Transcript Slide 1

Chapter 21
THE HIGH
TIDE OF
IMPERIALISM
The Spread of Colonial Rule
• Q: What were the causes of the new
imperialism of the nineteenth century, and
how did it differ from European expansion
in earlier periods?
Colonialism & Imperialism
• Economic motives for colonialism
– Raw materials & New Markets
– Oil, tin, rubber & manufactured goods
• Imperialism
– Process of western economic expansion in
Asia and Africa
• efforts of western capitalist states to seize markets,
cheap raw materials, and lucrative avenues for
investment
Voices of Imperialism
• John A. Hobson, Imperialism: A Study in
1902
• Jules Ferry (1885) & Karl Pearson
– Evoked Social Darwinism
• Cecil Rhodes,
– purpose was to extend the British empire on
“which the sun never set.”
• Moral Arguments: Promote Christianity &
Build a better world.
Colonial Rivalry
• Colonial rivalry
– scramble to acquire new territories in Asia and
Africa, primary motive, economic
– Africa
• British engaged in a struggle with rivals to protect
their interests in the Suez canal and Red Sea
– Southeast Asia
• U.S. seized the Philippines from Spain and to keep
them from the Japanese
– Indochina
• The French took over in competition with Germany,
Japan or the U.S. would usurp that territory
The Colonial System
• Q: What types of administrative systems
did the various colonial powers establish in
their colonies, and how did these systems
reflect the general philosophy of
colonialism?
Philosophy of Colonialism
• “Might makes it right”
– pseudoscientific validation from the concept
of Social Darwinism
• “White mans burden”
– Moral justification:
• bringing the benefits of western democracy,
capitalism, and Christianity to the tradition-ridden
societies of Africa and Asia,
– (civilizing mission)
Foreign Intervention &
Occupation
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Indirect Rule
Direct Rule
Association (French)
Assimilation
India Under the British Raj
• Q: What were some of the major
consequences of British rule in India, and
how did they affect the Indian peoples?
British India, 1800
• Empire of the Muhgals
• British sought to consolidate their control
over Indian and expand into the interior
– Direct Rule
• East India Co.
• Later by the British Crown
– Indirect Rule
• through their local Maharajas and rajas.
The East Indian Co. Resident and His Puppet
•company’s resident dominating a procession in Tanjore in
1825, while the Indian ruler, Sarabhoji, follows like an
obedient shadow
© Art Media, Victoria and Albert Museum, London/HIP/The Image Works
Colonial Reforms
• British government brought order and
“stability” and quelled civil wars
• Benefits
– Increase in access to education
• Girls had some increase access – wifely duties,
– Sati outlawed
– widows allowed to remarry legally
– new infrastructure of railroads and telegraph,
postal service, health and sanitation
improved.
Costs of Colonialism
• High price for stability
– British used the Zamindar system
– Economic hardship to the majority of millions of
people
• Introduction of British textiles put thousands of
Bengali women out of work and severely damaged
the local textile industry
– Limited industrialization,
• remiss in bringing the benefits of modern science
and technology
– Psychological impact of British arrogance,
contempt and discrimination
India Under
British Rule,
1805–1931
•This map shows
the different
forms of rule that
the British
applied in India
under their
control.
Colonial regimes in SE Asia
• Q: Which western countries were most
active in seeking colonial possessions in
Southeast Asia, and what were their
motives in doing so?
Colonial Regimes in
Southeast Asia
• 1800 only two societies were under
colonial rule
– Spanish Philippines
– Dutch East Indies
• 1900 the entire area colonized by the
west
The Effects of Dutch
Colonialism in Java
•Dutch administration buildings in Batavia
© William J. Duiker
Singapore
and Malaya
•“Opportunity in the
Orient”
•1819 Stamford
Raffles founded
British colony in
Singapore
•Strategic
shipping port in
the region
Government Hill in Singapore
•Strait of Malacca, an important commercial seaport in
Asia.
© British Library/HIP/Art Resource, NY
Colonial Southeast Asia
•British
Burma
Malacca
•French
Vietnam
Laos
Cambodia
•American
Philippines
The Nature of Colonial Rule
• Colonial administrations did not allow for
“democratic” institutions nor encouraged
educational reforms.
• Albert Sarraut I will treat you like my younger
brothers, but do not forget that I am the older brother.
I will slowly give you the dignity of humanity
• French officials in Vietnam: Educating the natives
meant not “one coolie less but one rebel more”
Cultural
Influences—
East and
West
© Archives Charmet/The Bridgeman Art Library
The Nature of Colonial Rule
• Economic Development
– Exploitation of raw materials
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Burma: Teakwood
Malaya: Rubber and Tin
East Indies: spices, tea, coffee, palm oil
Philippines: sugar, copra (coconut flesh)
– Limited industrialization
• Industrialization to meet needs of European elite and
local elites
• Most industrial and commercial establishments,
banking, & trade, owned and managed by Europeans
The Nature of Colonial Rule
• Colonialism and the Countryside
– Majority of people agrarian
• Subsistence agriculture
• Plantation agriculture
– European Rubber & Tea Plantations
– Workers “Shanghaied”
• English term , practice of recruiting laborers, often from
the docks and streets of Shanghai: use of force, drugs or
alcohol
The Production of Rubber
• European
Cash Crop of
Asia
•Slave wages.
© William J. Duiker
The
Production of
Rubber
•.latex sheets
© William J. Duiker
Empire Building in Africa
• Q: What factors were behind the
“Scramble for Africa” and what impact did
it have on the continent?
• Berlin West
African
Conference
1884-1885
The Scramble for Africa
© Snarky/Art Resource, NY
The Suez Canal
• Strategic Imperialism
• British Control of
Egypt & Sudan
The Opening of the Suez Canal,
1869
•Continues to be Egypt’s greatest revenue
producer
© Bildarchiv Preussischer Kulturbesitz/Art Resource, NY
French Conquest & Settlement of
Northwest Africa
• 1830 – 1869 France expanded influence
into Algeria, the Sahara, Tunisia, Morocco
• Encouraged French re-settlement
• Created a system of White Privilege
– Colons or settlers enjoyed representation in
government
– Muslims not represented and dispossessed of
land and resources
Belgium
• King Leopold II, 1876
– “I want my share of this wonderful African cake”
• Organized private commercial organization to
exploit resources of Congo basin
– Established the Congo Free State
– Exploitation of land and people of Congo justified
accusations that modern tropical colonization by
Europeans was motivated by economic greed
• International outcry against repressive policies forced him to
appoint a Commission of inquiry in 1904
1912
• Partition of Africa Completed
• Industrial Development
– Demand for raw materials from Africa & elsewhere
increased
– Improvements in shipping reduced transportation
costs
– Steamships, telegraphs, railways, superior guns,
military equipment facilitated European intervention &
control
– European mentality, economic system & morality –
the desire & justification to conquer other peoples
was present
Serving the White Ruler
•African workers carry British officers across a
mangrove swamp in Central Africa. Two porters
in the rear bring the liquor.
© Mary Evans Picture Library/The Image Works
Resistance
• invasion disrupted to traditional life ways,
political, socio-economic systems
• 25 conflicts with Europeans before WWI
– Key resisters
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Ethiopia
Ashanti in present day Ghana
Followers of the Mahdi in Sudan
Zulus in Southern Africa
– All lost in the end with exception of Ethiopia who skillfully used modern
weapons they purchased
Empire Building in Africa
Informal Empire
• The Growing European Presence in West
Africa
– Emergence of European educated elite class of
Africans who were then employed by Europeans
– Christianizing
– African social splits
– Tensions with African government
– British: Gold Coast, Sierra Leone
– America: Liberia
– French: Senegal River near Cape Verde
• Peanut plantations
South
Africa
• Dutch & English
Colonization
• Creation of
Apartheid State(s)
• S. Africa Company:
– Created Rhodesia
– Diamond Mining
Revere the conquering
heroes: Establishing British
rule in Africa
© Time & Life Pictures/Getty Images
Domestic Slaves, Zanzibar, 1890
•Slave trade in decline: growing outrage among
humanitarians in European countries over human
trafficking & increase in price coupled with decrease in
© Bojan Brecelj/CORBIS
demand
New African Leadership
Anti-colonial movements
• Educated
– Wanted to seize new opportunities created by
colonialism
– Began to develop anti-colonial movements
• Prior to WWI, demanded African Christian
Churches be placed under black African
leadership
• New African independent states be established
based on modern democratic principles
Africa in 1914
• Nationalist Political
movements in North
Africa
– Morocco
• Rif Rebellion led by Krim
Brothers
• Brutally crushed by
French and Spanish
forces
– Algeria
– Libya
• Italians bombed
rebellion
– Tunisia
• French crushed
movements in early
1900s