Imperialism in Southeast Asia

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 11 Section 5.  Demand for Asian products drove Western imperialists to seek possession of Southeast Asian lands.  Southeast Asian independence.
Advertisements

Imperialism in Southeast Asia
Chapter 11 The Age of Imperialism:
Reminder Map and Map Test Friday, February 27
Imperialism in Southeast Asia & the Pacific.
How did Europeans gain control of most of Southeast Asia?
The Pacific Rim United States takes Hawaii. Pacific Rim Just as the Europeans powers rushed to divide Africa, they also competed to carve up the lands.
Chapter 11 Section 3 Europeans Claim Muslim Lands Objective: Trace the decline of the Ottoman Empire & the rise of geopolitics in Muslim lands Vocabulary:
European Powers Invade the Pacific Rim
Bell Ringer Why do Mexico and Peru have primarily Catholic populations? A. The Inquisition converted Jews and Muslims of these areas. B. Religion was spread.
South East Asia, China and the Pacific Islands By: Esther, Jamie, and Gina.
Chapter 27: Section 5 Demand for Asian products drive Western imperialists to seek possession of Southeast Asian lands Adapted from Ms. Garratt.
FORMS OF IMPERIALISM Imperialism is a policy in which one country seeks to extend its authority by conquering other countries or by establishing economic.
11.5 Imperialism in South Asia
Imperialism Unit 6, SSWH 15 d.
Imperialism in Southeast Asia and the Pacific
Chapter 27: Imperialism in Southeast Asia
Western Powers Rule Southeast Asia: Vietnam and Philippines
The Age of Imperialism
Western Powers Rule Southeast Asia
Imperialism in South East Asia
Imperialism in Southeast Asia
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Imperialism in Southeast Asia and the Pacific.
Day 48 Imperialism in South East Asia
Chapter 27 - Section 5 “Imperialism in Southeast Asia”
Ch. 13 Sec. 2 Imperialism in Southeast Asia and The Pacific.
Imperialism in Southeast Asia
Imperialism in Southeast Asia & the Pacific A.Australia B.Southeast Asia C.The United States D.Resistance to the U.S.
Imperialism in Muslim Lands & Asia Subtle Racism 1.
Western Power Rule Southeast Asia Chapter 27.5
U.S. Economic Imperialism & Mexico Chapter 28: Section 3 Chapter 28: Section 4.
Chapter 11 Section 5.  Demand for Asian products drove Western imperialists to seek possession of Southeast Asian lands.  Southeast Asian independence.
NEXT Soldiers fighting in Boer War (South African War, 1899– 1902). The Age of Imperialism, 1850–1914 Western countries colonize large areas of Africa.
Forms of Colonial Rule Colony- A country or a territory governed internally by a foreign power Colony- A country or a territory governed internally by.
Imperialism in Southeast Asia Demand for Asian products drive Western imperialists to seek possession of Southeast Asian lands.
Ch. 27, Sec. 5 Imperialism in Southeast Asia Advanced World History Adkins.
Chapter 11: Section 5 Ms. Garratt Imperialism in Southeast Asia.
Warm-Up: 1.What countries make up Southeast Asia? 2.Why do you think Western nations would want to colonize countries in Southeast Asia?
Study Questions (Define the terms and names from Chapter 11 (pages 339, 345, 352, 357, 362).) -Imperialism -Racism -Social Darwinism -Berlin Conference.
Imperialism in Southeast Asia. Europeans race to claim Pacific Rim Southeast Asia that border Pacific Ocean Dutch, British, French, Germans all claim.
Western Powers Rule Southeast Asia Imperialism Day 7.
Chapter 13 Section 2 Imperialism in Southeast Asia and the Pacific.
Imperialism India & South East Asia. Forces Enabling African and Indian Imperialism (Review-Slide) European technilogical superiority –? Europeans had.
Imperialism Unit 6, SSWH 15 d.
Western powers rule southeast Asia
Imperialism in Southeast Asia
Patterns of Change: Imperialism
Imperialism of Southeast Asia
Imperialism in Southeast Asia and the Pacific
Chapter 26 Section 2 S.E. Asia and the Pacific
Imperialism In Southeast Asia
Imperialism in Southeast Asia and the Pacific
Imperialism in Southeast Asia and the Pacific
Imperialism in Southeast Asia
BRITISH IMPERIALISM IN INDIA
Imperialism in South east Asia
Objectives Outline how Europeans colonized Southeast Asia and how Siam avoided colonial rule. Explain how the United States gained control over the Philippines.
The Age of Imperialism: India, Southeast Asia, and China
Imperialism.
Western Powers rule southeast Asia
Imperialism in Southeast Asia
European Powers Invade the Pacific Rim
Imperialism in Asia & The Pacific
Imperialism in Southeast Asia
Imperialism in Asia & The Pacific
11.5 Imperialism in Asia.
Imperialism in Southeast Asia and the Pacific
Imperialism in Southeast Asia
Chapter 11 Section 5 Imperialism in Southeast Asia
Western powers rule southeast Asia
Presentation transcript:

Imperialism in Southeast Asia Unit 6, SSWH 15 d

Forms of Control - colony, protectorate, sphere of influence, economic imperialism Types of Management: Indirect and direct Indirect: limited self-rule, legislative body (local & foreign officials) Direct (2): Paternalism: Provide for locals but grant no rights Assimilation: adaptation of locals to ruling culture

Race to Claim Pacific Rim Pacific Rim: Lands of Southeast Asia that border Pacific Ocean - establish trading ports (location) - land perfect for plantation agriculture (natural resources)

Indochina French directly control Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia Export rice, angering Vietnamese

Colonial Impact •Modernization: helps European businesses •Improve: Education, health, sanitation Millions migrate to Southeast Asia to work in mines, plantations •Colonialism leads to racial & religious clashes

Siam Remains Independent King Mongkut modernizes country: - starts schools - reforms legal system - reorganizes government - builds transportation & telegraph systems - ends slavery

U.S. Imperialism in the Pacific Islands U.S. gains Philippines after Spanish-American War • Emilio Aguinaldo leads Filipino nationalists against U.S. rule • U.S. defeats three-year nationalist revolt (1902) Focus on cash crops leads to food shortages

Hawaii Becomes a Republic Americans establish sugar-cane plantations on Hawaii • By mid-1800s, sugar accounts for 75 percent of Hawaii’s wealth • U.S. business leaders want annexation—adding territory to country • Queen Liliuokalani tries to restore Hawaiian control • U.S. annexes Republic of Hawaii (1898)