Tuesday, 5 April 2016

The Market Place




Trade provides mankind's most significant meeting place, the market

In primitive societies only religious events - cult rituals, or rites of passage such as marriage - bring people together in a comparable way. But in these cases the participants are already linked, by custom or kinship - they already know one another.

The process of barter brings a crowd together in a more random fashion. New ideas, along with precious goods, have always traveled along trade routes


Agricultural produce and everyday household goods tend to make short journeys to and from a local market. 

Trade in a bigger sense, between distant places, is a different matter. It involves entrepreneurs and middlemen, people willing to accept delay and risk in the hope of a large profit.

When travel is slow and dangerous, the trader's commodities must be as nearly as possible imperishable; and they must be valuable in relation to their size. Spices and rich textiles, for example. And, above all, precious ornaments of silver and gold, or useful items in copper, bronze or iron. 

As the most valuable of commodities (in addition to being compact and easily portable), metals are a great incentive to trade. 

Key Vocabulary

market
kinship
barter
trade routes
agricultural produce
everyday household goods
entrepreneurs
middlemen 
commodities
imperishable
textiles  

What does this mean? And why is this an important thing to consider?

"valuable in relation to their size"

Can you connect the following concepts to the above text about markets?  

Key Concept


Global Interactions

Related Concepts

Trade
Growth
Resources
Consumption