The Transformation of Europe
[2023-11-28 12:03:21]
Europe was a completely different place than over 200 years ago. From a modern perspective, the 18th century Europe will not be able to tell from the current state. But this new road to Europe is not a smooth ride, but rather a rude and vibrant journey. The introduction of a new way of thinking, the emergence of multiple revolution, the change of the style of government, and the improvement of leadership are the creation and extinction of many countries, the reorganization of the border, and the formation of the European Union, Europe in today's history book I brought it. It is difficult to compare with Europe.
The political transformation of Europe after the French Revolution did not end the empire throughout Europe. It is the opposite. Scandinavian countries and Western Europe countries benefited from the Industrial Revolution and were able to use steamships and railways as a tool to further expand the empire to Asia, Africa and the United States. In modern weapons, the British team achieved a good military victory in powerful India and China. And that is an unprecedented feat of the power of Europe. Even small countries like France, Germany and Belgium can make their own colonies using modern weapons and techniques (mainly in Africa)
Judging from the evidence gathered, there is no doubt that the change that happened in Europe is so important that it is unnoticed. In addition to affecting Europe, the world is feeling this influence even in modern times. The stone age culture, rituals and beliefs change not only in access to food, body coverings, evacuation centers, but also in rituals concerning death and burial, but the style depends on culture and place.
The social change in Europe and the ups and downs of the next 2 nd century (until the early 14 th century) have little pause until today. Medievalists talk about agriculture, technology, commerce, law, living, culture, expansion of military and colonial times, architecture and sculpture, and historical fraud, Chapter 2. 14. Regarding the holy foreskin which first appeared in the middle of the 11th century, see Amy · G · Rememens kneader while recalling the past history. For the legend of the monastery in the Medieval Southern France (Ithaca, New York, 1995), pages 172-81, for the comments, see Duby, L'an mil, pp. 222-26, Stephen Nichols, Jr. , Romanesque Sign: Initial medieval stories and iconography (New Haven, Connecticut, 1983), pp. 110-19, and Freed, "Endzeiterwartung", pp 451-61