1 / 22

IMPERIALISM IN ASIA

IMPERIALISM IN ASIA. IMPERIALISM IN ASIA. THE BRITISH RULE IN INDIA. British involvement began in the 1600s. Traders explored the Indian coast. Some traders formed the East India Company (very rich and powerful). Robert Clive (1757) defeated the French and Britain gained control of India.

kaiser
Télécharger la présentation

IMPERIALISM IN ASIA

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. IMPERIALISM IN ASIA

  2. IMPERIALISM IN ASIA

  3. THE BRITISH RULE IN INDIA • British involvement began in the 1600s. • Traders explored the Indian coast. • Some traders formed the East India Company (very rich and powerful). • Robert Clive (1757) defeated the French and Britain gained control of India. • EIC rules India.

  4. Sepoy Rebellion (1857) • Sepoys (Indian soldiers in British military) revolted. • Resentment over British imposing Christianity and European customs. • “The Grease Bullet Rumor” • Spread across Northern and Central India. Massacre of British. • British gov. takes control with viceroy (monarchs representatives).

  5. Map of British Rule

  6. Indian Nationalism

  7. Indian National Congress • Worked for independence for India from British rule.

  8. China Faces the West • China had limited contact with West for 300 years. • Qing Dynasty weakened China. • British (early 1800s) begin trade with China. Paid for goods with opium.

  9. The Opium War (1839-42) • Chinese tried to stop opium trade. • British refused. Attacked Chinese. • Britain had superior weapons. Won. • Treaty of Nanking (trading rights & Hong Kong).

  10. Image: The Opium War

  11. China by 1890s • European powers as well as Japan divided China into spheres of influence. • Sphere of influence: area where they had exclusive trading rights. • Chinese resentment lead to formation of nationalistic groups—such as Righteous and Harmonious Fists (called Boxers by Europeans).

  12. Image: Boxer Rebellion

  13. Image: Boxer Rebellion

  14. Revolution 1911 • Chinese begin to feel Qing Dynasty should be replaced with Republic. • Leads to Revolution 1911. • Sun Yet-Sen (leader). • Revolution leads to destruction of Qing Dynasty. • Sun Yet-Sen becomes leader of China (1912).

  15. Sun Yet-Sen and Wife

  16. The Rise of Japan

  17. Perry in Japan (1853)

  18. Modernization of Japan • Japan isolated from early 1600s. • Signed trading treaty with Perry. Shogun (ruler of Japan) saw what happened to China with Opium War. • Treaties favored foreign powers. Lead to overthrow of Shogun by new emperor known as the Meiji (enlightened emperor).

  19. Modernization of Japan • Meiji realize they will need to modernize by building strong army and industrial base to compete with Western powers. • Japan (1870) began to modernize itself without any outside help. • 1905 defeats Russia in Russo-Japanese war. • By 1914, emerged as one of world’s industrial leaders.

  20. Political Cartoon of Russo-Japanese War

More Related