AP World Unit 5 Cramming Notes

šŸŒ AP World Unit 5 — THEĀ CRAM GOAL

"Understand how Enlightenment ideas sparked political revolutions, how those revolutions changed governments, and how industrialization created new global systems of labor, production, and reform."


🧠 PART 1: The Enlightenment & Political Revolutions

Key Ideas:
  • Enlightenment = Brainpower Bomb

    • šŸ”„ Thinkers likeĀ LockeĀ (natural rights),Ā RousseauĀ (social contract), andĀ VoltaireĀ (free speech) challenge kings & churches.

    • āž” People start questioning: "Why does the king rule me again?"

Major Revolutions (Sparked by Enlightenment):

Revolution

Trigger

Result

American (1776)

Taxation w/o representation

Republic, Constitution

French (1789)

Inequality + famine + debt

King beheaded, NapolƩon rises

Haitian (1791)

Slavery, French hypocrisy

First Black-led republic

Latin American

Spanish mercantilism + class tension

Creole-led independence (Simón Bolívar!)

āž”Ā BIG THEME:Ā People overthrow traditional monarchies using Enlightenment ideas.


🧠 PART 2: Industrialization Changes the World

Where it started:
  • Britain (late 1700s) — had 🪵 coal, šŸ’§rivers, šŸ— factories, šŸ’°capital, & 🧠 skilled labor.

Why it matters:
  • Shift fromĀ handmade → machine-made

  • Creation of theĀ factory system → urbanization, wage labor, class divide

Major Inventions:
  • Spinning Jenny – faster textile production

  • Steam Engine (James Watt) – power factories & locomotives

  • Railroads/Canals – speed up trade & imperialism

Economic Systems:
  • Capitalism (Adam Smith) – supply & demand, laissez-faire

  • Communism (Karl Marx) – anti-capitalist, pro-worker revolution

  • Socialism – mix of the two (gov’t helps people more)


🧠 PART 3: Responses to Industrialization

New Social Classes:
  • Bourgeoisie – rich factory owners

  • Proletariat – poor working class

Working Conditions:
  • Bad. Long hours, low pay, child labor.

  • Unions formĀ to push for rights.

Reforms:
  • Factory Acts (Britain) → no child labor

  • Abolition of slavery (1830s–1880s)

  • ExpandingĀ suffrageĀ (voting rights)


🧠 PART 4: Global Effects of Industrialization

šŸ’¼ Migration increases:
  • Indentured servantsĀ from India & China go to Caribbean, SE Asia, etc.

  • Irish to the U.S. (Great Famine), Chinese to railroads

šŸ› Political Ideologies Rise:
  • NationalismĀ (Germany/Italy unify, Jews want homeland → Zionism)

  • Feminism – Mary Wollstonecraft, Seneca Falls

  • Abolitionism – end of slavery across empires

🌐 Imperialism Expands:
  • Need for raw materials & markets → scramble for Africa, Asia

  • ā€œWhite Man’s Burdenā€Ā and Social Darwinism used to justify


🧠 CRAM THESE TERMS:

  • Enlightenment

  • Natural Rights

  • Nationalism

  • Industrialization

  • Capitalism vs. Socialism vs. Communism

  • Labor Unions

  • Suffrage Movements

  • Abolitionism

  • Haitian Revolution

  • Latin American Revolutions (Simón BolĆ­var!)

  • Steam Engine, Railroads, Factory System

  • Migration (esp. indentured labor & push/pull factors)


šŸ” LINK TO OTHER UNITS:

  • Unit 6: Industrialization → Imperialism

  • Unit 7: Revolutions → nationalism, WWI

  • Unit 3: Absolutism challenged by Enlightenment

  • Unit 9: Climate change from industrial development starts here

WHAP CED

TOPIC 5.1 — The Enlightenment (Continuity and Change)

Learning Objective:

  • Explain the intellectual and ideological context in which revolutions swept the Atlantic world from 1750 to 1900

Historical Developments:

  • Enlightenment philosophies applied new ways of understanding and empiricist approaches to both the natural world and human relationships; they also reexamined the role that religion played in public life nd emphasized the importance of reason. Philosophers developed new political ideas about the individual, natural rights, and the social contract

  • The rise and diffusion of Enlightenment thought that questioned established traditions in all areas of life often preceded revolutions and rebellions against existing governments

  • Nationalism also became a major force shaping the historical development of states and empires

Learning Objective:

  • Explain how the Enlightenment affected societies over time

Historical Developments:

  • Enlightenment ideas and religious ideals influenced various reform movements. These reform movements contributed to the expansion of rights, as seen in expanded suffrage, the abolition of slavery, and the end of serfdom

  • Demands for women’s suffrage and an emergent feminism challenged political and gender hierarchies

Illustrative Examples:

  • Demands:

    • Mary Wollstonecraft’s ā€œA Vindication of the Rights of Womanā€

    • Olympe de Gouges’s ā€œDeclaration of the Rights of Woman and the Female Citizenā€

    • Seneca falls Conference (1848) organized by Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Lucretia Mott

TOPIC 5.2 — Nationalism and Revolutions in the Period from 1750 to 1900 (Causation)

Learning Objective:

  • Explain causes and effects of the various revolutions in the period from 1750 to 1900

Historical Developments:

  • People around the world developed a new sense of commonality based on language, religion, social customs, and territory. This was sometimes harnessed by governments to foster a sense of unity

  • The 18th century marked the beginning of an intense period of revolution and rebellion against existing governments, leading to the establishment of new nation-states around the world.

  • Discontent with monarchist and imperial rule encouraged the development of systems of government and various ideologies, including democracy and 19th-century liberalism.

  • Colonial subjects in the Americas led a series of rebellions inspired by democratic ideals. The American Revolution, and its successful establishment of a republic, the United States of America, was a model and inspiration for a number of the revolutions that followed. The American Revolution, the Haitian Revolution, and the Latin American independence movements facilitated the emergence of independent states in the Americas.

  • The ideas of Enlightenment philosophers, as reflected in revolutionary documents—including the American Declaration of Independence during the American Revolution, the French ā€œDeclaration of the Rights of man and of the Citizenā€ during the French Revolution, and Bolivar’s ā€œLetter from Jamaicaā€ on the eve of the Latin American revolutions—influenced resistance to existing political authority, often in pursuit of independence and democratic ideals.

  • Newly imagined national communities often linked this new national identity with borders of the state, and in some cases, nationalists challenged boundaries or sought unification of fragmented regions

Illustrative Examples:

  • Call for national unification or liberation:

    • Propaganda Movement in the Philippines

    • Maori nationalism and the New Zealand wars in New Zealand

    • Puerto Rico—writings of Lola Rodriguez de Tio

    • German and Italian unifications

    • Balkan nationalisms

    • Ottomanism

TOPIC 5.3 — Industrial Revolution Begins (Causation)

Learning Objective:

  • Explain how environmental factors contributed to industrialization from 1750 to 1900

Historical Developments:

  • A variety of factors contributed to the growth of industrial production and eventually resulted in the Industrial Revolution, including:

    • Proximity to waterways; access to rivers and canals

    • Geographical distribution of coal, iron, and timber

    • Urbanization

    • Improved agricultural productivity

    • Legal protection of private property

    • Access to foreign resources

    • Accumulation of capital

  • The development of the factory system concentrated production in a single location and led to an increasing degree of specialization of labor

TOPIC 5.4 — Industrialization Spreads in the Period from 1750 to 1900 (Causation)

Learning Objective:

  • Explain how different modes and locations of production have developed and changed over time

Historical Developments:

  • The rapid development of steam-powered industrial production in European countries and the U.S. contributed to the increase in these regions’ share of global manufacturing during the first Industrial Revolution. While Middle Eastern and Asian countries continued to produce manufactured goods, these regions’ share in global manufacturing declined.

  • As new methods of industrial production became more common in parts of northwestern Europe, they spread to other parts of Europe and the United States, Russia, and Japan

Illustrative Examples:

  • Decline of Middle Eastern and Asian share in global manufacturing:

    • Shipbuilding in India and Southeast Asia

    • Iron works in India

    • Textile production in India and Egypt

TOPIC 5.5 — Technology of the Industrial Age (Causation)

Learning Objective:

  • Explain how technology shaped economic production over time

Historical Developments:

  • The development of machines, including steam engines and the internal combustion engine, made it possible to take advantage of both existing and vast newly discovered resources of energy stored in fossil fuels, specifically coal and oil. The fossil fuel revolution greatly increased the energy available to human societies

  • The ā€œsecond industrial revolutionā€ led to new methods in the production of steel, chemicals, electricity, and precision machinery during the second half of the 19th century

  • Railroads, steamships, and the telegraph made exploration, development, and communication possible in interior regions globally, which led to increased trade and migration

TOPIC 5.6 — Industrialization: Government’s Role from 1750 to 1900 (Causation)

Learning Objective:

  • Explain the causes and effects of economic strategies of different states and empires

Historical Developments:

  • As the influence of the Industrial Revolution grew, a small number of states and governments promoted their own state-sponsored visions of industrialization.

  • The expansion of U.S. and European influence in Asia led to internal reform in Japan that supported industrialization and led to the growing regional power of Japan in the Meiji Era

Illustrative Examples:

  • State-sponsored visions of industrialization

    • Muhammad Ali’s development of a cotton textile industry in Egypt

TOPIC 5.7 — Economic Developments and Innovations in the Industrial Age (Continuity and Change)

Learning Objective;

  • Explain the development of economic systems, ideologies, and institutions and how they contributed to change in the period from 1750 to 1900

Historical Developments:

  • Western European countries began abandoning mercantilism and adopting free trade policies, partly in response to the growing acceptance of Adam Smith’s theories of laissez-faire capitalism and free markets

  • The global nature of trade and production contributed to the proliferation of large-scale transnational businesses that relied on new practices in banking and finance

  • The development of industrial capitalism led to increased standards of living for some, and to continued improvement in manufacturing methods that increased the availability, affordability, and variety of consumer goods

Illustrative Examples:

  • Transnational businesses:

    • Hong Kong and Shanghai Banking Corporation (HSBC)

    • Unilever based in England and the Netherlands and operating in British West Africa and the Belgian Congo

  • Financial instruments:

    • Stock markets

    • Limited-liability corporations

TOPIC 5.8 — Reactions to the Industrial Economy from 1750 to 1900 (Causation)

Learning Objective:

  • Explain the causes and effects of calls for changes in industrial societies from 1750 to 1900

Historical Developments:

  • In response to the social and economic changes brought about by industrial capitalism, some governments, organizations, and individuals promoted various types of political, social, educational, and urban reforms

  • In industrialized states, many workers organized themselves, often in labor unions, to improve working conditions, limit hours, and gain higher wages. Worker’s movements and political parties emerged in different areas, promoting alternative visions of society

  • Discontent with established power structures encouraged the development of various ideologies, including those espoused by Karl Marx, and the ideas of socialism and communism

  • In response to the expansion of industrializing states, some governments in Asia and Africa, including the Ottoman Empire and Qing China, sought to reform and modernize their economies and militaries. Reform efforts were often resisted by some members of government of established elite groups.

TOPIC 5.9 — Society and the Industrial Age (Continuity and Change)

Learning Objective:

  • Explain how industrialization caused change in existing social hierarchies and standards of living

Historical Developments:

  • New social classes, including the middle class and industrial working class, developed

  • While women and often children in working class families typically held wage-earning jobs to supplement their families’ income, middle-class women who did no have the same economic demands to satisfy were increasingly limited in roles in the household or roles focused on child development

  • The rapid urbanization that accompanied global capitalism at times led to a variety of challenges, including pollution, poverty, increased crime, public health crises, housing shortages, and insufficient infrastructure to accommodate urban growth

TOPIC 5.10 — Continuity and Change in the Industrial Age (Continuity and Change)

Learning Objective:

  • Explain the extent to which industrialization brought change from 1750 to 1900

Main Key Concepts:

  • The development of industrial capitalism led to increased standards of living for some, and to continued improvement in manufacturing methods that increased the availability, affordability, and variety of consumer goods

    • Railroads; steamships, and the telegraph made exploration, development, and communication possible in interior regions globally, which led to increased trade and migration

  • The 18th Century marked the beginning of an intense period of revolution and rebellion against existing governments, leading to the establishment of new nation-states around the world

    • Enlightenment philosophies applied new ways of understanding and empiricist approaches to both the natural world and human relationships; they also reexamined the role that religion played in public life and emphasized the importance of reason. Philosophers developed new political ideas about the individual, natural rights, and the social contract.

    • The rise and diffusion of Enlightenment thought that questioned established traditions in all areas of life often preceded revolutions and rebellions against existing governments

    • Nationalism also became a major force shaping the historical development of states and empires