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Matthias: The Power Of The Market Revolution

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The power of the Market Revolution The Market Revolution was a period of drastic change in the US, from 1793 to 1909. It changed the life of all Americans. The economy was the center from where political, social and cultural developments started to evolve. Industries grew a lot in the north-east and mass produced goods that were shipped abroad so there was a capital global understanding not just a national one. It lead to the the first kind of globalization in the US. Before the market revolution there were isolated villages, when globalization came in effect, it started connecting communities and no one could escape it. People lost their independence because they were now dependent on the factory work. It is easier to understand how this …show more content…

In summary, he would damn the enemies of the Jews, above all the meek Christian devils and their disobedient women. In the kingdom of Matthias there would be no market, no money, no buying or selling, no wage system…he insisted that the earth and everything on it belonged to God”. Matthias was trying to create a solid patriarchal society and the calvinist approach was the way to go. He focused on the calvinist idea of predestination that is the control God exercises over the world. He was Old Testament. The Bible was the most popular way to respond to the Market Revolution. It was the only way to figure out what was going on. The keyword was “abolitionism” because that was God’s will. (pages …show more content…

No one should eat pastries because that would engage the Market Revolution. “It brought Caribbean sugar, local eggs, white flour and cast-iron stoves into the more prosperous households. From that moment, the urban merchant classes started to eat “dinner”, a word that Matthias and many other people associated with the noon meal. Matthias insisted that the evening meal was called “supper”. Through this example he wanted to emphasize what the market revolution was capable of, given that it had changed the way people ate and what meals were called. (pages

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