Silver Trade AP World History DBQ
Silver Trade AP World History DBQ
Silver Trade AP World History DBQ
the worlds first global trade network. Silver linked the two continents of North America,
Asia, and Europe, acting as a major trade good in the first sustained trade between the
three continents. The silver trade had many unique patterns, and these can be
explained by the supply and demand of silver around the world. Conversion to a silver
currency in Ming China, newly found deposits of silver in Japan and Spanish America,
and European demand for luxury goods are all underlying forces that shaped the global
The first key to unlocking the patterns of the global silver trade is uncovering why
silver was traded, as this would only happen if there was a profit in selling silver.
Originally, the Ming dynasty used paper currency, but rapid inflation soon caused it to
be unusable, with silver gradually taking over as the currency of choice. This trend
culminated in the Single-Whip tax reform, which consolidated taxes under a single tax to
be paid in silver. Suddenly, every business in China was demanding silver, as illustrated
in Xu Dunqiu Mings essay The Changing Times: Now, when you have your cloth dyed,
you receive a bill, which must be paid in silver. Ming was most likely writing at the time
of this reform, and being a writer, had a contemporary and accurate account of the
trends going on at the time in China. This demand for silver caused large exports of
the amount of silver being shipped to China from Manila: The streets of Manila could
be paved with granite cobblestones brought from China as ballast in Chinese ships
of large silver deposits in Spanish America and Japan. Large amounts of silver were
mined and shipped to Europe and Manila for eventual trade in Asia. By far the largest
silver deposit was Potosi, in Spanish America. The magnitude of the silver extraction
silver. This was painted by an anonymous painted, so there is a chance that there is no
criticism toward the Spanish exploitation of natives or praise of Spanish power. Also, the
painting is done in a style such that there are no dramatic or emotion provoking
Potosi. All in all, the enormous amount of wealth extracted at Potosi exceeded 326
million silver coins This does not count the great amount of silver taken secretly to
The final piece in the puzzle of the patterns of the global silver trade was the
European desire for Asian luxury goods. Europeans used silver, a commodity in its own
right, to trade for these goods such as silk, tea, and porcelain. Silver wasnt simply a
out of China at the same time. The Portuguese would use Japanese silver to buy
Chinese luxury goods, as described by Ralph Fitch. Fitch was a British merchant at the
time, so his account would most likely be an observation on the trade between China
and Portugal from the perspective of a merchant who would want to get involved in this
profitable trade as well. The British, too, bought Asian goods with nothing but silver and
sold them in Europe due to high demand, as recorded by Charles DAvenant, an
English political economist. DAvenant was writing during a debate on restricting Asian
economist, the scholarly audience he is writing for, make this account reliable of the
Silver had a varying impact on the various countries which were the most heavily
involved in the silver trade. In Spain, silver was used to fund military expeditions in
Europe, and Spanish authorities monopolized the production of silver, eliminating any
traces of market capitalism. In Japan, silver profits were used to fund wars to unite the
country under a single shogun, were invested in public works, and the government
worked with merchants to create market capitalism. In China, silver was used more and
more as an official currency. When silver prices crashed due to supply meeting
demand, Spain lost most of its income, and thus power. Japan fared well, as its
economy wasnt reliant on silver. Its early market capitalism also set the stage for its
industrial revolution in the 1800s. Finally, in China, high inflation caused prices to rise in
silver, and this weakened the reigning Ming. he devaluement of silver set the stage for
Another example of a commodity driving trade patterns can be found in the salt
within West Africa. Supply of salt and demand for gold in the Saharan desert and North
Africa drove a trade in the Niger river area, where gold was mined. These factors
contributed to the vast caravan trade that took place across the Sahara, and the
emergence of cosmopolitan trading cities such as Timbuktu. Also, the interactions with
North African merchants caused the conversion of West African kings to Islam. All in all,
pattern of global trade can be explained through the mechanics of supply and demand,