That would be easier to argue than the end of the Black Death. The fact is that what we're experiencing right now is a top-down disaster. -Paul Krugman
It was the merchants who drove the industrial revolution. And it's still the merchants who are setting the agenda today. Only now they're a little more powerful than they used to be.
Capitalism is just another word for merchant-culture. Everyone trades, everyone tries to get rich, and - er - that's it.
I just don't see the significance of the little ice age, in the mediterranean basin it didn't have a crippling economic effect. If you're thinking about the Maunder Minimum, it coincided with the reign of Le Roi Soleil, so France was obviously unaffected. And "the end of the little ice age" seems to have happened around 1850?
The Little Ice Age (LIA) was a period of cooling occurring after a warmer era known as the Medieval climate optimum. Climatologists and historians find it difficult to agree on either the start or end dates of this period. Some confine the Little Ice Age to 1550-1850, lasting approximately from the 14th to the mid-19th centuries while others prefer a span from the 13th to 17th centuries. It is generally agreed that there were three minima, beginning about 1650, about 1770, and 1850, each separated by slight warming intervals.