Significance of Corroborating Historical Accounts
An economic historian is examining two primary source documents about the same geographic region. The first, from the 14th century, describes the region as having an exceptional surplus of basic foods. The second, from the 17th century, makes a very similar observation, noting that even small villages have plentiful supplies of various foodstuffs. From an analytical perspective, what is the primary significance of the second document when considered alongside the first?
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Assessing Historical Economic Evidence
An economic historian is studying the economy of Bengal. They find an account from a 14th-century Moroccan scholar describing the region as having an extreme abundance of provisions. Later, they find a separate account from a 17th-century French merchant that describes a similar state of widespread abundance, listing many basic foodstuffs as being plentiful even in small villages. What is the most important analytical conclusion the historian can draw from the combination of these two sources?
Interpreting Historical Economic Data
Significance of Corroborating Historical Accounts
The primary economic significance of a 17th-century French merchant's detailed account of Bengal's plentiful food supplies is that it represents the first-ever historical evidence of that region's prosperity.
You are presented with two historical accounts describing the economic conditions of the Bengal region. Match each account with its primary significance for an economic historian.
An economic historian is making the argument that the Bengal region experienced a sustained period of widespread prosperity from the 14th to the 17th century. Which of the following findings would provide the strongest support for this specific claim?
A historian questions the reliability of a 17th-century French merchant's account, which describes even the smallest villages in Bengal as having abundant food. The historian suggests the account may be an isolated or exaggerated observation. Which of the following findings would most strongly challenge the historian's skepticism?
An economic historian is analyzing a 17th-century French merchant's account which details the abundance of basic foodstuffs like rice, flour, and sugar in the Bengal region. Which specific detail from the merchant's observation provides the strongest evidence that this prosperity was widespread throughout the general population, rather than being confined to elite urban centers?
A 17th-century European merchant's account describes the Bengal region as having an abundance of 'rice, flour, butter, milk, beans and other vegetables, sugar and sweetmeats,' even in the smallest villages. From an economic historian's perspective, what does the nature of these specific goods most strongly suggest about the region's economy at that time?