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BELLWORK 1. How was the Russian Empire divided prior to unification? Why did they desire unity? 2. Describe how Russia finally unified. 3. How was Austria-Hungary divided prior to unification? Why did they want to unify? How were the Slavs involved? 4. Describe how Austria-Hungary finally unified. 5. What was the purpose of the Suez Canal? 6. What was the purpose of the Monroe Doctrine? 7. Explain the Open-Door policy. 8. What was the outcome of the Spanish-American War?
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BELLWORK 1.How was the Russian Empire divided prior to unification? Why did they desire unity? 2.Describe how Russia finally unified. 3.How was Austria-Hungary.

Jan 12, 2016

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Dana Dickerson
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Page 1: BELLWORK 1.How was the Russian Empire divided prior to unification? Why did they desire unity? 2.Describe how Russia finally unified. 3.How was Austria-Hungary.

BELLWORK1. How was the Russian Empire divided prior to

unification? Why did they desire unity?

2. Describe how Russia finally unified.

3. How was Austria-Hungary divided prior to unification? Why did they want to unify? How were the Slavs involved?

4. Describe how Austria-Hungary finally unified.

5. What was the purpose of the Suez Canal?

6. What was the purpose of the Monroe Doctrine?

7. Explain the Open-Door policy.

8. What was the outcome of the Spanish-American War?

Page 2: BELLWORK 1.How was the Russian Empire divided prior to unification? Why did they desire unity? 2.Describe how Russia finally unified. 3.How was Austria-Hungary.

Russian Empire• In the early 1800s the Russian Empire was

made up of more than 60 nationalities and 100 different languages!

• The Empire was an autocracy: government in which one person rules with unlimited authority.

• Leader of the autocracy = czar.

• The plan: escape harsh rule of the czars and establish civil rights, equality and a functioning government.

Page 3: BELLWORK 1.How was the Russian Empire divided prior to unification? Why did they desire unity? 2.Describe how Russia finally unified. 3.How was Austria-Hungary.
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Page 5: BELLWORK 1.How was the Russian Empire divided prior to unification? Why did they desire unity? 2.Describe how Russia finally unified. 3.How was Austria-Hungary.

Russian Empire• Czar Alexander III: wanted to unify the empire

by a policy of Russification.

• Russification: persecution of non-Russian peoples, anyone who questioned the czar’s authority, or followed a different religion.

• These harsh policies created a huge wave of revolutions from peasants, radicals, anarchists and reformers.

• Czar Nicholas II: next in power; still used an autocratic government

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Russian Empire • In October 1905, angry peasants seized control

of the cities

• Forced Nicholas II to meet the demands of the people

• October Manifesto: granted civil rights and set up constitutional monarchy.

• The empire was finally unified under a common government!

• This unification was only temporary because the peasants will rise up again on the eve of WWI.

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Austria-Hungary • Dual Monarchy: combination of two

states with one monarch

• Empire of Austria and the kingdom of Hungary joined together

• 3/5 of Austria-Hungary’s population were Slavs – who had no voice in the government.

• Slavic nationalist groups wanted to break free of the Empire and create their own countries.

Page 11: BELLWORK 1.How was the Russian Empire divided prior to unification? Why did they desire unity? 2.Describe how Russia finally unified. 3.How was Austria-Hungary.
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Austria-Hungary• In 1877, Russia went to war on behalf of the

Slavic people in the Balkan Peninsula.

• As Russia began to win, various states within Austria-Hungary declared their independence.

• By 1912, the new Balkan states joined together to protect themselves from Austria-Hungarian rule.

• The tensions in this region eventually cause WWI.

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Suez Canal • Ferdinand de Lesseps was a

French entrepreneur who proposed the idea of a canal in Egypt.

• He obtained permission to build from both Egypt and Sudan

• His goal was to increase international trade and decrease the cost of goods

• It linked two important trade waters: Mediterranean and Red Seas (Europe to Asia)

• Eventually, Great Britain takes over control of the canal, until 1981 when it’s given to Egypt

Page 16: BELLWORK 1.How was the Russian Empire divided prior to unification? Why did they desire unity? 2.Describe how Russia finally unified. 3.How was Austria-Hungary.

The Monroe Doctrine• President James Monroe

and Secretary of State John Adams proposed the doctrine in 1823

• It warned that if any European power intervened in the Western hemisphere, the U.S. has the right to use military force against them.

• Showed U.S. superiority in the region, but caused a lot of interventions in Latin America.

Page 17: BELLWORK 1.How was the Russian Empire divided prior to unification? Why did they desire unity? 2.Describe how Russia finally unified. 3.How was Austria-Hungary.

America Becoming a World Power• Japan had not traded

with a Western power for 250 years, but had great coal deposits.

• Open Door Policy: Commodore Matthew Perry sailed to Tokyo and “opened” or negotiated trade. The growth of Asian markets stimulated the U.S. economy.

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Causes of the Spanish-American War• Background:• Cuba had struggled for 30 years over independence

from Spain.• Some argued Cuba was part of the U.S. -

geographically close & great economic potential (sugar)

• 1895 – Cuban rebels launched a fight for independence. Spanish retaliated by placing them in concentration camps.

• 1896 – McKinley elected President; openly supports Cuban independence.

• February 1898: Explosion of U.S.S. Maine – American’s blame Spain (actually was a coal fire)

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End of the Spanish American War• After the U.S. won, Spain signed an armistice

(cease-fire).

• In October 1898, both countries signed the Paris Peace Treaty – Spain granted Independence to Cuba, Guam,

Puerto Rico and the Philippines to the U.S. for $20 million.

• Caused the collapse of the Spanish Empire

• Cuba and Philippines eventually were given complete independence but Puerto Rico and Guam remain U.S. territories.

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Importance of Spanish-American War

• America was now considered a “superpower”

• Makes foreign powers recognize American military/political strength

• U.S. now establishes foreign markets

• U.S. is able to establish military bases around the world