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Chapter 24. Western Imperialism. Western Imperialism. Imperialism: the policy of strengthening a country’s power into an empire through the military and diplomatic domination of other areas of the world into colonies: Effect of Industrial Revolution Need for raw materials
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Chapter 24 Western Imperialism
Western Imperialism • Imperialism: the policy of strengthening a country’s power into an empire through the military and diplomatic domination of other areas of the world into colonies: • Effect of Industrial Revolution • Need for raw materials • European rivalries =Scramble for colonies • Britain dominated = early 1800’s (India) • Late 1800’s: Belgium, France, Germany and United States followed with colonial empires.
Colonial Types 1) Indirect rule colonies (White dominion): few Europeans ruled many indigenous peoples. Used locals as leaders • Congo, India, Java 2) Settlement colonies: A) White Dominions • Canada, Australia • Europeans settle in the colony permanently to inhabit most of the region B) Contested Settler Colonies • New Zealand, South Africa, Hawaii • Large European populations lived among even more numerous indigenous peoples and continuously clashed over resources and social/cultural differences
Imperialism is a result of what? There are two types of colonies: what are they? Quick Review Question
Rise of British East India Company in India • B.E.I.C. interests = As Mughals collapsed • Gain influence through alliances with regional princes (who fought each other for control) • Territorial gains with 7-Yrs. War victory over France • The British relied on Sepoys (Indian soldiers trained in British military style) to control and crush any potential uprisings • Sepoys received higher pay in the British army • India was divided, no national unity could be formed to combat the British. • Regional: Hindu/Muslim divide
Challenges to British East India Company • B.E.I.C. officials = corruption and mismanagement. • Led to Bengal Famine 1770 (1/3 of population died). • Sepoy Rebellion, 1857 (Indian soldiers revolt). Ends with British victory. • Led to dissolution of B.E.I.C. • British government takes over • British Raj
The British Raj • The British Raj (the British political establishment in India) • Telegraph lines = communication with British government. • India a market for British manufactured goods and a source of raw materials. • British put themselves at the top of the social hierarchy instead of changing the social system • Adopted Indian culture • Mixed marriages
Growth of British Empire in India from the 1750s to 1858
Reform in British India • Started c. 1790 (as British government took on greater role from B.E.I.C.). • Western technology – telegraph, railway • Outlawed traditional Hindu practices • Eg. Sati (the burning of a wife on her deceased husband’s funeral pyre) outlawed, c. 1830 • Slavery • Western education for upper-classes • Promoted Western ideals (eg. Punctuality) • English a common language
What is the British Raj? What reforms did the British enact in India in the 19th century? Speculate on the effects of western education on the Indian upper-classes. Quick Review Question
Scramble for Africa • Europeans clash over African colonies as Africa offered raw materials and young markets. • The Berlin Conference of 1884-1885 (organized by Otto van Bismarck) partitioned Africa into colonies controlled by Belgium, France, Germany, Great Britain, Italy, Portugal, and Spain. • Liberia and Ethiopia not colonized; South Africa already British • No African representatives are present. • Divisions made without concern for ethnic or cultural groups traditional African communities disrupted.
Scramble for Africa 1870 1914 Before Berlin Conference AfterBerlin Conference
Colonial Wars and Unequal Combat • Industrial change justified colonial possessions and made them easier to acquire. • New weapons (machine gun, repeating rifle) made the Europeans impossible to stop in Africa and Pacific Islands. • Natives will try traditional tactics and sometimes diplomacy. • Only guerrilla tactics proved to stall – but not prevent – European advances. • 1879: Battle of Isandhlwana in South Africa (Zulu victory)
Methods of Economic Extraction • African labor for colonists: plantations, bronzing, mining (discovery of diamonds), felling forests • Plantations were established; natives forced to labor (long hours, extremely low wages if at all) to export crops. • Belgian Congo: rubber for tires • Palm oil from West and Central Africa for machine lubricants • Roads and railways built to move raw materials to ports where they could be shipped using steamships that could travel along interior rivers. • European colonial governments imposed a tax system on Africans, which had to be paid in cash or cash crops; this forced free Africans to virtually work for the colonists. • Products weren’t manufactured in Africa but were processed in Europe instead.
Belgian Congo (1880’s – early 1900’s) • Most egregious example of exploitation: • King Leopold II • Belgium = Rubber incredibly profitable • Why? Industrialization • Native Congolese reduced to serfs • Men worked to death • Wives held hostage until quotas met • Hands cut off if you refused to work or if quotas not met. • Murder, starvation, exposure • 1885-1905: Congolese population declined by 10 million
Colonial Regimes and Social Hierarchies • Europeans exploited ethnic and cultural divisions in Africa • Borders created based on European agreements without consideration of African cultural tradition. • Higher education was not promoted • Rampant exploitation of African population • All “stunted the growth” of African civilizations. • No middle class develops • Western languages taught by missionaries
Social Darwinism • Social Darwinism: application of Charles Darwin’s theory of natural selection to race to justify European conquest of non-Western societies • White racial supremacy was widely accepted. • Used to justify mental and moral superiority of whites over the rest of mankind based on skin color • No need to socialize or adopt non-European culture
Civilizing Effects • Europeans believed in the civilizing effects of their colonization. • Not only did they provide order and stability, but also European culture and societal expectations regarding cleanliness and decorum. • Europeans brought science and health studies with them. • Aided in preventions against malaria for Europeans • improved living conditions in colonies for indigenous peoples: hospitals built, sanitation improved
Describe Social Darwinism; how does it relate to imperialism? What assumptions did Europeans make about non-whites, and why did Europeans believe their civilizing of natives was beneficial? Quick Review Question
White Dominion Colonies • Part of British Empire • Basically governed themselves • Based on British political and economic model • “Imported” British culture • Had small indigenous populations • Many British settlers • Canada (from France after 7 yrs. War) • Australia, established 1788 • Penal colony • Influx of settlers after gold discovered
South Africa • Boers (Dutch settlers in South Africa) gradually moved to the interior from the coast. • Mixed with indigenous peoples (new race) • British took Cape Colony • Great Trek (1834): Boers migrated further into the interior of South Africa • Zulu peoples fight against Boers, then British (Anglo-Zulu Wars)
South African Boer Wars • 1850s: Boers established two republics (Orange Free State and Transvaal) in the interior. • 1867: Diamonds in Orange Free State • 1885: Gold was discovered in Transvaal • Boer War (1899-1902) Boers vs. British • British were victorious. • 1902: British unite republics into Union of South Africa; Africans under European control • Apartheid begins
Partition of Southeast Asia and the Pacific to 1914 • Small kingdoms, not industrialized, easily colonized. • British: Malay States; Burma • French: Indochina (now Vietnam) • Dutch: East Indies • Pacific groups had lived in isolation for thousands of years. • Sophisticated cultures and societies had developed • No immunities • Social disintegration and suffering
Dutch Expansion in Java • Modern day Indonesia • Traditionally a major player in Indian Ocean trade (spices). • Srivajaya Kingdom • Buddhism in region, then Islam • Dutch enter picture 16th c. • Alliances between Dutch and some sultans • Dutch help Sultans, victorious Sultans cede territory to Dutch. • Dutch slowly take over. By 1750 control most of Java.
The Maori of New Zealand • British colonization for natural resources (timber). Eventually settled by British farmers and herders by 1850’s. • Effects on Maori • Disease, displaced from fertile land, convert to Christianity, adopt European farming techniques. • Maori resisted, adjusted, and endure.
Economic Imperialism and Hawaii • Economic imperialism, not political • 1777-1779: English Captain James Cook voyaged to Hawaii. • U.S. Missionaries bring Christianity in 1819. • Disease devastates native population. • American companies move in = sugar plantations. This is economic imperialism. • Hawaiian monarchs declined after 1872 and Hawaii was annexed by the United States. • US Congress took over the islands in 1898.
What are White Dominions? Describe Dutch expansion in Java. Why did the U.S. government annex Hawaii? Quick Review Question