Out of curiosity, is what I said 'regressive' because it used signifying language (social-justice points, truly a regressive's slogan) or because of its content?
I've no interest in making this personal.
Neither do I! Apologies, ahah. My question was not intended to provoke anything - I was genuinely curious.
-snip-
So I came here to make this ^ post, only less intelligibly.
As to the point about widespread trade - yes, there was. But trading partners were more established than today. England exported an incredible amount of wool (indeed, English wool was famous), mostly through Dutch ports like Antwerp where it was woven into cloth. The country was completely reliant on the wool trade.
Additionally, most communities hovered either side of subsistence levels. There was no market system, except in its most rudimentary and local sense. England was an agricultural economy until the late medieval period.
Nevertheless, trade did of course stretch quite far afield. See, for instance, the Russian river trade and international trade in bee-related products. See, also, the trade in silver and gold bullion which could stretch into Africa and Asia. However.... it's probably best to see this as a trade network with many middle men, rather than direct trade with Africa. It would be incredibly unlikely (and incredibly dangerous, considering the huge risk associated with overseas or overland travel) for an African trader to arrive in England.
And, even were one to make the trip, his vessel would be laden with luxury goods like bullion which he'd probably want to sell in London, possibly Bristol or Ipswich, which would limit contact with such individuals considerably.
Besides which, of course, such traders were peripatetic - they wouldn't settle with their families in barbaric England, such as depicted in Merlin. As I said earlier, the situation in Merlin was only possible technically.
They conquered shit. Its all theyre good for.
Architecture, medical theory, political systems (and political theory), poetry and literature, social categories, language, written texts