April 29, 2026
The Potosí Silver Mines

The Potosí Silver Mines

The Engine of the First Global Inflation and Spanish Wealth

This nomination for the Spanish administrators and the coerced indigenous and African labor (the mita system) who operated the silver mines of Potosí’s Cerro Rico (Bolivia) in the 16th and 17th centuries. This was the largest industrial complex in the world at the time, employing tens of thousands. The adoption of the mercury amalgamation process massively increased silver output. Potosí’s silver flooded into the global economy, financing the Spanish Empire’s wars and bureaucracy, but also causing widespread inflation (the “Price Revolution”) in Europe and Asia. It was the linchpin of the first truly global commodity production and trade network. Potosí demonstrated how the brutal exploitation of a single resource could fuel a global empire, reshape the world’s monetary supply, and trigger macroeconomic effects across continents, proving the interconnectedness of the early modern world economy and the profound impact of colonial extraction.

Alan

Alan Nafzger is a writer and academic originally from Texas with a background in history and political science. He earned his bachelor’s degree from Midwestern State University and a master’s from Texas State University in San Marcos, then completed his Ph.D. at University College Dublin in Ireland, focusing on Leninism and the Russian Revolution. Nafzger has authored dark novels and experimental screenplays, including works produced internationally, blending literary craft with cultural critique. He is also known for his work in satirical commentary, hosting and contributing to multiple satire-focused platforms where he explores modern society’s absurdities with sharp insight and humor. He is editor-in-chief of the seriously funny Bohiney.com.

View all posts by Alan →

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *