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The cut off contact with Japan A+

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Q: What did not have an impact on Western Europe during the early fourteenth century?
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Did not have an impact on western Europe during the early fourteenth century?

The cut off contact with Japan A+


The economic social and political organization of Europe during the mid-fourteenth century is most commonly referred to as?

feudalism


What was dominant economic philosophy in western Europe during the seventeenth century?

mercantilism


Christianity became a political power in western Europe during what period?

In the early 4th century.


When did feudalism dominate Western Europe?

Feudalism dominated political life in Western Europe from the 9th Century to the beginning of the 14th Century. Feudal lords, rather than kings were the powerful rulers during this time in history.


During which century can it be inferred that The Masque of the Red Death probably occurred?

fourteenth


Between which years did the fourteenth century take place?

during the maya time


what were some important inventions in the fourteenth century?

Important inventions of the fourteenth century included the floating crane of the Holy Roman Empire and the Naval Mine of China during the Ming Dynasty.


What did the europeans in the fourteenth century do during times of famine to survive?

They killed and ate their draft animals.


What country developed the compass?

A magnetic compass was invented during the Chinese Han Dynasty bout 206 BC. For navigation it was used in China during the 11th Century. The first usage in Western Europe and Persia was during the 13th Century


How was western Europe like during 600 AD?

It was rough and it was the time when the Muslims invaded Western Europe.


How did climate change affect early fourteenth-century Europe?

The lives of all medieval Europeans were tied to the fortunes of agriculture. In the twelfth and thirteenth centuries a gradually warming climate lengthened the growing season in northern Europe, making it possible to grow more grain even on less arable land. This trend was reversed at the end of the thirteenth century and in the fourteenth century the European mainland became progressively colder. This caused changes in rainfall patterns, shortened the growing seasons and lessened the productivity of cereal agriculture. Europe's vulnerability to climatic change came in 1315 during the great famine in northern Europe.