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1. The High Tide of Imperialism
2. Colonial Southeast Asia, c. 1850
3. The Spread of Colonial Rule
Africa and Asia a source of raw materials and markets for European manufactured goods
Motives for expansion:
Economic
National grandeur
Moral purposes
No longer happy to deal with independent states; maintaining access important
Competition for control over territories
Opportunity in the Orient: Colonial Takeover in Southeast Asia
Malay Peninsula
Singapore
Burma
Vietnam
Philippines
4. Africa Before World War I
5. Empire Building in Africa
The Growing European Presence in West Africa
Slave trade
Abolished by all major countries in the world by 1880s
Legitimate trade
More permanent presence
Gold Coast and Sierra Leone
Liberia
New class of Africans
Informal Empire
Imperialist Shadow over the Nile
Napoleon
Muhammad Ali
Suez Canal, 1854-1869
Sudan
Algiers
Arab Merchants and European Missionaries in East Africa
Bantus, Boers, and British in South Africa
6. The Scramble for Africa European rivalries
Trade
Missionary factor
Superiority in firearms
Belgiums claim on the Congo
Conference of Berlin, 1884
Britain and France at Fashoda; France backs down
Cape Colony
Boer War, 1899-1902
7. The Struggle for South Africa
8. The Colonial System
Resistance from societies with long traditions of national cohesion
Direct and indirect rule
Philosophy of colonialism
Darwinism
Survival of the fittest
Agent of civilization
Bring the benefits of the West
Assimilation/association
9. Colonialism in Action India Under the British Raj
Some territories taken over directly by the East India Company and later the British crown
Others ruled by local maharajas and rajas
Order and stability
Attention to education
Thomas Babington Macaulay
Outlaw sati
Introduced railroads, the telegraph, and postal service
British textiles put out of work those in the Indian textile industry
Zamindar system
Failed to bring benefits of modern science and technology
Psychological effects
10. India Under British Rule, 1805-1931
11. Gateway to India?
12. The Company Resident and His Puppet
13. Colonial Regimes in Southeast Asia Primary aim was economic
Indirect rule
Burma
Malaya
Indochina
Slow to create democratic institutions
Slow to adopt educational reforms
Reluctant to take up white mans burden
Slow economic development
Some manufacturing in urban areas
Problems with growth of cash crops
Problems of population growth
Modernizing elite
14. Colonialism in Africa
British attitude was to preserve African political traditions
Advantages of indirect rule
East Africa
White settlers
Southern Africa
Independent Union of South Africa
Representative government
France used direct rule
Assimilation of Africans into French culture
Moral and social responsibility
Racial consciousness
15. The Emergence of Anti-Colonialism
Nationalism
Imperialism brought a consciousness of modern nationhood
Introduction of western ideas of citizenship and representative government
New elite
Traditional Resistance: A Precursor to Nationalism
Led by existing ruling class
Resistance in India
Peasant revolts
Religious resentment
India -- Sepoy Rebellion
16. Discussion Questions
What sparked the Scramble for Africa? What did Europeans hope to gain from the colonization of Africa?
What benefits to Indians resulted from British rule of India? What costs balanced those benefits?
Compare and contrast the British and French approach to colonialism.
How did subject peoples respond to colonialism? How did their response change over time?