Read How the West Won: The Neglected Story of the Triumph of Modernity Online
Authors: Rodney Stark
Tags: #History, #World, #Civilization & Culture
Le Testu, Guillaume,
246
Levant Company,
253
Lewis, Archibald R.,
85
liberty.
See
freedom
Liebeschuetz, J. H. W. G.,
50
Lindberg, David,
171–72
Lindisfarne monastery,
97
literature: decline during the Dark Ages,
73–74
; Greco-Roman,
52
; Greek,
22–23
Little, Lester K.,
137
Liverpool and Manchester Railway,
330–31
Li Yen-chang,
44
Locke, John,
159
Locomotion
(locomotive),
330
logic,
28
Louis IX (king of France),
168
Louis the Pious,
91
Luddites,
336–37
Luther, Martin: anti-Semitism and,
275
; biographical overview,
264
; Catholic Church’s response to,
266
,
267
; Charles V and,
244
,
263
; Diet of Worms,
244
,
267
; Ninety-Five Theses,
265–66
; the printing of his pamphlets and essays,
269–70
; “Reformation Treatises,”
266–67
; on the state of piety in Germany,
275
Luttwak, Eugene N.,
62
Luzzi, Mondino de,’
164
Lysander,
30
Macedon,
30–31
Macedonian Empire,
31
machine guns,
362
Macmurray, John,
42
MacQuarrie, Kim,
223
Madeira Islands,
206
Madina al-Salam,
86
Madre de Deus
(ship),
255
Magellan, Ferdinand,
215
magnetic compass,
203–4
Magnus, Albertus.
See
Albertus Magnus, Saint
Magnus II (king of Sweden),
150
Magnus, Shulamit,
152
Mahdi Revolt,
365
Maimonides, Moses,
302
Mälaren, Lake,
81
malaria,
359
Malik, Abd al-,
295–96
Malphighi, Marcello,
309–10
Maltby, William S.,
248
Maltese Falcon, The
(Hammett),
288
Malthus, Thomas,
157
Manco Inca,
224
Mandarins,
134
Maniakes, George,
100
Mansur, al-,
86
manufacturing: cotton industry,
326–27
; during the Dark Ages,
80–81
.
See also
iron industry; woolen industry
Maqrizi, Al-,
300
Marcus, G. J.,
254
Marinus of Tyre,
200
Marius, Gaius,
56
Marlowe, Christopher,
301
Mar Yaballaha III,
300
mathematics: illusions about Islamic contributions,
296
Mattock, James,
278
Maurya Empire,
10–11
Maxim gun,
362
Maxim, Hiram,
362
Mayans,
235–36
McNickle, D’Arcy,
234
Means, Russell,
237
medicine: Christian missionaries and,
367–68
; European colonialism and,
359–60
; illusions about Islamic contributions,
297
Medieval Warm Period,
144–47
Mehmed IV,
289
Melanchthon, Philipp,
270
Melos,
29
Mercator, Gerardus,
200
Mesih Pasha,
286
Mesta
,
257
metallurgy: in the Dark Ages,
81
.
See also
iron industry
Mexico: Spanish conquest,
220–22
Middle Ages: capitalism in,
182–91
; Christian theology and natural philosophy in,
162
; climate and climatic changes,
144–48
; Hanseatic League,
191–92
; industry, trade, and technology,
45
,
181–82
,
191–93
,
193–98
; Scholastics and the Copernican “Revolution,”
169–79
; universities and,
163–69
Migeotte, Leopold,
15
migrations: during the Dark Ages,
75–76
military science/technology: of the ancient Greeks,
15–18
; European colonialism and,
360–62
; firearms and the European military revolution,
261
; Roman army,
55–57
,
62–64
; technological superiority of the West,
182
; warfare and innovation during the Dark Ages,
84–86
.
See also
arms and armor; cannons; firearms; weapons
missionaries: European colonialism and,
357
,
366–68
; European knowledge of Asia and,
201–2
Mitchell, Joseph,
89
modernity: the Christian notions of God and,
45
; decline of university education on,
1–2
; defined,
1
; European colonialism and the transmission of,
357
,
365
; freedom and,
355
; historical tuning points and,
5–6
; partial modernity in non-Western societies,
370
; primacy of ideas to a historical understanding of,
2–5
Moffett, Samuel H.,
301
Mommsen, Theodor,
62
monasteries and monks: Christianization of the Vikings,
113–16
; invention of capitalism and,
119
,
132–36
; reformulation of theological doctrines and,
119–20
; virtue of work,
134–35
Mongolia,
201
Mongols,
300–301
monophonic music,
82
monotheism: Anaxagoras’s notions of Mind,
26
monumentalism: in ancient empires,
10
Mooers, Colin,
346
Moorish Spain,
302
Mornet, Daniel,
5
Morse code,
363
Morse, F. B.,
363
mortgages,
133
Moses: compared to Plato,
36
Muhammad: Muslim conquests and,
86
; persecution of Jews,
301–2
; slavery and,
125–26
Mühlberg, Battle of,
244
Munn, William A.,
146
Murray, Matthew,
330
muskets and musketeers,
197
Muslims: atrocities of the crusader-era,
110–11
; crusader victories against,
105–7
; illusions about Islamic culture,
294–302
; myths of military superiority,
283–88
; Portuguese plundering of Muslim ships,
209
; treatment of Christian pilgrims and origins of the Crusades,
102
.
See also
Islam; Ottoman Empire
Mytilene,
29–30
Native American Indians: lack of technological progress,
237–40
; myths of the “noble savage,”
232–37