... in all Eastern products, at the close of the first quarter of the sixteenth century, and found that it must have come from the conquest of Egypt. The river of commerce was speedily dried up. The cities which had thriven on it were gradually ruined,... An Introduction to English Politics - Page 211by John Mackinnon Robertson - 1900 - 515 pagesFull view - About this book
| James Edwin Thorold Rogers - Economic history - 1888 - 584 pages
...must be at work which had been hitherto unsuspected, in the sudden and enormous rise of price ' in all Eastern products, at the close of the first quarter of the sixteenth century, and found that it must have come from the conquest of Egypt. The river of commerce was speedily dried... | |
| James Edwin Thorold Rogers - Economic history - 1888 - 576 pages
...must be at work which had been hitherto unsuspected, in the sudden and enormous rise of price iiia!! Eastern products, at the close of the first quarter of the sixteenth century, and found that it must have come from the conquest of Egypt. The river of commerce was speedily dried... | |
| John Mackinnon Robertson - Europe - 1912 - 510 pages
...in general. s As to these, consult M'Crie, History of the Reformation in Italy, ed. 1866, pp. 23-25. Work and Wages, p. 157 ; Holland, p. 49 ; Economic...all the privileges they had under the Mamelukes." Prof. Rogers states that "the thriving manufactures of Alexandria were at once destroyed." Scherer... | |
| John Mackinnon Robertson - Economics - 1918 - 320 pages
...he discovered a cause, " hitherto unsuspected," for the " sudden and enormous increase of price in all Eastern products at the close of the first quarter of the sixteenth century." As to this sudden rise in the price of all Eastern products, no detail or reference is given by Rogers... | |
| Frederick Turner, John Mack Faragher - History - 1999 - 280 pages
...cause must be at work which had hitherto been unsuspected in the sudden and enormous rise of prices in all Eastern products, at the close of the first quarter of the sixteenth century, and found that it must have come from the conquest of Egypt. The river of commerce was speedily dried... | |
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