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World Politics in a New Era

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World Politics in a New Era Imperialism and Its Victims – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: World Politics in a New Era


1
World Politics in a New Era
  • Imperialism and Its Victims

2
Origins of Imperialism
  • Definition of imperialism
  • Three foundations of European imperialism
  • The search for trade routes to Asia
  • Strengthening the European home country
  • European superiority in technology (Example
    Seafaring)
  • Some emphasized territorial conquest, whereas
    others concentrated on control of trade routes

3
Spain and Portugal Dividing the World
  • Avoid conflict over their competing expansion
  • Spain and Portugal established an imaginary line
    in 1494
  • The Treaty of Tordesillas
  • Spain was granted possession of all lands to the
    west of this line
  • Portugal was granted all the lands to the east
  • Spain had authority in the New World except
    Brazil
  • Portugal gained supremacy over Africa and the
    Indian Ocean

4
Spanish Colonial Administration
  • Emphasized the acquisition of territory
  • Aided by a number of factors
  • Gunpowder and muskets
  • Native Americans had less immunity to diseases
  • Foreign intervention was often welcome by the
    people
  • Large bureaucracy in the Spanish territories

5
Portuguese Colonialism
  • Based on trade
  • Content to establish trading ports
  • In Brazil, the Portuguese turned to growing
    sugarcane
  • Large plantations
  • African slaves were imported to compensate for
    the lack of indigenous labor

6
Independence from Spain and Portugal
  • Spain
  • The Napoleonic Wars
  • Proscription on free trade
  • Independence encouraged by Great Britain
  • Fight for independence 1810 through 1825
  • Simon Bolivar
  • Portugal
  • Brazil gained its independence with relatively
    little conflict
  • Colonies in Africa would wait until the 1970s

7
Dutch Empire
  • Founding of the Dutch East India Company 1602
  • Controlling key strategic trading ports, straits,
    and coasts
  • Spices of the Dutch East Indies
  • Tea plantations on the island of Ceylon
  • Impact of the Napoleonic Wars
  • Lost the Dutch East Indies during World War II
    but retained some Caribbean islands

8
Anglo-French Rivalry
  • Principal colonial competition for most of the
    eighteenth and nineteenth centuries
  • Different strengths and weaknesses
  • The British Isles made foreign invasion unlikely
  • British trade for raw materials and food
  • France had to devote large resources to its
    standing army
  • France was more inward-looking in economic
    matters
  • British population pressures encouraged
    emigration
  • Britain had consistent advantages over France

9
Frances Bid for Empire
  • Areas in North America, the western half of
    Hispaniola, and other Caribbean islands
  • Established trading posts in the Indian Ocean
  • Never attracted a great number of French settlers
  • Early empire collapsed as a result of the Seven
    Years War
  • France rebuilt an empire after the Napoleonic
    Wars in Africa, Southeast Asia, and the Pacific

10
Frances Bid for Empire
  • Saw role as bringing culture and civilization to
    backwards people
  • Decolonization was a particularly difficult
    ordeal for the French empire
  • Precipitated by the disastrous results for France
    in World War II
  • Only a few Caribbean and Pacific islands remain
    overseas departments today

11
British Empire
  • Seventeenth and Eighteenth centuries
  • Jamestown, Virginia (1607)
  • Additional colonies in North America and the
    Caribbean
  • English hegemony in North America lasted only a
    few years
  • Nineteenth and twentieth centuries
  • Burma and Malaya Australia and New Zealand
  • Self-government in Canada, Australia, and New
    Zealand
  • Britain used its superior naval and strategic
    resources to secure the proverbial lions share
  • The Boer War (1899-1902)
  • By the eve of World War I, the sun never set on
    the British empire

12
Twilight of the British Empire
  • The world wars
  • Independence by Ireland, Arab states, India,
    Burma, Ceylon, and Israel
  • In Africa, most colonies gained independence in
    the mid-1950s and early 1960s
  • Followed by most of the Caribbean and South
    Pacific island territories over the next decade
  • Decolonization was generally peacefully achieved

13
The Russians
  • Relentless expansion (Sixteenth and Seventeenth
    centuries)
  • East across Siberia and toward the Baltic Sea
  • Trade and contact with Europe remained limited
  • The reign of Alexander I (1801-1825)
  • Influence peaked during the Cold War
  • Massive military spending
  • Continued inability to compete
  • The Soviet Union disintegrated in 1991
  • Collapse was rapid but mostly peaceful

14
The United States
  • Expanded westward through North America in the
    nineteenth century
  • In 1898 entered the ranks of the overseas
    imperialist powers
  • Puerto Rico, the Philippines, Hawaii, Guam, and
    other Pacific islands
  • Major power in the Pacific
  • Informal control
  • Friendly governments in Third World countries
    often led to disaster

15
Ottoman Empire
  • Major force for more than 500 years
  • Fourteenth through eighteenth centuries
  • Conquered Constantinople, the rest of Turkey,
    Greece, parts of Albania, and the Balkans (See
    Map 5.3)
  • Neutralized Persia and conquered most of the
    Middle East
  • Consolidated the claim to be the protector and
    benefactor of Islam
  • Brought economic gains
  • Nineteenth and twentieth centuries
  • Increasingly came under attack from Russia and
    Austria
  • The sick man of Europe deteriorated
  • Chaos sparked World War I and the end of the
    Ottoman Empire

16
German and Japanese Empires
  • Produced numerous bloody wars between 1860 and
    1945
  • Neither was effective in creating permanent
    structures
  • Consequence of defeat by other countries

17
Decline of Imperialism
  • Most empires were unable to survive the two World
    Wars
  • Fragmenting pressure from the peoples subjected
    to their rule
  • Costs of long-distance administration
  • cCompetition from each other
  • Nationalism and political sovereignty
  • Empire became politically incorrect

18
Social Impact
  • Two forms of colonialism
  • Settler colonialism
  • Examples North America, the Caribbean, Australia
  • Elite colonialism
  • Example South Asia
  • Role of geography and climate
  • East Asia avoided direct colonial rule
  • Japan
  • China

19
Economic Consequences
  • Latin America, Africa, and the Pacific
  • North America furs, timber, fish, tobacco, and
    cotton
  • South America gold, silver, corn, and potatoes
  • Africa slaves, cocoa, coffee, palm oil, tea,
    cotton, ivory, tropical hardwoods, copper, and
    gold
  • Australia and New Zealand sheep and dairy
  • In Asia, the purpose was to control overseas
    trade routes
  • Create a degree of political and economic
    predictability

20
Cultural and Ideological Impact
  • Colonialism and culture
  • Traditions of rule of law, private property, and
    individual rights
  • Divide and conquer in areas of elite colonialism
  • Creation of countries in Africa and parts of Asia
    that made little if any political sense
  • Colonialism and ideology
  • European notions of liberty and democracy
  • Anticolonialism
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