1 / 33

Effects of Imperialism

Effects of Imperialism. Negatives. Loss of Independence and Self-Government. Negative Effects of Imperialism. Africans lost their land and independence . African peoples lost the power to govern their own lives.

pcindy
Download Presentation

Effects of Imperialism

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Effects of Imperialism

  2. Negatives

  3. Loss of Independence and Self-Government

  4. Negative Effects of Imperialism • Africans lost their land and independence. • African peoples lost the power to govern their own lives. • None of them were included in the new colonial governments set up by the Europeans. • African people already had laws and traditions for maintaining order and did not need European interference. • The colonial governments did not receive money from their mother country, so they taxed the Africans heavily. • Africans were indirectly forced to work for the Europeans because those taxes had to be paid in European currency. • This resulted in more and more Africans being forced to work for the Europeans.

  5. Negative Effects of Imperialism • Loss of Independence: • Under the brutal control of King Leopold, the Congolese kept rebelling. • There were at least 12 major rebellions and many smaller ones. • The Congolese would be massacred, but kept fighting. • One of the tribal leaders said: “If we let the white men into this country, they will soon make an end of us.” • Many of the natives realized what would happen when they lost their independence to the Europeans.

  6. Loss of Culture and Identity

  7. Negative Effects of Imperialism • Loss of Culture and Identity: • There was a breakdown of traditional culture as they were forced to Westernize. • African culture and heritage were replaced by European culture and traditions. • Many Africans were not included in society, because they did not speak the European languages. • Indigenous peoples were divided according to whether they followed European customs or not. • The African continent was divided up, but tribal, ethnic groups, and cultural boundaries were not considered. • This has led to the multiple tribal conflicts in Africa today as seen with the genocides and civil wars.

  8. Loss of Culture and Identity • A new set of values and beliefs were created blending European and native traditions as seen with Christianity. • African culture did not grow or prosper. • There were arguments over which religion they should follow. • The missionaries destroyed the African cultures. • Due to being forced to move for work, the men left their families in the villages to move to the cities or towns.

  9. Loss of Cultural Identity • This led to a destruction of traditional village life, the decline of villages chiefs, and a loss of a sense of family. • Immigrant laborers were brought from Asia to Africa to work and this led to tensions between the African workers and the immigrant workers. • An example of this was in South Africa where there was a large Indian population.

  10. Economic

  11. Negative Effects of Imperialism • Economic: • Africans were used as cheap labor and abused as seen in the Congo. • Most of the Africans were employed in difficult manual labor and for very low wages. • The Africans were forced to work the European farms and mines. • The working conditions were horrible, involved corporal punishment, and low wages. • Wages were partially given in cash and as food rations.

  12. Economic • African resources were not used to benefit the Africans, as their natural resources were exploited and depleted and at the expense of their environment. • The profits went entirely to the European economies from those natural resources and none of it went to the natives. • Indigenous economies were replaced by a market economy following the example of the Europeans with only European money used. • The Europeans imposed severe taxes on the Africans that had to be paid in European money which forced them to work for the Europeans in the poor jobs.

  13. Negative Effects of Imperialism • Economic: • Ndansi Kumalo, an African, said, “We were treated like slaves… the treatment we received was intolerable. We said, ‘It is no good living under such conditions; death would be better—let us fight’” • King Leopold II of Belgium justified brutality against the Africans by saying, “the natives hardly knew how to get their daily food” • Cecil Rhodes wrote in his will in 1877 that Africans were “the most despicable specimens of human beings.”

  14. Negative Effects of Imperialism • Economic: • The Europeans were quick to tax the Africans on anything they could. • Kumalo wrote: “The government said, ‘You must contribute more; you must pay £1.’ We did so. Then those who took more than one wife were taxed… that is not all. We are also taxed for our dogs… then we were told we were living on private land; the owners wanted rent in addition to the government tax…” • Kumalo said, “If we do raise anything, it is never our own: all, or most of it, goes back in taxation”

  15. Negative Effects of Imperialism • Economic: • The colonial governments took much of the land away from the Africans for personal and commercial use for mining and large farms. • The Europeans took the best land for themselves. • This was seen in the actions of Belgium and Britain in Central, East, and South Africa. • The Europeans changed the economic structure of African society. • They introduced commercial or cash crops to meet their industrial demands of the home countries. • So cocoa, coffee, tea, and cotton were produced on a large scale. • The Africans were no longer producing food to meet their basic needs. • Africans were not allowed to trade with any other country then their European power.

  16. Negative Effects of Imperialism • Economic: • Europeans take land, cattle, and food Africans acquired • Kumalo said, “All the best land has been taken by the white people. We get hardly any price for our cattle; we find it hard to meet our money obligations. If we have crops to spare, we get very little for them… When we have plenty of grain the prices are very low, but the moment we are short of grain and we have to buy from Europeans at once the price is high”

  17. War and Genocide

  18. Negative Effects of Imperialism • War and Genocide: • British Matabele War: Cecil Rhodes gained control of the mineral mines in Matabeleland and with the help of his South Africa Company, exploited the mineral wealth in the area, sparking the rebellion of the Matabeles against the British. • The British Matabele War ended with Britain easily slaughtering thousands of Africans with the help of the machine guns.

  19. War and Genocide • Civil War in Africa: After the Europeans relinquished control, civil war broke out all over Africa; some of these civil wars are still going on today. • In January, representatives at the Pan Africanist Congress said that, "the problems which were being blamed on [President Robert] Mugabe [of Zimbabwe] were created by British colonialism, whose agent Cecil Rhodes used armed force to acquire land for settlers." • In Zimbabwe, formerly called Rhodesia, Mugabe called his enemies of all races "colonialists," despite that Rhodesia was renamed Zimbabwe in 1980

  20. Negative Effects of Imperialism • War and Genocide: • Edmund Morel, upon the discovery of King Leopold II’s system of forced labor and genocide in the Congo wrote: “It must be bad enough to stumble upon a murder. I have stumbled upon a secret society of murderers with a King for a crony.”

  21. Belgian soldiers enforcing rubber sap quotas

  22. Positives

  23. Improved Health

  24. Positive Effects of Imperialism • Health: • Improved sanitation • Introduced modern medicine that led to less deaths • Life spans increased

  25. Education

  26. Positive Effects of Imperialism • Education: • Schools were set up by the Europeans to educate them; though they taught the message that the European ways were best. • Literacy increased, because more Africans went to school and learned to read and write. • Africans could communicate through a common language now like English, because before there were hundreds of different languages and dialects that isolated them by tribes. • The formal education broadened the African outlook. • This backfired on the Europeans, because a group of educated Africans emerged. They understood democracy. And they condemned imperialism • They founded nationalist groups to push for self-rule. • And by the end of the 20th century, the Africans won their political independence from European rule.

  27. Positive Effects of Imperialism • Education: • NdansiKumalo, an African warrior in the British Matabele War said “the Government has arranged for education and through that, when our children grow up, they may rise in status” • Kumalo said, “they brought us European implements—plows; we can buy European clothes, which are an advance”

  28. Political

  29. Positive Effects of Imperialism • Political: • There was a uniform legal code. Laws no longer varied from tribe to tribe. • Intergenerational and intertribal wars were eliminated by the military might of the Europeans. • The European governments had the military resources to maintain law and order peacefully. • Africans worked as the local police force.

  30. Improved Infrastructure

  31. Positive Effects of Imperialism • Improved Infrastructure: • Introduction of modern technology from the Industrial Revolution that Africa had not experienced yet. • Modern roads • Railroads • Telegraphs • Telephones • Electricity • Water and sewage pipes

  32. Religion

  33. Positive Effects of Imperialism • Religion: • The introduction of Christianity promoted literacy and health care through the work of the missionaries. • Created a basis for all Africans to come together to assist each other following the examples from the Old and New Testaments. • Christianity made African spirituality simpler in regards to life, death, and salvation. • There was no need for sacrifices and rituals which has been traditionally required.

More Related