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Enlightenment
Post-Renaissance period in European history devoted to the study and exploration of new ideas in science
American Revolution
Conflict between American colonists and the British government caused by growing resentments over taxation and governing policies
Revolutionary War lasted 1775–1781 and ended in American independence and the first large-scale democracy since ancient Greece
French Revolution
Conflict between the Third Estate (peasants
Maroon
Term for a nineteenth-century escaped slave in the Americas who established an independent settlement away from plantations & also used to describe those slaves’ present-day descendants
Haitian Revolution
Slave revolt from 1791–1804 led by Toussaint L’Ouverture the French colony of Saint-Domingue became the independent nation of Haiti — the second independent nation in the Western Hemisphere and the world’s first Black republic
Latin American Independence Movements
Movements against Spanish colonial rule in Central and South America in the 1810s and 1820s leading to independence of every nation in the region key leaders were Simón Bolívar
Nationalism
The tendency of people to see themselves as part of a broader community unified by common heritages
Adam Smith
Scottish economist whose 1776 work The Wealth of Nations advocated laissez-faire economics (minimal government interference)
Factory System
System of labor using rigorous mechanization and large numbers of unskilled workers to mass-produce goods- developed during the Industrial Revolution- interchangeable parts simplified assembly but made work repetitive
Global Division of Labor
System in which industrialized societies utilized raw materials from less industrialized societies (e.g.
First Industrial Revolution
Rapid industrial development in European countries and the United States between 1760 and 1820- the steam engine enabled steamships and early locomotives to rapidly increase the speed at which goods
Second Industrial Revolution
Continuing industrialization from 1870 to 1920 including revolutionary new methods of producing steel
Railroads
Steam-powered locomotives invented in England in the 1820s that started a transportation revolution- by 1900 virtually every industrialized nation had a well-developed railroad system
Liberalism
Political and economic ideology based on Enlightenment philosophies advocating constitutional government & separation of powers & natural rights & and limited government involvement in the industrialized economy
Socialism
Utopian ideal developed in response to poor working conditions faced by factory workers- workers would run the economy in a self-sufficient manner and share everything fairly * eliminating the wealthy classes
Communism
Extreme form of socialism in which governments centrally plan the economy- inspired by The Communist Manifesto (1848)
Tanzimat Movement
Period of reform in the Ottoman Empire from 1839 to 1879 resulting in a modernized infrastructure
First Opium War
Conflict between China and Great Britain in 1839 after Chinese customs officials refused British imports of Indian opium- weakened the Qing Dynasty and made China more vulnerable to unequal trade with the West
Second Opium War
Conflict between China
Self-Strengthening Movement
Attempt by China in the 1860s and 1870s to modernize its military and economy on its own terms- changes were minimal due to imperial resistance
Taiping Rebellion
Christian-based uprising led by Chinese scholar Hong Xiuquan from 1850 to 1864- the violent imperial response left China financially strained and caused the bloodiest civil war in world history
Boxer Rebellion
Movement by a secret Chinese society backed by Empress Cixi to rid China of foreigners and foreign influence- defeated by a multinational force including the United States and Russia
Imperialism
Policy of a country extending its rule over other countries
Social Darwinism
Popular nineteenth-century theory used to justify capitalism and imperialism- drew on Charles Darwin’s concept of survival of the fittest-
Indian Rebellion of 1857
Congo Free State
Colony in Central Africa established in 1885 by Belgium’s King Leopold II-consisted of large rubber plantations worked by forced labor in brutal conditions- later declared independence as Zaire
Indentured Servants
System of labor in which workers are contracted to work for a fixed period of time
Chinese Exclusion Act
Law enacted in the United States in 1882 that severely limited immigration from China
Emancipation of Slaves
Process by which slavery was abolished and slaves were granted freedom- partly driven by Enlightenment ideals- between the 1830s and 1880s every industrialized nation and its colonies gradually abolished slavery and turned to wage labor and indentured servitude
Feminism
Movement undertaken by women emerging from the economic changes of industrialization- challenged established gender roles and advocated for increased political and legal rights
Meiji Restoration
Period of rapid modernization and industrialization in Japan beginning in 1868 in which Japan transformed from a feudal society into a modern industrial nation-state
Berlin Conference 1885
Meeting of European powers to divide and formalize the colonization of Africa- set the rules for European claims over African territory with no African representation
Suez Canal
Canal built by the British and French in the 1850s linking the Mediterranean Sea to the Red Sea- shortened sea travel between Europe and Asia dramatically
Panama Canal
Canal completed in 1913 cutting through Central America- shortened travel between the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans and boosted global trade
Banana Republics
Term for Latin American and other developing nations that became highly dependent on a single cash crop (e.g.
Modernization Theory
Theory that as countries become more modern or westernized their economies prosper
Victorian Cult of Domesticity
Middle-class ideal originating in Victorian England in which women’s proper role was defined as wife and mother in the home- led middle-class women to aspire not to work for pay and to have a servant handle domestic chores
Seneca Falls Convention
1848 women’s rights convention held in the United States that was a landmark event in the women’s suffrage movement
Toussaint L’Ouverture
Leader of the Haitian Revolution who led enslaved people in overthrowing French colonial rule and establishing Haiti as an independent republic
Simón Bolívar
Key leader of Latin American independence movements who helped liberate much of South America from Spanish colonial rule
Factory System Effects on Women
Women gained some economic opportunities through factory work but were paid significantly less than men- new economic independence and Enlightenment ideals prompted women to organize for political rights
Working Class and Labor Unions
As industrialization grew
Qing Dynasty Decline
The Qing Dynasty of China was significantly weakened by the Opium Wars the Taiping Rebellion the Boxer Rebellion and Western spheres of influence led to the Chinese Revolution of 1911
Chinese Revolution of 1911
Revolution led by Sun Yatsen and Yuan Shikai against Qing (Manchu) rule, driven by British imperialism, injustice, and Enlightenment ideals of representation- set the stage for the 1949 Communist revolution under mao zedong.