中世纪晚期和近代早期西班牙的经济生活,1085-1815

Hilario Casado Alonso, T. Ruiz
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引用次数: 0

摘要

1085年至1815年这段时间见证了西班牙经济史上的重要转变。从一个边疆社会到世界上最大的帝国之一的转变很快就伴随着随后的衰落。在中世纪的西班牙,两种经济、社会和政治结构并存:一种以各种穆斯林王国为代表,另一种以基督教徒为代表。从1035年到1212年,他们的疆界不断变化,损害了安达卢斯(穆斯林西班牙),最终在1492年征服了格拉纳达。经济活力导致基督教的扩张,反映在人口、农业、牲畜和商业增长在11、12和13世纪,可与其他中世纪王国相媲美。在14世纪中期危机(瘟疫、战争和国内冲突)的压力下,经济增长在14世纪下半叶部分停止。然而,与欧洲其他地区不同,中世纪晚期的危机对西班牙的影响较小,对伊比利亚地区的影响不同。15世纪后三分之二,就像葡萄牙的情况一样,卡斯蒂利亚王国的经济再次开始增长。卡斯蒂利亚成为西班牙的人口和经济中心,损害了其他地区,如加泰罗尼亚、纳瓦拉或Aragón,这些地区在早期更加发达。天主教君主的统治和改革使西班牙成为欧洲最繁荣的经济体之一,也是一个庞大帝国的中心。美洲和菲律宾的殖民统治以及他们无尽的财富进一步支撑了西班牙的经济。因此,大多数研究人员一致认为,西班牙在16世纪中叶达到了经济增长的高峰,尽管在一些地区,经济增长一直延续到16世纪80年代。经济主要以农业为基础,也受益于手工业的发展,尤其是贸易,为哈布斯堡王朝的扩张战争政策带来了巨大的税收收入。然而,在16世纪末之后,西班牙经济开始出现疲态,导致了严重的危机,这种危机至少持续到17世纪中期。这次经济衰退预示着西班牙历史上的重大转变。在12世纪和13世纪,西班牙的内陆地区是人口最多、最富裕的地区,但这些地区也是受危机影响最大的地区,而沿海地区将首先从经济衰退中复苏。尽管西班牙没有达到英国、法国或荷兰等其他国家所达到的高度,但18世纪出现了经济复苏,使西班牙经济超越了16世纪最后三分之一的水平。尽管如此,正如17世纪发生的那样,沿海地区的发展比内陆地区更为强烈,导致了现代西班牙的经济地理。
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Economic Life in Late Medieval and Early Modern Spain, 1085–1815
The period between 1085 to 1815 witnessed important transformations in Spain’s economic history. The transition from a frontier society to one of the largest empires in the world was soon followed by its subsequent decline. During Spain’s Middle Ages two kinds of economies, societies and political structures, existed side by side: One represented by the various Muslim kingdoms and another by the Christians. Their frontiers shifted constantly between 1035 and 1212 to the detriment of Al-Andalus (Muslim Spain), concluding with the conquest of Granada in 1492. Economic dynamism resulted in Christian expansion, reflected in demographic, agricultural, livestock, and commercial growth during the 11th, 12th, and 13th centuries and comparable to that of other medieval kingdoms. Under the stress of the mid-14th-century crisis (plagues, wars, and civil conflicts), economic growth came to a partial halt in the second half of the century. Yet, unlike other areas in Europe, the late medieval crisis had less of an impact in Spain, differently affecting some of the Iberian realms. After the second third of the 15th century, as it was the case in Portugal, the economy in the Crown of Castile began to grow once more. Castile became the demographic and economic hub of Spain to the detriment of other areas, such as Catalonia, Navarra, or Aragón, which had been more developed in earlier times. The Catholic Monarchs’ rule and their reforms made Spain one of the most prosperous economies in Europe and the center of a sprawling empire. The colonisation of the Americas and the Philippines with their untold wealth further bolstered Spain’s economy. As a result, most researchers agree that Spain reached the height of its economic growth in the mid-16th century, although in a number of regions growth extended into the 1580s. Based mostly in agriculture, the economy also benefitted from the development of crafts and, above all, trade, generating vast tax revenue for the Habsburg monarchy’s expansive policy of war. After the late 16th century, however, the Spanish economy began to show signs of fatigue, leading to severe crisis that lasted until at least the mid-17th century. This recession heralded a major shift in Spain’s history. Whereas it was the inland areas of Spain that were the most populated and wealthy during the 12th and 13th centuries, these areas were also most affected by the crisis, while the coastal regions would be the first to emerge from the recession. Although Spain failed to reach the heights attained in other countries such as Britain, France, or the Netherlands, an economic revival occurred during the 18th century, moving the Spanish economy beyond what it had been during the final third of the 16th century. Nonetheless, as had occurred in the 17th century, coastal areas developed more intensely than inland, leading to the economic geography of modern-day Spain.
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