In the name of Allah the Merciful

The Long Millennium: Affluence, Architecture and Its Dark Matter Economy

(Global Histories Before Globalisation) by Mark Jarzombek, B0CMBSMJ7S, 1032244143, 103224416X, 1003820875, 9781032244167, 9781003820871, 9781032244143, 978-1032244167, 978-1003820871, 978-1032244143

10 $

English | 2024 | Original PDF

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This  book argues that long-distance trade in luxury items – such as  diamonds, gold, cinnamon, scented woods, ivory and pearls, all of which  require little overhead in their acquisition and were relatively easy to  transport – played a foundational role in the creation of what we would  call "global trade" in the first millennium CE. The book coins the term  "dark matter economy" to better describe this complex – though mostly  invisible – relationship to normative realities.

The  first full integration of dark matter economy with the emerging global  flows took place in South India and Sri Lanka at the beginning of the  millennium. The book then moves to other places in the world – "sweet  spots" – where a particular type of affluence was generated through the  trade in luxury goods. This upstream affluence manifested itself in the  creation of shrines, palaces, temples and engineering works that all  thickened the landscape of memory, control and extraction and also  served as a defense mechanism against intrusions from afar. The book  also explains the collapse of dark matter economy as a result of the  cumulative energies of colonialism, modernization and nationalism that  make it hard for us today to come to terms with this history.

The  Long Millennium will appeal to students and scholars alike studying the  trade networks and economics of the early Middle Ages as well as anyone  interested in the effect of trade onmedieval society in the first millennium CE.