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Unit 5: 1750-1900.  Traditional Farming Life  Village Life  Wealth distribution  Land distribution  Farming.

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Presentation on theme: "Unit 5: 1750-1900.  Traditional Farming Life  Village Life  Wealth distribution  Land distribution  Farming."— Presentation transcript:

1 Unit 5: 1750-1900

2  Traditional Farming Life  Village Life  Wealth distribution  Land distribution  Farming

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4  Name some of the early industries in Europe. What were some advantages of these early industries? Disadvantages?

5  Domestic System/Cottage Industry Merchant buys raw fiber  Women and children clean, sort, spin  Merchant collects yarn, pays, takes it to weaver  Men weave  Merchant pays and picks up woven cloth takes it to the fuller  Fuller shapes and cleans  Dyer…dyes  Merchant sells finished cloth or clothing

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8  Mining

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10  Enclosure Movement  Crop rotation

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12  Great Britain  Advantages to industrialization  Textiles  Advances in machinery ▪ Steam Engine  Factory System  Mass production  Interchangeable Parts

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14 Steam Engine Textile Factory

15 Charlie Chaplin - Modern Times  Specialization and Division of Labor

16  Transportation  Electricity  Communications  Consumer Goods

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18  Other nations begin to industrialize

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26  Classical Liberalism  Adam Smith – The Wealth of Nations (1776)  John Stuart Mill – On Liberty (1859)  Business organization

27  Rise of the Middle Class  Middle Class Occupations  Cult of Domesticity/Separate Spheres

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31  Rise of the Working Class  Working Class Occupations  Roles of Women in the Working Class  Domestic servants

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36  The Labor Movement  Unionization  Anarchism  Utopian movements  Robert Owen  Karl Marx

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42  Voting Rights  Public Services/Health/Education  Pollution Abatement

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44 Whereas it is expedient to take effectual measures for correcting divers abuses that have long prevailed in the choice of members to serve in the commons' house of parliament to deprive many inconsiderable places of the right of returning members to grant such privilege to large populous and wealthy towns to increase the number of knights of the shire to extend the elective franchise to many of his majesty's subjects who have not heretofore enjoyed the same and to diminish the expense of elections Be it therefore enacted by the king's most excellent majesty by and with the advice and consent of the lords spiritual and temporal and commons in this present parliament assembled and by the authority of the same That each of the boroughs enumerated in the schedule marked (A) to this act annexed ˆ shall from and after the end of this present parliament cease to return any member or members to serve in parliament in And be it enacted that each of the boroughs enumerated in the schedule marked (B) to this act annexed shall from and after the [.....]

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48 VICTORIA PARK, BETHNAL GREEN. A plot of pleasure-ground of 290 acres, planted and laid out in the reign of the Sovereign whose name it bears. The first cost of formation was covered by the purchase-money of York House, St. James's, received from the Duke of Sutherland, to whom the remainder of the Crown lease was sold in 1841 for 72,0001. It is bounded on the south by Sir George Ducket's canal, (sometimes called the Lea Union Canal); on the west by the Regent's Canal; on the east by Old Ford-lane, leading from Old Ford to Hackney Wick; and on the north by an irregular line of fields. It serves as a lung for the north-east part of London, and has already added to the health of the inhabitants of Spitalflelds and Bethnal- green. The leases of building ground surrounding the Park have been delayed till the roads and walks become more perfect, and the plantations in a more advanced state. Peter Cunningham, Hand-Book of London, 1850


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