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Course: Big History Project > Unit 8
Lesson 1: Expansion | 8.0- ACTIVITY: What Caused Expansion?
- WATCH: Unit 8 Overview | Big History Project
- ACTIVITY: Unit 8 Vocab Tracking
- ACTIVITY: DQ Notebook 8.0
- WATCH: Why Did Civilizations Expand?
- WATCH: The Modern Revolution
- READ: The Four World Zones
- Quiz: Expansion & Interconnection
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ACTIVITY: What Caused Expansion?
Purpose
This exercise will get you to think about the causes of the expansion of civilizations by completing an activity where you are the leader of a civilization. This is a great way for you to begin to think about the pros and cons associated with the development of agrarian civilizations.
Process
Imagine that you are part of the ruling class of an agrarian civilization. You have a problem: Your civilization is running low on resources! You have two options: raise taxes on your citizens or conquer a neighboring civilization. What will you do?
Download the worksheet and develop your plan.
For Further Discussion
In the Questions Area below, write the following:
- Whether you decided to raise taxes or conquer a neighboring civilization.
- Either a benefit or drawback of doing that.
Then, look at what other people wrote. If someone listed a benefit of their plan, you should comment and list a drawback. Or, if someone listed a drawback, respond with a benefit. Remember, it’s always best to look at things from multiple perspectives.
Want to join the conversation?
- One possible solution would be to actually do both -- if one is sure of success.
War/conquering neighbors -- is an expensive endeavour. One needs both manpower and resources to support and sustain that man power over any extended engagement. Initial reconnaissance, developing a strategy, training and preparing men and their families for battle, preservation and defense of existing resources, initial attack, short and prolonged battles, victory and eventual cleanup, recovery and return to normalcy all have a price.
Then there would be more resources to have to protect -- spread over a wider area --along with keeping rebels subdued.
Hopefully this would then provide a larger tax base with more goods and services to tax, provide a larger taxable population until the treasury is built up enough to invest in the latest technological advances or conquer the next neighbor -- whichever seems to provide the best return with the least investment.(15 votes)- Going to war without ample resources in place will cause further strain on resources, So, let the war mongers go to war against a population with more resources, they would likely lose, and the over all population will be reduced, and consequently reduce the strain on resources for the remaining population, and also lessen need for any taxes as well.(6 votes)
- Raising taxes on the population will deter population from further over consumption. If resources are renewable, population have better opportunity to manage resources next they are available .(6 votes)
- Raising taxes doesn't take that money out of circulation, it just shifts the purchasing power from the taxpayers to the taxers, who might then spend them internally, continuing to strain resources. Even the rulers putting tax money into mammoth building projects fails to take it out of circulation, since it is spent on labor and materials, and thence enters back into the economy. Unless the idea is to raise taxes, then purchase resources from outside the country. But that was one of the things that ancient Romans thought was dooming their country--the outflow of coinage from Rome to the East to purchase exotic goods. On the other hand they conquered Ptolemaic Egypt, which then served long and well as Rome's breadbasket.(7 votes)
- One possible solution is to do both
Because by conquering a neighboring village you would need resources and the supply's to do it. But if you just raise the taxes on your people there would be a time where everyone in the village would have nothing left to give, so i believe by doing both you are conquering new lands and getting more money and resources at the same time.(3 votes) - If I was ruling a agrarian civilization and we were running out of food storage I would conquer a neighboring civilization. I think this is the best choice. The benefit for this is conquering a civilization will get us what we need faster rather then raising taxes, taking time and money away from the people in the civilization. The drawback of doing this would be many people may get hurt and will not work out.(3 votes)
- i would raise taxes because at least if you raised taxes instead of conquering neighbors it would be a lot less expensive then just raising taxes(3 votes)
- I think the ruler must do some economic reforms (use his brain) for making the lifes of people better while it is not the dangerous of invasion. When there is the dengerous of the invasion he need to think and to estimate his opportunities and fight of course. I think so on my level of awareness, but I hope there can be such conditions (in life or in my brain) when there is not the opportunities of the invasion or my desire to win.(3 votes)
- he should think first before doing something good or bad(1 vote)
- I would slowly raise taxes because if you raise them too fast your people will get angry and if you go to war it's going to cost you more and it will cost your people's life's(2 votes)
- I would try to conquer a neighboring civilization because this way we will get more land and my population can continue to grow.(2 votes)
- if you just conquered the neighboring civilization with little to no resources and maybe weak warriors what makes you think you could win. i mean you would have no intel on what kind of strengths these other civilizations have. It would be better to raise taxes then conquer atleast you would have time to strengthen your warriors without having to worry about if they can fight and keep up or not. But that is how i look at it.(1 vote)
- CONQUER
In this particular situation, I would gather the strongest war minded individuals my town has to offer then spend one week and a half preparing them with multiple forms of combat, also explain our battle strategies that will be executed the day of the take over. Once the conquering is over I will have spared several surrendered soldiers then I will offer them a chance to join us whomever joins will allow us the ability to have more warriors for the next battles to come as well as serve as a worker in shops or on the crops their choice. This land we conquered can be used for crops expansion for families and live stock our benefit will be to have two sets of land thus allowing families a place to live to harvest fruits, vegetables, and grains on. This may also provide a resource for our people that will be tradable and saleable items This should definitely balance our civilizations and avoid any disruptions with our way of life.(2 votes) - If I were to lead a civilization, I would preferably conquer other nations after stabilizing my country internally, as raising taxes would, especially if I had just cemented power, not go so well (to put it mildly). But, if I were to go ahead and misjudge the ability my civilization had to incorporate the territories, the following drawbacks could occur: 1. Economic instability/inflation, political and internal destabilization, overextension geographically and politically of my civilization, and an increased cultural development around militarism and imperialism, furtherly sapping the morale of the citizens and strengthening the role of the military in daily and political life.(2 votes)