Imperialism - Spring Branch ISD
... Markets and Missionaries ▪ In 1901, the European powers imposed the humiliating Boxer Protocol, giving them the right to maintain military forces in the Chinese capital and requiring the Chinese government to pay an indemnity of $333 million for the loss of life and property resulting from the Boxe ...
... Markets and Missionaries ▪ In 1901, the European powers imposed the humiliating Boxer Protocol, giving them the right to maintain military forces in the Chinese capital and requiring the Chinese government to pay an indemnity of $333 million for the loss of life and property resulting from the Boxe ...
ATC
... indentured and slave labor, strong economic and social hierarchies and widely scattered, institutionally weak settlement (govt.). The first permanent English colony was established in Jamestown Virginia in 1607. They faced harsh conditions and Indian troubles, but eventually tobacco brought populat ...
... indentured and slave labor, strong economic and social hierarchies and widely scattered, institutionally weak settlement (govt.). The first permanent English colony was established in Jamestown Virginia in 1607. They faced harsh conditions and Indian troubles, but eventually tobacco brought populat ...
Modern World History Chapter 11, Section 2 Imperialism Case Studies
... parental way by providing for their needs, but not giving them rights and not training local people to govern • Assimilation – a policy that the local populations of a colony would gradually over time adopt the culture of the governing colonial power • The French abandoned the ideal of assimilation ...
... parental way by providing for their needs, but not giving them rights and not training local people to govern • Assimilation – a policy that the local populations of a colony would gradually over time adopt the culture of the governing colonial power • The French abandoned the ideal of assimilation ...
Imperialism - The Kidnapping of Nations
... their society • Protectorates – local rulers were left in place but they had to follow the rules of the ruling country • Spheres of Influence – an outside power would claim exclusive investment and trading privileges with a certain country or region ...
... their society • Protectorates – local rulers were left in place but they had to follow the rules of the ruling country • Spheres of Influence – an outside power would claim exclusive investment and trading privileges with a certain country or region ...
Imperialism: African Resistance Movements
... Aim: How did Africans Resist Imperialism? Do Now: 1. Analyze the following images. 2. How do these images reflect African culture prior to European Imperialism? ...
... Aim: How did Africans Resist Imperialism? Do Now: 1. Analyze the following images. 2. How do these images reflect African culture prior to European Imperialism? ...
Ch 14 Colonial Societies Pwp
... and farms in the rural areas, and worked as wage laborers Some gained high status and wealth and adopted Spanish or Portuguese culture ...
... and farms in the rural areas, and worked as wage laborers Some gained high status and wealth and adopted Spanish or Portuguese culture ...
period05_10_4
... Hausa Fulani, the Yoruba and the Igbo. Although it worked for Hausa Fulani it didn’t for Yoruba and Igbo because they resented having their powers limited. Over 20 different African groups resisted to be ruled by the Germans, however once the Germans recorded 7,500 resistors dead they changed up the ...
... Hausa Fulani, the Yoruba and the Igbo. Although it worked for Hausa Fulani it didn’t for Yoruba and Igbo because they resented having their powers limited. Over 20 different African groups resisted to be ruled by the Germans, however once the Germans recorded 7,500 resistors dead they changed up the ...
unit five 1914
... the severity of its problems was largely unknown to outsiders. Mikhail Gorbachev attempted to revive the country through a 3-pronged program: •Perestroika; Economic reforms attempted to infuse some capitalism into the system, reduce the size of the army, stimulate under-producing factories, and stab ...
... the severity of its problems was largely unknown to outsiders. Mikhail Gorbachev attempted to revive the country through a 3-pronged program: •Perestroika; Economic reforms attempted to infuse some capitalism into the system, reduce the size of the army, stimulate under-producing factories, and stab ...
Chapter 27: The Age of Imperialism, 1850 – 1914 Chapter 27.1: The
... 2. National Pride: Europeans thought the bigger their empire was, the better. “Social Darwinism”: survival of the fittest – those fittest for survival (Europeans) would enjoy wealth/success and were superior (“racism”). *It was Europe’s right and duty to bring progress to Africa. 3. Missionaries: tr ...
... 2. National Pride: Europeans thought the bigger their empire was, the better. “Social Darwinism”: survival of the fittest – those fittest for survival (Europeans) would enjoy wealth/success and were superior (“racism”). *It was Europe’s right and duty to bring progress to Africa. 3. Missionaries: tr ...
1 Chapter 17 The Transatlantic Economy Trade Wars, and Colonial
... - Europe’s mercantilist empires - Spain’s vast colonial empire in the Americas - Africa, slavery, and the transatlantic plantation economies - The wars of the mid-18th century in Europe and the colonies - The struggle for independence in Britain’s North America colonies Periods of European Overseas ...
... - Europe’s mercantilist empires - Spain’s vast colonial empire in the Americas - Africa, slavery, and the transatlantic plantation economies - The wars of the mid-18th century in Europe and the colonies - The struggle for independence in Britain’s North America colonies Periods of European Overseas ...
Chapter 17
... - Europe’s mercantilist empires - Spain’s vast colonial empire in the Americas - Africa, slavery, and the transatlantic plantation economies - The wars of the mid-18th century in Europe and the colonies - The struggle for independence in Britain’s North America colonies Periods of European Overseas ...
... - Europe’s mercantilist empires - Spain’s vast colonial empire in the Americas - Africa, slavery, and the transatlantic plantation economies - The wars of the mid-18th century in Europe and the colonies - The struggle for independence in Britain’s North America colonies Periods of European Overseas ...
European Imperialism
... Why did Europe lead the way in imperialism in the late 1800’s and early 1900’s? • Nationalism = European nations, such as France, Great Britain, Germany, and Italy became unified and wanted to build up their nations through industrialization. • Industrialization = required more natural resources to ...
... Why did Europe lead the way in imperialism in the late 1800’s and early 1900’s? • Nationalism = European nations, such as France, Great Britain, Germany, and Italy became unified and wanted to build up their nations through industrialization. • Industrialization = required more natural resources to ...
Goal 6 Notes (Study Island)
... Puerto Rico, and Guam are examples of imperialism. In 1899, the Philippine Republic declared war on the U.S. and fought until 1902, though they were ultimately defeated. U.S. Emergence as a World Power Listed below are some of the important ideas and events involving American diplomacy during the 19 ...
... Puerto Rico, and Guam are examples of imperialism. In 1899, the Philippine Republic declared war on the U.S. and fought until 1902, though they were ultimately defeated. U.S. Emergence as a World Power Listed below are some of the important ideas and events involving American diplomacy during the 19 ...
Colonization The creation and collapse of empires is not a
... locals and their lands. Ultimately, conquests of the Native Americans were achieved due to devastating epidemics that spread unchecked with the Europeans' arrival, as well as by advanced technological weapons used by the invaders and, at times, brutal massacres. Fantastic stories of unlimited wealth ...
... locals and their lands. Ultimately, conquests of the Native Americans were achieved due to devastating epidemics that spread unchecked with the Europeans' arrival, as well as by advanced technological weapons used by the invaders and, at times, brutal massacres. Fantastic stories of unlimited wealth ...
America Claims an Empire - StricklandUSHistory1302
... had always sought to expand the size of their nation. ► America to join imperialist power in Europe and establish colonies overseas. ► Imperialism- policy in which stronger nations extend their economic, political, or military control over weaker territories. ...
... had always sought to expand the size of their nation. ► America to join imperialist power in Europe and establish colonies overseas. ► Imperialism- policy in which stronger nations extend their economic, political, or military control over weaker territories. ...
chapter 12 study guide fall 11
... 10. What condition was the US Army in at the beginning of the war? How did the Army change as a result of the war? 11. What was the leading cause of death in the SP/AM War? 12. What did the US get out of the Treaty of Paris that ended the Spanish American War? 13. What reasons did Anti Imperialists ...
... 10. What condition was the US Army in at the beginning of the war? How did the Army change as a result of the war? 11. What was the leading cause of death in the SP/AM War? 12. What did the US get out of the Treaty of Paris that ended the Spanish American War? 13. What reasons did Anti Imperialists ...
Unit 8-3 Notes
... • European countries establish colonies around the world to provide raw materials for their industries ...
... • European countries establish colonies around the world to provide raw materials for their industries ...
Encylopedia Britannica Student Edition Introduction to International
... the peoples of a colony together in a search for political and ethnic identity. Once the reins of imperial rule were weakened, demands for local autonomy were bound to be met. The two world wars of the 20th century ended the age of empire. After the first war AustriaHungary was broken up by the sett ...
... the peoples of a colony together in a search for political and ethnic identity. Once the reins of imperial rule were weakened, demands for local autonomy were bound to be met. The two world wars of the 20th century ended the age of empire. After the first war AustriaHungary was broken up by the sett ...
Imperialism 2014 - Thompsonsocialstudies8
... needed supplies of raw materials. These wealthy nations also needed new markets for their industrialized products. ...
... needed supplies of raw materials. These wealthy nations also needed new markets for their industrialized products. ...
Vocabulary for AP Human Geography – Political Geography, Chp. 8
... Vocabulary for AP Human Geography – Political Geography, Chp. 8. Vocab not in Rubenstein ...
... Vocabulary for AP Human Geography – Political Geography, Chp. 8. Vocab not in Rubenstein ...
Decolonization
Decolonization (US) or decolonisation (UK) is the undoing of colonialism, where a nation establishes and maintains its domination over dependent territories. The Oxford English Dictionary defines decolonization as ""the withdrawal from its colonies of a colonial power; the acquisition of political or economic independence by such colonies."" The term refers particularly to the dismantlement, in the years after World War II, of the colonial empires established prior to World War I throughout the world. However, decolonization not only refers to the complete ""removal of the domination of non-indigenous forces"" within the geographical space and different institutions of the colonized, but it also refers to the ""decolonizing of the mind"" from the colonizer's ideas that made the colonized seem inferior.The United Nations Special Committee on Decolonization has stated that in the process of decolonization there is no alternative to the colonizer allowing a process of self-determination, but in practice decolonization may involve either nonviolent revolution or national liberation wars by pro-independence groups. It may be intramural or involve the intervention of foreign powers acting individually or through international bodies such as the United Nations. Although examples of decolonization can be found as early as the writings of Thucydides, there have been several particularly active periods of decolonization in modern times. These include the breakup of the Spanish Empire in the 19th century; of the German, Austro-Hungarian, Ottoman, and Russian Empires following World War I; of the British, French, Dutch, Japanese, Portuguese, Belgian and Italian colonial empires following World War II; and of the Soviet Union (successor to the Russian Empire) following the Cold War.As a philosophy, ""decolonization"" refers to the ability to view and discuss non-European cultures from an unbiased, non-Western perspective.