The New Age After the 1500s          After 1500 there were many signs that a new age of world   history was beginning, for example the discovery of America and the   first European enterprises in Asia.   This "new age" was dominated by  the astonishing success of one civilization among many, that of  Europe. There was more and more continuous interconnection between  events in all countries, but it is to be explained by European  efforts. Europeans eventually became "masters of the globe" and they  used their mastery to make the world one. That resulted in a unity of  world history that can be detected until today. Politics,  empire-building, and military expansion were only a tiny part of what  was going on. Besides the economic integration of the globe there was  a much more important process going on: The spreading of assumptions  and ideas. The result was to be "One World." The age of independent  civilizations has come to a close.         The history of the centuries since 1500 can be described as a  series of wars and violent struggles. Obviously men in different  countries did not like another much more than their predecessors did.  However, they were much more alike than their ancestors were, which  was an outcome of what we now call modernization. One could also say  that the world was Europeanized, for modernization was a matter of  ideas and techniques which have an European origin. It was with the  modernization of Europe that the unification of world history began. A  great change in Europe was the starting-point of modern history.         There was a continuing economic predominance of agriculture.  Agricultural progress increasingly took two main forms: Orientation  towards the market, and technical innovation. They were  interconnected. A large population in the neighborhood meant a market  and therefore an incentive. Even in the fifteenth century the  inhabitants of so called low countries were already leaders in the  t...