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MODERN ERA

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Title: MODERN ERA


1
MODERN ERA
  • INTERACTIONS 1750 - 1914

2
THEMES
  • Modernization
  • Reform, industrialization, progress minus
    Westernization
  • Westernization
  • The west as the cultural, economic, political
    model
  • Democratization
  • Increasing franchise, increasing governmental
    voice
  • Industrialization, Mechanization
  • Machines, technology replace human, animal muscle
  • Mass production of items, decreasing prices
  • Commercialism, Consumerism
  • Capitalism, profit, buying replace tradition,
    command in economics
  • Disruptions, Conflict, War
  • Change marks all societies leading to conflict,
    war
  • Population Movements
  • Urbanization, Immigration, Migration
  • Western Global Hegemony
  • It is the West and all of the Rest
  • Globalization or Diversity
  • Global Unity vs. Regional Autonomy Think
    Globally, Act Locally

3
MODERN ERA
  • INTERACTIONS
  • WARS CONFLICT 1750 - 1914

4
THE FIRST WORLD WARS
  • 1750 - 1765
  • War of Austrian Succession and Rise of Prussia
  • France, Spain, England, Portugal, Dutch, Russia,
    Sweden in wars
  • Rise of Prussia as a great power, England as a
    super power
  • Showed balance of power doctrine at its fullest
  • Colonial Wars
  • Battles fought around the world
  • Colonies changed hands, colonials effected
  • English, French contest for North America
  • France lost influence in North America,
    Caribbean, India
  • England emerges as worlds super power
  • British navy rules seas unopposed
  • Acquires former French North American colonies
  • Acquires preeminent influence in India
  • Acquires right to supply slaves to Spanish
    Americas
  • Spain, Portugal, Dutch no longer great powers
  • American Revolution 1776 1783 and the Wider
    World Impact
  • British colonists revolt, inspired by
    Enlightenment
  • American ships ranged seas attacking English

5
WAR OFAMERICANINDEPENDENCE
6
THE FRENCH NAPOLEON
  • An Era of Global Conflict from 1792 to 1814
  • French Revolution as Interaction
  • French revolutionary success sparked interest
    throughout Europe, Americas
  • Many revolutionary regimes set up by French
    armies in Italy, Germany
  • Haiti rebels during French Revolution
  • Spanish American colonies achieve independence
  • Napoleon Bonaparte (1769-1821)
  • Brilliant military leader upset the Balance of
    Power
  • Became general in royal army at 24
  • Supported the revolution defended the Directory
  • His invasion of Egypt was defeated by British
    army
  • Overthrew Directory named himself consul for
    life
  • Napoleon's empire
  • 1804, proclaimed himself emperor
  • Dominated the European continent
  • Annexed lands in Italy, Netherlands, Germany,
    Spain controlled other thrones
  • Defeated Austria and Prussia, Occupied Spain and
    Portugal, allied with Scandinavia
  • Perennial Enemy Great Britain who controlled the
    high seas
  • Disastrous invasions of Spain, Russia in 1812
    destroyed Grand Army

7
EUROPE 1812 1815
8
RUSSIAN EXPANSION
  • Nineteenth-century Russia
  • Collapse of Napoleon left Russia as great power
  • Russia dominates Eastern Europe (saved both
    Prussia, Austria)
  • Russia increased presence in Central Europe,
    Northern Europe
  • Russia wants to push into Ottoman SE Europe, SW
    Asia
  • Expands into Central Asia, Pacific
  • Autocracy, Orthodoxy, Conservatism
  • Official government policy to uphold conservatism
  • Pre-destined Russia to oppose revolution, change
    everywhere
  • Rise of Pan-Slavic Nationalism
  • Sought to control all Orthodox, Slavs
  • Brought Russia into conflict with Ottoman Empire,
    Austria in Balkans
  • Also wanted access to Mediterranean Sea
  • Hoped to seize control of Constantinople
  • War against the Ottoman Empire
  • Numerous wars to acquire Turkish lands in SE
    Europe, Caucasus
  • Supported rise of Christian Balkan states under
    Russian influence
  • Crimean War 1853 - 1856
  • France, Great Britain, Sardinia supported
    Ottomans

9
RUSSIAN EMPIRE
10
THE SICK OLD MAN OF EUROPE
  • The issue of Ottoman State called the Eastern
    Question
  • A central concern of European diplomacy from 1800
    to 1914
  • At issue was whether to preserve or partition
    Ottoman Empire
  • By 1800s, Ottoman Empire a dying state
  • Central government
  • Horribly corrupt, unable to reform, unviable
  • Central authority breaks down and provinces begin
    to rebel, break off
  • Multinational state
  • Greeks, Slavs, Albanians, Rumanians, Jews, Arabs,
    Kurds, Armenians
  • Conflicting traditions demanding autonomy
  • Nationalism affects some subject peoples
  • Mehmet Ali of Albania seeks independence
  • Muhammad Ali of Egypt seeks independence
  • Greek Rebellion in 1820 achieves independence
  • Serbs, Bulgars, Rumanians, Albanians follow in
    late 19th century
  • Russians, Austrians prey on Ottoman Territory
  • Russians constantly looking to take over
    territory
  • Austrians, Germans, French, English oppose
    Russian designs
  • French, English interested in markets, protecting
    Suez Canal

11
THE DECLINEANDPARTITIONOF THEOTTOMAN EMPIRE
12
EGYPT THE WORLD
  • Napoleons Invasion of (Egypt) Ottoman Empire
  • French Revolution and ideas influence Ottoman
    Europeans
  • Napoleon invaded Egypt, made radical changes
    while in possession
  • Introduced westernization, nationalism into Egypt
  • Destroyed Mameluk army without serious loss
  • Showed the weakness, outdated nature of the
    Muslim institutions
  • English halt invasion and restore Turkish control
    of Egypt
  • Muhammad Ali emerges as ruler of Egypt after
    Napoleon
  • Began process to modernize Egyptian army
  • Hired European officers, adopted European tactics
  • Invaded Syria builds modern fleet to invade
    Greece, Turkey
  • Modernizes economy to support military
  • Increased production of cash crops for export
    cotton, hemp, indigo
  • Improved harbors, irrigation, increased revenues
  • Reform frustrated by worried Europeans,
    traditional Muslims
  • Europeans destroy navy at Battle of Navarino
  • Khedives and European Intervention
  • Successors to Muhammad Ali ruled Egypt, Sudan
    until 1956
  • Egypt single export crop economy (cotton)
    vulnerable to fluctuations

13
AMERICAN CIVIL WAR
  • War not just an American domestic conflict
  • France, UK nearly intervened for South
  • Both dependent on Southern cotton
  • Both provided aid to Southern blockade runners
  • France and Mexico 1863 - 1867
  • Revolution ousted Santa Anna Juarez new leader
  • Mexico owed Europeans money
  • Europeans occupy Veracruz, ignored Monroe
    Doctrine
  • France set up a puppet regime under Austrian
    emperor
  • Austria, Prussia, Russia supported North
  • Saw Southern secession as revolt against
    legitimacy
  • Poland 1863 Three nations suppressed rebellion
  • Three nations warned France, UK not to get
    involved
  • Russian fleets anchored in Northern ports
  • US bought Alaska in 1867 to repay Russia for
    support
  • Prussia observed Union military
  • Learned from Northern art of war, rebuilt army
  • Increased use of railroads as instrument of war
  • Emancipation Proclamation, Gettysburg Address

14
MEXICO IN MODERN ERAINSTABILITY AND FOREIGN
INTERVENTION
  • Mexican Republic under Santa Anna
  • Until his death dominated Mexico
  • Saw himself as a Latin Napoleon
  • Constantly in debt to foreigners
  • Revolt of Texas led to conflict with US
  • Mexican American War 1846 1848
  • Mexico lost 1/3 of its territory
  • Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo
  • US expanded to Pacific and annexed Texas
  • The French Intervention
  • Benito Juarez
  • Liberal Indian President of Mexico
  • He started a liberal revolt
  • La Reforma which was powerful
  • Conservatives turned to French for support
  • French troops land
  • French install an Austrian emperor on throne
  • Backed emperor with French troops, French money
  • US demanded French withdrawal in 1867

15
OPIUM WARS
  • 1795 Maccauley Mission and After
  • British send diplomatic, trade delegation to
    China
  • Chinese tell British they are not interested in
    trade
  • China made mistake of underestimating Europeans
  • Forced British, Europeans to trade through Canton
  • Chinese exported silks, porcelains, teas for
    silver
  • Chinese refused to trade for manufactures
  • Opium trade
  • A serious threat to Qing dynasty by 19th century
  • Cohong system restricted foreign merchants to
    Canton
  • China had much to offer, but little demand for
    European products
  • East India Company cultivated opium to trade for
    Chinese goods
  • British found that Chinese would trade for opium
  • 1810 4500 chests weighing 133 pounds yearly
  • By 1839, 40,000 chests traded yearly
  • Opium draining revenue, destroying economy,
    society
  • By 1838, 1 of 400 million Chinese were addicted
  • The Opium War (1839-1842)
  • Commissioner Lin Zexu directed to stop trade

16
CHINA UNEQUAL TREATIES
  • Unequal treaties forced trade concessions from
    Qing dynasty
  • Treaty of Nanjing, 1842
  • Britain gained right to opium trade
  • Obtained most-favored-nation status
  • Hong Kong ceded to Great Britain
  • Called unequal treaties
  • Made with western countries and Japan
  • Extraterritoriality
  • Foreigners not subject to Chinese laws
  • Criminal acts tried in Western courts
  • Chinese crimes against westerners tried in
    western courts
  • By 1900, China lost control of economy to
    foreigners
  • Foreigners invest in China, control industry
  • Ninety ports open to foreign powers
  • Foreigners issued own stamps, had own post
  • Spheres of influence eroded Chinese power
  • Foreign powers seized Chinese tribute states
  • Vietnam (France)
  • Burma (United Kingdom)

17
CHINA CONCESSIONS
18
MODERN ERA
  • INTERACTIONS
  • IMPERIALISM 1750 - 1914

19
IMPERIALISM
  • Motives of imperialism
  • Modern imperialism
  • Refers to domination of industrialized countries
    over subject lands
  • Domination achieved by trade, investment,
    business activities
  • Two types of modern colonialism
  • Colonies ruled and populated by migrants
  • Colonies controlled without significant
    settlement
  • Economic motives of imperialism
  • European merchants made personal fortunes
  • Expansion to obtain raw materials
  • Colonies were potential markets for products
  • Political motives
  • Strategic purpose harbors, supply stations
  • Overseas expansion used to defuse internal
    tensions
  • Cultural justifications of imperialism
  • Christian missionaries sought converts in Africa
    and Asia
  • "Civilizing mission/"white man's burden
    justified expansion
  • Tools of empire
  • Transportation technologies supported imperialism

20
EMPIRE IN ASIA
  • The British empire in India
  • Company rule under the English East India Company
  • EIC took advantage of Mughal decline in India,
    began conquest of India in 1750s
  • Built trading cities and forts at Calcutta,
    Madras, Bombay
  • Ruled with small British force, Indian troops
    called sepoys
  • Sepoy Rebellion, 1857 attacks on British led to
    reprisals
  • British imperial rule replaced the EIC, 1858
  • British viceroy and high-level British civil
    service ruled India
  • British appointed viceroy, ran all domestic,
    foreign policy
  • Indians held low-level bureaucratic positions
  • Economic restructuring of India, Ceylon (Sri
    Lanka)
  • Introduction of commercial crops tea, coffee,
    opium
  • Built railroads, telegraph lines, canals,
    harbors, irrigation
  • Did not interfere with Indian culture, religion
  • Established English-style schools for Indian
    elites
  • Outlawed Indian customs considered offensive,
    (sati)
  • Imperialism in central Asia and southeast Asia
  • "Great Game" refers to competition between
    Britain, Russia in central Asia
  • By 1860s Russian expansion reached northern
    frontiers of British India

21
IMPERIALISM IN ASIA
22
SCRAMBLE FOR AFRICA
  • 1875 and 1900
  • European powers seized almost the entire
    continent
  • Early explorers charted the waters, gathered
    information on resources
  • Missionaries like David Livingstone set up
    mission posts
  • Henry Stanley sent by Leopold II of Belgium to
    create colony in Congo, 1870s
  • To protect their investments and Suez Canal,
    Britain occupied Egypt, 1882
  • South Africa
  • Settled first by Dutch farmers (Afrikaners) in
    seventeenth century
  • By 1800 was a European settler colony with
    enslaved black African population
  • British seized Cape Colony in early nineteenth
    century, abolished slavery in 1833
  • British-Dutch tensions led to Great Trek of
    Afrikaners inland to claim new lands
  • Mid-19TH century, they established Orange Free
    State in 1854, Transvaal in 1860
  • Discovery of gold and diamonds in Afrikaner
    lands influx of British settlers
  • Boer War, 1899-1902 British defeated Afrikaners,
    Union of South Africa
  • The Berlin Conference, 1884-1885
  • European powers set rules for carving Africa into
    colonies, Africans not invited
  • Occupation, supported by European armies,
    established colonial rule in Africa
  • By 1900 all of Africa, except Ethiopia and
    Liberia, was controlled by European powers
  • Colonial rule challenging and expensive

23
AFRICA 1880 1914
24
EMPIRES IN THE PACIFIC
  • Australia and New Zealand
  • Both became settler colonies in the Pacific
  • 1770, Captain Cook reached Australia, reported it
    suitable for settlement
  • 1788, one thousand settlers established colony of
    New South Wales
  • Became a penal colony after loss of Georgia in
    American Revolution
  • 1851, gold discovered surge of European
    migration to Australia
  • Fertile soil and timber of New Zealand attracted
    European settlers
  • Europeans diseases dramatically reduced
    aboriginal populations
  • European flora and fauna replaced most native
    species
  • Large settler societies forced indigenous peoples
    onto marginal lands
  • Pacific Islands
  • Spain and the Pacific
  • Pacific had been a Spanish possession until 19th
    century (Philippines, Micronesia)
  • Spanish yearly shipments of silver from Mexico to
    China ended in 1812
  • Colonization of Pacific Islands delayed until
    late nineteenth century
  • Early American visitors to the Pacific
  • American Whalers throughout region after American
    revolution
  • American merchants on way to China began in 19th
    century
  • California Gold Rush open Pacific coast to
    immigrants from Europe, China

25
EMPIRES IN THE PACIFIC
26
U.S. IMPERIALISM
  • Westward Expansion, Manifest Destiny precede
    overseas imperialism
  • Americans push west after American revolution
  • Drove Indians from land
  • US purchases Louisiana from France
  • Opened up West to settlement
  • Americans saw it as God-given right to occupy
    continent
  • The Monroe Doctrine and Latin America
  • 1823 proclamation by U.S. president James Monroe
  • Opposed European imperialism in the Americas
  • Justified American interventions in late 19th,
    20th century
  • Used doctrine to tell France to withdraw from
    Mexico in 1867
  • United States purchased Alaska from Russia in
    1867
  • Hawaii became a protectorate in 1875, formally
    annexed in 1898
  • Tended to leave area open only for American
    investments, loans
  • The Mexican American War 1846 1848
  • US annexation of Texas set off conflict with
    Mexico
  • US defeats Mexico, annexed 1/3 of Mexican
    territory
  • Settlement of Far West, Pacific Coast, Great
    Basin follows
  • 1867 1898

27
MANIFEST DESTINYWhat one painting can tell us
28
MAP OF AMERICAN IMPERIALISM
29
IMPERIAL JAPAN
  • Japan and the West
  • 1854 US Commodore Perry forces Japan out of
    isolation
  • Japanese resented unequal treaties of 1860s
  • Borrowed western knowledge
  • Resolved to become imperial power
  • Early Japanese expansion in nearby islands
  • 1870s, to the north Hokkaido, Kurile islands
  • By 1879, to the south Okinawa and Ryukyu Islands
  • Meiji Government
  • Prussia trained Japanese army, Britain trained
    Japanese navy
  • Bought British warships, built up navy, began
    building own ships
  • Established military academies
  • 1876, imposed unequal treaties on Korea at
    gunpoint
  • Made plans to invade China
  • The Sino-Japanese War (1894-95)
  • Rebellion in Korea Chinese army sent to restore
    order, reassert authority
  • Meiji leaders declared war against China,
    demolished Chinese fleet
  • China forced to cede Korea, Taiwan, Pescadores,
    Liaodong peninsula
  • Japan helps suppress Boxer Rebellion, creates own
    zones in China

30
JAPANESE EMPIRE
31
MODERN ERA
  • INTERACTIONS
  • RISE OF INTERNATIONAL
  • DIPLOMACY 1750 - 1914

32
DIPLOMACY BALANCE OF POWER HEGEMONY
  • Century Era of Western hegemony in all areas
  • Balance of Power dominates century
  • After Napoleon, great powers kept peace
  • Intervened in European affairs to maintain
    balance
  • Goals and Policies
  • No one power should dominate
  • No nation should be eliminated
  • No permanent ideologies threaten peace
  • Brokered conferences to decide touchy issues
  • International Organizations
  • Non-governmental Organizations new in history
  • Try to promote international accord
  • Establish cooperation
  • Red Cross
  • Established at end of Crimean War
  • Provide health care, relief following
    catastrophes
  • Olympics
  • Resurrected in 1896
  • Healthy competition

33
PRE-WAR ALLIANCES
  • Rival systems of alliance
  • Germany forms alliances
  • Bismarck attempts to isolate France
  • Until 1890, Germany had alliances with all except
    France
  • Obligated allies to come to one another's defense
  • France and Russia
  • Found themselves isolated, fearful of Germany
  • Formed Double Entente to end their isolation
  • The Triple Alliance
  • Germany, Austria-Hungary, Italy
  • Germany, Austria allied 1879
  • Italy joined in 1882 (Triple Alliance)
  • Others Allied States
  • Ottoman Empire German railroads, reforms of
    military
  • Bulgaria and Rumania fearful of Russia and Serbia
  • The Double and Later Triple Entente
  • France, Russia
  • Common enemy Germany, common war plans
  • Worked together diplomatically

34
ALLIANCESc. 1914
35
MODERN ERA
  • INTERACTIONS
  • TRADE AND COMMERCE 1750 - 1914

36
COMMERCIAL IDEOLOGIES IN 1750
  • Mercantilism
  • Limited amount of wealth in the world
  • If one nation benefited, another suffered
  • Goal is to maximize nations portion of trade
  • Goal is to exclude competition from markets and
    monopolize wealth
  • Governments pass legislation to support domestic
    commerce
  • Trade incentives for local producers
  • Establish barriers to outside trade
  • Tariffs, excise taxes
  • Quotas, restrictions on imports
  • Infant industries support
  • Governments support colonization, imperialism
  • Colonization find homes for excess population
  • Imperialism provides markets, resources for
    domestic industry
  • Foreign possessions bring glory, wealth to the
    nation
  • Almost every nation in the world subscribes to
    this theory
  • Free Trade
  • Wealth is not finite but can be created
  • To maximize wealth, allow people, industry to
    compete freely

37
ECONOMIC EXCHANGES IN 1750
  • Domestic Trade
  • Most commerce is internal, most markets are
    autarkic self-sufficient
  • Great wealth is generated in trade but not as
    much as domestic production
  • Most workers, farmers generate wealth only
    sufficient for self consumption
  • International Trade
  • Conditions of Trade
  • Mercantilism predominates
  • International trade tends to be limited to cash
    crops, finished luxuries
  • Western Europe dominates most trade
  • Only Eastern Asia has the ability to rival,
    challenge Western Europe
  • Trade Markets
  • Western European exports and imports
  • Exports finished products, finished luxuries
  • Imports raw materials, minerals, primary crop
    luxuries
  • Eastern Europe, Southern Europe, Northern Europe,
    SW Asia
  • Imports finished products, finished luxuries
  • Exports minerals, primary products, grains
  • Americas including Caribbean, South Asia
  • Imports finished products, finished luxuries

38
ECONOMIC EXCHANGES IN 1914
  • Saw the rise of international trade
  • Trade involved all types of products, goods for
    first time
  • Entire world involved all continents, peoples
    effected
  • Some nations traded to exist made their wealth
    off of trade
  • Very few nations produced finished goods for
    international market (core)
  • Most nations supplied world markets with raw
    materials (periphery)
  • Nations had begun to specialize in trade (we
    cannot produce everything)
  • Terms of Trade
  • Most items traded were finished goods, industrial
    products
  • Wealthy nations tended to trade with each other
  • Western Colonies, Latin America, all of Asia
    except Japan
  • Only accounted for a small part of trade
  • Generally exported primary products, imported
    finished products
  • Nations began negotiating trade agreements
  • The US and later UK came to favor open markets
    (markets open to all)
  • Most favored nation status was goal partners
    traded as equals
  • Rise of international capital markets
  • Domestic profit needed to be invested, sometimes
    best opportunities abroad
  • Money invested abroad to reap benefits at home
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