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AP World History

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Title: AP World History


1
AP World History
  • 1750 1914 Overview
  • (Periodization Question Why 1750 1914?)

2
Industrialization changed Production
  • Britain was the center (geography, distribution
    of coal and iron, demographic changes/urbanization
    , B. entrepreneurialism access to foreign
    resources through colonialism, capitalism)
  • Factories and fossil fuel-based machines
  • Colonialism search for raw materials markets
    new patterns of trade, capitalism and New
    Imperialism (China, India)
  • IR contributed to decline of agriculturally-based
    economies
  • Mining imp gold/silver/diamonds (S. Africa,)

3
Changes in Global Commerce, Communication and
Technology
  • Modes of Transportation/ communication
  • Impact of railroad, steam, telegraph
  • Suez Canal, Panama Canal

4
Changes in Global Commerce, Communication and
Technology
  • Industrial Revolution Financial Institutions,
    Responses
  • Rationale of capitalism Adam Smith,
    laissez-faire
  • Stock market expansion, transnational businesses
  • Impact of I.R. on family and work
  • Relationship of nations during I.R.
  • Have/have-nots, nation response (Egypt,China
    vs. Japan, Meiji reforms)
  • Intellectual responses to I.R. Marxism,
  • socialism, utopianism, unions - govts create
    state pensions, suffrage, education

5
Power loom
Fatcat
Milltown
Miner
Streetchildren
6
Demographic/Environmental Changes
  • Migration Immigration
  • Why?
  • Where?
  • Global Urbanization
  • Women take new rolesMigrant Males (labor)
  • Prejudice, racism laws(Chinese Exclusion Act)
  • New transplant culture think IS DBQ, Chinese
    railroads, convict labor in Australia

7
Demographic and Environmental Changes
  • End of Atlantic Slave Trade capitalism and
    Indentured servitude, voluntary migration
  • New Birthrate Patterns
  • Disease prevention
  • and eradication
  • Food Supply
  • Population RISES

8
Changes in Social and Gender Structure
  • Industrial Revolution women working and then
    VICTORIAN ERA at home
  • Commercial developments
  • Tension between work patterns and ideas about
    gender
  • Emancipation of Serfs
  • Slaves
  • Suffrage

9
Changes in Social and Gender Structure
  • Womens emancipation movements

10
European women 19th century
Queen Victorias family
British family in India
Russian peasant family
11
Nationalism, Revolution, Reform
  • Enlightenment thought political individual
    rights freedoms (Voltaire, Rousseau, Locke,
    Montesquieu) REVOLUTIONS!
  • New documents (Declaration of Independence,
    Declaration of Rights of Man)
  • Abolition of slavery, expanded suffrage
  • Development of nationalism (language, religion,
    culture, tdentiity byt erritory)
  • Revolutions in Americas led to New Imperialism
  • Anti-colonial movements (Boxer Rebellion) led to
    reforms (Tanzimat, Self-strengthening movements)
    and new ideologies (socialism, communism)
  • Europeans self-superiority conservatism, new
    imperialism, social darwinism
  • Womens Rights (Seneca Falls, Declaration of the
    Rights of Women, Wollstonecraft)

12
Political Revolutions and Independence Movements
  • Revolutions
  • Why Revolution now?
  • Where?
  • United States (1776)
  • France (1789)
  • Haiti (1803)
  • Mexico (1910)
  • China (1911)

13
Political Revolutions and Independence Movements
  • Latin American Independence Movements
  • Why?

Simon Bolivar
14
Political Revolutions and Independence Movements
  • Haitian Revolution

Toussaint LOuverture
15
Political Revolutions and Independence Movements
  • Mexican Revolution

16
Political Revolutions and Independence Movements
Dr. Sun Yat Sen
  • Chinese Revolution

Manchus
17
New Political Ideas
  • Rise of Nationalism
  • Growth of Nation-states/ empires

18
New Political Ideas
  • Movements of Political Reform ag. Govt.
  • Jacobins in France
  • Taiping Rebellion in China

19
New Political Ideas
  • Rise of Democracy and its limitations
  • Reform
  • Women
  • Racism
  • Social Darwinism
  • Herbert Spencer

20
Rise of Western Dominance, New Imperialism
Nation-States
  • Imperialism/Colonialism
  • WHY3 Gs economic, national pride, social just.
  • HOW Use of force, technology, cures, take
    advantage of African rivalries
  • Changes Old (colonialism) to New Imperialism
  • ie. African continent, much of Asia, and Oceania
  • Ethiopia, Liberia and Siam are the only
    independent countries

21
Imperialism Nation-State Reaction
  • Industrial powers create transoceanic empires
    British (India), Dutch (Indonesia), American and
    Japan
  • Use of warfare diplomacy to create empires
  • Europeans establish settler colonies (British in
    S. Africa, Australia and New Zealand)
  • Economic Imperialism (US and Britain in Latin
    America, Opium Wars in China, US influence over
    Tokugawa Japan leads to Meiji Transformation)
  • Anti-Imperial Resistance Movements
  • Social Darwinism facilitated and justified
    imperialism
  • Social Darwinism, facilitated justified
    imperialism

22
Rise of Western Dominance
  • Scramble for Africa

23
Rise of Western Dominance
  • Cultural and Political Reactions to western
    dominance (reform, resistance, rebellion, racism,
    nationalism)
  • Japan Commodore Perry and Meiji Restoration
  • Russia Reforms and Rebellions
  • Siam and Ethiopia-- defensive modernization
  • China--Boxer Rebellion
  • Islamic and Chinese responses compared
  • Impact of Changing European Ideologies on
    Colonial Administrations

24
Rise of Western Dominance
  • Japan Commodore Perry and Meiji Restoration

25
Rise of Western Dominance
  • ChinaBoxer Rebellion

26
Rise of Western Dominance
  • Economic, Political, Social, Cultural, Artistic

27
Ottomans in 19th century attempts at reform,
but sick man of Europe
Young Turk Revolutionaries
The Last Sultans
28
CCOT and CC ideas
  • Industrial revolution in western Europe and Japan
    (causes and early phases)
  • Revolutions (American, French, Haitian, Mexican,
    and Chinese)
  • Reaction to foreign domination in Ottomans
    empire, China, India and Japan.

29
Comparisons and CCOT
  • Nationalism changes/continuities over time
    compare between regions
  • Difference in forms of intervention in 19th
    century Latin America and Africa
  • Roles and conditions of upper/ middle versus
    working/ peasant class women in western Europe

30
Conclusions
  • What are the global processes that are at play?
    Which have intensified? Diminished?
  • Predict how the events of the 19th century are a
    natural culmination of earlier developments.
  • Speculate what historical events in the 19th
    century would have most surprised historians of
    earlier eras.
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