Download Why did Europeans have so much power in the modern world system?

Document related concepts
no text concepts found
Transcript
Big Era Eight
A Half Century of Crisis
1900 - 1950
+
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
What was the overall effect of the events of
the 20th Century?
How was the world tied together at the
start of the 20th century?
Did an equal balance of
political and military power
exist among world regions?
Why did Europeans have so much power
in the modern world system?
Did Europeans get only benefits from the
modern world system?
Did other industrial countries accept
Europe having exclusive dominance?
What did peoples in Asia and Africa do
when European powers invaded their
lands or put economic pressure on them?
Tasks
Answer the following
questions for slides three
through 13
Why is
this unit
about crisis?
Three major events shook up the
modern world system that had
been created during the 19th
Century.
Depression
World War II
World War I
What was the overall effect of these events?
They could upset
the balance of
political and economic
forces in the
modern world.
Before we go any
further, how was the
world tied together at
the start of the 20th
century?

Communications networks made possible by the
telegraph, telephone, and undersea cable.

Transportation networks made possible by the
railway, steamship, and (soon to come) airplane.

Trade and financial networks.

Diplomatic relations and alliances.

Relations between imperial powers and the
colonial peoples they ruled.
Did an equal balance of
political and military power
exist among world regions?
Oh, no.
I like to throw my
weight around.
At the start, European countries
dominated the 20th Century. By the
end…well, we’ll talk about that
towards the end. For now, let’s pick
up where we left off.
Europe
European descent-dense
European descent-sparse
European influence
European colonies
Japanese Empire
You already
know that
Europeans got
the upper hand
in the modern
world system
during the later
part of Big Era
Seven.
Why did Europeans have
so much power in the
modern world system?

During the Industrial
Revolution and Imperialism,
western European countries
achieved greater economic
power than most other
countries as a result of
industrialization.

Many European governments
and businesses wanted more
overseas markets and raw
materials.

Western European military
forces had big world leads in
military technology.
Also . . .
The last quarter of the
19th century saw great
droughts and famines
in many parts of the
world.
These disasters were
connected to El Niño
climatic conditions.
These disasters caused
economic, social, and
political disruption in
African and Asian
societies just when
European power was
strongest.
Did Europeans get only
benefits from the
modern world system?
No.
Europe’s leaders competed
with each other to dominate
the modern world. Their
competition helped cause
World War I, the first crisis
of Big Era Eight.
Also, many workers in
Europe felt that their
political and business
leaders treated them poorly.
German cartoon depicts the
threat of British imperial
expansion in the 19th century.
+
No. Americans
expanded their
opportunities
at home and
abroad.
Did other
industrial
countries accept
Europe having
exclusive
dominance?
No. The
Japanese
government
seized an
empire in
East Asia
Some
collaborated
with the
European
takeover…
What did peoples in
Asia and Africa do
when European
powers invaded their
lands or put economic
pressure on them?
Many resisted, though usually
failed to defeat European
armies. The Ethiopians
repelled the Italians in 1896,
but this was an exception.
So, to review:
European countries dominated
a booming world economy at
the start of the 20th Century.
But many people in other
places (and some in Europe)
did not like this system.
This is getting
old.
Tasks For 15 through 34
1.
What does MEAN stand for?
2.
What is militarism?
3.
How were the alliances created?
4.
What were the two sides of World War 1?
5.
What were the final sides of World War I? How did they form?
6.
What sparked World War I?
7.
What were the regions where fighting took place during World War I?
8.
What is the The Schlieffen Plan?
9.
What two events brought the United States into the war?
10.
Why was WWI a Stalemate?
11.
What was the final result of the war? How many casualties did it have?
+
Europe created the crisis by being
MEAN

Militarism

Empires

Alliances

Nationalism
+
Militarism
1910-1914 Increase in
Defense Expenditures
France
10%
Britain
13%
Russia
39%
Germany
73%
+ Alliances
Triple Alliance
Triple Entente
+
So how did the crises of
the first half of the 20th
Century change things?
1. Two wars and a worldwide economic
collapse weakened European dominance.
World War II
World War I
Depression
2. But some countries saw these crises as
opportunities to gain new influence or
take over parts of the system.
World War I was fought in several parts of
the world, though the longest and biggest battles
took place in Europe. The war killed both soldiers
and civilians, and it devastated both towns and
countryside.
20,000,000
people died in
connection
with the war, far
more than in any
earlier war in
world history.
+ Assassination
Archduke Franz Ferdinand and
Duchess Sophie at Sarajevo, Bosnia,
on June 28th, 1914.
Regions
where
fighting
took place
in World
War I
1
2
3
1 Western European
Front
2 Eastern European
Front
3 Italian Front
4 Balkan Front
5 Palestine/Syria
6 Iraq
7 Arabia
8 German Togoland
9 German Camaroons
10 German East Africa
11 German Southwest
Africa
12 German Pacific Islands
12
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
+
+ Domino Effect
Austria blamed Serbia for Ferdinand’s death and
declared war on Serbia.
Germany pledged their support for Austria -Hungary.
Russia pledged their support for Serbia.
+ Domino Effect
Germany declares war on Russia.
France pledges their support for Russia.
Germany declares war on France.
Germany invades Belgium on the way to France.
Great Britain supports Belgium and declares war on Germany.
+
The Schlieffen Plan

German plan to take out the
Western Front to avoid being
sandwiched between two
fighting zones.

Good idea--failed
+
America
Joins
the
Allies
+
The Sinking
of the Lusitania
The Zimmerman Telegram
+
The Yanks
Are Coming!
Americans in the Trenches
+
Why was WWI a Stalemate?

What’s a stalemate?

Neither side can make a move to win.

Machine gun. How did this change war? How was it fought
before?

Trench Warfare = “solution”.

Millions die without gaining ground.
+
What were the results?

Germany surrendered.

Allies impose Treaty of Versailles.

Declares Germany guilty for war.

Germany must pay reparations to Allies.

This sets the stage for WWII!

League of Nations formed to try to prevent war in the future.
+
Casualties?
 Total
troops mobilized by all countries in WW1
65,038,810
 Total
troops dead from all countries in WW1
8,556,315
 Total
troops wounded from all countries in
WW1
21,219,452
 Total
missing or POWs
7,750,945
+
+
+
Tasks for slides 38 to 46

How did World War I weaken Europe’s global
dominance?

If World War I weakened European power, how
did it affect everyone else?

Did the world change in important ways?
How did World War I
weaken Europe’s
global dominance?
It devastated Europe
both physically and
psychologically.
Europeans saw that
industrialization made
warfare more brutal,
deadly, and
destructive.
Many felt disillusioned
and lost their belief in
progress.
If World War I weakened
European power, how did it affect
everyone else?
Hey! How’d I get
off the ground?
It’s about time
some more of us
made our weight
felt.
+
The war caused death
and destruction in
the Middle East and
Africa—wherever
fighting took place.
It caused economic
and social stress in
all the European
colonial empires.
Societies all over the world contributed resources
or soldiers to the war effort, gaining experience
and a firmer voice on the global stage.
Colonial soldiers became more confident
in their own abilities and less awed
by their foreign rulers.
Indian soldiers in
Belgium
+As a result, some local leaders in colonies began
to call for self-determination or independence.
India
South Africa
Meanwhile, in Europe upheaval gave other
industrial countries opportunities to grow.
Ford factory,
Detroit, Michigan
Women everywhere took on new responsibilities
outside the home as part of the Total War effort.
France
Russia
USA
+In 1917, the Bolshevik Party led a
successful Communist revolution in
Russia.
The Bolsheviks overthrew the
monarchy of the Tsar, which had been
in power for centuries.
Russia had been an ally of Britain,
France, and the US. But Lenin, the
Bolshevik leader, took Russia out of
World War I.
Tsar Nicholas II was
Executed in 1918
After World War I, the modern world
became more closely tied together
than ever before.
Did the world change in
important ways?
Yes. Along with global trade and finance, sounds
from radios and images from movies and
magazines helped knit a modern global culture.
The 1920s saw silent film, tango, flappers,
and jazz gain global popularity.
Paris
USA
Argentina
Japan
India
Then, the Great Depression
happened.
35
Value of
Global
Exports in
Billions of
Dollars
30
25
20
15
10
5
0
1924
1926
1928
1930
1932
1934
1936
The Depression put another dent in the sense
of progress and possibility that many people
had felt. The global economy spread misery as
well as wealth and prosperity.
1
Unemployment and
hunger rippled through
many societies, raising
doubts about the system.
Brazil
USA
France
Did the Depression in the
modern world system
affect everyone the same
way?
No, some industries in
the West kept going.
And some workers kept
going on strike when
they felt the system was
treating them badly.
(Remember the unhappy
workers before World
War I?)
Sit-down strikers, 1937, USA.
Communists said the modern
world system had to change.
Government planning,
communal ownership, and a
classless society should replace
free markets and close the
divide between rich owners
and poor workers.
In fact, the Soviet Union under
the Bolsheviks remained
authoritarian and repressive.
10
8
6
4
2
0
-2
SA
ce
R
SS
U
n
pa
Ja
y
an
m
er
G
in
ita
Br
U
an
Fr
Even so, while most of the
capitalist world struggled in
the 1930s, the Soviet Union’s
industrial economy grew
rapidly.
12
Soviet GNP growth per year
1928-37
How did the Depression and
the challenge of Communism
add to the crisis in the modern
world?
By the mid1930s,
there was a
three-way
struggle for
control of
modern
world’s
Hitler
future.
Along with Communism’s challenge to
liberal capitalism, a new challenger
appeared: Fascism.
Hitler
Mussolini
Stalin
Fascist leaders used nationalism and state control of
industries and cultural life to unite people of all classes.
These leaders blamed national troubles on foreigners and
communists.
Some fascist-run countries recovered quickly from the
Depression, partly by expanding their military economies.
Major countries
with Fasciststyle governments
by the 1940s
Spain
South Africa
Japan
Leaders of capitalist democracies
+
believed that they could meet the
challenges of Communism and
Fascism…
•by defending democratic
values.
•by modernizing capitalism
through economic and social
reform.
Regardless of these beliefs, democracies
used overseas colonies to help prop up the
home economies during the Depression.
Hawaii pineapple plantation
+As they recovered from the Depression, both Germany
and Japan became increasingly aggressive. When
Hitler invaded Poland in 1939, Britain and France
went to war against Germany. World War II was
underway.
At first, Fascist Germany and Communist Russia had a
tense alliance. But when Hitler invaded Russia in June
1941, Stalin allied Russia with
Britain and the United States.
The US entered the war after
Japan bombed Pearl Harbor
on December 7, 1941.
Japanese
Bombing
of Pearl
Harbor
+
World War II Alliances
Mussolini and Hitler
Allies: The US and
Britain were liberal
democracies. The
USSR was Communist.
But all three were
anti-fascist.
Axis Powers: Italy,
Germany, and Japan
were fascist, anticommunist, and antiliberal democracy.
Stalin, Roosevelt, & Churchill
World War II involved men and
women fighting and serving all over
the world.
Areas of Fighting
Even more than in World War I, men and
women around the world fought in or
supported the battles of World War II.
West African
Canadian
Indian
New weapons and tactics of war made World
War II even more destructive and deadly than
World War I.
German plane
wreckage in
North Africa
+Tokyo,
Japan
Both sides in the war
targeted civilians.
London,
England
Dresden,
Germany
The deadliest war in
history (over 50
million killed)…
ended with the use
of the deadliest
weapon in history.
What global changes resulted
from World War II?
New powers and political groups
competed to reshape the world.
The United States
took over as the
world’s leading
military and
economic power
and supporter of
reformed
capitalism and
liberal democracy
A poster encouraging
Americans to buy war
bonds to support the
war effort
A devastated
Western Europe
depended on US
aid for rebuilding.
This American
effort was called
the Marshall Plan.
Dutch cartoon, late 1940s
The USSR also emerged from the
war stronger than ever.
 It
rebuilt its economy
without Western aid.
 It
created an empire in
Eastern Europe.
 It
worked to spread
Communist ideas and
revolutions.
 It
became the USA’s
main rival for power in
the modern world.
Red Army Soldiers
Japan lost its empire, swore off militarism, and
rebuilt with American aid.
China became the second major communist
country after its revolution in 1949.
American Ships Sail to
Japan for Occupation,
1945
Mao Zedong, Leader of the
Communist Revolution in
China
Colonies sought
independence
from their former
European rulers.
Ho Chi Minh
in Vietnam
Nehru and Gandhi
in India
Nehru with Kwame
Nkrumah of the Gold
Coast/Ghana
European countries recovered from
the war and went on to new
prosperity.
But Europe no longer dominated the
world as it had at the start of the
century.
What happened?
That’s more
like it.
+
What will Big Era
Nine bring for the
modern world
system?
•More world-wide integration
(now called globalization).
Stay
tuned!
•More conflict too! Will
capitalism triumph over
Communism? The USA over
the USSR? Will new groups
push their way into the
competition for power? How
will the environment change?