Industrial Age Preconditions in England and western Europe

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 12 Review.
Advertisements

Industrial Revolution Study Guide. Due to the Agricultural Revolution, all of the following occurred… Food prices decreased Populations increased Average.
 Vocabulary ◦ factors of production ◦ entrepreneur.
The Industrial Revolution
Unit 5: Industrialism and a New Global Age (1800 – 1914)
Industrial Revolution. Industrial Revolution begins in Britain Agricultural Revolution Enclosures Crop Rotation Jehthro Tull’s Seed Drill Livestock Breeding.
Industrial Revolution. Agricultural Revolution: a change in the way food was produced CHANGES Enclosed Fields – made farm work more efficient Crop.
JEOPARDY The Industrial Revolution Categories Agricultural.
Industrial Revolution 1. How did the Industrial Revolution begin in Great Britain? 2. How did the Industrial Revolution change the way people worked and.
JEOPARDY Industrial Rev. Categories
Chapter 7 The Industrial Revolution Begins
Inbox - Make sure you have the following vocabulary words in your sourcebook: EnclosureUtilitarianismUrbanizationAssembly Line SmeltSocialismTenementStock.
Social Change in the 1800s (particularly )
Wheels, Deals and Automobiles: The Industrial Revolution World History B – Seminar 4 Warm Up – Define: 1.Urbanization 2. Capitalism.
The Industrial Revolution  Review Terms. Agricultural Revolution Cottage Industry Industrial Revolution Why England? Textiles Evolution of power sources.
Welcome to a glorious afternoon in Mr. Keeling’s history class!!! You have 10 minutes to study for the test please use your time wisely. If you study hard.
1 10 pt 15 pt 20 pt 25 pt 5 pt 10 pt 15 pt 20 pt 25 pt 5 pt 10 pt 15 pt 20 pt 25 pt 5 pt 10 pt 15 pt 20 pt 25 pt 5 pt 10 pt 15 pt 20 pt 25 pt 5 pt Pre-
World History Bellwork How does a monopoly differ from a cartel? If you were absent last class, you probably need to pick up a copy of the test review.
6.2 The Rise of Cities.
The Industrial Revolution – Part I. Background Info After the French and American revolutions, a social revolution took place in England (Britain) After.
The World of Cities: Changing Attitude & Values. The Fight Against Disease Germ Theory- Certain microbes cause specific infectious diseases Germ Theory-
The World of Cities Chapter 9 Section 2.
PeopleVocabularyBeginnings New Developments Spread.
Life in the Cities. Industrialism  Mainly starts in England during this time. why?  France focuses on finer goods and farming  Germany lacks unity,
THE RISE OF THE CITIES CHAPTER 6 SECTION 2. THE POPULATION EXPLOSION Between 1800 and 1900, the population in Europe doubles despite families having less.
Causes First Ind. Rev. Potpourri Intellectuals Second Ind. Rev Industrial Revolution Jeopardy.
Industrial Revolution. Major Causes Beginning in the 1700’s, large landowners dramatically improved farming methods Agricultural changes  agricultural.
Industrial Revolution. Industrial Revolution begins in Britain Agricultural Revolution Enclosures Crop Rotation Jehthro Tull’s Seed Drill Livestock Breeding.
World History Bellwork How does a monopoly differ from a cartel? If you were absent last class, you probably need to pick up a copy of the test review.
The Social Impact of Industrialization. Manchester: One of the First Industrialized Cities Population 1750: 18, : 300,000 Life Span, 1843 Laborer:
Gov’t/Art PPT. New Economic Ideas Capitalists/Capitalism Goal: profit and private ownership Factors of production are own privately Adam Smith Free Market.
Ch. 9 Sec. 2 The Rise of Cities. Population »Between 1800 and 1900 the population of Europe more than doubled »Advances in medicine »Germ theory - certain.
The Industrial Revolution Unit 2 Study Guide Chapter 9 Pages
THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION. Agriculture  Agricultural improvements drive industrial improvements  Crop rotation  Seed drill  Enclosure movement  Food.
Ch 25 Notecards. Industrial Revolution Who: British, Europeans What: an age where machine-made goods increased the output of goods Where: England, then.
The Industrial Revolution
The Industrial Revolution 1750s
Make a list of all of the things that you own that were made BY HAND
The Industrial Revolution ( )
Philosophers of Industrialism
CHAPTER 22 OVEVIEW NOTES.
Industrial Conditions
Focus 11/14 The Industrial Revolution started with advances in the textile industry, but later expanded to the production of other goods. Other fields.
Industrial Revolution Jamboree
CAPITALISM V COMMUNISM
Chapter 19 The Industrial Revolution Begins
Effects of the Industrial Revolution
The Industrial Revolution
Ch 5 sec 4 New Ways of Thinking
Chapter 19 The Industrial Revolution
Industrial Revolution
Industrial Revolution
Populations soared in Europe and America between 1800 and 1900 because the death rate fell. This resulted from improved nutrition and significant advances.
New Ways of Thinking & Life in the Cities
Industrial Revolution & World War I Unit
Chapters 19 & 21 The Industrial Revolution
People Energy Economy Inventions Industry 5 pt 5 pt 5 pt 5 pt 5 pt
You will be given the answer. You must give the correct question.
Revolution: A period of change or significant transition
CHAPTER 22 OVEVIEW NOTES.
Aim: Review for Test on Industrial Revolution
The Rise of the Modern City
The Industrial Revolution (1750-Early 1900’s)
Life in the Industrial Age
The Rise of the Modern City
Economic & Social Revolutions Week 2-8
Impact of Industrialization
Industrial Revolution
The Rise of the Modern City
What were the Effects of the Industrial Revolution?
Presentation transcript:

Industrial Age Preconditions in England and western Europe Agricultural Revolution Advancements in transportation Availability of natural resources

Effects Technological advances and inventors   Effects of the Industrial Revolution Changes in work and life Class changes; new upper middle class of industrialists, bankers, merchants, new factory working masses

Outcomes Outcomes of the Industrial Revolution The new factory city (example: Manchester) Resistance to industrialization; Luddites, Romanticism Ideologies, classes and social movements; liberalism, socialism, Marxism, anti-Semitism Europe-wide revolutions of 1848; classes, ideologies in conflict

Key contributors: James Watt, Adam Smith, Thomas Malthus, David Ricardo, Samuel Smiles, Jeremy Bentham, John Stuart Mills, Robert Owen, Charles Darwin, Sigmund Freud

Analysis 1. Analyze the causes and consequences of the Industrial Revolution. Focus consequences on the poor working conditions, low pay, factory workers without skills, long hours and tenement slums at first, new upper middle class of bankers, industrialists and merchants. Focus Causes on agriculture, new technology and social movement to new factory cities like Manchester. 2. Evaluate the effect of crop rotation, agricultural technology and fencing in grazing land excluding common range lands. Include the decline in number of people needed to farm, food production increases, lower prices and life expectancy. 3. Explain why corporations would get together to form cartels.  

Factors 1. Describe the impact of communication and transportation technology. What made them faster? 2. Explain why the population in Europe doubled between 1800 and 1900. Include germ theory and Louis Pasteur, Lister and antiseptics, Nightingale and hospitals 3. Outline major demographic changes and migrations to the present, including: their causes and consequences (e.g. rural to urban, less developed to more developed) as well as sanitation sewers and water treatment.

Labor 1. Expand on at least three means that urban workers turned to in order to improve conditions for the laborer. 5.How did utilitarianism or government for the greatest good fit into socialism? mutual aid societies, union strikes, disability insurance, working hours and work safety laws

Changes Explain survival of the fittest and evolution theory. Elizabeth Stanton Cady, social gospel temperance movement, cult of domesticity Explain why Napoleon III widened the streets of Paris in an urban renewal.

Romanticism, Impressionism, Realism 1. Explain the themes of imagination, freedom and emotion that shaped romantic art, literature and music and give examples. 2. Discuss how realism responded to the industrialized world Monet and impressionism of first fleeting view, Van Gogh and post-impressionism bold colors, Charles Dickens Zola realism