US History Guided Notes 12-1
... How was Imperialism tied to US economic success? What is “ANGLO-SAXONISM”? Who developed this idea? Who is Josiah Strong and how did he build support for American Imperialism? ...
... How was Imperialism tied to US economic success? What is “ANGLO-SAXONISM”? Who developed this idea? Who is Josiah Strong and how did he build support for American Imperialism? ...
Nationalism and Unification
... • Industrial nations in Europe needed natural resources and markets to expand their economies. • These nations competed to control Africa and Asia in order to secure their own economic and political success. • Imperialism spread the economic, political and social philosophies of Europe throughout th ...
... • Industrial nations in Europe needed natural resources and markets to expand their economies. • These nations competed to control Africa and Asia in order to secure their own economic and political success. • Imperialism spread the economic, political and social philosophies of Europe throughout th ...
America Claim*s an Empire
... • The Maine was stationed there to protect American citizens and property if necessary • 260 Americans were killed in the explosion • Each side blamed the other for the Maine Explosion and despite two investigations it is still unclear how the ship exploded. ...
... • The Maine was stationed there to protect American citizens and property if necessary • 260 Americans were killed in the explosion • Each side blamed the other for the Maine Explosion and despite two investigations it is still unclear how the ship exploded. ...
Africa: Control and Resistance
... • 1847-1980, Liberia was governed by the small group of African-American colonists and their offspring - Americo-Liberians • Many Americo-Liberians believed they were superior because they were Christian • They ruled over the large indigenous majority of 95% of the Liberian population ...
... • 1847-1980, Liberia was governed by the small group of African-American colonists and their offspring - Americo-Liberians • Many Americo-Liberians believed they were superior because they were Christian • They ruled over the large indigenous majority of 95% of the Liberian population ...
File
... • At the end of the Spanish American war America had made it clear they would not take over Cuba • American soldiers still occupied Cuba after the war • American gov’t brought in food, medical and clothing. • Platt Amendment: Americans forced Cuba to add this to their constitution – 1. Cuba couldn’t ...
... • At the end of the Spanish American war America had made it clear they would not take over Cuba • American soldiers still occupied Cuba after the war • American gov’t brought in food, medical and clothing. • Platt Amendment: Americans forced Cuba to add this to their constitution – 1. Cuba couldn’t ...
Scramble for Africa
... Chinese trade to all nations • China attempted to modernize the country • Boxer Rebellion = peasants who upper class and foreigners set siege on European section of Beijing for months// Europeans soldiers finally defeated them (le to strong sense of nationalism—resist foreign ...
... Chinese trade to all nations • China attempted to modernize the country • Boxer Rebellion = peasants who upper class and foreigners set siege on European section of Beijing for months// Europeans soldiers finally defeated them (le to strong sense of nationalism—resist foreign ...
The Colonies Come of Age
... WAR ERUPTS One major area of contention between France and Great Britain was the rich Ohio River valley just west of Pennsylvania and Virginia. In 1754, the French built Fort Duquesne in the region despite the fact that the Virginia government had already granted 200,000 acres of land in the Ohio co ...
... WAR ERUPTS One major area of contention between France and Great Britain was the rich Ohio River valley just west of Pennsylvania and Virginia. In 1754, the French built Fort Duquesne in the region despite the fact that the Virginia government had already granted 200,000 acres of land in the Ohio co ...
Unit 4 Section 1 Student Notes PDF
... ______________________ that reduced and weakened native populations. ...
... ______________________ that reduced and weakened native populations. ...
The Third Republic and Colonialism 1870 – 1940, Michael Vann
... 1850s and northern Vietnam several decades later in order to gain access to south China’s silk-producing centres in Yunnan. French shipping companies in Marseilles and Bordeaux had an interest in an increase in overseas trade, transport, and shipping, as well as building the empire’s fleet. After la ...
... 1850s and northern Vietnam several decades later in order to gain access to south China’s silk-producing centres in Yunnan. French shipping companies in Marseilles and Bordeaux had an interest in an increase in overseas trade, transport, and shipping, as well as building the empire’s fleet. After la ...
File - The Slaughterhouse
... The English Colonies The English Colonists brought with them to North America different political theories methods of forming governments They experimented with early forms of government in the colonies ...
... The English Colonies The English Colonists brought with them to North America different political theories methods of forming governments They experimented with early forms of government in the colonies ...
Review Questions on the Growth of America`s Empire
... (2) increase trade between Russia and the United States (3) ensure equal trading opportunities in China (4) prevent European countries from colonizing the Western Hemisphere 6. President Theodore Roosevelt’s Big Stick policy was used by the United States to (1) police the Western Hemisphere (2) expa ...
... (2) increase trade between Russia and the United States (3) ensure equal trading opportunities in China (4) prevent European countries from colonizing the Western Hemisphere 6. President Theodore Roosevelt’s Big Stick policy was used by the United States to (1) police the Western Hemisphere (2) expa ...
Unit 5
... was unjust and imperfect. The main debate was over the League of Nations—the only of Wilson’s Fourteen Points contained in the treaty. Many people believed that joining the League would involve the United States in foreign conflicts. Wilson refused to compromise on the League or accept amendments to ...
... was unjust and imperfect. The main debate was over the League of Nations—the only of Wilson’s Fourteen Points contained in the treaty. Many people believed that joining the League would involve the United States in foreign conflicts. Wilson refused to compromise on the League or accept amendments to ...
OUSD History/Social Studies
... Regarding British imperialism in Africa, a British official, Lord Curzon said: “The British Empire has brought peace, justice, prosperity, and freedom to Africa.” To what extent is this belief accurate? Tentative thesis in response to the question: ...
... Regarding British imperialism in Africa, a British official, Lord Curzon said: “The British Empire has brought peace, justice, prosperity, and freedom to Africa.” To what extent is this belief accurate? Tentative thesis in response to the question: ...
Imperialism in the late 19th Century - LBCC e
... • In 1904, the Dominican Republic faced possible invasion and possession by its European creditors • Roosevelt announced his Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine It is not true that the United States feels any land hunger or entertains any projects as regards the other nations of the Western Hemispher ...
... • In 1904, the Dominican Republic faced possible invasion and possession by its European creditors • Roosevelt announced his Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine It is not true that the United States feels any land hunger or entertains any projects as regards the other nations of the Western Hemispher ...
Part two : the christendom of the West Indies (1492
... the tendency to unify indissolubly the aims and purposes of the state and of the Church. This tendency can be traced from the Constantinian period through the Visigoths and the Pontifical States. It should be observed, however, that the Islamic doctrine of the caliphate demanded this same kind of un ...
... the tendency to unify indissolubly the aims and purposes of the state and of the Church. This tendency can be traced from the Constantinian period through the Visigoths and the Pontifical States. It should be observed, however, that the Islamic doctrine of the caliphate demanded this same kind of un ...
Unit 4: Imperialism Vocab List
... involvement in foreign countries (spheres of influence and expansionism), as well as the United States becoming a world power. 11. Yellow Journalism: Sensational and dramatic news coverage, emphasizing crime and scandal. 12. Boxer Rebellion: an unsuccessful rebellion in China in 1900, the objective ...
... involvement in foreign countries (spheres of influence and expansionism), as well as the United States becoming a world power. 11. Yellow Journalism: Sensational and dramatic news coverage, emphasizing crime and scandal. 12. Boxer Rebellion: an unsuccessful rebellion in China in 1900, the objective ...
Imperialism - The Kidnapping of Nations
... • Applying Darwin’s ideas to war and economics • this encouraged racism - the belief that one racial group is superior to the other ...
... • Applying Darwin’s ideas to war and economics • this encouraged racism - the belief that one racial group is superior to the other ...
The Colonies Come of Age
... LIFE IN A DIVERSE SOUTHERN SOCIETY In addition to English settlers, thousands of German immigrants as well as Scots and Scots-Irish settled in the South. Women in Southern society, as in the North, endured second-class citizenship. For the most part they could not vote, preach, or own property. Whil ...
... LIFE IN A DIVERSE SOUTHERN SOCIETY In addition to English settlers, thousands of German immigrants as well as Scots and Scots-Irish settled in the South. Women in Southern society, as in the North, endured second-class citizenship. For the most part they could not vote, preach, or own property. Whil ...
Imperialism-
... starts to become a world power and extend it’s control beyond North America • Objective- students will understand reasons why the US gets involved in the affairs of other countries – ?Why do you feel countries want to take over other countries? ...
... starts to become a world power and extend it’s control beyond North America • Objective- students will understand reasons why the US gets involved in the affairs of other countries – ?Why do you feel countries want to take over other countries? ...
ap eh chapter 24: an age of modernity and anxiety, 1894-1914
... responsibility to civilize ignorant peoples (White Man’s Burden) 5. the need for natural resources and new military bases were other reasons emphasized by some historians for imperialism B. The Creation of Empires 1. The Scramble for Africa a. Europeans controlled relatively little of the African co ...
... responsibility to civilize ignorant peoples (White Man’s Burden) 5. the need for natural resources and new military bases were other reasons emphasized by some historians for imperialism B. The Creation of Empires 1. The Scramble for Africa a. Europeans controlled relatively little of the African co ...
History of colonialism
The historical phenomenon of colonisation is one that stretches around the globe and across time, including such disparate peoples as the Hittites, the Incas and the British. Modern state global colonialism, or imperialism, began in the 15th century with the ""Age of Discovery"", led by Portuguese and Spanish exploration of the Americas, and the coasts of Africa, the Middle East, India, and East Asia. During the 16th and 17th centuries, England, France and the Dutch Republic established their own overseas empires, in direct competition with each other. The end of the 18th and early 19th century saw the first era of decolonization, when most of the European colonies in the Americas gained their independence from their respective metropoles. Spain was irreversibly weakened after the loss of their New World colonies, but the Kingdom of Great Britain (uniting Scotland with England and Wales), France, Portugal, and the Dutch turned their attention to the Old World, particularly South Africa, India, Pakistan and South East Asia, where coastal enclaves had already been established. The second industrial revolution, in the 19th century, led to what has been termed the era of New Imperialism, when the pace of colonization rapidly accelerated, the height of which was the Scramble for Africa, in which Belgium, Germany and Italy were participants. During the 20th century, the colonies of the losers of World War I were distributed amongst the victors as mandates, but it was not until the end of World War II that the second phase of decolonization began in earnest. In 1999, Portugal gave up the last of Europe's colonies in Asia, Macau, to China, ending an era that had lasted six hundred years.