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The New Imperialism. 1800-1900. Note:. This power point presentation is based on reading selections from Students’ Friend. I deas and topics highlighted in red indicate new information not included in the Students’ Friend reading. New Imperialism-What is it?.
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The New Imperialism 1800-1900
Note: This power point presentation is based on reading selections from Students’ Friend. Ideas and topics highlighted in red indicate new information not included in the Students’ Friend reading.
New Imperialism-What is it? • The physical, economic, or political domination or control of another nation
What causes or influences Imperialism? • *Nationalism (national pride) • *Social Darwinism (racist attitudes) • *Money (Industrial Revolution & colonies)
Imperialism in India • British East India Company gained control of most of India • British government took over after the Sepoy Rebellion that resulted over religious & cultural differences • Advantages: postal service, telegraph, roads, railroad network, schools, kept peace • Disadvantages: destroyed Indian textile industry, high taxes, pushed cotton growing instead of food=famines
Imperialism in China • British demand for tea and other products drained silver from Britain (trade imbalance). • British pushed opium trade in order to balance trade • Chinese objected, resulted in Opium War in 1839.
Opium War • With superior ships and technology the British won an easy victory. • Chinese under the Qing emperor were forced to pay cost of war and to open new ports to Western ships.
Continued Foreign Pressure in China • Spheres of influence-areas where only one foreign country had the right to trade with the Chinese • Open Door Policy-United States forced all countries to share equal rights to trade in China in 1899
Chinese Reaction to Foreign Pressure • Boxer Rebellion (1900)-A secret society, the Boxers, swore to destroy foreigners and began killing foreigners across China, especially Christian missionaries. • Trapped foreigners in Beijing were rescued by French, German, British, Japanese, Russian, and American troops. • Qing Dynasty forced to give up more ports and pay for huge losses. The dynasty was finally overthrown in 1911.
Imperialism in Japan • Tokugawa shogunate attempted to keep out foreign influences. • Americans sent warships and threatened attack unless Japan open its ports to trade with the United States
Tokugawa Shogunate Falls • The Tokugawa shogunate(& feudalism) was overthrown and replaced with a modern centralized government. • Japanese citizens given equal rights. • Emperor (Meiji) restored to god-like power and devotion. • Japan embraces Industrial Revolution & becomes powerful.
Imperialism in Africa • King Leopold II of Belgium hired Henry Stanley to explore Congo River basin and make treaties with African leaders. • This set off a “Scramble for Africa” by European countries which led to the division of Africa without any input from Africans.
Boers & Zulus • Boers, descendants of Dutch farmers, came into contact and conflict with the Zulus. • Boer guns eventually overcame Zulu spears
Africa was carved into countries with boundaries that had nothing to do with cultural groups living there. • Europeans built railroads to remove African resources. • Nearly destroyed African culture and development.
Imperialism in Latin American • The Monroe Doctrine was issued by the United States in 1823. • Closed Americas to any future European colonization
The United Statesin Latin America • The United States took about half of Mexico’s territory in the Mexican war in 1846. • Latin American countries would gain independence but a white upper class usually kept control. • New wealth from trade and industrialization benefited the elites.
American Imperialism • Spanish-American War • U. S. supported Cuban rebels against Spain • Battleship Maine blew up in Havana harbor & Spain was blamed (mistakenly). • U. S. declared war on Spain. • Theodore Roosevelt & Rough Riders • U. S. won war and acquired Puerto Rico, Guam, Philippines.
American Attitude • The United States took control of Hawaii. • Theodore Roosevelt declared the U.S. would take control of any Latin American country that didn’t run it’s government the way the U.S. wanted it to. • Caused resentment
Westernization • Western nations: • Industrialized • Wealthy • Powerful • Aggressive • How could non-Western nations respond? • Isolation (China & Japan) • Fight (Zulus) • Adopt Western ideas, (industrialize, modernize)
Problems • Education was one route to Westernization but there were problems: • Western countries already had factories, workers, and controlled world markets.