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Africa, India, and the New British Empire, 1750–1870
I. Changes and Exchanges in Africa
A. New Africa States
1. Serious drought hit the coastlands of southeastern Africa in the
early nineteenth century and led to conflicts over grazing and farming lands.
During these conflicts Shaka used strict military drill and close-combat
warfare in order to build the Zulu kingdom.
2. Some neighboring Africans created their own states (such as
Swaziland and Lesotho) in order to protect themselves against the expansionist
Zulu kingdom. Shaka ruled the Zulu kingdom for little more than a decade, but
he succeeded in creating a new national identity as well as a new kingdom.
3. In West Africa movements to purify Islam led to the construction
of new states through the classic Muslim pattern of jihad. The largest of these reform movements occurred in the Hausa
states and led to the establishment of the Sokoto Caliphate (1809–1906).
4. The new Muslim states became centers of Islamic learning and
reform. Sokoto and other Muslim states both sold slaves and used slaves in
order to raise food, thus making it possible for them to seclude free Muslim
women in their homes in accordance with reformed Muslim practice.
B. Modernization in Egypt and Ethiopia
1. In Egypt, Muhammad Ali (r. 1805–1848) carried out a series of
modernizing reforms that were intended to build up Egypt’s military strength.
In order to pay for his reform program, Muhammad Ali required Egyptian peasants
to cultivate cotton and other crops for export.
2. Muhammad Ali’s grandson Ismail placed even more emphasis on
westernizing Egypt. Ismail’s ambitious construction programs (railroads, the
new capital city of Cairo) were funded by borrowing from French and British
banks, which led Britain and France to occupy the country when the market for
cotton collapsed after the American Civil War.
3. In the mid- to late nineteenth century Ethiopian kings
reconquered territory that had been lost since the sixteenth century, purchased
modern European weapons, and began to manufacture weapons locally. An attempt
to hold British officials captive led to a temporary British occupation in the
1860s, but the British withdrew and the modernization program continued.
C. European Pentration
1. In 1830 France invaded Algeria; it took the French eighteen
years to defeat Algerian resistance organized by the Muslim holy man Abd
al-Qadir and another thirty years to put down resistance forces in the
mountains. By 1871 130,000 European settlers had taken possession of rich
Algerian farmland.
2. European explorers carried out peaceful expeditions in order to
trace the course of Africa’s rivers, assess the mineral wealth of the
continent, and to convert Africans to Christianity. David Livingstone, Henry
Morton Stanley, and other explorers traced the courses of the Nile, the Niger,
the Zambezi, and the Congo rivers.
D. Abolition and Legitimate Trade
1. In 1808 news of slave revolts like that on Saint Domingue and
the activities of abolitionists combined to lead Britain and the United States
to prohibit their citizens from participating in the slave trade. The British
used their navy in order to stop the slave trade, but the continued demand for
slaves in Cuba and Brazil meant that the trade did not end until 1867.
2. As the slave trade declined, Africans expanded their “legitimate
trade” in gold and other goods.
3. The most successful new export was palm oil that was exported to
British manufacturers of soap, candles, and lubricants. The increased export of
palm oil altered the social structure of coastal trading communities of the
Niger Delta, as is demonstrated in the career of the canoe slave Jaja who became
a wealthy palm oil trader in the 1870s.
4. The suppression of the slave trade also helped to spread Western
cultural influences in West Africa. Missionaries converted and founded schools
for the recaptives whom the British settled in Sierra Leone while black
Americans brought Western culture to Liberia and to other parts of Africa
before and after Emancipation in the United States.
E. Secondary Empires in Eastern Africa
1. When British patrols ended the slave trade on the Atlantic
coast, slave traders in the Atlantic trade began to purchase their slaves from
the East African markets that had traditionally supplied slaves to North Africa
and the Middle East. Zanzibar Island and neighboring territories ruled by the
Sultan of Oman were important in the slave trade, the ivory trade, and in the
cultivation of cloves on plantations using slave labor.
2. The demand for ivory along the East African coast allowed
African and Arab merchants hundreds of miles inland to build large personal
trading empires like that of Tippu Tip. Historians refer to these empires as
“secondary empires” because they depended on Western demand for ivory and other
goods and on Western manufacturers for weapons.
3. Egypt’s expansion southward in the nineteenth century may also
be considered a secondary empire. Muhammad Ali invaded the Egyptian Sudan in
order to secure slaves for his armies.
II. India Under British Rule
A. Company Men
1. In the eighteenth century the Mughal Empire was defeated and its
capital sacked by marauding Iranian armies while internally, the Mughal’s
deputies (nawabs) had become de facto independent rulers of their
states.
2. British, French, and Dutch companies staffed by ambitious young
“Company Men” established trading posts and strategic places and hired Indian
troops (sepoys) to defend them. By the early 1800s the British East
India Company had pushed the French out of south India, forced the Mughal
Empire to recognize Company rule over Bengal, and taken control of large
territories that became the core of the “Bombay Presidency.”
B. Raj and Rebellion, 1818–1857
1. The British raj (reign) over India aimed both to
introduce administrative and social reform and to hold the support of Indian
allies by respecting Indian social and religious customs. These contradictory
goals led to many inconsistencies in British policies toward India.
2. Before 1850 the British created a government that relied on
sepoy military power, disarmed the warriors of the Indian states, gave free
reign to Christian missionaries, and established a private land ownership
system in order to ease tax collection. At the same time, the British bolstered
the “traditional” power of princes and holy men and invented “traditional”
rituals to celebrate their own rule.
3. British political and economic influence benefited Indian elites
and created jobs in some sectors while bringing new oppression to the poor and
causing the collapse of the traditional textile industry.
4. Discontent among the needy and particularly among the Indian
soldiers led to the Sepoy Rebellion of 1857. The rebellion was suppressed in
1858, but it gave the British a severe shock.
C. Political Reform and Industrial Impact
1. After the rebellion of 1857–1858 the British eliminated the last
traces of Mughal and Company rule and installed a new government, administered
from London. The new government continued to emphasize both tradition and
reform, maintained Indian princes in luxury, and staged elaborate ceremonial
pageants known as durbars.
2. An efficient bureaucracy, the Indian Civil Service, now
controlled the Indian masses. Recruitment into the ICS was by examinations that
were theoretically open to all, but in practice, racist attitudes prevented
Indians from gaining access to the upper levels of administration.
3. After 1857 the British government and British enterprises
expanded the production and export of agricultural commodities and built
irrigation systems, railroads, and telegraph lines. Freer movement of people
into the cities caused the spread of cholera, which was brought under control
when new sewage and filtered water systems were installed in the major cities
in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
D. Rising Indian Nationalism
1. The failure of the rebellion of 1857 prompted some Indians to
argue that the only way for Indians to regain control of their destiny was to
reduce their country’s social and ethnic divisions and to promote a Pan-Indian
nationalism.
2. In the early nineteenth century Rammouhan Roy and his Brahmo
Samaj movement tried to reconcile Indian religious traditions with Western
values and to reform traditional abuses of women. After 1857, Indian
intellectuals tended to turn toward Western secular values and western
nationalism as a way of developing a Pan-Indian nationalism that would
transcend regional and religious differences.
3. Indian middle class nationalists convened the first Indian
National Congress in 1885. The Congress promoted national unity and argued for
greater inclusion of Indians in the Civil Service, but it was an elite organization
with little support from the masses.
III. Britain’s Eastern Empire
A. Colonies and Commerce
1. British defeat of French and Dutch forces in the Napoleonic Wars
allowed Britain to expand its control in South Africa, Southeast Asia, and the
southern Caribbean.
2. The Cape Colony was valuable to Britain because of its strategic
importance as a supply station on the route to India. In response to British
pressure the descendants of earlier French and Dutch settlers (the Afrikaners)
embarked on a “Great Trek” to found new colonies on the fertile high veld that
had been depopulated by the Zulu wars.
3. The British also established a series of strategic outposts in
Southeast Asia. Thomas Raffles established the free port of Singapore in 1824,
Assam was annexed to India in 1826, and Burma was annexed in 1852.
B. Imperial Policies and Shipping
1. Historians usually depict Britain in this period as a reluctant
empire builder, more interested in trade than in acquiring territory. Most of
the new colonies were intended to serve as ports in a global shipping network
that the British envisioned in terms of free trade, as opposed to the previous
mercantilist trade policy.
2. Whether colonized or not, African, Asian, and Pacific lands were
being drawn into the commercial networks created by British expansion and
industrialization. These areas became exporters of raw materials and
agricultural goods and importers of affordable manufactured products.
3. A second impetus to global commercial expansion was the
technological revolution in the construction of oceangoing ships in the
nineteenth century. Use of iron to fasten timbers together and the use of huge
canvas sails allowed shipbuilders to make larger, faster vessels that lowered
the cost of shipping and thus stimulated maritime trade.
C. Colonization of Australia and New Zealand
1. The development of new ships and shipping contributed to the
colonization of Australia and New Zealand by British settlers that displaced
the indigenous populations.
2. Portuguese mariners sighted Australia in the early seventeenth
century, and Captain James Cook surveyed New Zealand and the eastern Australian
coast between 1769 and 1778. Unfamiliar diseases brought by new overseas
contacts substantially reduced the populations of the hunter-gatherer
Aborigines of Australia and the Maori of New Zealand.
3. Australia received British convicts and, after the discovery of
gold in 1851, a flood of free European (and some Chinese) settlers. British
settlers came more slowly to New Zealand until defeat of the Maori, faster
ships, and a short gold rush brought more British immigrants after 1860.
4. The British crown gradually turned governing power over to the
British settlers of Australia and New Zealand, but Aborigines and the Maori
experienced discrimination. However, Australia did develop powerful trade
unions, New Zealand promoted the availability of land for the common person,
and both Australia and New Zealand granted women the right to vote in 1894.
D. New Labor Migrations
1. Between 1834 and 1870 large numbers of Indians, Chinese, and
Africans went overseas as laborers. British India was the greatest source of
migrant laborers, and British colonies (particularly sugar plantations) were
the principal destinations of the migrants.
2. With the end of slavery, the demand for cheap labor in the
British colonies, Cuba, and Hawaii was filled by Indians, free Africans,
Chinese, and Japanese workers. These workers served under contracts of
indenture which bound them to work for a specified number of years in return
for free passage to their overseas destination, a small salary, and free
housing, clothing and medical care.
3. These new indentured migrants were similar to the European
emigrants of the time in that they left their homelands voluntarily in order to
make money that they could send or take back home or to finance a new life in
their new country. However, people recruited as indentured laborers were
generally much poorer than European emigrants, took lower-paying jobs, and were
unable to afford the passage to the most desirable areas.
If you have any test reviews, homeworks, guides, anything school related that you think can be posted on this website, reach out to me at makingschooleasier@gmail.com
If you have any test reviews, homeworks, guides, anything school related that you think can be posted on this website, reach out to me at makingschooleasier@gmail.com