What is proto industrialisation explain with example?
Answers
Answered by
0
Answer:
a company make a brand and popular him if they will succeed is called proto industrialisation
Answered by
0
Proto-industrialization is the geographic development of rural handicraft manufacturing for external markets, in addition to commercial agriculture.
About Proto-industrialization:
Proto-industrialisation refers to the period of industrialisation that existed before factories were established in England and Europe.
There was a massive large-scale industrial production for an international market, but it was not based on factories and was entirely handcrafted.
- In the 17th and 18th centuries, European merchants moved to the rural areas, providing money to peasants and artisans and being asked to produce for a global market.
- Even though rulers given different guilds the monopolistic right to generate and trade in particular products, vendors were restricted and told not to enlarge their production within towns.
- Poor peasants and artisans in the countryside eagerly and cheerfully agreed so that they could stay in the countryside as well as continue to cultivate their small plots.
- There was huge industrial manufacturing for an international market even before manufacturers began to appear in the landscapes of England and Europe. However, this was not premised on factories or industries.
- Many historians of the time regard this period of industrialization as proto-industrialization or the precursor to industrialization.
- During this time, the majority of goods were hand-manufactured or hand-made by trained craftspeople for the international market.
Example: Proto-industrial actions in Holland included export-oriented "glue-production, lime-burning, brickwork, barging, boat building, and textile manufacturing."
Similar questions