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The Age of Imperialism

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Title: The Age of Imperialism


1
The Age of Imperialism
  • Chapter 11
  • 1850-1914

2
What is imperialism?
  • The seizure (takeover) of a country or territory
    by a stronger country

3
What is Imperialism?
  • Why do Europeans do this?
  • Industrialization sparks the need for
  • Land perfect for establishing trading and
    military posts
  • Natural resources and raw materials
  • New markets for products

4
What is Imperialism?
  • Europeans want to control all aspects of their
    colonies
  • Politics
  • Society
  • Economy
  • Culture and customs

5
Types of Imperialism
  • Methods of Management
  • Direct Control
  • Paternalism Europeans provide for local people
    but grant no rights
  • Assimilation adaptation of local people to
    ruling culture
  • Indirect Control
  • Limited self-rule for local governments
  • Legislative body includes colonial local
    officials

6
Types of Imperialism
  • Forms of Control
  • Colony
  • Governed by a foreign power
  • Protectorate
  • Governs itself, but under outside control
  • Sphere of Influence
  • Outside power controls investments trading
  • Economic Imperialism
  • Private business interests assert control

7
I. The Scramble for Africa
  • Africa Before European Dominion
  • Divided into hundreds of ethnic groups
  • Followed traditional beliefs, Islam or
    Christianity
  • Nations ranged from large empires to independent
    villages
  • Africans controlled their own trade networks
  • Europeans only had contact on African coasts

8
The Scramble for Africa (cont)
  • Nations compete for overseas empires
  • Europeans wanted more land
  • Contained large amounts of gold, diamonds, and
    rubber
  • Africa was a mystery to many
  • Europeans who penetrated Africa were
  • Explorers seeking wealth and notoriety
  • Missionaries trying to convert Africans to
    Christianity
  • Humanitarians westernize the savages

9
The Scramble for Africa (cont)
  • Forces Driving Imperialism
  • Belief in European superiority
  • Racism
  • Social Darwinism
  • Factors Promoting Imperialism in Africa
  • European technological superiority
  • Europeans had means to control
  • New medicines prevent diseases

10
The Division of Africa
  • The Berlin Conference (1884)
  • Europeans leaders divide Africa
  • No African ruler invited
  • Little or no thought about the complex
    differences in ethnic groups
  • By 1914 Only independent nations
  • Liberia
  • Ethiopia

11
According to this cartoon, which European
countries were fighting for a position in Africa?
How did the Berlin Conference lead to the
situation shown in the cartoon?
12
South Africa
  • Three Groups Clash for Power
  • Africans
  • Zulu nation, led by Shaka, fought the British
  • Zulu nation lost to British in 1887
  • Boers
  • Dutch settlers that had controlled South Africa
    since the mid 1600s
  • Also known as Afrikaners
  • British
  • Gained control of South Africa after the Berlin
    Conference

13
Boer War
  • Fought between the Boers and the British
  • Many Africans fought with the Boers
  • First example of total war
  • British win in 1910
  • Established the Union of South Africa (British
    Rule)

14
Effects of European Imperialism in Africa
15
II. Case Study Nigeria
  • Britains control of Nigeria
  • Britain takes control by diplomacy force
  • All of Nigeria claimed as a colony in 1914
  • Nigeria very culturally diverse
  • 250 ethnic groups
  • British utilize indirect rule
  • Local chiefs resent limits on their rule

16
African Resistance
  • Africans Confront Imperialism
  • Broad resistance, but Europeans have superior
    weapons
  • Unsuccessful Movements
  • Algeria fights the French for 50 years
  • German East Africa resistance results in 75,000
    deaths
  • Successful Movements
  • Ethiopia under Emperor Menelik II
  • Plays Europeans against each other
  • Stockpiles modern weapons
  • Defeats Italy and remains independent

17
Legacy of Imperialism
  • Negative Effects
  • Africans lose land and independence
  • Many lives are lost
  • Traditional cultures breakdown
  • Division of Africa creates problems that continue
    today
  • Positive Effects
  • Reduces local fighting
  • Sanitation improves
  • Hospitals and schools created
  • Technology brings economic growth

18
III. Europeans Claim Muslim Lands
  • The Ottoman Empire Loses Power
  • Empire begins to decline in 1566
  • Death of Suleyman I
  • Modernization movements are unsuccessful
  • Greece and Serbia gain independence
  • European Powers look to gain Ottoman lands

19
Downfall of the Ottoman Empire
20
Crimean War (1853)
  • Crimean War Russia vs. Ottoman Empire
  • Russia seeks Ottoman land
  • Access to a warm-water port
  • Russia loses war
  • Ottomans are shown to be weak
  • Russia still is able to take land

21
Europeans Grab Territory
  • England gains control of
  • India natural resources
  • Suez Canal international trade
  • Persia oil and tobacco
  • Russia gains control of
  • Persia oil, tobacco, access to Indian Ocean
  • Afghanistan oil

22
The Suez Canal
23
IV. British Imperialism in India
  • British Expand Control over India
  • East India Company
  • Controls India thru economic imperialism
  • Company uses an army including Indian soldiers
    known as sepoys
  • India was seen as the most important colony
  • Due to its production of raw materials
  • Known as the Jewel in the Crown

24
Effects of British Rule
  • Impact of Colonialism
  • Railroads move cash crops and goods faster
  • British control political and economic power
  • Cash crops resulted in loss of self-sufficiency
    and caused famine
  • Indian culture is disrupted due to racism and
    missionaries
  • Britain sought to modernize India

25
The Sepoy Rebellion
  • Indians Rebel
  • Sepoys refuse to use cartridges due to religious
    reasons
  • They had to bite them open greased with pork
    fat
  • Considered unclean by Muslims
  • Many sepoys were jailed, others rebelled
  • British put down the rebellion
  • Results
  • Britain takes direct control of India
  • Increased distrust between Indians and British

26
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27
Nationalism in India
  • Call for reforms
  • India adopts modernization movements
  • Many Indians adopt western ways
  • Religious Issues Remain
  • Formation of the Indian National Congress (1885)
  • Called for independence from Britain
  • Formation of the Muslim League (1906)
  • Many Muslims did not trust Hindus within India

28
Imperialism in Southeast Asia
  • European Powers Invade the Pacific Rim
  • Lands of Southeast Asia that border the Pacific
    Ocean
  • Britain Malaysia, Burmia, and Singapore
  • Netherlands Indonesia
  • France Indochina (Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia)
  • Why?
  • Land perfect for establishing trading and
    military posts
  • Excellent for plantation agriculture

29
Imperialism in Southeast Asia
  • Results
  • Modernization helps the European businesses
  • Education, health, and sanitation improves
  • Millions migrate to find work
  • Racial and religious clashes increase

30
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31
Englands Empire Grows
32
V. Imperialism in China and Japan
  • China vs. The West
  • China was self-sufficient no need for trade
  • China kept a favorable balance of trade
  • Europeans were able to shift the balance
  • Sale of Opium addictive drug from poppy plant
  • Opium War (1839-1842) China vs. Britain
  • China loses signs Treaty of Nanjing
  • Extraterritoriality foreigners were not subject
    to Chinese laws
  • Chinese power over the West ends

33
China vs. The West
  • Foreign Influence Grows
  • Growing Spheres of Influence
  • A Surge in Chinese Nationalism
  • Boxer Rebellion
  • Poor peasants and workers who resented foreign
    priviledge
  • Beginnings of Reform
  • China tried to become more western
  • Further added to internal problems

34
Imperialism in China
35
Imperialism in Japan
  • Japan remained isolated from western world for
    centuries only traded mainly with China
  • Treaty of Kanagawa (1854) ends Japans
    isolation
  • Meiji Reform Japan begins to modernize
    beginning in 1867
  • Japan was competitive with the west in many
    modern industries

36
Imperialism in Japan
  • Russo-Japanese War (1904)
  • Treaty of Portsmouth
  • Japan gained Russian territory
  • Russia forced out of Korea
  • Japan Controls Korea
  • Takes control of the peninsula in 1910
  • Begins a period of extreme oppression

37
THE END
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