How the West Won: The Neglected Story of the Triumph of Modernity (83 page)

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Authors: Rodney Stark

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BOOK: How the West Won: The Neglected Story of the Triumph of Modernity
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Casement, Roger,
365

cash economy,
132–33

Cassander,
27

Castillo, Bernal Díaz del,
221
,
234

catapults,
24

cathedrals,
83
,
147

Catholic Church: causes of the Reformation and,
264–65
; Galileo and,
318–20
; opposition to translations of Bible,
352
; organization and contributions during the Dark Ages,
116–18
; papal opposition to African slavery,
229
; response to Luther’s writings,
266
,
267
; rise of capitalism and,
131–37
; support for democracy in northern Italy,
129
; theological reformulations affecting price and interest,
135–37
; wealth during the Dark Ages,
131–32
.
See also
Christendom; Christianity

Catholic Reformation,
280

Catholic slave codes,
230–32

cavalry: Battle of Hastings and,
99
; Battle of Tours/Poitiers and, 89;
during the Dark Ages,
85–86
; Roman,
64

censuses: in England,
99

Ceuta,
205

Chadwick, Sir Henry,
34–35

Chadwick, Owen,
273

Chaeronea, Battle of,
31

chain-mail armor,
84
,
95

Champlain, Samuel de,
225

charcoal,
189

chariot races,
54

Charlemagne,
88
,
90–91
,
93
,
97
,
118
,
124

Charles the Simple,
98

Charles V (Holy Roman Emperor): Knights of Malta and,
288
; Luther and,
263
,
267
; Ottomans and,
286
,
288
,
289
; Schmalkaldic Wars,
277
; Spanish Empire and,
241
,
243–44
,
255
,
262

Cheng Ho,
44–45

Cherokee Indians,
236–37

child labor,
335

chimneys,
156–57

China: conceptions hostile to science,
316
; European trade with and knowledge of,
200–202
; exploitation, stagnation, and repression in ancient China,
10
,
11–13
; gunpowder and,
196
; magnetic compass and,
203
; military capabilities compared to the West,
182
; modernity and,
370
; opposition to change and progress,
43–45
; trade with Italy,
192–93
; views of commerce,
344
; Western gunboats and,
361–62

Chirot, Daniel,
370

Christendom: Christianizing the Vikings,
113–16
; Church of Power and Church of Piety,
112–13
; concept of,
94
; impact of church-state relationships on the Reformation,
273–74
; organization and contributions of the Church during the Dark Ages,
116–18
; organized diversity and the Reformation,
280–81
.
See also
Catholic Church; Christianity

Christian III (king of Denmark),
273–74

Christianity: abolition of European slavery and,
121–25
; Aristotelian logic and,
28
; the Black Death and,
150–52
; blamed for the fall of Rome,
60
; concepts of a rational creator,
39–40
; early Christianity and Greek philosophy,
35–38
,
39–40
; faith in progress,
40–42
; free will and,
120–21
; Goths and,
65
; human rights and,
125
; impact of church-state relationships on the Reformation,
273–74
; modernity and the Christian notions of God,
45
; rise in the Roman era,
57–59
; rise of capitalism and,
119
,
131–37
,
139
; rise of science and,
315–18
,
320
,
321
; “Romanization” of,
59
; technological progress and,
321
; treatment of Christians in Islamic culture,
299–300
; virtue of work,
134–35

Christian missionaries.
See
missionaries

Christian persecution: Anglicanism and the persecution of dissenters in England,
263
,
277
; in Islamic culture,
300–301
,
302
; in Rome,
58–59

Christian theology: natural philosophy and,
160–62
; rationalism and,
159–60
; rise of science and,
315–18
,
320

Chrysippus,
38

Church of Piety,
113
,
280

Church of Power,
112–13
,
280

Cicero,
120
,
343

City of God
(Augustine),
36
,
39

city-states (Greek): constitutions and,
19
; economics and,
20–21
; endemic warfare and,
29–31
; size and independence of,
14
; slavery and,
29

city-states (Italian capitalist),
138–39

Clearchus,
17

Clegg, Brian,
172

Clement IV (pope),
172

Clement of Alexandria,
36
,
39
,
161–62

Clement VI (pope),
149
,
151–52

Clendinnen, Inga,
222

clepsydra.
See
water clocks

Clermont
(steamboat),
333

climate and climatic changes: historical study of,
143
; methods of studying,
145
; during the Middle Ages,
144–48

clinker-built ships,
195

Clovis II,
124

Cluny,
133
,
134

coal mining,
189–90

coal power: English capitalism and,
189–91
; Industrial Revolution and,
343

Cobbett, William,
352

Cochin,
209

Code Noir
,
230–31
,
232

codfish,
96

Código Negro Español
,
231
,
232

cog (ship),
80
,
195

Cohen, Edward,
20

Cohne, I. Bernard,
179

Colish, Marcia L.,
163–64

Collins, Randall,
133
,
134

Colón, Cristóbal.
See
Columbus, Christopher

colonialism.
See
European colonialism; New World colonialism

Colosseum,
55

Columbus, Christopher (Cristóbal Colón),
195
,
199
,
210–13
,
233
,
237
,
242

command economy: in ancient empires,
11–13
; the Ottomans and,
294

commerce: ancient views of,
343–44
; the Industrial Revolution and,
344–46

commune: of Venice,
127

communications: European colonialism and,
363–64

Communist Manifesto
(Marx and Engels),
339

Company of Cathay,
226

compasses,
203–4

Concordat of Bologna,
273

Confucianism,
160

Constantine,
54
,
59
,
62–63
,
112

Constantinople: Ottoman capture of,
284–86
; sack of in 1204,
105
; Viking attack on,
93–94

Constantius,
343

constitutions: the Greeks and,
19

conversion.
See
religious conversion

Copernicus, Nicolaus,
37
,
170
,
178–79
,
312

Cortés, Hernán,
220–21

Cort, Henry,
329

cotton gin,
327

cotton mills: child labor and,
335
; Industrial Revolution and,
326–27

Council of Granges,
124

Counter-Reformation,
280

Creasy, Edward,
89

Crécy, Battle of,
196

credit: development of capitalism and,
133

crop rotation,
77

crossbows,
85
,
99
,
109

crossbow teams,
109

Crouzet, François,
347

Crowley, Roger,
290

crusader kingdoms: conquest by the Muslims,
283–84
,
286–88
; origins and overview of,
107–9

Crusades: crossbows,
85
; crusader kingdoms,
107–9
,
283–84
,
286–88
; events of the First Crusade,
103–5
(
see also
First Crusade); Italian naval strength and,
195
; the Normans and,
94
; origins of,
84
,
102
; recruitment of knights,
103
; victories against the Muslims,
105–7
; “war crimes” and massacres,
109–12

Cuba,
211

“cultural imperialism,”
366

Curtin, Philip,
228
,
359

Cuzco,
224
,
242

Cyrus the Younger,
17

Da Gama, Vasco,
195
,
199

d’Ailly, Pierre,
177
,
210

Dampier, Sir William,
159

dams,
78

Dark Ages: Carolingian interlude,
90–91
; decline of literary and artistic works,
73–74
; defining factors,
71
; disunity and progress during,
69
; economic civilization of the Germanic peoples,
73
; geography of disunity,
74
; high culture,
82–83
; literacy in,
72–73
; manufacturing and trade,
72
,
80–82
; migrations and disunity,
75–76
; the Muslim threat and the Battle of Tours/Poitiers,
86–90
; myth of,
70–74
,
91
.
69
; standard of living in,
73
,
77–78
; technological progress,
76–80
; warfare and innovation,
84–86

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