Rapid Review Chapter 3
... American workers began to unionize in this era by joining the Knights of Labor, the American Federation of Labor, and the Industrial Workers of the World. Because of intimidation by company bosses and the publicity that came from several unsuccessful strikes, union membership remained low, even into ...
... American workers began to unionize in this era by joining the Knights of Labor, the American Federation of Labor, and the Industrial Workers of the World. Because of intimidation by company bosses and the publicity that came from several unsuccessful strikes, union membership remained low, even into ...
The French and Indian War
... Those who were here had never been to England Many of their parents had fled England to escape poverty of persecution The colonies were founded with little help or interference from the British government. BUT the American colonists NEEDED the British for protection from the French and the Indians ...
... Those who were here had never been to England Many of their parents had fled England to escape poverty of persecution The colonies were founded with little help or interference from the British government. BUT the American colonists NEEDED the British for protection from the French and the Indians ...
Imperialism-Power-Point
... The Sepoys rebelled against the British East India Company and tried to drive the British out of India (very violent and brutal) • The rebellion failed, Britain’s Parliament took away the East India Company’s power and ran India as a colony until 1947 ...
... The Sepoys rebelled against the British East India Company and tried to drive the British out of India (very violent and brutal) • The rebellion failed, Britain’s Parliament took away the East India Company’s power and ran India as a colony until 1947 ...
The Colonial Period
... Natural rights (life, liberty and property) must be protected; if gov fails to do so, people should abolish the gov Second Treatise of Government ...
... Natural rights (life, liberty and property) must be protected; if gov fails to do so, people should abolish the gov Second Treatise of Government ...
What is Imperialism?
... showed power. This turned into an all out race for the best and most colonies. ...
... showed power. This turned into an all out race for the best and most colonies. ...
America Builds an Empire - Mrs. Bass` US History Class
... intervene in Cuba and gave the United States control of the naval base in Guantánamo Bay. In effect, the amendment made Cuba an American protectorate, a nation whose independence is limited by the control of a more powerful country. ...
... intervene in Cuba and gave the United States control of the naval base in Guantánamo Bay. In effect, the amendment made Cuba an American protectorate, a nation whose independence is limited by the control of a more powerful country. ...
An American cartoonist in 1888 depicted John Bull (England) as the
... • Dutchexpanded their Dutch East India Company in Indonesia • French seized Indochina (Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos • Germans occupied islands in the Pacific • Russia expanded their control into Persia (Iran) • US seized the Philippines from Spain ...
... • Dutchexpanded their Dutch East India Company in Indonesia • French seized Indochina (Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos • Germans occupied islands in the Pacific • Russia expanded their control into Persia (Iran) • US seized the Philippines from Spain ...
File
... “The Seven Years War did not contribute to colonial unity and frustration against the mother country. It was Britain’s actions immediately after the war which antagonized the colonists to the point of revolution.” Assess the validity of this statement ...
... “The Seven Years War did not contribute to colonial unity and frustration against the mother country. It was Britain’s actions immediately after the war which antagonized the colonists to the point of revolution.” Assess the validity of this statement ...
Unit 3.1 - WVHSUSHISTORY
... CSS 11.4 Students trace the rise of the US to its role as a world power in the 20th century ...
... CSS 11.4 Students trace the rise of the US to its role as a world power in the 20th century ...
AP World History
... Rise of Western Dominance, New Imperialism & Nation-States Imperialism/Colonialism: WHY:3 G’s; 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 Oc ...
... Rise of Western Dominance, New Imperialism & Nation-States Imperialism/Colonialism: WHY:3 G’s; 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 Oc ...
The Cold War WHAP/Napp Do Now: “The Cold War was one of the
... nationalist opponents who wanted no more of colonialism. After World War II, the French attempted to reestablish colonial rule in Vietnam but met armed opposition and guerrilla warfare led by Ho Chi Minh, the leader of the communist Vietminh or Independence League. The Vietminh had established thems ...
... nationalist opponents who wanted no more of colonialism. After World War II, the French attempted to reestablish colonial rule in Vietnam but met armed opposition and guerrilla warfare led by Ho Chi Minh, the leader of the communist Vietminh or Independence League. The Vietminh had established thems ...
doc The Roosevelt Corollary
... its debts to various nations. Theodore Roosevelt felt it was necessary to entre the Republic and take control of the situation. To do this, Roosevelt needed to reformulate the Monroe Doctrine; his corollary allowed American intervention in Latin America. The doctrine barred unwanted European powers ...
... its debts to various nations. Theodore Roosevelt felt it was necessary to entre the Republic and take control of the situation. To do this, Roosevelt needed to reformulate the Monroe Doctrine; his corollary allowed American intervention in Latin America. The doctrine barred unwanted European powers ...
Why Imperialize?
... At the end of a hard day's work under the tropical sun the officers had only one hill left to record. They decided to use their imagination and fill the area in with a fictitious image. They drew round a picture in a magazine creating contours in the form of an elephant. The substitution remained u ...
... At the end of a hard day's work under the tropical sun the officers had only one hill left to record. They decided to use their imagination and fill the area in with a fictitious image. They drew round a picture in a magazine creating contours in the form of an elephant. The substitution remained u ...
Imperialism - Rondout Valley Intermediate School
... Spain due to the treaty signed from the war the islands were hard to govern due to so many islands and many ethnic groups Emilio Aguinaldo established a revolutionary government and founded a resistance against American imperialism The Philippines eventually gained independence in 1946 ...
... Spain due to the treaty signed from the war the islands were hard to govern due to so many islands and many ethnic groups Emilio Aguinaldo established a revolutionary government and founded a resistance against American imperialism The Philippines eventually gained independence in 1946 ...
Colonialism in Africa What does colonialism mean? The occupation
... areas of the world. These European colonies were in North and South America, Africa, Asia, Australia, and various smaller islands around the world. European nations colonized Africa from the late 19th century until the middle to later 20th century. Although Europeans had had contact with many parts ...
... areas of the world. These European colonies were in North and South America, Africa, Asia, Australia, and various smaller islands around the world. European nations colonized Africa from the late 19th century until the middle to later 20th century. Although Europeans had had contact with many parts ...
Ch. 18 PowerPoint
... revolution organized by American settlers and led by Sanford B. Dole. • The new government petitioned the U.S. to annex Hawaii. • After the outbreak of the SpanishAmerican War, Congress accepted the offer. Hawaii was organized as a territory 2 years later. ...
... revolution organized by American settlers and led by Sanford B. Dole. • The new government petitioned the U.S. to annex Hawaii. • After the outbreak of the SpanishAmerican War, Congress accepted the offer. Hawaii was organized as a territory 2 years later. ...
File
... The Treaty of Paris • August 12, 1898 the fifteen week war was over • Met in Paris to come up with a treaty • Spain freed Cuba and turned Guam, and Puerto Rico over to the United States • Sold the Philippines to the U.S. for 20 million • Treaty was highly debated: some thought it went against the D ...
... The Treaty of Paris • August 12, 1898 the fifteen week war was over • Met in Paris to come up with a treaty • Spain freed Cuba and turned Guam, and Puerto Rico over to the United States • Sold the Philippines to the U.S. for 20 million • Treaty was highly debated: some thought it went against the D ...
Vocabulary for AP Human Geography POLITICAL not found in Text
... 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 ...
Imperialism (1800-1914) - Cambridge Central School District
... 1. Many foreign nations did not have strong enough military power to resist invasion. In some areas, people were divided and thus were easy to conquer. 2. Superior technology and medicine strengthened European power. Machine guns and steam driven warships forced foreigners to accept European dominat ...
... 1. Many foreign nations did not have strong enough military power to resist invasion. In some areas, people were divided and thus were easy to conquer. 2. Superior technology and medicine strengthened European power. Machine guns and steam driven warships forced foreigners to accept European dominat ...
Competency Goal 6: The emergence of the United States in World
... Competency Goal 6: The emergence of the United States in World Affairs (1890-1914) – The learner will analyze causes and effects of the United States emergence as a world power. Generalizations: • Attempts to gain influence over an area can occur through political, economic, and military means. • Ef ...
... Competency Goal 6: The emergence of the United States in World Affairs (1890-1914) – The learner will analyze causes and effects of the United States emergence as a world power. Generalizations: • Attempts to gain influence over an area can occur through political, economic, and military means. • Ef ...
Chapter 14 Section 4 - Saugerties Central School
... The treaties did not apply self-determination to European colonies in Asia and Africa. • Instead, former German and Ottoman lands became mandates administered by Western powers. • In theory, the mandates were to be held until they were ready to stand alone. • In practice, they were treated as colo ...
... The treaties did not apply self-determination to European colonies in Asia and Africa. • Instead, former German and Ottoman lands became mandates administered by Western powers. • In theory, the mandates were to be held until they were ready to stand alone. • In practice, they were treated as colo ...
What was imperialism?
... world. If you can take over a foreign nation, you must be pretty strong. 2. The US needed some natural resources that were not available inside the country. *Sugar cane, fruit plantations, rubber: the US needed all of these, and they aren't very plentiful on the continent. We were an "extractive eco ...
... world. If you can take over a foreign nation, you must be pretty strong. 2. The US needed some natural resources that were not available inside the country. *Sugar cane, fruit plantations, rubber: the US needed all of these, and they aren't very plentiful on the continent. We were an "extractive eco ...
The Ottoman Empire and the Interwar Period
... • Tensions rise between Muslim Ottomans and Christians in Europe. Christians don’t want to pay fees on goods brought in from Asia • European merchants don’t have to pay Ottoman fees if they go around the Middle East. Major trade routes no longer run through the Middle East they go around Africa to a ...
... • Tensions rise between Muslim Ottomans and Christians in Europe. Christians don’t want to pay fees on goods brought in from Asia • European merchants don’t have to pay Ottoman fees if they go around the Middle East. Major trade routes no longer run through the Middle East they go around Africa to a ...
33.1 – Patterns of Independence Movements
... British and French repeatedly broke their promises when negotiating the postwar settlement at Versailles. Wartime promises to the Arabs in return for supporting the Entente were forgotten, as Britain and France divided the Arab heartlands of the Middle East between themselves. China's pleas for prot ...
... British and French repeatedly broke their promises when negotiating the postwar settlement at Versailles. Wartime promises to the Arabs in return for supporting the Entente were forgotten, as Britain and France divided the Arab heartlands of the Middle East between themselves. China's pleas for prot ...
africa before imperialism
... protect British interests in Suez Canal; later established partial control as protectorate to ensure British access to canal Division in Africa • European nations competed aggressively for other territories • 1884–1885, European leaders met in Berlin to divide African territory • Tried to prevent co ...
... protect British interests in Suez Canal; later established partial control as protectorate to ensure British access to canal Division in Africa • European nations competed aggressively for other territories • 1884–1885, European leaders met in Berlin to divide African territory • Tried to prevent co ...
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.