Proposal for History School Based Assessment Research Topic Caribbean Economy and Slavery Research Question ‘What were the economical‚ social and political consequences which resulted from the changeover of tobacco to sugarcane in the 17th Century?’ Objectives • What is the sugar revolution? • What were the reasons for the change from tobacco to sugarcane (better termed a the sugar revolution) in the 17th century • Assess the social political and economical consequences which
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Sugar Studying sugar may seem like an ineffective way to approach the Caribbean’s rise to a globalized economy. It is quite the contrary‚ sugar rose to be an extremely popular and profitable staple for the international food economy. It grew to play a major role in what we know of today as the global food market. Sugar started developing immense popularity around the 1960’s due to colonial slavery‚ the industrialization of a global economy‚ and an increase in tea consumption. Sugar was introduced
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The Effects that the Sugar Revolution had on the 18th century Caribbean Society The Sugar became population in the West Indies. The English‚ French colonies who settled Caribbean island such as St.kitts in the early 16th grew tobacco in order to make money. For a little while they were able to make the profit. However by 1640’s the faced different competition from tobacco grower in virgina had certain advantages which are virgiana had large lots of fertile land. Virginia tobacco was cheaper and
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Sugar DBQ During the sixteenth through the eighteenth centuries the sugar trade was driven by high consumer demand‚ and the slave trade. Sugar was so high in consumer demand and addicting that in certain areas an average person would consume sixteen pounds a year. Evidence of this is shown in document G. The document conveys the annual per capita consumption ( in pounds ) from the year 1700 to the year 1770 in England. When analyzing document C‚ readers realize that the high amount of consumption
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human blood as sugar" ...(Anon) Sugar in its many forms is as old as the Earth itself. It is a sweet tasting thing for which humans have a natural desire. However there is more to sugar than its sweet taste‚ rather cane sugar has been shown historically to have generated a complex process of cultural change altering the lives of all those it has touched‚ both the people who grew the commodity and those for whom it was grown. Suprisingly‚ for something so desireable knowledge of sugar cane spread
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The Sugar Revolution Revolution means a complete change in a system. There was an economic revolution that occurred in the 17th Century. Some refer to it as the Sugar Revolution. During this period‚ several basic changes took place. (1) Sugar replaced tobacco as the chief export crop in the Caribbean. (2) The population changed from one that was mainly white to one that was mainly black because of the introduction of African slaves. (3) The size of land holdings changed. This change was pioneered
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The Australian Sugar Cane Industry The Australian sugar cane industry is one of the largest industries in Australia and continues to grow today. It is the third largest raw sugar supplier after Brazil and India despite sugar being produced in over one hundred countries. It is also the seventh largest agricultural exporter in Australia. It is the second largest export crop after wheat and the fourth major export earning agricultural product. Its value of production is worth 1.5-2.5 billion dollars
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The Production and Consumption of Sugar The production of sugar has shaped our world throughout the centuries. From its humble beginning‚ to its royal induction it has now made a household name as a necessity. It has changed our society into sugar addicts with a never ending urge for sweetness. Production of this craving has lead to an over abundant consumption. Consumption so great that is has defined humans through culture and history. The journey has marked the path of this once less then
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Sugar 1) Research your topic and find out other names used in this ingredient. Barley malt | Cane sugar | Carob syrup | Dextrose | Fruit juice | Beet sugar | Caramel | Castor sugar | Diastatic malt | Fruit juice concentrate | Brown sugar | Corn syrup | Date sugar | Diatase | Galactose | Buttered syrup | Corn syrup solids | Demerara sugar | Ethyl maltol | Glucose | Cane juice crystals | Confectioner’s sugar | Dextran | Fructose | Glucose solids | Golden sugar | Grape sugar | Honey
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Sugar taps into a powerful human preference for sweet taste‚ says Marcia Pelchat‚ PhD‚ a scientist at the Monell Chemical Senses Center‚ a basic research institute in Philadelphia. “We’re born to like sugar‚” she says. Sugar is sucrose‚ a molecule composed of 12 atoms of carbon‚ 22 atoms of hydrogen‚ and 11 atoms of oxygen. Like all compounds made from these three elements‚ sugar is a carbohydrate. It’s found naturally in most plants‚ but especially in sugarcane and sugar beets. The
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