Why were merchants moving to the countryside in Europe during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries? Explain.
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In the 17th and 18th centuries, the merchants from municipalities in Europe started moving to the countryside as the supplies were accessible in abundance and at more affordable rates.
Also, the hand-operated laborers in the nation were in high numbers which were beneficial for enhancing production. As this was the time of industrialization, large-scale generation was a requirement to render the commodities to the global exchange and to depreciate the costs associated with buying supplies and arranging laborers in the town, and the wholesalers migrated to the farmland.
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In order to provide advances to peasant to produce goods for an international market
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