This MCQ module is based on: The Pre-modern World & 19th-Century Economy
The Pre-modern World & 19th-Century Economy
The Pre-modern World & the Nineteenth-Century Global Economy
India and the Contemporary World-II | Chapter III: The Making of a Global World
The Pre-modern World — How Did Silk Routes and Trade Shape Early Globalisation?
The term globalisation? typically brings to mind the economic system of the last five decades. Yet the process of building a globally connected world stretches far back in time — through centuries of trade, migration, the movement of capital, and the exchange of ideas. Throughout history, human societies have grown steadily more interlinked. Ancient travellers, merchants, priests, and pilgrims covered vast distances seeking knowledge, economic opportunity, spiritual fulfilment, or refuge from persecution. Along the way, they carried goods, money, skills, ideas, inventions, and even germs.
Consider this: as early as 3000 BCE, a thriving coastal trade connected the Indus Valley civilisations with present-day West Asia. For more than a millennium, cowries? (seashells used as a form of currency) from the Maldives reached as far as China and East Africa. Even the long-distance spread of disease-carrying germs may be traced to the seventh century, and by the thirteenth century such biological transmission had become an unmistakable feature of global interaction.
1.1 Silk Routes — Linking the World
The Silk Routes? offer a vivid illustration of vibrant pre-modern trade and cultural connections. The name itself highlights the importance of Chinese silk cargoes moving westward. Historians have identified multiple silk routes — over land and by sea — that knitted together vast regions of Asia while linking them to Europe and northern Africa. These routes are known to have existed since before the Common Era and flourished until the fifteenth century.
However, silk was not the only commodity exchanged. Chinese pottery, Indian and Southeast Asian textiles, and spices also travelled along these pathways. In return, precious metals — gold and silver — flowed from Europe to Asia. Trade was always accompanied by cultural exchange: early Christian missionaries almost certainly used these routes to reach Asia, and Muslim preachers followed a few centuries later. Even before them, Buddhism had spread from eastern India in several directions through the intersecting points along the silk routes.
1.2 Food Travels — Spaghetti and Potato
Food provides striking examples of long-distance cultural exchange. Traders and travellers introduced new crops wherever they went. Take the case of noodles and spaghetti — it is believed that noodles travelled westward from China and eventually became spaghetti. Another theory suggests that Arab traders brought pasta to fifth-century Sicily (an island now part of Italy). Similar preparations were also known in India and Japan, so the true origin may never be conclusively established. Yet such possibilities hint at the remarkable extent of cultural contact in the pre-modern era.
Many everyday foods — potatoes, soya, groundnuts, maize, tomatoes, chillies, and sweet potatoes — were unknown outside the Americas until roughly five centuries ago. They were introduced to Europe and Asia only after Christopher Columbus accidentally reached the Americas. Ireland's poorest peasants became so reliant on the potato that when a disease destroyed the crop in the mid-1840s, hundreds of thousands perished from starvation, and twice that number emigrated in search of livelihood.
1.3 Conquest, Disease, and Trade
The pre-modern world contracted dramatically in the sixteenth century after European sailors discovered a sea route to Asia and successfully crossed the Atlantic to the Americas. For centuries, the Indian Ocean had been a centre of thriving trade in goods, people, knowledge, and customs. The Indian subcontinent occupied a central position in these networks, and the entry of Europeans helped redirect some of these flows towards Europe.
Before European contact, the Americas had been largely isolated from the rest of the world. From the sixteenth century onward, their abundant crops and minerals began to transform trade and livelihoods everywhere. Silver from mines in present-day Peru and Mexico enriched Europe and financed its commerce with Asia. Legends of South America's fabled wealth (El Dorado, the city of gold) inspired numerous European expeditions in the seventeenth century.
The Spanish and Portuguese conquest of the Americas was well advanced by the mid-sixteenth century. Critically, the most devastating weapon wielded by the Spanish conquerors was not a conventional weapon at all — it was the germs they carried, especially smallpox?. Because the indigenous peoples of the Americas had been isolated for millennia, they possessed no immunity against European diseases. Smallpox spread deep into the continent ahead of any European explorers, decimating entire communities and paving the way for conquest.
By the eighteenth century, plantations worked by enslaved Africans were growing cotton and sugar for European markets. China and India, once the world's wealthiest nations and leaders of Asian trade, saw their global roles shift. China retreated into relative isolation from the fifteenth century, and the growing importance of the Americas moved the centre of world trade westward. Europe emerged as the new hub of global commerce.
The Nineteenth-Century Global Economy — Trade, Migration and Technology (1815–1914)
The nineteenth century brought profound transformations. Economic, political, social, cultural, and technological factors interacted in complex ways. Economists identify three types of international economic flows during this period:
These three flows were deeply interwoven and affected people's lives more profoundly than ever before. Though labour migration was often more restricted than the movement of goods or capital, examining all three together gives us the most complete picture of the nineteenth-century world economy.
2.1 A World Economy Takes Shape
The story begins with the changing pattern of food production and consumption in industrial Europe. Traditionally, countries preferred to be self-sufficient in food. But in nineteenth-century Britain, self-sufficiency came at the cost of lower living standards and social conflict.
Population growth from the late eighteenth century had pushed up demand for food grains. As cities expanded and industries grew, agricultural prices rose sharply. Under pressure from wealthy landowners, the British government restricted corn (grain) imports through the Corn Laws?. Dissatisfied with high food prices, industrialists and urban dwellers campaigned for and secured the abolition of these laws.
Once the Corn Laws were repealed, cheaper food could be imported. British agriculture could not compete with imports, leading to vast areas of uncultivated land and widespread unemployment. Displaced workers flocked to cities or migrated overseas. As food prices fell, British consumption rose. Faster industrial growth also boosted incomes, increasing food imports further. Worldwide — in eastern Europe, Russia, America, and Australia — land was cleared and food production expanded to satisfy British demand.
The textbook asks you to prepare a flow chart showing how Britain's decision to import food led to increased migration to America and Australia. Think through the chain of cause and effect:
Nearly 50 million people emigrated from Europe to America and Australia during the nineteenth century. Some 150 million people worldwide left their homes in search of better opportunities. By 1890, a global agricultural economy had fully taken shape.
A similar shift occurred closer to home in western Punjab, where the British Indian government built irrigation canals that transformed semi-desert wastes into fertile agricultural land for growing wheat and cotton for export. These Canal Colonies? were settled by peasants brought from other parts of Punjab.
Between 1820 and 1914, world trade multiplied an estimated 25 to 40 times. Nearly 60 per cent of this trade comprised primary products — agricultural goods like wheat and cotton, and minerals such as coal.
2.2 Role of Technology
Technology played a crucial enabling role in these transformations. Railways, steamships, and the telegraph were key inventions without which the nineteenth-century global economy could not have emerged. Yet technological advances often resulted from broader social, political, and economic forces. Colonisation, for instance, stimulated new investments in transport — faster railways, lighter wagons, and larger ships helped carry food more cheaply from distant farms to final markets.
The trade in meat offers an illuminating example. Until the 1870s, live animals were shipped from America to Europe, but many died or fell ill during the voyage, making meat an expensive luxury. The development of refrigerated ships? transformed the industry: animals could now be slaughtered at the point of origin (in America, Australia, or New Zealand) and transported as frozen meat. This reduced shipping costs, lowered meat prices in Europe, and allowed the poor to enjoy a more varied diet including meat, butter, and eggs alongside the earlier monotony of bread and potatoes.
Timeline — From Pre-modern Trade to the 19th-Century Global Economy
L4 AnalyseIndus Valley Trade
Active coastal trade between the Indus Valley civilisations and West Asia was already underway.Silk Routes Flourish
Multiple overland and maritime silk routes connected Asia, Europe, and North Africa, exchanging silk, pottery, textiles, spices, and precious metals.European Maritime Expansion
European sailors discovered sea routes to Asia and the Americas. Spanish and Portuguese colonisation of the Americas began, aided by the devastating impact of smallpox on indigenous populations.Irish Potato Famine
Crop failure led to mass starvation and emigration from Ireland, demonstrating the risks of global food dependency.Corn Laws Abolished
Britain scrapped the Corn Laws, opening its markets to cheap food imports and reshaping global agriculture.Refrigerated Shipping
New technology enabled frozen meat transport from the Americas and Australasia to Europe, lowering food costs for the European poor.Global Agricultural Economy
A complex worldwide system of food production, trade, labour migration, and capital flows had taken shape.World Trade Growth (1820–1914)
L3 ApplyWorld trade multiplied 25–40 times between 1820 and 1914. Nearly 60% was primary products.
Competency-Based Questions — The Pre-modern World & 19th-Century Economy
For each pair, choose the correct option:
(A) Both Assertion and Reason are true, and Reason correctly explains the Assertion.
(B) Both Assertion and Reason are true, but Reason does not correctly explain the Assertion.
(C) Assertion is true, but Reason is false.
(D) Assertion is false, but Reason is true.
Reason (R): Refrigerated ships allowed perishable food to be transported over long distances.
Reason (R): The Americas had been isolated from the rest of the world for millions of years, and the native population had no immunity against European diseases.
Reason (R): The Silk Routes facilitated the exchange of goods, religions, and cultural practices across continents.
Frequently Asked Questions — The Pre-modern World and the Nineteenth-Century Economy
What were the Silk Routes in Class 10 History?
The Silk Routes were ancient trade networks connecting Asia, Europe, and North Africa through which goods, ideas, and cultures were exchanged. Named after Chinese silk, they carried textiles, spices, precious metals, and religious ideas like Buddhism. NCERT Class 10 History Chapter 3 explains these routes demonstrate globalisation is not modern but has shaped the world since ancient times.
How did the Corn Laws affect global trade?
The Corn Laws restricted grain imports into Britain to protect domestic agriculture. When abolished in the 1840s, food could be imported freely, transforming global agriculture. Vast areas in Eastern Europe, Russia, America, and Australia were cleared for farming to supply British markets. Food prices fell, workers lost jobs, and millions migrated, creating an interconnected global food economy.
What was indentured labour migration in the 19th century?
Indentured labour was a system of bonded labour replacing slavery. Workers from India, China, and other countries signed contracts to work on plantations, mines, and railways in distant colonies for usually five years. Conditions were harsh with low wages and limited rights. Hundreds of thousands of Indian workers were sent to Caribbean islands, Mauritius, Fiji, and Malaya, driven by poverty and changing property laws.
What was the rinderpest epidemic and its impact on Africa?
Rinderpest was a devastating cattle disease that spread across Africa in the late 1880s, killing over 90% of cattle in many regions. European colonisers exploited this by seizing African lands, forcing communities into labour markets for mines and plantations, and establishing control through veterinary measures that restricted African autonomy.
How did technology change global trade in the 19th century?
Technology transformed trade through railways connecting inland regions to ports, steamships reducing shipping times, and refrigerated ships allowing perishable goods to reach distant markets. The telegraph enabled faster communication. Together, these created an integrated global economy where goods could flow freely between continents for the first time.