Unit 4
1750-1914
The Modern Era
- Changes
- Global commerce
- Communications
- Telegraph
- Telephone
- Radio
- National postal system
- Steamship
- Railroad
- Technology
- Changes in patterns of world trade
- World Trade
- Introduction
- Manufactured goods of the west and raw materials used to produce them – focus
- Atlantic World
- Plantation system and exploitation of newly independent L. American nations
- Methods of extracting natural resources changes
- Railroads and roads constructed – can go to the interior
- Instead of small, independent farm plots by natives > large plantations
- Crops chosen based on needs of industrialized West
- Latin American Trade – increased significantly
- Profitable sugar, cotton, cacao plantations
- Increased importance of slavery
- Monroe Doctrine – Britain takes larger role in recipient of goods
- Cut out colonization by other European countries
- More mfg goods go to L. America for raw materials
- Beef exports increase – refrigerated railroad car
- Products
- Cuba – tobacco and sugar
- Brazil – sugar and coffee – later rubber
- Mexico – copper, silver
- Peru – guano
- Chile – grain, copper
- Argentine – beef, grain, hides, wool
- Large landholders benefit at expense of smaller, independent farmers
- Dependent on cheaper foreign goods – better quality, cheaper to produce
- Wealth monopolized by a few
- Foreign investment gives capital
- But…many industrial/transporation projects owned by foreigners
- Trade with the Islamic World – decreased significantly
- Ottoman Empire weakened
- Revolts
- Disinterest in industrialization
- Christian/Jews in Empire carry on trade independently
- Domestic system producers can’t compete with industrialized nations
- Threat of competition lead to reforms
- Tanzimet reforms – facilitated trade, but came too late
- Made dependent on European imports and influence
- Foreign investment to bolster economy
- Extraterritoriality – Europeans allowed in Ottoman major commercial centers
- Suez Canal makes Egypt a significant commercial/political power
- Ottoman Empire weakened
- Qing China and the Opium Trade – trade imbalance shifts
- From 1644 to 19th century trade benefited China
- Controlled out of few ports – Canton primarily
- Trade in Chinese tea, silk, porcelain for silver – basis of economy
- Trade imbalance – extremely profitable for China
- Britain annoyed with trade imbalance
- Indian opium switches balance
- Now silver flows out of China
- After Opium Wars eventually China open to Europe
- Nations map out spheres of influence
- Extraterritoriality
- From 1644 to 19th century trade benefited China
- Russia and World Trade
- Occupy backward position in trade and technology
- Exported some grain to w. Europe for Western machinery
- Difficult to compete due to outdated agricultural methods
- Desire to compete in world trade led to end of serfdom in 1861
- Japanese Entrance into World Trade
- Second Perry expedition opened Japanese ports in 1854
- Japan industrialized
- Trade relations with Netherlands, Great Britain, Russia
- Depended more on imports of raw materials
- End of Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade
- Ended due to
- Enlightenment thought
- religious conviction
- slave revolt in Haiti
- British ended role first – 1807- then encouraged others later to end also
- Britain seized hundreds of slave ships
- Slavery continued to Cuba and Brazil
- Cooperation of African rulers
- Didn’t totally end until 1867
- Ended due to
- Introduction
- Industrial Revolution
- What is it?
- Civilizations no longer principally agricultural/rural
- Mass production of goods by means of machine power – industrialization
- Importance of trade and commerce skyrocketed
- Urbanization
- Capitalism rules supreme
- Metaphoric revolution – takes decades – no clear-cut beginning or end
- But…can’t underestimate effect
- Changed life in Europe more thoroughly than political revolutions
- New machines at hands of ordinary people
- Effected how people work, where they lived, how they views political problems
- Forced West to spread practices to colonies and exploit colonies economically
- History
- Began in Great Britain in mid 1700s
- Great Britain has large domestic deposits of coal
- Japan lacks coal – needed territorial expansion
- Enclosure movement – removal of land from farming
- Common area gone – loss of livelihood for peasants
- Now private land for private gain – you have motivation - mine
- Great Britain has large domestic deposits of coal
- Causes
- Agricultural Revolution – Second Agricultural Revolution 18th century
- Improved farming techniques
- Up to half the population left farms for cities
- New industrial jobs becoming available
- Why so much more crop yield?
- High yield crops – potatoes, corn from New World
- Crop rotation instead of leaving fallow
- New technologies
- New machines for plowing, seeding, reaping
- Chemical fertilizers
- Increase in population
- More food available
- Less chance for famine
- Life expectancy rose – population increase
- 50% growth to 190 million from 1700-1800
- Decreased death rate
- improved medical care
- nutrition
- hygiene sanitation
- Improvements in technology
- New sources of energy
- steam power
- Invention of the steam engine – James Watt
- Improved by Watt, started by others
- availability of sources of coal to fuel machinery
- Invention of the steam engine – James Watt
- natural gas and petroleum later
- fed industrial and transportation improvements
- steam power
- New materials
- steel
- New methods
- factory system
- Put factory near water-power source
- Inventions had always been occurring, but so many happen in 18th century
- New inventions for textile industry
- Flying shuttle – sped up weaving process - 1733
- Spinning jenny – spins vast amount of thread – 1764
- Cotton gin – Eli Whitney – 1793 – quick processing of cotton
- New sources of energy
- Protestant work ethic
- Earthly success is a sign of personal salvation
- Acquisition of capital and development of industry
- Value of hard work
- Earthly success is a sign of personal salvation
- Domestic system not as effective
- cotton woven into cloth at homes
- Middlemen drop off wool/cotton at homes
- Women then sell cloth to middlemen > buyers
- Philosophical – Adam Smith – Wealth of Nations
- Private ownership
- Let open market determine demand for goods and services
- free-market system/capitalism fits needs of individuals/nations
- laissez faire capitalism – government removes self from process
- Response to failing mercantilist policies
- corrupt, inefficient
- monarchies managed economies
- Agricultural Revolution – Second Agricultural Revolution 18th century
- Phases
- Phase One
- Britain – 1780s – steam engine used to power textile machines
- Coal mining uses steam power
- James Watt patented designs in 1782 – efficient and relatively cheaper
- Phase Two
- Steam engine used in every economic field - adapted
- “We sell what everyone desires and that is power.”
- Stimulate huge wave of invention and technological innovation
- i. Transportation – steam ships, railroads
- Electricity – telegraph – communications to the modern age
- Steam engine used in every economic field - adapted
- Phase Three
- New energy sources, new raw materials and new inventions
- Bessemer Process – cheaper way to make steal – stronger/more useful
- Electricity overtakes steam and coal as energy source
- Commercial uses of petroleoum
- Phase One
- Factory System
- Replaces domestic system – putting out system
- Thousands of new products now created efficiently and inexpensively
- Interchangeable parts – Eli Whitney – machines and parts uniform
- Repaired and replaced easily
- Assembly line
- Add only one part to a finished product
- Interchangeable parts – Eli Whitney – machines and parts uniform
- Began in Great Britain in mid 1700s
- Transformative effects
- Vast numbers of Asians/Africans provide labor for plantations/mines
- Transportation Revolution
- Invention of the steam locomotive – 1820s
- Steamship – 1807
- Internal Combustion Engine – 1885 – Daimler – car
- Airplane – 1903 – speed of transportation increased a bit
- Urbanization
- Development of factory system
- New classes
- Birth of the working class – proletariat
- Masses who worked in factories, mines, other industry
- At first, made up of peasants who had abandoned agricultural work
- At first, poorly treated and barely compensated
- Long hours – 14 hours a day, 6 days a week
- Disgusting, crowded living conditions
- Unsafe working conditions
- fire, dangerous machines, poisonous/harmful materials
- child labor common
- Rise of middle class
- merchants, bankers, factory owners, industrialists
- Became landowners of agriculture as well
- Farmers rented, poor laborers employed
- Social status began to be determined more by wealth than family position
- Birth of the working class – proletariat
- Reform movements
- Number of people with influence (aristorcrats/middle class) see inhumanity
- Capitalism a positive, but need laws to keep abuses in check
- Government needs to act on behalf of the workers
- Some want to get rid of system, some want to merely reform it
- Some nations do both – capitalist and socialist
- Reform more possible in Great Britain/United States
- Has democracy, middle class, impact of Enlightenment
- Not so in Russia with autocracy
- Marxism more attractive here
- Parliaments started passing laws that limited hours, child labor, safer working conditions
- Labor unions formed to bargain for the big 3 – or threaten to strike
- Factory owners realized happy, healthy, well-paid force productive
- Eventually led to communication revolution
- Telegraph
- Telephone
- Radio
- Major consequences
- countries with industrial technology had advanced military weapons
- Able to conquer people who did not have this technology
- countries needed access to raw materials to make finished products and markets
- colonies would fit both of these roles quite well
- countries with industrial technology had advanced military weapons
- Because started in Britain – Britain becomes dominant global nation of 19th century
- Need for communication improvements to facilitate organizing expanding businesses
- Telegraph – 1837 – communicate great distances in seconds
- Telephone – 1876 – Bell
- Radio – 1890s
- Lightbulb – 1879 – hey, we can work into the night
- Role of the individual changes
- Man not just working with machines, he becomes part of machine
- Working to the noise of machines
- Pace of work more rapid than at home
- Consistency of function more important than independent thought
- Man not just working with machines, he becomes part of machine
- Abuse of labor
- Initially overworked, underpaid, unsafe working conditions
- 16 hour workdays, children as young as 6
- Initially overworked, underpaid, unsafe working conditions
- Living conditions change
- No longer fresh air and sunshine – air pollution and hazardous machinery
- No longer seasonal adjustments to work pattern – same product day after day
- Leads to despair and hopelessness
- Minimal police protection at first
- Literature created to reflect times
- Charles Dickens writes of social ills of industrialization
- Philosophical – Karl Marx – Communist Manifesto
- working class eventually revolt and take control of means of production
- Instruments of power – government, courts, police, Church on side of the rich
- uprising would make these instruments of power unnecessary
- saw flaw in capitalist system
- Conservative backlash – don’t like the changes
- Luddites – destroyed factory equipment, protested working conditions/wages
- Government exacts harsh punishments to prevent this type of protest
- Sides with the wealthy…surprise
- Government exacts harsh punishments to prevent this type of protest
- Luddites – destroyed factory equipment, protested working conditions/wages
- Changes urban life
- bus service, sidewalks, street lights, steam heating of homes, icebox refrigeration, indoor plumbing, sewing machines, canned food, urban sewage systems, medicine
- Affected navies and armies of all countries
- Steam powered battleships, modern rifles, modern artillery, machine gun
- United States Civil War – first industrial war – 1861-1865
- Franco-Prussian – 1870-1871
- Influence of Industrial Nations over Nonindustrial
- Obviously they are conquered, forced
- Businessmen/industrialists struck deals with local aristocrats/politicians
- Encouraged monoculture – extraction of one, small set of crops/resources
- Monoculture – damages environment and retards economy
- “Banana Republic” – derogatory term
- Exploits native workers
- Money ends up in hands of a small number of aristocrats/politician
- Changes after 1850
- Societies received higher wages, shorter working hours allowing leisure activities
- Leisure time led to popular interest in theater and sports
- Additional employment opportunities as secretaries, salespeople, clerical jobs
- Some filled by women, especially unmarried women
- Clothing more affordable – general population can now wear similar fashions
- Popular consumption led to advertising campaigns
- Societies received higher wages, shorter working hours allowing leisure activities
- Differential timing in different societies
- Factors of production needed for industrialization - Britain
- Land – including natural resources such as coal and iron ore
- Labor – including thousands of dispossessed farmers evicted after enclosure
- Capital – banking and investment interests capable of funding costs of factories and machinery
- Entrepreneurship – groups of individuals with the knowledge of combinging land, labor and capital to establish factory production
- What geographic factors needed to industrialize
- Industrial growth measured by iron, coal, steel, cotton production – access?
- Next United States, then Western Germany, France, Netherlands, N. Italy
- Those in South and East Europe lagged behind – agriculture based
- Russia totally backward thanks to serfdom - reliance on agriculture
- United States
- By early 1800s textile factory system transported to US
- Production methods/technological improvements spurred industry/railroads
- other European nations
- France and Germany complex industrial economies in 19th century
- Russia remains agricultural country
- Government sponsored programs turn of the century
- Russian banking system and protective tariffs later to protect industry
- Russia ranked 4th in steel production by 1900
- Japan
- Partial Modernization under Tokugawa Japan
- Partially modernization both economically and socially
- Population growth steady – increased urbanization
- Agriculture – fewer people producing more – Western technique
- Allowed for more working class – urbanization
- Trade, commerce, manufacturing increasingly important
- National infrastructure needed – roads, canals, ports
- Merchant class emerges – becomes middle class
- Awareness of scientific/technological knowledge from West – few
- Problems with partial modernization
- Threatened 5% aristocracy
- Urbanization, Western learning, growing merchant class
- So…modernization controlled in early stages
- Military class – samurai – control gunpowder
- Threatened 5% aristocracy
- Partially modernization both economically and socially
- Meiji Restoration – second half 19th century – quickly industrialized
- Outside forces forced change – Commodore Perry
- Friendly words, but naval bombardment for show
- Next five years, other European countries pressure Japan
- Looks like they might be headed down path of other nations
- Samurai leaders in southern provinces push to end foreign influence
- Sat-Cho Alliance – fires on foreign ships
- Fired back by Europe – reason to overthrow shogun
- Install Emperor Meiji to power
- First emperor in 1000 years to have power
- Sat-Cho Alliance – fires on foreign ships
- Outside forces forced change – Commodore Perry
- Partial Modernization under Tokugawa Japan
- Some Latin American countries
- Seen as sources for natural resources and markets
- Not so much as potential industrial nations
- Hampered by lack of local capital for investment
- Industrialization would need to be financed by foreigners
- Hampered by lack of local capital for investment
- Eventually to Asia and Africa in 20th centuries
- Comparing Industrialization in Great Britain and Japan
- Sources of Capital
- Britain
- private entrepreneurs, capitalists
- Limited foreign investment
- Japan
- Government investment in initial states
- Zaibatsu – few wealthy banking, industrial families – developed large business interests
- Conglomerates that bought up textile mills and factories
- Limited foreign investment
- Britain
- Energy Resources
- Britain
- Large domestic deposits of coal for steam power
- Large domestic deposits of iron for building machinery
- Timber running out, had to move to coal
- Coal mining required machine power to pump water
- Japan
- Has to import energy sources
- Britain
- Availability of Technology
- Developed originally in Britain
- Textile mills
- First steam engine
- First steel-making process
- Replaced other methods of powering machines
- wind, water, animal
- Japan
- Had to import machinery
- Developed originally in Britain
- Pool of workers
- Britain
- almost doubling population in 1700s – 5>9 million
- clothing industry – piecework by poorly paid women – sweatshops
- Ennclosure Acts – pool of laborless workers
- Japan
- Also rapid population growth
- Clothing industry – sweatshops as well
- Britain
- Transportation System
- Britain
- Internal railway system
- Canals
- Shipping companies for export
- Small size
- Japan
- Internal railway system
- Shipping companies for export
- Britain
- Societal Changes
- Britain
- Reform movements
- Class tension, labor unions, socialism
- Women’s suffrage
- Universal education
- Middle class
- Leisure time
- Reform movements
- Japan
- some increased opportunity for education for women
- continued reliance on traditional family life
- subordinate position of women
- Class tensions
- Britain
- Summary of differences
- Both followed similar paths, but Japan on fast forward
- A few decades what it took Britain a century
- Didn’t have to invent everything – just implement advances
- Private corporations rose up
- Industrialists like Mitsubishi family
- Factories built
- Urbanization increased dramatically
- Reform instituted
- Both followed similar paths, but Japan on fast forward
- Sources of Capital
- Factors of production needed for industrialization - Britain
- Mutual relation of industrial and scientific developments
- Inventions pushed industrial revolution
- Industrialization
- Made European nations richer > more technologically adept > boosted need for scientific knowledge to explore
- New weaponry in hands of westerners
- New inventions needed to extract resources from earth – colonies
- Cotton gin made textile revolution possible
- Extraction of clean cotton thread from raw cotton balls
- Commonalities
- Goes through the same process whether 18th century Britain as 20th century Nigeria
- Factories built in areas near towns/cities
- These built near sources of power, transportation, pool of workers
- Shift of people from countryside to city - urbanization
- Due to…caused by…
- Poor harvests
- Too little land
- Too many people to feed
- Due to…caused by…
- Middle class forms
- Factory managers
- Shopowners
- Professionals – lawyers, accountants
- Brutal working conditions/unsafe and unhealthy living condition leads to reform
- Political reform
- Socioeconomic reform
- Muckrakers – propaganda writers
- Settlement houses – local buildings for kids/moms – YMCAs
- Factories built in areas near towns/cities
- Goes through the same process whether 18th century Britain as 20th century Nigeria
- Comparing scientific revolution to industrial revolution
- Both changed the world
- Knowledge spread and improvements made across cultures
- Though there were patents, scientists/inventors built on ideas of colleagues
- Collaborative effort allows for constant improvement
- Scientific Revolution – discovering, learning, evaluating, understanding the natural world
- Industrial Revolution – applying that understanding to natural ends
- Both changed the world
- Industrial Revolution Flow Chart
- Effects
- Increase in need for resources and markets
- Colonization
- Rise of nationalism
- Independence movements and revolutions
- Rise of nationalism
- Colonization
- Increase in urbanization
- Increase in social unrest
- Rise of nationalism
- Independence movements and revolutions
- Changes in social thought – from Enlightenment ideals
- Women’s Emancipation movements
- End of the slave trade
- Rise of unions and laws to protect workers
- Rise of Marxism
- Independence movements and revolutions
- Rise of nationalism
- Increase in social unrest
- Improves agricultural techniques which then fuels more industrial revolution
- Increase in need for resources and markets
- Effects
- What is it?
- Changes in patterns of world trade
- European nations seize trading networks from local/regional control
- Connected them into a truly global network
- European nations seize trading networks from local/regional control
- World Trade