare, ipecac.
  • Luxury/Social Goods: Tobacco, cocoa (chocolate), coffee, tea, and porcelain.
    These new commodities fueled new industries (e.g., sugar refining, tobacco processing) and created immense profits, contributing to capital accumulation in trading nations.

8. The Scientific Revolution: A New Mindset for Progress

The "moderns" of the seventeenth century, in their reaction against traditional values and in their effort to impose the experimental method, set themselves doggedly to reappraise the work of craftsmen.

Challenging antiquity. The discoveries of new worlds, the proof of a round Earth, and advancements in navigation and weaponry fueled a profound cultural revolution in the 17th century. This era saw an intellectual battle between the "ancients" (upholding dogma and classical authority) and the "moderns" (advocating reason and experimentation). The "moderns" triumphed, leading to the "mechanization of the world view" and a new optimism about human progress.

Empiricism and quantification. This shift fostered the experimental method and the application of mathematics to explain reality, particularly in physics and mechanics. A statistical approach emerged, with figures and data gaining new importance in understanding population, trade, and economic dimensions. Pioneers like Graunt, Petty, and Halley made the first demographic estimates and national income calculations, laying the groundwork for modern statistics.

Bridging science and technology. Crucially, the Scientific Revolution began to bridge the historical divide between "science" (philosophy) and "technology" (artisan craft). Figures like Francis Bacon and Galileo emphasized collaboration between scientists and artisans. The Royal Society actively documented trades and techniques. This convergence, coupled with increased literacy and the rise of precision instrument makers, created a fertile ground for the practical application of scientific knowledge, a vital precondition for industrial development.

9. The Energy Crisis: Forcing Innovation and Industrialization

The energy crisis helped instead to push England down the road towards industrialization.

Timber scarcity. From the 12th century, and acutely in the 16th and 17th centuries, Europe faced a severe timber crisis. Population growth, expanding ocean navigation, shipbuilding, and the metallurgical industry (requiring charcoal for smelting) led to rapid deforestation. Prices for timber and charcoal soared, creating a critical bottleneck for economic activity, particularly in England.

Coal as a solution. Faced with dwindling wood supplies, England was compelled to turn to its abundant coal deposits. Though initially viewed with suspicion due to its "toxic fumes," coal became increasingly adopted for domestic heating and industrial processes like brick-making, glass production, soap manufacturing, and eventually iron-smelting. This shift was not a smooth transition but a forced adaptation to a pressing environmental challenge.

Catalyst for industrialization. The necessity of exploiting coal drove significant innovation in mining and transportation. The demand for coal stimulated shipping and shipbuilding, creating a "nursery and school of seamen." This forced reliance on coal and iron, rather than cotton, played a critical role in shaping the Industrial Revolution in England, demonstrating how a crisis could be ingeniously leveraged to create new comparative advantages and drive long-term structural change.

10. Shifting Tides: The Decline of Mediterranean Powers

By the end of the seventeenth century, however, the Mediterranean was clearly a backward area.

Spain's artificial prosperity. Despite a massive influx of American gold and silver in the 16th century, Spain failed to develop its productive capacity. A lack of skilled labor, social prejudice against trade, and restrictive guilds meant that increased demand was met by foreign imports rather than domestic production. This "rain on a roof" effect saw American treasure flow through Spain to other European nations, fueling their economic development while Spain accumulated debt and declined into a state of "artificial prosperity."

Italy's structural rigidities. Italy, a leading economic power until the 16th century, suffered from a combination of external shocks (wars, plague) and internal rigidities. Guilds stifled innovation and maintained high production costs, making Italian goods uncompetitive against cheaper, lighter products from northern Europe. This led to a drastic decline in exports and massive disinvestment in manufacturing, shifting capital and labor back to agriculture.

Loss of dynamism. Both Spain and Italy experienced a decline in entrepreneurial spirit and a hardening of social structures. While Spain became over-reliant on foreign goods and bankers, Italy's once-vibrant cities lost their dynamism, and its intellectual and technological leadership waned. By the end of the 17th century, the economic center of gravity in Europe had decisively shifted from the Mediterranean to the North Sea, marking a profound reordering of European power.

11. England's Ascent: Leveraging Crises for Global Dominance

The English, to say the truth, are judicious people and of great intelligence, and are very ingenious in their inventions.

From periphery to power. At the end of the 15th century, England was an "underdeveloped country" compared to Italy or the Low Countries, primarily exporting raw wool. However, by the 17th century, it had transformed into a dynamic, globally dominant economic power. This ascent was driven by a series of strategic responses to challenges and a unique blend of cultural and material factors.

Strategic adaptation and innovation. England leveraged its wool production to develop a thriving woollen cloth industry, shifting from raw material export to manufactured goods. When faced with competition and crises (like the 1550s export slump), England diversified into new manufactures (iron, lead, glass, silk) and aggressively pursued new markets in North Africa and the Middle East. Key drivers included:

  • Privateering: A significant source of capital accumulation.
  • Mercantilist policies: Protectionist measures like the Navigation Acts boosted English shipping and trade.
  • Immigration: Skilled "Walloons" and French Huguenots brought advanced technologies and entrepreneurial spirit, particularly in textiles, glass, and horology.

Global commercial network. By the 17th century, London became the world's largest metropolis and a pivotal hub for a complex, multilateral global trade network. This trade, especially in tropical commodities (re-exports), provided crucial purchasing power for European imports (timber, iron, silk) and fueled capital accumulation. This commercial revolution fostered a new class of entrepreneurs, refined business ethics, and created an institutional structure that laid the direct groundwork for the Industrial Revolution.

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4.29 su 5
Media di 277 valutazioni da Goodreads e Amazon.

Le recensioni di Prima della Rivoluzione Industriale sono per lo più positive, con una valutazione media di 4,29 su 5. Molti apprezzano la capacità di Cipolla di coniugare rigore accademico e una prosa accessibile e coinvolgente, sottolineando l’uso sapiente di dati, grafici e aneddoti per illuminare la storia economica europea pre-industriale. I lettori riconoscono l’ampiezza del volume, che abbraccia tendenze demografiche, tecnologia, commercio e sviluppo urbano nell’arco di sette secoli. Tra le critiche, invece, si segnalano una copertura non sempre equilibrata — in particolare il confronto tra l’ascesa dell’Inghilterra e quella dell’Olanda — concetti talvolta superati, uno stile accademico a tratti arido e un trattamento a volte superficiale degli aspetti sociali.

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Sull'autore

Carlo M. Cipolla (15 agosto 1922 – 5 settembre 2000) è stato un celebre storico dell’economia italiano, nato a Pavia, dove si è laureato nel 1944. Inizialmente desiderava insegnare storia e filosofia, ma fu sotto la guida del professor Franco Borlandi all’Università di Pavia che scoprì la sua vera passione per la storia economica. Proseguì i suoi studi alla Sorbona e alla London School of Economics. Dopo aver iniziato la carriera di insegnante a Catania, Cipolla ricoprì incarichi in diverse città italiane prima di diventare borsista Fulbright nel 1953. Infine, ottenne una cattedra piena all’Università della California, Berkeley, consolidando così la sua fama come una delle figure più autorevoli della storiografia economica.

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