Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byAllen Arnold Modified over 9 years ago
1
Imperialism
2
Motives of Imperialism Economic interests Military Motives Religious Goals: Christianization Social Darwinism A sense of racial superiority This applied the rules of natural selection and survival of the fittest to human societies.
3
THE WHITE MAN’S BURDEN Poem written in 1899 by Rudyard Kipling It outlined the idea that it was a duty of the western countries to help less advantaged peoples Included ideas about sharing Religion, technology & medicine.
4
The Partition of Africa 1800s, Britain, France, Germany, and other European powers began a scramble for African territories Within 20 years, the Europeans had carved up the continent and dominated millions of Africans Africa in the Early 1800s Huge continent, hundreds of languages, varied governments
5
North Africa Sahara and lands along Mediterranean. Mostly Muslim…north dominated by Ottoman Empire Usman dan Fodio helps establish a strong Muslim state in northern Nigeria…inspired other reforms in West Africa
6
East Africa Mostly Islamic…port cities (Mombasa) profited from trade, often slaves Southern Africa The Zulu Kingdom led by Shaka dominated the region. 1814- The Boers (Dutch) were migrating north to avoid the new British rule. Fighting ensued between the Zulus and Boers.
7
Impact of the Slave Trade 1800s- Euro. Slave trade was outlawed East Africa slave trade continued Sierra Leone (British) and Liberia (USA) drew freed slaves
8
European Contact Increases 1500s-1700s Europeans traded with Africans along the coast…Africans wanted to trade, but not house them. Resistance, geography, and disease kept Euros from moving inland…medical advances and river steamships changed that in the 1800s
9
Explorers Advance Into Africa’s Interior Explorers set out to map Africa and explored the Niger, Congo, and Nile rivers. They were fascinated by the geography, but had little understanding of the people
10
Missionaries Follow Explorers Catholic and Protestant missionaries built schools and medical clinics…took a paternalistic view of Africans Livingston Blazes a Trail The most famous was Dr. Livingstone More sympathy and less biased view, and opposed the slave trade…though trade and Christianity would rob Africans of tradition and culture He disappeared into the continent for over thirty years and when he was finally tracked down by the Journalist Henry Stanley the famous quote “Dr. Livingstone, I presume?” was coined.
11
A Scramble for Colonies King Leopold II of Belgium opens up trade with Congo. Spoke of a civilizing mission, but privately dreamed of conquest Leopold inspired other Euro leaders as Britain, France, and Germany were pressing rival claims to the region.
12
Berlin Conference Wanting to keep pace with Belgium, France, Germany and Great Britain begin racing to colonize the continent of Africa. 1884- A country could not claim any part of Africa without first setting up a government office there…leads to direct ruled colonies 20 years the entire continent was claimed
13
Horrors in the Congo Leopold and the Belgians exploited the riches of the Congo African workers were savagely beaten or mutilated as villages were brutalized. France Extends Its Influence Took a giant share…invaded and conquered Algeria, Tunisia, West and Central Africa, etc.
14
Britain Takes Its Share Scattered empire…parts of West and East Africa, defeated the Boers (formerly Dutch) to control South Africa..gold is discovered in Boer lands Others Join the Scramble Portugal, Italy, Germany all took shares
15
Africans Resist Imperialism Europeans did face armed resistance Algerians battled French, Zulus battled British, Yao and Heroro battled Germans in East Africa Ethiopia Survives The Ethiopian leader Menelik II had modernized his country…when Italy invaded in 1896 the Ethiopians crushed the invaders Ethiopia and Liberia were the only African nation to preserve independence
16
A New African Elite Emerges A western educated elite emerged. These middle class Africans would lead independence movements in the 1900s
17
12.3-European Claims in Muslim Regions STRESSES IN MUSLIMS REGIONS All three Muslim regions were in decline (Ottoman (in the Middle East), Safavids (in Persia), and the Mughals (in India) due to corruption and lack of government control In the Sudan, Muhammad Ahmad, claimed he was the Mahdi (savior) or the faith, and he and his followers resisted British expansion into the region The Wahhabi movement in Arabia worked to recapture the teachings of Muhammad The Muslim empires also faced the threat of Western Imperialism
18
Problems for the Ottoman Empire Internal nationalist revolts broke out in N. Africa, E. Europe, and the Middle East (the Balkans, Greeks, Serbs, Bulgarians, and Romanians gained independence) European countries sought to seize former Ottoman lands…Russia wanted access to the Meditereanean Sea Some Ottoman rulers westernized (education,medical) (Young Turks overthrew the Sultan of Turkey) Armenian Genocide- Muslim Turks killed the Christian Armenians out of fears they were supporting the Russian plans against the Ottomans
19
Egypt Seeks to Modernize Egypt was a semi-independent province of the Ottoman Empire Muhammad Ali (“father of modern Egypt”) introduced reforms-political, economic, landholding, and agriculture M.A. successors came under foreign control Egypt owed high interest loans to Europeans…Egypt paid off debts by selling shares of the Suez Canal to the British After a revolt, Britain made Egypt a protectorate
20
Persia and the European Powers The Qajar Shahs (1794-1925) attempted to modernize (telegraph and RRs, and liberal constitution) Great Britain and Russian each established a sphere of influence OIL!!!- European interest intensified with this discovery in Iran
21
12.4-THE BRITISH TAKE OVER INDIA EAST INDIAN COMPANY AND REBELLION 1800s- British East India Company controlled 3/5s of India The British exploited Indian diversity: encouraged competition and disunity among rival provinces, however they did bring western education and legal procedures Sepoys- Indian soldiers: forced to fight overseas and told to bite bullets before loading…bullets were greased in animal fats (cows- Hindu/ Pigs- Muslims)…those who refused were imprisoned Sepoy Rebellion- Early successes were crushed by the British…the British responded by sending more troops and exerting more control British took over for B.E.I.C.
22
Impact of British Colonial Rule The British parliament set up a system of colonial rule- British Raj A viceroy governed in the name of the queen. Indian was the “brightest jewel” in the crown of the empire India faced deforestation, over population, and famine Benefits- peace and order to the country side, railroads, postal communication
23
Different Views of Culture 1- Some Indians welcomed the western ways 2- Others felt the answer lay in their religion (Hinduism or Islam) Ram Mohun Roy combined both views He promoted Indian cultural pride while seeing the value in Western education… is often call the founder of Indian nationalism Condemned purdah (isolation of Indian women in separate quarters
24
Indian Nationalism Grows Western educated Indians led nationalist movements Indian National Congress- supported Western- modernization but desired self rule…peaceful Muslim League- Muslims were weary of the Hindu dominated INC Soon were talking of a separate Muslim state
25
China and the New Imperialism China experienced a favorable balance of trade (export more` than import) for centuries…this shifted towards negative due to the influence of western powers China’s restrictions of foreign trades gave them a trade surplus (traded Chinese goods for silver and gold, imported less than export)…this would reverse in the 1800s and 1900s…trade deficit- import more than export Opium War- GB traded opium (from India) for Chinese tea…soon many addicted Chinese started buying opium with silver, disrupting the economy China outlawed opium, executed drug dealers and demanded that stop the trade…they refused China fought a losing war with British
26
Launching Reform Efforts Open Door Policy- keep Chinese trade open for all countries, equally…protect US trading right with China Guang Xu- 100 Days of Reform- modernize civil service exams, streamline government, encourage industry Qing Dynasty Falls Sun Yixian- President of the new Chinese republic after the fall of the Qing Dynasty`
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.