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Imperialism Intro

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Title: Imperialism Intro


1
Imperialism Intro
2
Goal of Today
  • The goal of today will be to begin to understand
    some of motives and reasons that European
    Imperialism.
  • Terms to know
  • Colony
  • Protectorate
  • Sphere of Influence

3
Definition
  • Imperialism- the policy, practice, or advocacy of
    extending the power and dominion of a nation
    especially by direct territorial acquisitions or
    by gaining indirect control over the political or
    economic life of other areas broadly the
    extension or imposition of power, authority, or
    influence

4
Five Forms of Imperial Control
  • Colony
  • Protectorate
  • Sphere of Influence
  • Annex
  • Economic/Military Aid

5
1. COLONY
  • Territory settled and ruled by people of another
    land

6
2. PROTECTORATE
  • Country with its own government but under the
    control of an outside power.
  • Puppet Government
  • Satellite

7
3. SPHERE OF INFLUENCE
  • Area in which an outside power claims exclusive
    investment or trading privileges.

8
4. ANNEX
  • Add a territory onto an existing state or country.

9
5. ECONOMIC/MILITARY AID
  • One country isnt simply trying to help another
    but is trying to gain a small amount of control.

10
Why did countries colonize
EuropeanNationalism
Source for Raw Materials
Missionary/ Humanitarian Activity
Industrial Revolution
  • European
  • Motives
  • For Colonization

Military NavalBases
Markets forFinishedGoods
Places toDumpUnwanted/Excess Popul.
SocialDarwinism
EuropeanRacism
Soc. Eco.Opportunities
WhiteMansBurden
11
  • Imperialism did not begin in the nineteenth
    century. A number of European states, most
    notably Spain, Portugal and the Netherlands, had
    carved out large overseas empires in the age of
    exploration.
  • The new technologies of the Industrial Revolution
    in the nineteenth century encouraged imperial
    growth.- ie raw materials
  • When the value of these raw materials became
    apparent, the states of Europe began to take
    control of large swathes of territory in Africa
    and Asia, heralding in a new era of imperialism.

12
European Nationalism
  • This is the idea of one upping another country.
    Ex. If Great Britain had a colony in Africa than
    France, Belgium, Germany, Italy, Holland, Spain,
    and Portugal, had to have one too.
  • There was a huge desire to compete with other
    countries.

13
  • Missionaries
  • Catholic and Protestant missionaries followed the
    explorers
  • Built schools and medical clinics
  • Saw Africans as children in need of guidance
    (paternalistic view)

14
  • In this period there was a push to spread the
    Christian religion to the newly formed colonies
    so missionaries set out to these places to help
    convert the native peoples.
  • Closely related to the missionary motives of
    Europeans there was also the idea that the people
    of the advanced Western nations had the duty to
    transmit Western ideas and techniques to more
    backward people. People were considered
    backward if their religion or their culture
    differed from those of the West.
  • Missionaries also spread education and helped
    improve medicine in these countries. This meant
    people in these countries improved their
    knowledge of medicine, hygiene, and sanitation.

15
The White Mans Burden
16
Dictionary Term
  • White Man's Burden
  • The phrase "white man's burden" referred to the
    perceived responsibility of Europeans to civilize
    and Christianize the nonwhite people of the
    world. It was primarily used by the British to
    justify their colonization efforts, which were
    usually motivated by economics rather than the
    white man's burden.

17
The White Mans Burden appeared in childrens
books and even in advertisements of the time
period.
18
  • Text on bottom read The first step towards
    lightening the White Mans Burden is through
    teaching the virtues of cleanliness. Pear Soap
    is a potent factor in brightening the dark
    corners of the earth.

19
Charles Darwin
  • Theory of natural selection
  • Resources of the environment are limited
  • No two members of the same species are alike.
  • Organisms that have useful traits reproduce in
    greater number, those that do not have those
    traits die off- survival of the fittest.
  • Nature selects different traits at different
    times.

20
Social Darwinism
  • Many writers applied Darwins theory to
    sociology. These theories became Social
    Darwinism.
  • Within the human species, nations are locked in
    a struggle for survival. Everywhere, civilized
    nations are supplanting barbarous nations.
    Advanced civilization, obviously, has inherited
    valuable traits from its ancestors.
    Underdeveloped cultures, except in hostile
    climates, will soon die off. Therefore, natural
    order obligates powerful, civilized nations to
    appropriate the limited resources of the weak.
  • Does it adhere to the principles of Darwin's
    theory? Why or why not?

21
Social Darwinism
22
  • Josiah Strong, an influential American clergyman,
    wrote the following argument for expansion in
    1897. Is it logical? How does it differ from the
    previous passage? Does it follow Darwin's line of
    reasoning?
  • The two great ideas of mankind are Christianity
    and civil liberty. The Anglo-Saxon civilization
    is the great representative of these two great
    ideas. Add to this the fact of his rapidly
    increasing strength in modern times, and we have
    a demonstration of his destiny.There can be no
    doubt that North America is to be the great home
    of Anglo-Saxon power. It is not unlikely that
    before the close of the next century, this race
    will outnumber all other civilized races of the
    earth. But the widening waves of migration meet
    today on its Pacific coast. The unoccupied arable
    lands of the world are limited and will soon be
    taken.The time is coming when the pressure of
    population will . . . force the final competition
    of races. The United States will assert itself,
    having developed aggressive traits necessary to
    impress its institutions upon mankind. Can anyone
    doubt that the result of this competition will be
    the survival of the fittest?

23
  • Cecil Rhodes (who is British) said- I contend
    that we are the first race in the world, and that
    the more of the world we inhabit the better it is
    for the human race.

24
  • Gordon Sprigg( a politician in Cape Colony- South
    Africa) in referring to local tribes- The
    Government feels that, like the rest of the
    natives in South Africa, you posses very much the
    character of children, and the Government knows
    that children cannot at all times be trusted

25
Rudyard Kipling 1865- 1936
  • A British author who wrote about early colonial
    life in India.
  • Supported imperialism.
  • Wrote Jungle Book 1895

26
His Poem
  • In February 1899 the poem appeared in an issue of
    McClures Magazine
  • It was written to encourage the US to take up the
    burden that other European countries had and
    colonize the Philippine Islands.
  • The release of the poem coincided with the
    beginning of the Philippine- American War and the
    US Senate ratification of the treaty that placed
    Puerto Rico, Guam, Cuba, and the Philippines
    under US control.
  • This poem became the slogan of imperialism.

27
  • What Allowed the Europeans to take Control of
    Africa and Asia

28
Technological Advances
  • The steam engine
  • Better transportation
  • Increased exploration
  • Improvements in communication

The steamboat Herald (with mounted machine guns)
on the Zambezi river in Africa
One of the first steam engines
29
The Maxim Gun
British troops fighting forces in Benin in 1897
30
Remember? Whatever happens, we have gotthe
Maxim gun, and they have not.
When Africans rebelled, Europeans killed
thousands of Yao, Zulu, Asante, Shona, Herero,
and Maji-Maji people.
Ethiopia was the only exception
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