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Imperialism
Chapter 27
What is Imperialism?
– Mother country extends power and force
over a smaller, weaker country.
– Seizure of a country or territory by a
stronger country
What are the Cases?





Need for raw materials
Need a place to sell manufactured goods
Military basis
To make money
White Man’s Burden – colonize to civilize
Africa and Asia
Factors Driving Imperialism

Belief in European Superiority
– Race for colonies grows out of national pride
– Racism—belief that one race is better than others
– Social Darwinism—survival of the fittest applied
to human society

Factors Promoting Imperialism in Africa
– Technological inventions like steam engine,
Maxim gun help conquest
– Perfection of quinine protects Europeans from
malaria
– Within Africa, Africans are divided by language
and culture
What are the Forms?
– Colony


a country of a territory governed internally by a foreign
power
ex: Somaliland in E. Africa was a French colony
– Protectorate


a country or a territory with its own internal
government but under control of an outside power
ex: Great Britain established a protectorate over the
Niger River delta
What are the Forms?
– Sphere of influence


an area in which an outside power claims exclusive
investment or trading privileges
ex: Liberia was under the sphere of influence of the
United States
– Economic Imperialism


an independent but less developed country controlled
by private business interests rather than other
governments
ex: the Dole Fruit Company controlled the pineapple
trade in Hawaii (prior to being a US State)
Examples…
5 Colonies
Mother Country
 Puerto Rico 
Spain
 Dominican Republic 
Spain
 Haiti 
France
 Guyana 
England
 Jamaica 
England

How many countries colonized
Africa? - 10
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
Belgium
Boer
Britain
France
Germany
Italy
Ottoman Empire
Portugal
Spain
Independent states
Struggle for Africa
– Conquest
 superior
– technologically
– weapons
– transportation
Division of Africa
A. The Lure of Wealth
 Discovery of gold and diamonds
increases interest in colonization
B. Berlin Conference Divides Africa
– Berlin Conference—14 nations agree on
rules for division (1884–85)
– Countries must claim land and prove
ability to control it
–
By 1914, only Liberia and Ethiopia are
free of European control
C. Demand for Raw Materials Shapes
Colonies
– Raw materials are greatest source of wealth
in Africa
– Businesses develop cash-crop plantations
Conflict

a. Zulus Fight the British
– Shaka—Zulu chief—creates centralized state around 1816
– British defeat Zulus and gain control of Zulu nation in
1887

b. Boers and British Settle in the Cape
– Boers, or Dutch farmers, take Africans’ land, establish
large farms
– Boers clash with British over land, slaves
 -move north to escape British

c. The Boer War
– Boer War between British, Boers begins in 1899
– British win; Boer republics united in Union of South Africa
(1910)
Indirectly

Management
US & G.B. – rely on existing leaders
Directly

French on rely on paternalism
– parent country provide basic needs, no rights
Assimilation

learn to be the same
Resistance




Nigeria – Britain
Algeria – 50 yrs fight French – French win
E, NW Africa – Germany
Ethiopia –
– Menelik II
– Italy – Battle of Adowa – defeat Italy
Positives
Negatives
1. reduced local warfare
1. Africans lose control of land and
independence
2. improved sanitation, hospitals,
schools
2. died of new diseases
3. lifespan and literacy increased
3. famines because of cash crops
4. African products came to be
valued
4. Africans had a breakdown of
culture
5. railroads, dams, and telephone/
telegraph lines were built in
African colonies – economic
expansion
5. division of African people
6. Africans resisted against
Europeans
European Imperialism
The Great Game
War between Great Britain and Russia
 Russia wanted to expand empire to access
India’s riches
 Afghanistan – between British and Russian
borders – topic of interest
 British withdraw in 1881

Ottoman Empire


Suleiman I – dies – weakens empire
Greece, Serbia – gain independence
Geopolitics


Taking land for location and resources
Russia – gain access to a warm water
port
Crimean War




British and Russian War
British and French align with Ottomans
First war recorded by the news
First women war nurses – Florence
Nightingale
Egypt Initiates Reforms



Adjust to or be consumed by modern world
Political and Social Reforms
Military and Economic Reforms
– modernization created by French occupation
– new leader Mohammad Ali
Egypt continued

Mohammad Ali
–
–
–
heirs recognized as heredity rulers of Egypt
Military and Economy reforms
Egyptian Agriculture

–
Egypt – international marketplace


plantation cash crops – cotton
peasants lost land
Suez Canal
–
–
–
–
Isma’il grandson of Mohammad Ali
Supported Suez Construction
Connects Red and Med. Sea
Due to debt – British occupied Egypt and oversaw
financial control of canal
Persia



Russia / Britain exploited commercially to
bring country under own sphere of
influence
To gain $, Persia involved in Western
Businesses
People oppose – dislike Western
Influence
British Imperialism in
India
East India Company Dominates



British East India Company rules India
until 1850s
Company has its own army led by British
officers
Army is staffed by sepoys—Indian
soldiers
Britain’s Jewel in the Crown





India is Britain’s most valuable colony, or
“jewel in the crown”
huge amount of raw materials
huge amount of people to purchase
them and harvest raw materials
Forced to produce raw materials for
British manufacturing
Britain set up laws that force to buy
British goods
British Transport Trade Goods


Railroads move cash crops and goods
faster
Trade in specific crops is tied to
international events
Impact of Colonialism
Positive

1. Increased and modernized railroad
network 3rd larges in the world
 when
completed brought unity to the
country
 2. Rode network, telephone, telegraph,
dams, bridges, and irrigation canals
allowed for modernization
 3. Sanitation and Public health
improved
 4. End to local warfare
Negative
 1.
British held political and economic
power
–Restricted Indian owned Industry
–Emphasis on cash crops resulted in
smaller food supply and famine
 2. Traditional Indian culture was
threatened due to racist attitudes
Sepoy Mutiny




Indians Rebel
Sepoy’s refuse to use cartridges of new
rifles for religious reasons
Many Sepoys are jailed; others start
Sepoy Mutiny against British
Many Indians, especially Sikhs, remain
loyal toBritish
Sepoy Mutiny




Turning Point
British put down rebellion, take direct
command of India
Raj—term for British rule over India,
lasts from 1757 to 1947
Uprising increases distrust between
British and Indians
Nationalism

Indian National Congress and Muslim League
– called for self government
– specific concerns for Indians

Partition of Bengal
– Hindu and Muslim section
– terrorism
– 1911 – British take back order and divide
differently
Imperialism in SE Asia
Europeans Race to Claim Pacific Rim


Lands of Southeast Asia that border Pacific
Ocean form Pacific Rim
Dutch, British, French, Germans claim parts of
Pacific Rim


establish trading ports
land perfect for plantation agriculture
Dutch Expand Control
a. Dutch colonies, called Dutch East
Indies, include Indonesia
 b. Settle Indonesia, establish rigid social
class system

British Take the Malayan Peninsula



Britain seizes Singapore as a port and
trading base
Also gets colonies in Malaysia, Burma
Chinese immigration to Malaysia creates
problems
French Control Indochina



French come to control Vietnam, Laos,
Cambodia
Directly control French Indochina
Export rice, angering Vietnamese
Colonial Impact




Modernization mainly helps European
businesses
Education, health, sanitation improve
Millions migrate to Southeast Asia to
work in mines, plantations
Colonialism leads to racial and religious
clashes
Modernization in Spain
– Siam remains independent, neutral zone between
French, British
– King Mongkut modernizes country:





starts schools
reforms legal system
reorganizes government
builds transportation and telegraph systems
ends slavery
Pacific Islands

Philippines
–
–
–
–
US gains control after Spanish American War
take down three year nationalist revolt
promise to prepare for self rule
focus on cash crops leads to food shortages
Pacific Islands

Hawaii
–
–
–
–
US has sugar cane plantations
75% of Hawaii’s wealth
American businessmen want annexation
1898 US annexes Hawaii