EUROPE AND AMERICA Forces for Change, 1890-1914. Major Forces for Change More education for more people Industry overtakes agriculture Industrial growth.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Africa: The New Imperialism
Advertisements

The Age of Imperialism (1850 – 1914). Imperialism: building empires by expanding territory and gaining colonies.
Causes of World War I The “isms”.
CAUSES OF WORLD WAR I DO NOT COPY YET!!!!!.
THE FIRST WORLD WAR: ITS ORIGINS EUROPE ON THE VERGE OF WAR 1914 A German view of European relationships in 1914.
The Road to World War I. Nationalism Nationalism- the unique cultural identity of a people based on common language, religion and national symbols European.
World War I Prelude to a War.
How and why did the Alliance System form?
World War I Worldwide impact. World War I ( ) World War I ( ) was caused by competition among industrial nations in Europe and a failure.
International Conflicts and Threats to Peace in the 20th Century
World War One. Warm-Up 1. What is Nationalism? 2. What is militarism? 3. What is imperialism? 4. What is one country in the Central Powers? 5. What is.
[SUPPORTING STANDARD]
World War I Chapter 19. M.A.I.N. World War I part 1.
M ODERN E UROPE B EGINS. The Industrial Revolution began in Great Britain in the 1700s. New machinery and new methods were used to increase productivity.
The Road to War. Nationalism and the System of Alliances Liberals during the first half of the 1800’s hoped the formation of European nation-states would.
M A I N. M ilitarism Policy of building up military forces and weapons (threatening armed aggression)  Naval race taking place between Britain and Germany.
In World War I. Great Britain Triple Entente / Allies Constitutional Monarchy House of Windsor (dynasty) - King George V Large navy, very industrialized.
Annotated Timeline of European History
Name: Date: Class: Title of Lesson Draw a line here Note-taking Method You will need: 3 ring binder Loose leaf paper Writing utensil Draw a line here 2”
Industrial Prosperity, Urbanization & Democracy Mr. Ermer World History Miami Beach Senior High.
WWI: Part 1 Causes and Why America Joined the Triple Entente.
Activities, Systems, and Measure of Wealth
The Advance of Industry
The Great War Causes, Events, Aftermath
Why did the First World War start? Nmg 06. The Great Powers in 1914 Europe dominated the political world in 1914 Key countries were: Great Britain Germany.
QUIZ pp QUIZ ANSWERS THE TRANSFORMATION OF LIBERALISM – GREAT BRITAIN Two new working-class organizations in Britain at this time - 1. Trade.
Chapter 22: The Early Industrial Revolution. What Caused the Industrial Revolution? Population Growth.
With a neighbor, discuss what you know about WWI. List at least 5 of the things you discussed WORK WITH A PARTNER.
Chapter 20, Section 3 The National State and Democracy
World War I The Great War We’re going to build 10 new battleships! OH YEAH?!? Then we’ll build 20 new battleships! Arms Race- Competition for military.
Industrialization. Preview and Processing What is a Industrial Revolution? Why would it begin in Britain? What is going on in the rest of Europe? Why.
SS6H6 d. Explain the impact of European empire building in Africa and Asia on the outbreak of World War I. Social Studies Theme: Conflict / Change Essential.
 Definition- the domination by one country of the political, cultural, or economic life of another country.
CHAPTER 23 Industrialization of the West
Europe Pre-1850 Napoleon Bonaparte  Napoleonic Wars ( ) Congress of Vienna,  Preservation of power/monarchy The Legacy of the Congress...
CHAPTER 13 REVIEW.
Rise of Nationalism. I. The Congress of Vienna Napoleon had tried to take over most of Europe, but eventually he was removed from power. The Congress.
Forces Shaping Modern Latin America A Diverse Region Latin America stretches across an immense region from Mexico, Central America, and the Caribbean.
The Beginnings of Modernization: Industrialization and Nationalism in the Nineteenth Century The Beginnings of Modernization: Industrialization and Nationalism.
Bellringer modernism Social Darwinism pogroms I Can… Explain the social, political, scientific, economic, and cultural changes that took place in Western.
World History II - Unit 7 Imperialism World War I The Russian Revolution.
{ Mass Society & Democracy  Wages up, goods cost low = consume more  Assembly line developed by Henry Ford = efficient manufacturing and.
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Japanese Nationalism and Militarism Section 5.
The Industrial Revolution
Setting the Stage to the Causes of World War I
12th Grade World History Test Review *** Denotes a Final Exam Question
How/why did the Alliance System form?
The Rise of Nationalism leads to Tension
QUIZ pp What new political party was founded in Britain in 1900 by the trade unionists and Fabian Socialists? What British leader advanced a major.
22. What are spheres of influence
World War I: Underlying causes
World War I and the Russian Revolution (1914–1924)
Opener: 10/20 - #11 COPY and answer the following: How would the world be different if Germany had won WWII? 3-5 COMPLETE SENTENCES.
Thesis Nationalism Britain Franco Prussian War Alsace Lorraine
Tying it all together: the major causes of WOrld war i
World Goes to War.
The Causes of World War One
Nationalism and the road to the Great War
The Great War.
The World Leading to WWI
Objective~ Understand the M.A.I.N causes of WWI
Causes of the First World War
The Road To War 1914.
World War I The Road to War.
The Road to World War I.
Growing Tensions in Europe
The Road To War 1914.
Prelude to War.
The State of the Great Western Powers
World War I Chapter 29.
Presentation transcript:

EUROPE AND AMERICA Forces for Change,

Major Forces for Change More education for more people Industry overtakes agriculture Industrial growth – prosperity and labor Shortened distances and faster communications Growth of “scientific knowledge” European empires

UNITED STATES Resources of most of a continent Large and growing industry Peaceful neighbors (Canada and Mexico) Protected by oceans from other powers A tradition of neutrality in relation to the nations of Europe

Europe was divided by many nations, ethnicities and ideas. Europe in 1914

The Great Powers Britain – largest empire and navy Germany -- recently unified (1871) and ambitious for colonies and navy France – Only republic, an issue with Germany (war in 1870) Austria – Old empire, much divided by ethnic differences, worried about SE Europe Russia – Fastest growing in industry and population, major internal problems

Alliances Germany is allied with Austria and Italy in the “Triple Alliance” to check Russia and France France and Russia allied in the Entente to check Germany Britain is not allied, but is worried about Germany’s growing navy and trade with rest of world

TRADITIONAL LEADERSHIPS Queen Victoria, Britain, , by 1900 was the grandmother of many European monarchs. Victoria

George V, King of Britain in 1914 (right) Nicholas II, Tsar of Russia, in 1914 (left) George and Nick

Wilhelm (William) II, the Kaiser of Germany, ca – first cousin to both Nicholas II and George V Wilhelm

The Aristocracy controlled much of the wealth, more of the power, in Europe Aristocracy

Mass education – expanded opportunity for more people Mass education

Women particularly benefited from larger school expenditures – literacy of woman more than quadrupled from in Europe, tripled in U.S. Women and education

Schools were important for teaching Nationalism – France, rather than Loraine, etc. Nationalism

Industrial growth meant greater production but also major changes in society Industry

A rising middle class reflected the growth of a nation’s economy Middle Class

Middle class – clerks, businessmen, sales force – more leisure time Painting by Seurat

Consumer Goods What only the wealthy once enjoyed, middle class now had

Peasants – Van Gogh Factory values exceeded agricultural wealth in many countries

Labor force Industrial labor force – major change in societies that had been largely rural

Labor forces (such as this 1870s shoe factory) contained adults and children – poor families resisted the enforcement of child labor laws Child labor

Photography documented the hard lives of many workers Photography

Riis German immigrant Jacob Riis – photos of poverty in New York

Riis photos ran in newspapers and in his book, prompting new efforts at “social justice Social justice

Poverty There was still considerable poverty, and beggars were common sights on the streets of major cities and towns.

Socialism In 1891, Leo XIII, a conservative, issued the Rerum Novarum – a call for “just wages” and the recognition of trade unions. Laborers called him the “Workers’ Pope.”

Marxism Marxism called for the violent overthrow of wealth and capitalism and the establishment of a “workers’ state.”

Socialism Various forms of “gradual socialism” were proposed in place of Marxism – creating a better society through political parties, voting and government regulation of the state and the economy

Marxists and socialists generally opposed war, arguing that military costs prevented the improvement of the economy. British battleship, HMS Dreadnought Military Costs

Mass Communications Politics was now influenced by mass communications; newspapers could alter public opinion and government policies.

Spanish-American War

The war in Cuba made a national hero (and eventually president) of Theodore Roosevelt TR

Trains Modern armies could be speedily deployed by trains and directed by telegraph

Colonies –modern technology enabled European nations to control colonies around the world U.S. had “territories rather than colonies

Absolute faith in modern technology was seriously shaken in Titanic

In 1904, tensions between Russia and Japan (over China) led to war. Russo-Japanese war

Russian defeat Russia’s defeat in the war shocked the entire world

“Modernity” Old ideas: Authority derived from faith or ancient wisdom Behavior a matter of good and evil The universe was a matter of mechanics – “laws of motion” New ideas: Old wisdom is now questioned, frequently discarded Behavior is a matter of “hidden, biological impulses” The universe is much more complex and “chance” plays a a large part in it – Does God play dice with the universe?

Since the 1860s, Darwin’s theories of evolution had frightened the traditional basis of western religion. Darwin

The research of Freud questioned the traditional “good-evil” basis of behavior Freud

Laws of physical dynamics Bohr’s concept of the atom, Einstein’s theory of relativity, and the idea of “quantum mechanics” made understanding the universe difficult

SUMMARY The major nations of Europe are ‘modern” but the pace of change has created much tension Rivalries among powers are intense Social differences within nations are often intensified by ethnic differences Alliances exist that could trigger a widespread war

The Spark