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Modern Era Review 1750-1914 AP World History - Klinect Major Themes • • • • • • • Revolutions and independence movements Nationalism and the nation-state Industrialization Reform and Reaction Imperialism and its impact Emancipation Cultural influences Revolutions & Independence Movements • American Revolution (1776-1781) – Seven Year’s War (1756-1763) – “no taxation w/out representation” – Declaration of Independence – “all men are created equal” • Reality = no legal and political equality – Conservative revolution – Popular sovereignty Revolutions & Independence Movements • French Revolution (1789-1815) – Radical revolution … wanted to replace “old order” with a completely “new order” – Three Estates … problems – National Assembly … Bastille … Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen – Max Robespierre … “Reign of Terror” – Rise of Napoleon Bonaparte … Napoleonic Era & the accomplishments – Congress of Vienna (1814-1815) Revolutions & Independence Movements • Haitian Revolution (1802-04) – French … sugar production – American & French Revolution impact along with Enlightenment ideas – L’Overture … slave revolt … only successful slave revolt in history – Many nations, including the USA, refused to recognize independent Haiti – Haitian Revolution will inspire other L.A. nations Revolutions & Independence Movements • Latin American Revolutions – Spanish & Portuguese minority (30,000) dominated the 3.5 million creoles, and 10 million less-privileged peoples. – Creoles began the revolutions • Did NOT seek social reform, only to remove peninsulares from power – Napoleon’s impact – Father Hidalgo (Mexico); Bolivar (northern South America); San Martin (southern S.A.); Dom Pedro (Brazil) – Gran Colombia Nationalism & the Nation-State • Unification of Italy – Roman Catholic Church had discouraged nationalism. Why? – Papal states = papal resistance – Garibaldi & Cavour – Victor Emmanuell – Italy united by 1870 w/ the help of political maneuvering … alliances … deals Nationalism & the Nation-State • Unification of Germany – Prussia became increasingly more powerful after the fall of Napoleon – Otto von Bismarck … “blood and iron” – United Germany through wars w/ Denmark, Austria, and France (Franco-Prussian War) – Germany quickly approached the UK and USA as top industrial powers – Led to Germany wanting to “flex their muscles” entering the 20th century … World War I?? Nationalism & the Nation-State • Zionism – Nationalism’s view of minorities? – Jews had been the biggest “target” for many European nations … anti-semitism – Theodor Herzl (1897) – Balfour Declaration (1917 - just after this time period) Nationalism & the Nation-State • Latin America – 1830’s = LA was independent – Leaders wanted representative gov’t but felt the mass population was unprepared – Early constitutions created order and representation … property & literacy were prerequisites to vote – Economic problems = rise of caudillos – Catholic Church remained strong – Instability led to foreign intervention (Monroe Doctrine) Industrialization • Modern industry => scientific activity and invention of the 17th century • James Watt – steam engine – change? Before Industrialization After Industrialization Agricultural-rural economy Capitalist-urban economy Family-farm economy Wage earning economy Asian-based manufacturing Factory-based manufacturing Rural-based population Urban population Industrialization • Preconditions for industrialization – Technical knowledge and invention – Large population to serve as a workforce – Possession of natural resources to be turned into manufactured goods – Investment capital (money) to build factories – A stable and capitalist-minded government • Poorer nations have large population but lack investment capital • US and Germany surpassed Britain by 1900 Industrialization • Technology – Higher-grade steel => transportation and weaponry – Engine-driven steel ships replaced wooden ships – Trains revolutionized transportation and were transplanted into Asian & African colonies Industrialization • Impact on gender, family, and social structures – Slavery declined & free-wage laborers declined – Family as an economic moved to production outside the home – Men’s status increased because industrial work and the wage were considered more important than domestic work – Middle-class women generally did not work outside the home – “cult of domesticity” Industrialization • Global effects of industrialization – Global division of labor emerged – Industrial societies needed raw materials: • Cotton (India & Egypt) • Rubber (Brazil & Congo) • Cash crops (Latin America, Sub-Saharan Africa, South Asia, and SE Asia) – These areas developed little to no industrialization themselves – Wealth was concentrated in the hands of a few – “Dependency Theory” Industrialization • Reactions to Industrialization: – Socialism • Anti-capitalist reform movements • Karl Marx – Overthrow of the moneyed class (bourgeoisie) – Establish a “workers state” – Unionism • Less radical • Sought better wages and working conditions • Britain led the way in reforms to better working conditions Reform and Reaction • Ottoman Empire – By the 18th century they had fallen behind the Europeans in strength and technology … were more vulnerable – Central gov’t less effective while provinces became more independent, often controlling their own armies – Muhammad Ali … seized power in Egypt after the fall of Napoleon and was only minimally subordinate to the Ottoman sultans – Ali’s son commissioned the French to build the Suez Canal that opened in 1869 – Transformed Egypt into a critical strategic location – Ottomans also lost trade b/c of Europen bypass directly to India & China – Atlantic Ocean now became the focal point away from the Ottomans – European goods flooded Ottoman market and they became dependent on foreign loans – Huge blow to the ego of the Ottomans Reform and Reaction • Ottomans (cont.) – Mahmud II; reformer; reorganized secondary education, built new roads, telegraph lines, and a postal service along the western models – Tanzimat Era (1839-1879) … used the French legal system as a guide … public trials and equality were instituted before Muslim laws and those of other religious groups … secular – Obviously these reforms were met with opposition from various religious groups and the bureaucracy – Many reformers were exiled (Young Turks) but they returned in 1908 and led a coup and overthrew the sultan. – Years of internal struggle led Europe to refer to them as “the sick man of Europe” … – The Ottomans eventually ally themselves with the Germans Reform and Reaction • Russia – Russia was autocratic, multiethnic, multilingual, and multicultural … very similar to the Ottomans – Czars supported boyars and Russian Orthodox Church – Peasants = majority of population, serfdom – Expanded vastly > led to Crimean War (1856-58) … defeat – Czar Alexander II > emancipated serfs in 1861; created zemstovs (local/district assemblies) but were still subordinate to czar; began construction of Trans-Siberian Railroad; industrialization – Was assassinated by radical revolutionaries (Lenin’s brother) “intelligentsia” … university students and intellectuals (1881) – Later czars reverted back to repression, not reform, to control the masses – Czar Nicholas II & the Russo-Japanese War (1904-05) – Bloody Sunday & Revolution of 1905 Reform and Reaction • China – China, like the Ottomans & Russians had to deal with their own issues of reform and reaction. – Qing (Manchu) saw massive population growth, new food crops from the Americas, and new monetary system based on silver – Opium War (1839) … unequal treaties … extraterritoriality – Taiping Rebellion (1850’s to 1860’s) … Hong Xiuquan … antiChinese society rebellion … deadliest rebellion in world history – Reform > Self-Strengthening Movement … “Chinese learning at the base, Western learning for use.” … shipyards, railroads, & weapon industries along with science academies – Hundred Days Reform … Emperor Guangzu … constitutional monarchy, guarantee civil right liberties, encourage foreign influence … led to Boxer Rebellion (1899-1900) – Sun Yat Sen … Pu Yi … end of the Qing Dynasty (1911) – Three Principles of Sun: Nationalism, Democracy, Socialism Reform and Reaction • Japan – Japan made the most radical reforms and changes in its response to the challenges of reform and reaction … emerged as a world power – Commodore Perry (1853) … told to leave … “revere the emperor and repel the barbarians.” – Younger samurai (reformers) wanted to undermine the bakufu … “men of spirit” overthrew the Shogun … wanted to industrialize after seeing the British defeat China easily in Opium Wars – Meiji Restoration (Revolution) of 1868 … rapid industrialization and modernization of Japan … modern infrastructure and military – Victories against China and Russia heading into the 20th century gave Japan aspirations of empire in Asia Imperialism and its Impact • Three motives: economic, political, and cultural – Economic: Colonies = sources of raw materials and markets for manufactured goods. – Political: colonies were strategic sites with harbors and supply stations for naval ships – Culturally: hoped to convert the Asian and African people to Christianity … “White Man’s Burden” • India – UK’s interest was purely a business venture … British East India Company … took advantage of Mughal weaknesses – Sepoys … Sepoy Revolt (1857) – Tea, coffee, and opium were cultivated – British built railroads, telegraphs, canals, harbors, and irrigation systems … English-style schools were set up for elite Indians – Indian National Congress founded in 1885 – Muslim League – Promised independence if they fought in World War I Imperialism and its Impact • Africa – Europe had little presence in Africa outside coastal trading posts for most of modern world history ... – “Scramble for Africa” (1875-1900) … Europe dominates entire continent – King Leopold II of Belgium – Congo Free State … holocaust? – British in Egypt (1882) … seized Suez Canal – Berlin Conference • Japan – After accepting western help seized Korea (1894) and Manchuria (1904) after military victories – Japan was now on the world stage Imperialism and its Impact • Legacy of Imperialism – Manufacturers became suppliers of raw materials and consumers of imported goods – Migration increased … USA, Canada, Argentina, Australia, South Africa in search for cheap land and better economic opportunities – Indentured servants (Asia & Africa) went to tropical lands for plantation labor – Scientific racism (Social Darwinism) Emancipation • Slavery – Mid-19th century liberals pushed for abolition … Enlightenment influence – Slavery, from an economic sense, became less profitable • Prices of sugar, cotton, and tobacco fell – Emancipation: • • • • Britain (1833) France (1848) United States (1865) Brazil (1888) – Freedom ≠ equality Emancipation • Serfdom – Key to social change in Russia had to be the emancipation of the serfs – Opposition to serfdom had been growing since the 1700’s – “obstacle to economic development” as well as source of instability and revolts – Czar Alexander II (1861) freed serfs & compensated landowners for the loss of land and serfs – Serf labor obligations were gradually cancelled – Won few political rights and paid huge taxes on their “new land” – Their emancipation led to very little increase in agricultural production – Did create a large urban labor force necessary for industrialization Cultural Influences • African and Asian Influences on European Art – European artists took an interest in African & Asian artistic styles – Impressionism > based on Japanese influences in nature – Modern art was soon launched, free from traditional constraints • Cultural Policies of Meiji Japan – Heavily influenced by the Western culture – Japanese literature > writers experimented with Western verse – Architects & artists created large buildings of steel with Greek columns like those seen in the West • Leisure & Consumption – Industrialization brought about higher wages & fewer work hours … brought about new concept of “leisure time” – Advertisements > “needed things” – Newspapers, theaters, and professional sports all became popular