Chapter 24 – Industrialization and Imperialism

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AP World History Chapter 24
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Presentation transcript:

Chapter 24 – Industrialization and Imperialism I. The Shift to Land Empires in Asia II. Industrial Rivalries and the Partition of the World, 1870-1914 III. Patterns of Dominance: Continuity and Change

Reasons for Imperialism 1. Needs of Natural Resources THEME: Industrialization altered the nature of European overseas expansion – European partition of the world occurred in haphazard fashion Reasons for Imperialism 1. Needs of Natural Resources 2. Military Advantages (empire building) 3. Nationalism 4. Markets 5. Labor Supply 6. Business Investments 7. Land for excess population 8. Religious Levels of Imperialism Give Economic Aide puppet state Sphere of influence Annexation

Dutch gain Java Wanted it for its Spices Initial control was only in the interior of Java After 1670 the Dutch expanded their control over all of Java

British rule in India: British East India Company take sides in local wars as the Mughal Empire disintegrated – Intervention into local squabbles among indigenous in return for land similar to the Dutch in Java Sepoys – Indian troops, trained in European style; served the French and British armies

Willingness of Indians to serve in British armies contributed a powerful land force to the empire India became major outlet for British manufactured goods and overseas investment as well as a major supplier of raw materials Sepoy Europeans formed new class on top of existing hierarchies

Raj – The British political establishment in India Robert Clive – Architect of British victory at Plassey; established foundations of the Raj in northern India Presidencies – Three districts that comprised the bulk of British-ruled territories in India during the early 19th century

Madras, Bombay, and Calcutta = presidencies for British rule Agents of the East India Company were stationed at their courts to ensure loyalty from natives. By beginning of the 19th century, India was becoming Britain’s major colonial possession

Lord Charles Cornwallis: British official who reformed the British East India Company corruption during the 1790’s

Tropical dependencies – Western European possessions in Africa, Asia, and the South Pacific where small numbers of Europeans ruled large indigenous populations White dominions – A settlement colony, such as those in North America and Australia, where European settlers made up the majority of the population Settler colonies – Colonies in South Africa, New Zealand, Algeria, Kenya and Hawaii, where minority European populations lived among a majority of indigenous peoples.

The Partition of Africa between c. 1870 and 1914

Cecil Rhodes – British entrepreneur in South Africa; manipulated political situation to gain entry to the diamonds and gold discovered in the Boer republics *analyze the political cartoon!*     

Boer War (1899-1902) – Fought between the British and Afrikaners; British victory and postwar policies left the African population of South Africa under Afrikaner control

Great Trek – Migration into the South African interior of thousands of Afrikaners seeking to escape British control

Imperialism In Africa The Congress of Berlin – 1885 – Otto von Bismarck called a conference to discuss how European countries wishing to acquire African colonies should proceed. Bismarck wanted peace in Europe, not a large empire A nation could only claim land if it had settlements or colonies on the land itself – slavery outlawed in occupied lands

Imperialism in China & the Pacific In Asia, Britain lead the way by its example in India Only three Asian countries remain independent – China, Japan, and Siam (Thailand) By 1914 France had Indochina (Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos), the Dutch controlled the East Indies (Indonesia), the United States had the Philippines, and Germany had special rights in China.

Imperialism in India Old Imperialism – 15th and 16th c. Portugal, Spain, England, France – “Gold, God, and Glory” New Imperialism –late 19th c. wanted new natural resources; competition; markets for manufactured goods; done in Africa, India, east/southeast Asia Under the new imperialism, the Europeans managed to conquer or subjugate about half the world’s non-European population Industrialization encouraged imperialism!!

Justification for Imperialism: Europeans saw Africans, native Australians, & Pacific Islanders as primitive savages plagued by war, poverty, and disease. Felt a sense of duty to “civilize” the non-white peoples of the unindustrialized lands. J.S. Hobson argument in his book, Imperialism - the motive was economic  A few men of great wealth were behind imperialist policies, to gain more wealth

Aborigines and other natives lacked immunities to European disease (heard this story before!)

James Cook – His voyages to Hawaii form 1777-1779, opened the islands to the West

Sepoy “Mutiny” (Great Rebellion) – 1857 Reason – new bullet – had to bite off tip  required grease Cows – sacred to Hindus Pigs – sacred to Muslims Economic, social, and political reasons as well

Boxer Rebellion – 1898 – Eight Nation Alliance – Japan, Russia, Britain, France, U.S., Germany, Italy, & Austria-Hungary vs. China the issue: expel foreigners from China the winner: Foreigners Results: Qing dynasty weakens; 1912 – Qing dynasty is toppled Extraterritorial – foreigners cannot be tried by foreign court

Japanese Industrialization & Imperialism Japan becomes “westernized”; continue imperialism in Asia Japan annexes Korea and takes Formosa from China

Russo-Japanese War; Russia vs. Japan; 1904-1905 Causes: Japan & Russia both expanding territorial control in East/Southeast Asia. Russia gains partial control of Manchuria (north/northeast China) and in Korea. These moves upset the Japanese, who were trying to gain influence there as well. Results: brings recognition to Japan as a major world power; leads to the Russian Revolution of 1905 (problems for Russia) Ends with the signing of the Treaty of Portsmouth (1905): Russia had to withdraw troops from Manchuria and give Korea to the Japanese.