Heyday of European Imperialism

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Name: Hassanor Hadjizaman Imam

Sohaima M. Macadato
Norhasiah Baraamal
Johairah Almasa
Grade/Section: First Year College - B
Subject: Gened 6 (Contemporary World)
Topic: Heyday of European Imperialism (mid-19th century to 1918)
Instructor: Ma'am Mosmirah B. Abduljalil

Heyday of European Imperialism (mid-nineteenth century to 1918)

Old Imperialism

European imperialism did not begin in the 1800s. In their efforts to find a direct trade route
to Asia during the age of Old Imperialism, European nations established colonies in the Americas, India,
South Africa, and the East Indies, and gained territory along the coasts of Africa and China. Meanwhile,
Europe’s Commercial Revolution created new needs and desires for wealth and raw materials.
Mercantilists maintained that colonies could serve as a source of wealth, while personal motives by
rulers, statesmen, explorers, and missionaries supported the imperial belief in “Glory, God, and Gold.”
By 1800, Great Britain was the leading colonial power with colonies in India, South Africa, and Australia.
Spain colonized Central and South America. France held Louisiana and French Guinea, and Holland built
an empire in the East Indies.

In the first half of the nineteenth century, colonialism became less popular. The Napoleonic
Wars, the struggle for nationalism and democracy, and the cost of industrialization exhausted the
energies of European nations.

Many leaders also thought that the costs to their respective empires outweighed the
benefits, especially the cost of supervising the colonies. However, in the mid-nineteenth century, Europe
especially Great Britain and France began an economic revival. During the Victorian Era, which lasted
from 1837 to 1901, Great Britain became an industrial giant, providing more than 25 percent of the
world’s output of industrial goods. In France, Napoleon’s investment in industry and large-scale
ventures, such as railroad building, helped to promote prosperity. Thus the Industrial Revolution stirred
ambitions in many European countries and renewed their confidence to embark on a path of aggressive
expansion overseas.

New Imperialism

From the late 1800s through the early 1900s, Western Europe pursued a policy of
imperialism that became known as New Imperialism. This New Imperialist Age gained its impetus from
economic, military, political, humanitarian, and religious reasons, as well as from the development and
acceptance of a new theory—Social Darwinism—and advances in technology.
Economic Reasons

By 1870, it became necessary for European industrialized nations to expand their markets
globally in order to sell products that they could not sell domestically on the continent. Businessmen
and bankers had excess capital to invest, and foreign investments offered the incentive of greater
profits, despite the risks. The need for cheap labor and a steady supply of raw materials, such as oil,
rubber, and manganese for steel, required that the industrial nations maintain firm control over these
unexplored areas. Only by directly controlling these regions, which meant setting up colonies under
their direct control, could the industrial economy work effectively—or so the imperialists thought. The
economic gains of the new imperialism were limited, however, because the new colonies were too poor
to spend money on European goods.

Military and Political Reasons

Leading European nations also felt that colonies were crucial to military power, national
security, and nationalism. Military leaders claimed that a strong navy was necessary in order to become
a great power. Thus, naval vessels needed military bases around the world to take on coal and supplies.
Islands or harbors were seized to satisfy these needs. Colonies guaranteed the growing European navies
safe harbors and coaling stations, which they needed in time of war. National security was an important
reason for Great Britain’s decision to occupy Egypt. Protecting the Suez Canal was vital for the British
Empire. The Suez Canal, which formally opened in 1869, shortened the sea route from Europe to South
Africa and East Asia. To Britain, the canal was a lifeline to India, the jewel of its empire. Many people
were also convinced that the possession of colonies was an indication of a nation’s greatness; colonies
were status symbols. According to nineteenth-century German historian, Heinrich von Treitschke, all
great nations should want to conquer barbarian nations.

Humanitarian and Religious Goals

Many Westerners believed that Europe should civilize their little brothers beyond the seas.
According to this view, non-whites would received the blessings of Western civilization, including
medicine, law, and Christianity. Rudyard Kipling (1865–1936) in his famous poem, “The White Man’s
Burden” expressed this mission in the 1890s when he prodded Europeans to take up “their moral
obligation” to civilize the uncivilized. He encouraged them to “Send forth the best ye breed to serve your
captives’ need.” Missionaries supported colonization, believing that European control would help them
spread Christianity, the true religion, in Asia and Africa.

Social Darwinism

In 1859, Charles Darwin (1809–1882) published On the Origin of Species. Darwin claimed
that all life had evolved into the present state over millions of years. To explain the long slow process of
evolution, Darwin put forth the theory of natural selection. Natural forces selected those with physical
traits best adapted to their environment.
Darwin never promoted any social ideas. The process of natural selection came to be known
as survival of the fittest. The English man Herbert Spencer (1820–1903) was the first to apply “survival
of the fittest” to human societies and nations. Social Darwinism fostered imperialistic expansion by
proposing that some people were more fit (advanced) than others. The Europeans believed that they, as
the white race, were dominant and that it was only natural for them to conquer the “inferior” people as
nature’s way of improving mankind. Thus, the conquest of inferior people was just, and the destruction
of the weaker races was nature’s natural law.

Western Technology

Superior technology and improved medical knowledge helped to foster imperialism.


Quinine enabled Europeans to survive tropical diseases and venture into the mosquito-infested interiors
of Africa and Asia. The combination of the steamboat and the telegraph enabled the Western powers to
increase their mobility and to quickly respond to any situations that threatened their dominance. The
rapid-fire machine gun also gave them a military advantage and was helpful in convincing Africans and
Asians to accept Western control.

References:

https://www.tamaqua.k12.pa.us/cms/lib07/PA01000119/Centricity/Domain/119/
TheAgeofImperialism.pdf
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/British_Empire
https://www.google.com/search?q=the+intra+european+wars+late+18+
+early+19+century+pdf&client=ms-android-transsion-infinix-rev1&sxsrf=AP
https://www.google.com/search?
q=19th+Century+European+Imperialism&oq=19th+Century+European+Imperialism&aqs=chrome..69i57j
69i60j0i512l2j0i22i30l4.690j0j4&client=ms-android-transsion-infinix-rev1&sourceid=chrome-
mobile&ie=UTF-8#sbfbu=1&pi=19th%20Century%20European%20Imperialism

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