1 / 21

Industrialization

Discover the impact of industrialization on European cities, including urbanization, poor living conditions, and class tensions. Learn about the effects of the Industrial Revolution on society and the emergence of capitalism.

lboynton
Télécharger la présentation

Industrialization

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. Industrialization

  2. Growth of Industrial Cities • For centuries, most Europeans had lived in rural areas. After 1800,the balance shiftedtoward cities. • The growth of the Factory system– manufacturing goods in a central location – brought waves of job seekers to cities and towns. • Most of Europe’s urban areasat least doubled in population. • This period was one of Urbanization -city building and the movement of people to cities.

  3. Factories developed in clustersbecause entrepreneurs built them near sources of energy. The biggest of thesecenters developed in England. • Britain’s capital, London, was the country’s most important city containing twice as many people as its closet rival (Paris). • During the 1800s London’s population exploded, providing a large labor pooland market for new industry.

  4. Living Conditions • No plans, no sanitary codes, and no building codes controlled the growth of England’s cities. • Most of the unpaved streets had no drainsand collected heaps of garbage. • Workers lived in dark, dirty shelters, whole families crowding into one bedroom.

  5. Not surprisingly, sickness was widespread. • In 1842,a British government study showed an average life spanto be 17 yearsfor working-class people in one large city, compared with 38 years ina nearby rural area.

  6. Working Conditions • Factory owners wanted to keep their machines running for as many hours a day as possible. • As a result, the average worker spent 14 hours a dayat the job, 6 days a week. • Workers had to keep up with the machines. Industry also posed new dangers in work. Factories were seldom well-lit or clean.

  7. Machines injured workersin countless ways. A boiler might explode or a drive belt might catch the worker’s arm. • The most dangerous conditionsof all were found in the coal mines. • Frequent accidents, damp conditions, and the constant breathing of coal dust madethe averageminer’s life span 10 years shorterthan that of other workers.

  8. Class Tensions • Not everyonein the new cities lived miserably.Well-to-do merchants and factory owners built fancy homes in the suburbs. • In addition, a new class began to emerge. Though poverty gripped Britain’s working classes, the Industrial Revolution created enormous amounts of money in the country.

  9. Most of this wealth lined the pockets of Factory owners, shippers, and merchants. • These wealthy people made up agrowing middle class– a social class of skilled workers, professionals, businesspeople, and wealthy farmers.

  10. Gradually, a larger middle class – neither rich nor poor – emerged. This group included an upper middle class ofgovernment employees, doctors, lawyersand managers of factories, mines, and shops. • A lower middle classconsisted of factoryoverseers and such skilled workers as toolmakers, mechanical drafters, and printers.

  11. During the years of 1800 to 1850, however, poor workers saw little improvement in their own living and working conditions. • Frustrated workers watched their livelihoods disappear as machines replace them. • In response, they smashed the machines they thought were putting them out of work. One group of such workers was called the Luddites.

  12. Effects of the Industrial Revolution • Despite the problems that follow industrialization, the Industrial Revolution eventually had a number of positive effects. • It created jobs for workers. • It contributed to the wealth of the nation. • It fostered technological progress and invention.

  13. It greatly increased the production of goods and raised the standard of living. • Perhaps the most important, it providedthe hope of improvement in people’s lives. • Because the Industrial Revolution created a demand for engineers as well as clerical and professional workers, it expanded educational opportunities. • Labor eventually won higher wages, shorter hours, and better working conditions.

  14. The Industrial Revolution The Industrial Revolution changed the world. The countries that accepted these Industrial Revolutions were the countries that prospered in the mid 1800’s. Countries enjoyed more wealth and power than those that had not accepted it.

  15. The countries of Europe soon began to take advantage of lands of Africa and Asia. They used these lands as sources of raw materials needed for their factories.(Imperialism) They saw the people only as markets for the goods they made. They took control of these lands, a practice called Imperialism.

  16. Following this boom in Industry, there will be results that are still being fought about today. Adam Smith’s “Laissez Faire” or “hands off” became the norm for many countries, including the United States.

  17. This Laissez-faire attitude was the foundation of capitalism. Economic system in which money is invested in business ventures with the goal of making a profit. Capitalistic Ideals fueled the industrial revolution.

  18. Some people argued that businesses should be owned by society as a whole and not by individuals. This idea is called SOCIALISM -It was created out of a belief in progress, and a concern for justice and fairness.

  19. Karl Marx- German thinker that wrote about a radical form of socialism called Marxism.

  20. He said that factory owners and workers were bound to oppose one another in the struggle for power. Over time, he said, the capitalist system will destroy itself. The great mass of workers would rebel against the wealthy few.

  21. Marx wrote “The Communist Manifesto” in which he described communism, a form of complete socialism in which all production is owned by the people. These ideas became known as communism. Economic system in which all means of production are owned by the people, private property does not exist, and all goods and services are shared equally.

More Related