Europe - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Europe

Description:

... the only European power to continue its expansionist policy throughout the 19th century, ... Advanced fire arms defeat natives Enfield Rifle (1853) Smith ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:107
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 32
Provided by: SP247
Category:
Tags: 19th | century | enfield | europe

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Europe


1
EuropesNew Imperialism (1815-1914)
2
What is Imperialism?
  • The policy of extending a nations authority by
    territorial acquisition or by establishing an
    economic and political hegemony (domination) over
    other nations

3
Background (1815-1870)
  • European expansion goes back to the 15th century
  • The Spanish, Portuguese, Dutch, French, and
    British colonial empires followed one another for
    the next 400 years
  • They are all western, maritime powers
  • By the 1820s several countries lost their
    colonial connections without suffering
    economically
  • By 1815 France lost most of her possessions in
    America and the east Spain her South American
    lands, and Britain had lost her 13 American
    colonies
  • By 1822 Portugal lost Brazil

4
  • However, it is not necessary to cross sea, rather
    than land, to become an imperial power
  • Russia, the only European power to continue its
    expansionist policy throughout the 19th century,
    made rapid advances into southern and central
    Asia
  • They continued to move against the declining
    Ottoman Empire
  • Moved into Central Asia and the Sea of Japan

5
The 1870s
  • During the 1870s, the European powers developed a
    new interest in overseas expansion, especially in
    Africa and Asia
  • European states soon spread their control over 10
    million square acres and 150 million people
  • 1/5 of the worlds land area
  • 1/10 of the worlds population
  • European expansion moved quickly, and it was soon
    regarded as a necessary action to become a great
    power

6
What makes it new?
  • The number of contestants for empires increased
  • Many people believed that this was their nations
    last opportunity to build or enlarge an empire
  • Advocates and opponents of colonial expansion
    felt the need to sway public opinion

7
What were the reasons for Imperialism?
  1. Economic Reasons
  2. Cultural/Religious/Social Reasons
  3. Strategy and Political Reasons
  4. Irrational Reasons

8
Reason 1 Economics
  • Nations sought ways of finding markets beyond
    Europe, where tariffs caused economic barriers
    between nations
  • There were demands for new sources of
    raw materials
  • Manufacturers needed new markets for their goods
  • British explorer Henry Stanley advised a group of
    Manchester manufacturers to target Africa, which
    contained 30 million people who all needed clothes

9
Economic Analysts
  • J.A. Hobson (1858-1940)
  • In Imperialism A Study (1902), he attributed the
    colonial expansions to great financiers of
    western and central Europe who wanted to increase
    their wealth through overseas investment
  • Usually taken to mean that the real impulse was
    always one of capitalistic greed for cheap raw
    materials, advantageous markets, good
    investments, and new areas of exploration
  • Said excessive capital in search of investment
    was only possible due to the unequal distribution
    of wealth. He called for social reform and equal
    distribution
  • If the consuming public in this country raised
    its standard of consumption to keep pace with
    every rise of productive powers, there could be
    no excess of goods or capital clamorous to use
    imperialism in order to find markets.

10
  • V. I. Lenin (1870-1924)
  • Elaborated Hobsons argument in Imperialism
    the Last Stage of Capitalism
  • Emphasized the finance capital rather than
    industrial. Financiers were the powers behind
    imperialistic policies
  • Said Imperialism is the monopoly stage of
    capitalism, or the last stage of a dying system
  • Saw imperialism as a direct continuation of the
    fundamental properties of capitalism in general,
    and that the war of 1914 was on both sides
    imperialist.
  • This was a convenient and persuasive case for
    explaining WWI in economic terms

11
Reason 2 Cultural/Religious/Social
  • Social Darwinism
  • Saw life as a constant struggle
    for survival, with the stronger
    peoples surviving at the expense of the
    weaker. Countries that failed to expand were seen
    as losing. Believed that the advanced white race
    had an obligation to civilize the less
    developed, backward peoples of the world.
  • Your new-caught sullen peoples, half-devil and
    half-child. Rudyard Kipling, The White Mans
    Burden (1899)

12
  • Missionary Activity
  • An upsurge in Christian missionary
    activity by Catholics and Protestants.
    They sought to make
    disciples of all nations and to
    bring the advantages of European civilization to
    those they regarded as heathens tragically
    ignorant of the teachings of God
  • They demanded that Western governments give them
    political and even military support
  • David Livingstone (Scottish) Originally an
    African medical missionary, he later returned
    under government auspices as an explore to open
    a path for commerce and Christianity. Died in
    Africa in 1873, his body sent under navel escort
    to be buried in Westminster Abbey as a national
    hero

13
  • Colonies as Source of Profit Econ. Security
  • Argued that the empires profit would finance a
    program of domestic reform and welfare
  • New Land
  • The colonies would attract a European countrys
    surplus population
  • However, most European emigrants went to areas
    NOT controlled by their countries
  • North America
  • South America
  • Australia

14
Reason 3 Strategy and Politics
  • Strategic and political considerations
    were important in bringing on the
    New Imperialism. An example was
    the rush for African colonies in
    the 1880s.
  • Britain sought control of the Suez Canal in order
    to protect her trade route to India as a result,
    she gained an interest in Egypt and the
    Anglo-Egyptian Sudan
  • Germanys acquisition of the Cameroons and East
    Africa improved her diplomatic position
  • France acquired Algeria in order to compete w/G.B
    and Tunisia to keep it from Italy. Also annexed
    much of West Africa, the Congo, and the island of
    Madagascar

15
  • Perhaps the greatest pressure to build colonies
    resulted from the tension between the great
    European powers
  • Germany under Bismarcks guidance encouraged the
    French to build colonies in Africa, thinking that
    this might take their minds off their loss of
    Alsace-Lorraine. Soon afterwards, afraid they
    were being left out, they started to colonize.
  • Rather than leading to European stability, it
    threatened to cause war. In 1905 and 1911, France
    and Germany almost went to war over a dispute
    concerning Morocco.

16
Imperial Expansion in Africa to 1880
17
Imperial Expansion in Africa to 1880
18
Partition of Africa, 1880 1914
19
Partition of Africa, 1880 1914
20
Reason 4 The Irrational Element
  • The 1880s Scramble for Africa
  • Germanys annexations started a wild scramble to
    acquire the rest of Africa. In 1875, less than
    1/10th of Africa had been turned into European
    colonies by 1895, only 1/10th remained
    unclaimed, even the areas that were neither
    profitable nor strategic. Soon, Spheres of
    Influence were set up all over Africa.
  • Empire in the modern period was the product of
    European power its reward was power or the sense
    of power. D.K. Fieldhouse

21
Criticism of Economic Motives
  • Economic factors played a huge role in imperial
    developmentbut they were not the ONLY nor MOST
    important factors
  • Some colonies had abundant raw materials, while
    others had few or none
  • The poor people of African and Asia did not
    provide a sizeable market for European goods
  • Some colonies had many opportunities for
    investment, while others did not
  • In the race for colonies, the imperial powers
    appeared more interested in acquisition than in
    economic advantages

22
Imperialism in China
  • China became a center of imperialist activity in
    the 1890s as the Manchu dynasty became incapable
    of controlling the country
  • Great Britain, already in control of Hong Kong,
    developed a sphere of influence in the Yangtze
    River valley
  • The French focused on the Kwangsi
    and Kweichow provinces in the
    south, near Indochina

23
Japanese Intervention
  • 1894 Japan went to war with China, opening a
    new phase of imperialism
  • Japans emergence as a major power was shocking,
    as they had isolated themselves from the outside
    world until 1854, when American Commodore Matthew
    Perry was able to get Japan to establish
    commercial relations
  • In the Sino-Japanese War of 1894-95, Japan easily
    won
  • Fearing an advance of Japanese power in China,
    Russia, Germany, and France intervened
  • The Germans and Russians took advantage of
    Japans setback, while France and Great Britain
    also expanded their interests in China

24
Asia, 18801914
25
Asia, 18801914
26
The New American Empire
  • The United States joins the ranks of imperialist
    powers
  • Alaska is purchased from Russia in 1867
  • 1878 the USA requires rights to a naval base
    in Pago Pago in the Samoan Islands in the South
    Pacific
  • Growing American interests in Hawaii led to its
    annexation by the USA in 1898
  • 1898 The Spanish-American War resulted in the
    acquisition of Puerto Rico, Guam, and the
    Philippine Islands.
  • Cuba becomes, in effect, an American
    protectorate
  • American focus their attention on the Pacific,
    as well as the Caribbean and Central America,
    still reluctant to get involved in European
    affairs (The Monroe Doctrine)

27
What made it all Possible?
  • Improved Technology!
  • Steam boats allow river navigation
  • Electric telegraph aids communication
  • Quinine water prevents Malaria (The White Mans
    Grave)
  • 1825 death rate in West Africa 77
  • 1888 death rate in West Africa 7
  • Advanced fire arms defeat natives
  • Enfield Rifle (1853)
  • Smith Wesson (1855) repeating rifle
  • Winchester (1867)
  • Maxim gun (1884)

28
Important not to Forget
  • The Brutality of Colonialism
  • Huge numbers of Africans and Asians lost their
    lives in the European pursuit for empires
  • Ex
  • In the Congo, which the King of Belgium initially
    held as personal property, Belgian soldiers used
    to brag about being able to line up five Africans
    in such a way as that only one bullet was used to
    kill them. They cut off natives limbs for the
    slightest infraction of rules to terrorize the
    others into obeying.

29
(No Transcript)
30
  • Students Analyze patterns of global change in
    the era of New Imperialism in at least two of the
    following regions or countries Africa, Southeast
    Asia, China, India, Latin America, and the
    Philippines.
  • Describe the rise of industrial economies and
    their link to imperialism and colonialism (e.g.,
    the role played by national security and
    strategic advantage moral issues raised by the
    search for national hegemony, Social Darwinism,
    and the missionary impulse material issues such
    as land, resources, and technology).
  • 2. Discuss the locations of the colonial rule of
    such nations as England, France, Germany, Italy,
    Japan, the Netherlands, Russia, Spain, Portugal,
    and the United States.
  • 3. Explain imperialism from the perspective of
    the colonizers and the colonized and the varied
    immediate and long-term responses by the people
    under colonial rule.
  • 4. Describe the independence struggles of the
    colonized regions of the world, including the
    roles of leaders, such as Sun Yat-sen in China,
    and the roles of ideology and religion.

31
  • DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
  • Discuss the development of the inequality in the
    global economy that resulted from the
    industrialization of Europe.
  • Describe the development and growth of worldwide
    trade and the development of the world market.
  • Discuss the opening of China and Japan to outside
    contact and trade with the European world.
  • Describe the penetration of European civilization
    into Egypt and the resulting effects.
  • Discuss the causes and consequences of the growth
    of the population of Europe in the pre-World War
    I era.
  • Describe the type of people who emigrated from
    Europe, the major sources of emigration, and the
    causes for their emigration.
  • Describe the type of people who emigrated from
    Asia, the major sources of emigration, the causes
    for their emigration, the resistance to Asian
    immigration.
  • Discuss the growth and impact of the "new
    imperialism" upon the continent of Africa and its
    people.
  • Describe the career of Cecil Rhodes and what his
    attitudes suggest about the causes of
    imperialism.
  • Describe the growth of the "new imperialism" in
    Asia.
  • Discuss the causes of the new age of imperialism
    in the late nineteenth century.
  • Describe and discuss the criticism of the motives
    and effects of the new imperialism.
  • Describe the general responses to the new
    imperialism by the governments and peoples of
    Africa and Asia.
  • Describe the growth of the British domination of
    India and its effects.
  • Describe the opening of Japan to Western
    civilization and the effects of that opening upon
    Japan and its people
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com