THE BRITISH EMPIRE Chapter 25 (pp. 720 – 734)
Jan 01, 2016
THE BRITISH EMPIRE
Chapter 25 (pp. 720 – 734)
INTRODUCTION
During the 18th and 19th centuries, the British built
an empire that would grow to eventually encompass
1/3 of the world’s landmass• At the same time, Spanish and Portuguese power
declined• British sought raw materials and consumer markets
for finished goods• Included territories in:
• South Asia (India)• Southeast Asia• Oceania (New Zealand & Australia)• Africa
India Under British Rule
• In the late 1600s, Mughal power in India began a rapid decline– Hindu subjects
challenged the Mughals
– Formed the Maratha Confederation
– Fought a 27 year war to end Muslim rule in India
India Under British Rule
• During the Maratha Empire, the British established a large trade presence– British East India
Company– Sepoys: Indian soldiers
hired to protect British trade
• British took over major cities of Calcutta, Madras & Bombay
India Under British Rule• In 1857, for a variety of social and religious
reasons, the sepoys rebelled against British forces– Indian Revolt of 1857– Led to dissolution of East India Company– India was now directly governed by the British Crown
• British Raj (1858 – 1947)
The British Raj
• 1858, Queen Victoria becomes Empress of India– Strengthened control over
colonly– “Westernization, Anglicization,
and modernization”– Proclaimed equality under law
and “technically” allowed some forms of self government• Former Mughal princes pledged
loyalty for autonomy• Indian Civil Service
The British Raj
• Prior to British rule India had an economically productive and agriculturally based economy– Leading exporter of cotton
textiles
• British introduction of cheap factory-produced textiles led to decline of India’s economy
The British Raj
• British rapidly built up India’s infrastructure to more productivly farm natural resources– Railroads– Canals– Telegraph lines
Britain’s Eastern Empire(Africa, Asia and the
Pacific)
Colonies and Commerce
• 1795, Dutch ceded control of Cape Colony (South Africa) to British– British established a large
settler colony– Profited from port trade– British citizens displaced
previous Dutch settlers• Resulted in the Great Trek
Colonies and Commerce
• British seized control of numerous territories in Asia–Malacca (again form the Dutch)– Singapore– Burma (Myanmar)
Imperial Policies and Shipping
• British sought trade rather than territory– New colonies meant to serve as ports
• New clipper ships increased speed and cargo capacity of oceanic trade
Australia and New Zealand
• 1769 - 1778, British Captain James Cook explored New Zealand & eastern coast of Australia– Native communities
succumbed to disease– Ex. Maoryi
Colonization of Australia and New Zealand
• At first, British used Australia as a penal colony• As more settlers arrived, British allowed self-
government to avoid independence movements– Also, made colonists responsible for their own expenses
• British also settled New Zealand for seal hunting and whaling