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Imperialism in Asia. A. Justification. Social Darwinism , which applied Darwin’s theory of natural selection to sociology Dominant classes or races rose to the top Because Britain was the most powerful nation the British were superior
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A. Justification • Social Darwinism, which applied Darwin’s theory of natural selection to sociology • Dominant classes or races rose to the top • Because Britain was the most powerful nation the British were superior • Second … not only were the British superior they had a moral obligation to dominate and civilize others • Rudyard Kipling’s poem “ White Man’s Burden” shows this idea
Take up the White Man's burden--Send forth the best ye breed--Go bind your sons to exileTo serve your captives' need;To wait in heavy harness,On fluttered folk and wild--Your new-caught, sullen peoples,Half-devil and half-child.Take up the White Man's burden--In patience to abide,To veil the threat of terrorAnd check the show of pride;By open speech and simple,An hundred times made plainTo seek another's profit,And work another's gain. Rudyard Kipling
A. Early European Contact • 1750s • England and France fought over India • England won out (Seven Years War – Same war that ???)
B. British East India Company • Joint-stock company • Exclusive trading rights over the British trade with India • Led by Robert Clive
C. British East India Rule • BEIC directly ruled over India • Had its own army • From 1750 – 1858 the company took control of much of the subcontinent and set up administrative regions • Sepoy mutiny • Sepoys – Indians who work for the BEIC mostly in the army • Fought for two years • British won • Led Parliament to step in
D. British Colonialism • Political Structure • 1858 – India become a Crown Colony • 1877- Queen Victoria named Empress of India • British rule through Viceroys
D. British Colonialism (Con’t) 2. Economic Structure • Raw materials sent to Britain • Cotton • Timber • Metals • Finished goods sent to India • Cotton Fabric • Steel
D. British Colonialism (con’t) 3. Social Structure • Upper classes were Anglicized • Taught English • Adopted English dress and culture • Many began to want Independence aa. 1885 Indian National Congress established bb. Congress party sought Independence but recognized the need for reform
A. China before European Imperialism • Isolationist • Trade was important • Foreigners were restricted to Canton (Remember - Canton System from Qing Notes) • Limits on what could be bought and sold • All goods had to be bought with silver
B. The Opium Trade • 1773 – Opium Introduced to China • The Opium Trade • Opium grown in British India • Opium smuggled into China and bought with silver • Silver from Opium sales used to purchase Chinese goods • TEA - The are British after all!!! • Silk • Porcelain
C. First Opium War 1839 - 1842 • 1838 – Manchu Emperor issues an edict forbidden the sale and use of opium • 1839 – Chinese seize British opium • First Opium War • British win with relatively little force • Chinese forced to sign the Treaty of Nanking • Called the “Unequal Treaties” • British gained trade concessions • Opium trade made legal again
D. Second Opium War 1856 - 1860 • 1843 – British gain control of the island of Hong Kong • 1844 – Christian missionaries allowed back into China • Second Opium War • Chinese attempt to curb the opium trade again • China defeated • All of China now open for trade
E. Impact of the Opium Wars • Externally and internally China was viewed as weak • Internally this turned to rebellion • White Lotus Rebellion • Led by monks over taxes and corruption • Taiping Rebellion i. Led by a religious zealot who raised a million man army • Both Rebellions were stopped by the Chinese • Manchu launched the Self-Strengthening Movement aa. Largely unsuccessful
E. Impact of the Opium Wars (Con’t) • Chinese begin to lose territory • Korea and Taiwan to Japan • Vietnam to France • Major European Country establish Spheres of Influence setting up • Military bases • Businesses • Transportation • Communication • Open Door Policy • Chinese sovereignty maintained • Equal trading privileges among all imperial powers
F. Boxer Rebellion 1899 - 1901 • Boxers: Anti-Manchu, anti-European, anti-Japanese and anti-Christian • Wanted foreigners out of China • Used guerilla tactics • Killed missionaries • Seized embassies • Foreign military stopped the rebellion • China paid foreigners for these costs and apologized
A. Japan Before European Imperialism • 17th and 18th century closed to outsiders • 1853 – Commodore Mathew Perry U.S.N. forced Japan to open to outside trade • U.S. and other nations won trade concessions • Japanese revolted against the Shogun • Led by the samurai • Shogun removed from power • Power returned to the Emperor Meiji
B. The Meiji Restoration • Characterized by rapid industrialization • 1876 – Samurai class abolished a. Universal military service established • By 1890s Japan was on equal footing with the western powers • Japan would go on to gain control of Korea and Manchuria from the Chinese and Russians respectively • The willingness of the elite to reform in Japan led to rapid industrialization and would allow it to become an imperial power of its own