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The Era of Imperialism: Part II

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Title: The Era of Imperialism: Part II


1
The Era of Imperialism Part II
War Print by Toshikata
2
European Domination of AsiaIndia and the
Imperial Model
  • India (modern countries of India, Pakistan,
    Bangladesh, and Myanmar, or Burma) was the jewel
    of the British Empire.
  • In India, British expansion did not lead to
    territorial incorporation, nor were colonial
    subjects supposed to become part of a national
    citizenry.
  • They would be governed with an iron fist.
  • Suppressed the Indian Rebellion of 1857.
  • East India Company rule replaced with crown
    government in 1858.

3
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4
India and the Imperial Model
  • Public Works Project
  • By 1910. the Indian railways were the 4th largest
    railway system in the world.
  • Economic Purpose
  • India was to become a consumer of British
    manufactures (especially textiles) and a supplier
    of primary staples like cotton, jute, tea
    (Liptons), wheat, and vegetable oil seeds.
  • Indian exports balanced Britains huge trade
    deficits with the rest of the world and helped
    Britain retain its financial might.

5
Imperial Legacy in India
  • British administrative programs did turn
    India into a unified territory and take the
    first steps toward becoming a nation.
  • India would remain part of the British Empire
    until Mohandas Gandhi led drive for independence
    through civil disobedience and nonviolent
    resistance.
  • India would finally gain its independence after
    World War II had exhausted Britains resources.
  • The country would be split into Muslim Pakistan
    and Hindu India.

6
European Domination of Asia China
  • At first, China excluded foreigners in an effort
    to preserve traditional beliefs.
  • The British defeated the Chinese in the Opium War
    of 1839-42 and forced them open trade with the
    West.
  • In the process, Britain seized several Chinese
    ports including Hong Kong.
  • For a time, Europeans were content with trading
    rights.
  • After Japans victory in the Sino-Japanese War of
    1894-95, Europeans began to carve up China into
    spheres of influence.

7
European Domination of Asia China
  • China could have been partitioned off like
    Africa, however, each Western nation resisted
    partitioning for fear that it would give an
    advantage to a rival.
  • Americas Open Door Policy
  • Guaranteed that the territorial integrity of
    China would be preserved.
  • Boxer Rebellion (1900)
  • An international army of Europeans, Japanese, and
    Americans would put down the revolt.
  • China would remain at the mercy of outside
    interests until after World War II.

8
Japan
  • Like China, Japan had chosen isolation but was
    forced open by the West by the 1850s.
  • U.S. Commodore Matthew Perry in 1853
  • A flood of violence followed as the warrior
    nobility, the samurai, attacked foreigners and
    took control of the government, returning to
    power the emperor.
  • The feudal aristocracy, under the shogun, had
    ruled for 700 years.
  • The Meiji Emperor (Enlightened Rule) became the
    symbol of a new Japan.

9
The Meiji Restoration (1868-1912)
  • Determined to protect Japans independence,
    younger Japanese, especially among the military
    (samurai) elite, felt that Japan should respond
    by adopting, not rejecting, Western practices.
  • The new government turned Japan into a powerful
    modern centralized nation-state.
  • Universal military service promoted nationalism.
  • The Japanese modeled their constitution on
    Bismarcks German constitution.
  • Elected first parliament (Imperial Diet) in 1890.
  • Introduced modern industry and economic
    competition.

10
Economic Transformation of Japan
  • During the Meiji period, the government
    transformed the economy by building railroads,
    laying telegraph lines, founding a postal system,
    and encouraging the formation of giant firms
    known as zaibatsu, which were family
    organizations consisting of factories,
    import-export businesses, and banks.
  • Japan moved from economic backwardness to a place
    among the top ten industrial nations.

11
Japanese Expansion
  • The new nationalists stressed linguistic and
    ethnic homogeneityas well as superiority
    compared to others.
  • In this fashion, the Meiji leaders overcame
    age-old regional divisions and mobilized the
    country to face the threat of the powerful
    Europeans.
  • Turned their attention to the Asian mainland.
  • Captured Ryukyu Islands (Okinawa) in 1879.
  • Defeated China in the Sino-Japanese War (1894-95)
    and annexed Taiwan. Annexed Korea in 1910.
  • Established control of Manchuria by 1905.

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13
Japan
  • By 1900, Japan was an imperialist power in its
    own right, culminating with their victory over
    Russia in 1904 during a war over Manchuria.
    (Russo-Japanese War 1904-05)
  • The victory of an Asian power over a Western
    power had a tremendous impact throughout Asia.
  • In World War I, Japan fought on the side of the
    Allies and was rewarded with much of Germanys
    territory in Asia, becoming the most powerful
    Asian state.

14
Southeast and Central Asia
  • The Great Powers rushed to claim territory
    throughout Asia.
  • The French claimed Indochina (Vietnam, Laos).
  • The Dutch established colonial rule in Indonesia.
  • U.S. and the Philippines.
  • States began organizing patriots to resist
    foreign domination.
  • It would come to a dramatic climax in the
    aftermath of World War II.

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16
The U.S. and Latin America
  • European influence in Latin America was very
    different than in Africa and Asia.
  • Europe penetrated South America with investment
    and trade and immigration.
  • Argentina, Brazil, Chile, and other countries
    took in the Irish, Germans, Italians, eastern
    Europeans, and Spaniards.
  • Direct imperialism would only come from the
    United States.
  • U.S. declared war on Spain in 1898 and captured
    the Philippines, Puerto Rico, and Cuba.

17
The U.S. and Latin America
  • Following the Spanish-American War, the U.S.
    regularly sent troops to many Caribbean and
    Central-American countries.
  • The Americans preferred to make these regimes
    into dependent client states rather than making
    them part of the United States itself or
    converting them into formal colonies as the
    Europeans had done in Africa and Asia.
  • Became the model of 20th-century U.S.
    expansionism.

18
The Legacy of Imperialism
  • The drive to found nation-states and subordinate
    colonies provided an effective catalyst for
    integrating the global economy.
  • Labor, commodities, and capital moved across the
    world more rapidly and in greater numbers than
    ever before.
  • The political division of the world into imperial
    nation-states and colonial outposts shaped the
    economic division of the world into
    industrialized and non-industrialized societies.
  • It would not be until the aftermath of World War
    II that we would see a widespread move toward the
    decolonization of most of the world.
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