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Imperialism

Imperialism. World History: 1750 - Present. Imperialism. Imperialism: the domination by one country of the political, economic, or cultural life of another country or region. Imperialism. Like Great Britain, other Western countries built overseas empires in the late 1800s

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Imperialism

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  1. Imperialism

    World History: 1750 - Present
  2. Imperialism Imperialism: the domination by one country of the political, economic, or cultural life of another country or region
  3. Imperialism Like Great Britain, other Western countries built overseas empires in the late 1800s The Industrial Revolution gave the West the economic and political might to dominate the world
  4. Economic Reasons Imperialism
  5. Economic Reasons The Industrial Revolution created needs and desires that spurred overseas expansion Manufacturers needed access to rubber, petroleum, metals, and oil
  6. Economic Reasons Also, the West saw the rest of the world as a new market to whom they could sell their goods
  7. Military Reasons Imperialism
  8. Military Reasons Steam-powered merchant ships and naval vessels needed bases around the world to take on coal and supplies Industrial powers seized islands and harbors to satisfy these needs
  9. Humanitarian & Religious Reasons Imperialism
  10. Humanitarian & Religious Reasons Many Westerners felt a genuine concern for the less-fortunate around the world Missionaries spread the Christian religion
  11. Humanitarian & Religious Reasons Doctors spread medicine Laws, political beliefs, and cultures were also spread
  12. Social Darwinism Imperialism
  13. Social Darwinism Charles Darwin believed that the prevailing law in nature was “survival of the fittest” Many Westerners began to apply these principals to human societies
  14. Social Darwinism They believed that white, European races were superior to all others Therefore, domination of “weaker” races was nature’s way of improving the species
  15. How the West Won Imperialism
  16. How the West Won The West had many advantages over other powers: Strong economies Well-organized governments Powerful militaries Better technology Better medicine
  17. Backlash Imperialism
  18. Backlash Within Western nations, a small group of anti-imperialists emerged They argued that colonialism was a tool of the rich and that Westerners were moving towards greater democracy at home, but were imposing undemocratic rule over others
  19. Scramble for Africa Imperialism
  20. Scramble for Africa In the late 1800s, Britain, France, Germany, and other European nations began to carve up the African continent
  21. Scramble for Africa From the 1500s through the 1700s, Europeans traded along the African coast Europeans did not travel much into the interior of Africa
  22. Scramble for Africa Instead, Europeans paid or traded with Africans along the coast and had them travel into the interior for goods and slaves Why did Europeans not travel into the interior of Africa?
  23. Scramble for Africa Resistance by other Africans Difficult geography New diseases
  24. Scramble for Africa In the early 1800s, medical advances and steamships allowed Europeans to advance to Africa’s interior The best-known explorer of Africa was Dr. David Livingstone
  25. Scramble for Africa Livingstone crisscrossed Africa for 30 years Livingstone was opposed to the slave trade and tried to open up Africa to traders and missionaries
  26. Scramble for Africa In the 1870s, Belgium’s King Leopold II hired Henry Stanley to explore the Congo River and arrange trade treaties with African leaders
  27. Scramble for Africa Other nations followed Leopold’s lead and set off to create trade relations with African leaders To avoid bloodshed, European powers met at an international conference in Berlin in 1884
  28. Scramble for Africa At the conference, leaders agreed that no European power could claim any part of Africa unless it had set up a government office there This led Europeans to quickly send officials across Africa
  29. Scramble for Africa No Africans were invited to the conference In less than 20 years, almost all of Africa was partitioned
  30. Scramble for Africa As Europeans carved out their claims, they redrew the borders of Africa with little regard for traditional boundaries and frontiers
  31. Scramble for Africa Belgium took control of the Congo France took over much of North Africa, and parts of West and Central Africa
  32. Scramble for Africa At its height, the French Empire in Africa was as large as the United States
  33. Scramble for Africa Britain’s share of Africa was more scattered than that of France However, it included more heavily populated areas with many more resources
  34. Scramble for Africa Britain had colonies in western and eastern Africa, including Egypt and Sudan Britain acquired the Cape Colony in southern Africa from the Dutch in 1814
  35. Scramble for Africa In Cape Colony, Britain clashed with the Boers Boers: descendents of Dutch settlers
  36. Scramble for Africa When Britain took over, many Boers fled north and set up their own republics In the late 1800s, the discovery of gold and diamonds in Boer lands led to conflict with Britain
  37. Scramble for Africa The Boer War lasted from 1899 to 1902 and involved bitter guerilla warfare In the end, the British won, but at the cost of many lives
  38. Scramble for Africa In 1910, the British united Cape Colony and the former Boer republics into the Union of South Africa The new constitution set up a government run by whites and laid the foundation for a system of complete racial segregation
  39. Scramble for Africa The Portuguese created colonies in Central Africa Italy established Libya in North Africa and also colonies on the “horn” of Africa
  40. Scramble for Africa Germany took lands in eastern and southwestern Africa Europeans met armed resistance across the continent
  41. Scramble for Africa The Algerians battled the French for years The British fought the Zulus in southern Africa and the Asante in West Africa
  42. Scramble for Africa In East Africa, the Germans fought wars against the Yao and Herero The Germans met especially fierce in the Maji-Maji Rebellion of 1905
  43. Scramble for Africa The Germans triumphed only after burning acres and acres of farmland, leaving thousands of local people to die of starvation
  44. Scramble for Africa Ethiopia, an ancient Christian kingdom in East Africa, managed to maintain its independence
  45. Scramble for Africa Ethiopia was divided among rival princes who ruled their own domains In the late 1800s, Menelik II, one of the domain rulers, hired European experts to plan modern roads and bridges and set up school systems
  46. Scramble for Africa Menelik II also imported weapons and European officers to help train his army When Italy invaded Ethiopia in 1896, Menelik was prepared
  47. Scramble for Africa The Ethiopian army smashed the Italian military Ethiopia and Liberia were the only lands in Africa to maintain their independence
  48. Scramble for Africa During the “Scramble for Africa,” a new, western-educated elite emerged Some middle-class Africans admired Western culture and rejected their own culture
  49. Scramble for Africa Others valued their African traditions and condemned Western societies By the early 1900s, African leaders were forging nationalist movements to pursue independence
  50. Egypt Imperialism
  51. Egypt In the early 1800s, Egypt was a province of the Ottoman Empire After a Civil War, Muhammad Ali, an Egyptian soldier, became the governor of Egypt
  52. Egypt Ali is sometime called the “father of modern Egypt” He introduced economic reforms, backed large irrigation projects, expanded cotton production, and brought in Western military experts to build a powerful army
  53. Egypt Ali used the new military to conquer Arabia, Syria, and Sudan Ali’s successors were not as strong and when Ali died in 1849, western influence increased
  54. Egypt In 1858, a French entrepreneur, Ferdinand de Lesseps, organized a company to build the Suez Canal Construction began in 1859 and took 10 years to complete
  55. Egypt The Suez Canal is more than 100 miles long and connects the Mediterranean and Red Seas This meant that ships no longer had to sail around Africa to get to Asia
  56. Egypt The canal reduced the trip from London to India by over 5,000 miles Europeans gained control over the Ottomans by extending loans with very high interest rates
  57. Egypt In 1875, the ruler of Egypt could not repay his loans To pay his debts, he sold his share (a controlling interest) of the Suez Canal to Britain
  58. Egypt Egyptian nationalists revolted against foreign influence in 1882, loosening Ottoman control Britain then made Egypt a protectorate Protests and riots still flared in Egypt
  59. Persia Imperialism
  60. Persia Since 1794, Persia had been ruled by the Qajar dynasty Britain and Russia vied for influence in the region
  61. Persia Britain wanted to protect its interests in India, while Russia wanted to protect its southern borders In the early 1900s, oil was discovered in Persia
  62. Persia Both Russia and Britain made the Persian government grant them concessions Concessions: special rights given to foreign powers
  63. Persia To protect their interests, Britain and Russia both sent troops into Persia Persian nationalists were outraged
  64. Persia Two groups of nationalists emerged One group wanted to adopt Western ways The other, led by Muslim religious leaders, condemned both the Persian government and Western influences
  65. India
  66. India India was ruled by the Mughal dynasty In the early 1600s, the British East India Company gained trading rights in India
  67. India As Mughal power declined, the British exerted more and more influence British officials introduced Western education, missionaries traveled to India, worked to end slavery, and tried to improve the position of women in India
  68. India The British passed a law that banned sati (SUH tee) Sati was a Hindu custom that called for a widow to join her husband in death by throwing herself on his funeral fire
  69. India The British made sepoys serve anywhere the government commanded Sepoys: Indian soldiers in the British service
  70. India This was an offense to high-caste Hindus who believed it was an offense against their religion In 1857, the British issued new rifles to the sepoys
  71. India Troops were told to bite off the tips of the cartridges before loading them However, the cartridges were greased with cow and pig fat
  72. India Cows were sacred to Hindus and pigs were forbidden to Muslims When troops refused to load the rifles, they were imprisoned
  73. India Angry sepoys rose up against the British officers Known as the Sepoy Rebellion, many British men, women, and children were brutally massacred
  74. India The British soon rallied and crushed the revolt The British then took revenge by burning villages and slaughtering thousands of unarmed Indians
  75. India The British sent more troops to India and taxed Indians to support the extra soldiers The British also passed a law that allowed Hindu widows to remarry, angering many Hindu believers
  76. India After the Sepoy Rebellion ended, Britain set up a new government in India, known as the British Raj A British viceroy in India governed in the name of the queen and British officials held the top positions in government
  77. India The British admired their work in India so much that it became known as the “brightest jewel” in the crown of their empire
  78. India The British Raj improved transportation, communication, agriculture, medicine, education, and revised the legal system
  79. India Thanks to the reforms of the British, a class of Western-educated Indians emerged By the mid/late 1800s, these “elites” began forming nationalist movements
  80. India In 1885, nationalist leaders formed the Indian National Congress The INC sought eventual self-rule, but supported Western-style modernization
  81. India In 1906, Muslim nationalists in India formed the Muslim League Some even called for a separate Muslim state
  82. China Imperialism
  83. China During the late 1700s, British merchants began making huge profits by trading opium grown in India for Chinese tea Knowing the harsh effects of the drug, opium had already been outlawed in Britain
  84. China Soon, many Chinese had become addicted to the drug The Chinese government outlawed opium and executed Chinese drug dealers
  85. China The Chinese told the British to stop the trade, but the British refused In 1839, Chinese warships clashed with British merchants, triggering the Opium War
  86. China The British defeated the Chinese in 1842 The Opium Wars ended with the Treaty of Nanjing
  87. China According to the Treaty of Nanjing, the Chinese had to pay a huge indemnity to the British Indemnity: payment for loses in a war
  88. China The Treaty also gave the British control of Hong Kong British citizens living in China were also given extraterritoriality
  89. China Extraterritoriality: the right to live under the laws of one’s home country, while living in another country The Treaty of Nanjing was the first of a series of “unequal treaties” that forced China to make concessions to Western powers
  90. China Chinese nationalists were furious Hong Xiuquan, a village schoolteacher, led the Taiping Rebellion
  91. China The Taiping Rebellion sought to overthrow the Qing dynasty and turn China into a “Heavenly Kingdom of Peace” The rebellion lasted 14 years, with the rebels gaining control of large parts of China
  92. China The Qing dynasty eventually toppled the rebellion, but lost even more power 20 to 30 million Chinese died in the rebellion
  93. China: 1st Sino-Japanese War Imperialism
  94. China: 1st Sino-Japanese War Resenting the West and relying on its agriculture, many Chinese refused to modernize Japan, China’s neighbor, modernized in 1868 By the late 1800s, Japan had a powerful military
  95. China: 1st Sino-Japanese War The Japanese went to war with China over control of Asian lands between the two countries It was known as the Sino-Japanese War
  96. China: 1st Sino-Japanese War After bitter fighting, China agreed to give Japan the island of Taiwan and agree to pay Japan an indemnity
  97. China: 1st Sino-Japanese War After China’s defeat, European powers swept in and carved out “spheres of influence” in China In 1898, Emperor Guang Xu (gawahng shoo) launched the Hundred Days of Reform
  98. China: 1st Sino-Japanese War The Hundred Days of Reform called for modernization of the military, government, schools, and other organizations Conservatives rallied against the reforms and had the emperor imprisoned
  99. China: Boxer Rebellion Imperialism
  100. China: Boxer Rebellion Chinese conservatives began threatening Christian missionaries The Conservatives stated that the missionaries threatened Confucianism
  101. China: Boxer Rebellion Foreign troops also angered the nationalists Thanks to extraterritoriality foreigners ignored Chinese laws and traditions
  102. China: Boxer Rebellion The resentment against foreigners finally boiled over In 1899, a group of Chinese formed a secret society – the Righteous Harmonious Fists
  103. China: Boxer Rebellion Westerners, watching the group train in martial arts, dubbed them “boxers” The goal of the Boxers was to drive out foreigners
  104. China: Boxer Rebellion In 1900, the Boxers attacked foreigners, especially missionaries, across China In response, Japan and the western powers organized a multinational force
  105. China: Boxer Rebellion The force crushed the Boxer Rebellion and forced the Chinese to accept even more concessions The loss finally forced China to modernize
  106. China: Republic Imperialism
  107. China: Republic China admitted women to schools and placed more importance on science and math than on Confucian thought A large number of students were sent to study abroad
  108. China: Republic By the early 1900s, China had adopted a constitutional monarchy In 1911, peasants, students, local warlords, and court politicians finally toppled the Qing dynasty
  109. China: Republic In December of 1911, Sun Xian was named the president of the Chinese Republic Although reforms had been made, China was still at constant war with itself or foreigners
  110. The End
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