Bowie AP World History · Web viewFrench Revolution – Radical and Authoritarian Phases...
Transcript of Bowie AP World History · Web viewFrench Revolution – Radical and Authoritarian Phases...
page 1Chapters 24 & 25
Part V: The Dawn of the Industrial Age1750 C.E. – 1914 C.E.
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24.1. Context for Revolution As you read this section in your textbook, complete the following to describe the revolutions that shook the Western world between 1776 and 1848
Forces of Change in Europe
The Enlightenment
The American Revolution
Crisis in France in 1789
French Revolution – Radical and Authoritarian Phases (Robespierre to Napoleon)
Conservatism (Congress of Vienna)
Revolutions of 1820s and 1830s
Industrialization
Revolutions of 1848 (Germany, Austria, Hungary, France)
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24.2. The Age of Revolution As you read this section in your textbook, complete the list to summarize the lasting reforms of the French Revolution
Reforms of the French Revolution
1.
2.
3.
4.
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24.4. The Consolidation of the Industrial Order, 1850-1900 As you read this section in your textbook, take notes on the major European economic, political, and social developments in the second half of the nineteenth century in the table below.
Consolidation of the Industrial Order
City Life and Factory
Work
The Politics of Nationalism Society and Government
Population growth rates
stabilized in the second
half of the nineteenth
century.
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24.5. Cultural Transformations As you read this section in your textbook, complete the concept web below to identify cultural trends in the late nineteenth-century Europe
Late Nineteenth-Century Culture
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24.6. Western Settler Societies As you read this section in your textbook, take notes on the emergence of settler societies in the United States, Australia, Canada, and New Zealand in the table below. Use the first column to list features common to all four societies
Common Features
United States Canada Australia New Zealand
Massive European influence and ongoing conflict with home society
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24.7. Diplomatic Tensions and World War I As you read this section in your textbook, complete the following section to describe the diplomatic tensions in the decades leading up to World War I
Change in Europe between 1750 and 1900 Continuities in Europe between 1750 and 1900
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Part V: The Dawn of the Industrial Age1750 C.E. – 1914 C.E.
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25.1. The Shift to Land Empires in Asia As you read this section in your textbook, take notes on Dutch and British imperialism in Asia in the table below.
The British in India The Dutch in Indonesia
Colonial Government
Colonial Society
Social Reform
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25.2. Industrial Rivalries and the Partitioning of the World, 1870-1914 As you read this section in your textbook, complete the list below of the key advances in military technology that facilitated Western imperialism.
Key Advances in Military Technology
1. Advances in metallurgy make mass production of artillery possible
2. Better rifles multiply the firepower of European soldiers
3.
4.
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7.
8.
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25.3. Patterns of Dominance: Continuity and Change After reading this section in your textbook, write HIPP statements for the following documents/images.
Document 1:
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In the Rubber Coils, Published November 28, 1906
Document 2:
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The White Man’s Burden
Take up the White Man's burden —
Send forth the best ye breed —
Go bind your sons to exile
To serve your captives' need;
To wait in heavy harness,
On fluttered folk and wild —
Your new-caught, sullen peoples,
Half-devil and half-child.
- Rudyard Kiping, The Five Nations, 1903
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