Most of the production in Britain was done by serfs and by the colonial subjects. And industrial workers had frighteningly little rights anyway.BabelHuber wrote:Of course you can use slaves in factories (once you have them). But the question is if the industrial revolution could occur in a society where the production is performed by slaves.
It would depend on the question if certain modes of production are more efficient than others. But that is not a subject of "slavery bad, "free" workers with no rights good", that is a question on the effectiveness of certain methods of production.
The economy of Britain at the time the industrial revolution occured was primarily agrarian and based on the trade of non-industrial goods. Only the industrial revolution changed that. Given how steam engines were not practical at all during the times of the Romans, I don't understand your point on how the Roman economy was somehow inferior.Note that I am talking about industrial production, not about farming.
That is one very broad generalization. For some parts at some times it is true, but definitely not for all of the empire. And btw, these are not small plants we are talking about here. Fabricae (you know, where the word factory is derived from) were really huge industrial areas. The Roman state factories were really large - see for example this area, which was a fabrica converted into a palace.I thought that Rome's industry consisted of mines and small plants in the cities (which did the manufacturing).
And I am also confused by your description of industry. Since when is industry not related to agrarian products? What makes a massive construction like this which is able to feed over 13k people in itself non-industry?
(Oh and btw, that is a very low conservative estimate, real production was probably at least twice, if not three times that high. The conservative estimate thinks that the mills had 50% downtime and broke down a lot, which is both nonsense as this aquaeduct also supplied Arles with water and we would have known if there had been frequent water crisis there)
I challenge you to find any similar construction in England before the 19th century.
I also challenge you to find any huge market halls like the ones built in Rome by Maxentius. Here. This is the small part remaining. The full structure was much larger as you can see here. And this building stood without any maintenance until 1349, for over 900 years.
I challenge you to claim that the Romans were hostile to technology on those facts. If anything, they would laugh at our poor construction methods. After all, our buildings barely survive a hundred years.
Some did, others did not. The huge Roman factories used a combination of both. Some factories (like those producing armour) had few slaves and a lots of craftsmen. But I don't see how this should matter at all. What is the productive difference between a slave hammering something and a free worker with no rights hammering something? Is there a +20 productivity bonus attached to nominal (but not real) freedom?Mines used slaves anyways. But I thought that the small plants in the cities also used slaves as their work force. Am I wrong here?
And it is a huge generalization in any case. I don't think you really understand just how massive and industrialized the Roman economy really was.
Here are a few fun facts:
- Until the industrial period no city in all of Europe was able to support over a million people. Rome was able to support three or four cities with populations of well over a million, in some cases even 3.5 millions (a feat not achieved again until the 20th century iirc). Now, you may yell "extractive extractive" until you get blue in the face, but the fact is that without a huge degree of technology there is no way to feed and keep them healthy.
- The Roman diet was at least as healthy as the modern one and featured a wide variety of meats and vegetables.
- The Roman state was able to provide free meat, oil, wine and grain to the citizens of the City of Rome. This is unheard of and is only matched by the European social networks of the 20th century.
- City Romans used way more water than we used today, and at a much higher water quality to boot. They used about 150-250 litres per day, depending on the city.
- Roman concrete holds for over 2000 years. The less said about modern concrete the better.
- The Romans were the first to industrially manufacture and use glass. They produced glass windows that were really freaking huge. See those windows? They are really huge.
And maybe the real kicker:
This blows every medieval and modern production out of the water (until the middle 19th century). In the 16th century, Europe was producing 60,000 tons of iron per year. Heck, Britain barely produced 30.000 tons of Iron in the 1760. In 1800, it produced 100k, still within the range of Roman numbers and already using steam engines. And finally, Rome produced 16-14x as much metals than the contemporary chinese empires.Roman Empire output of metals per annum:
Iron: 82,500-120.000 tons
Copper: 15,000 tons
Lead: 80,000 tons
Silver: 200tons
Gold: 9 tons.
This means that right up until the steam engine was perfected, Roman production blows everything out of the water. So I don't get where your argument derives its data from. It seems contradictory to what every expert in the field says about the Roman economy.
I suspect Robinson has done very little actual work on the time periods in favor of a more generalized approach. Which would be fine if his claims are not simply lacking in fact.
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Those claims are really BS IMO.PainRack wrote:Hmm........... How much would you know about slavery in this context Thanas? I'm a bit curious because I have this text by an author, which compared Roman and Jewish differences and he asserted that the Jews treated their slaves better than the Romans............. My house is a mess atm but I would love to dig up the book and discuss its claims here.....Thanas wrote: A lot better. Much less child exploitation, much less accidents, more work safety etc. Unless you talk about the mines, but mines have always been a place where society disposes of prisoners and unwanted elements (until the 19th century).