1 / 18

Pax Britannica and Colonialism

Pax Britannica and Colonialism. References. Preston and Wise, Men in Arms , pp. 192-208 Ropp, War in the Modern World , pp. 206-214 Weigley, The American Way of War , pp. 167-191 Dupuy and Dupuy, The Encyclopedia of Military History , pp. 820-855. Learning Objectives.

hei
Download Presentation

Pax Britannica and Colonialism

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Pax Britannica and Colonialism

  2. References • Preston and Wise, Men in Arms, pp. 192-208 • Ropp, War in the Modern World, pp. 206-214 • Weigley, The American Way of War, pp. 167-191 • Dupuy and Dupuy, The Encyclopedia of Military History, pp. 820-855

  3. Learning Objectives • Comprehend the meaning of Pax Britannica and how the British fleet provided the deterrence to renewed total war • Know and discuss the weaknesses of the British Army as demonstrated in the Crimean War • Comprehend and explain the reasons for the revival of the race for empires and the necessary military requirements • Comprehend and explain how the Boer War put 19th Century British imperialism to its most severe test

  4. Europe circa 1815

  5. Pax Britannica and the Race for Empires • Pax Britannica • 1815: The Congress of Vienna removes colonies • 1880: Control of major sea lines • Britain gains industrialization head start • Britain is free to use its fleet • Britain controls the seas through naval supremacy • The Crimean War • Red Cross

  6. Pax Britannica andthe Race for Empires • The Industrial Revolution • European powers compete • Desires for colonies grew • 1914: Africa partitioned • “Spheres of Influence” • Advancing equipment made British ships obsolete • Capital necessary to upgrade was enormous

  7. Pax Britannica andthe Race for Empires • Technological Imperative • Modernization needed to stay competitive • Lesser nations’ role • Numbers no longer decide victory in combat • Economic competition • End result • Frenchman Jeune Ecole • Italian battleships Duilio and Dandalo • Submarines used as tools of war

  8. Pax Britannica and the Race for Empires • Capt A.T. Mahan • The Influence of Sea Power upon History • Sea power as a political and economic force • Mahan’s philosophies • Germans built a “risk fleet” • Britain aspires to maintain its supremacy • 1907: Dreadnought built

  9. Pax Britannica and the Race for Empires • The Boer War • Technology and anti-imperialist sentiment’s impact • Britain commits 500,000 troops • Boer tactics • Inadequacies of British tactics • The British success at Boer

  10. Pax Britannica andthe Race of Empires • The Modern Era • British lessen military burden • Britain’s superiority steadily erodes • 1907: End of Pax Britannica

  11. The Prussian Influence Franco-Prussian War Portrait

  12. Learning Objectives • Comprehend and explain the struggle for dominance between Prussian and Austrian forces • Comprehend and explain the emergence of the German General Staff under Moltke • Comprehend and explain the Prussian victory in the Franco-Prussian War • Compare and contrast Moltke and Bismarck as grand strategists

  13. The Struggle for Dominance • The Napoleonic Destruction – power void • 1815-1866: Austria and Prussia struggle • Prussian Zollerein gains control • 1850: Treaty of Olmuetz • 1864: Schleswig-Holstein War • Prussia & Austria defeat Denmark • Joint control of land disputed while under joint control of Prussia & Austria • Austria defeated

  14. Prussian Preeminence • 1867: Northern Germany joins Prussia • Fear of France forces Southern alliance • 1870: Franco-Prussian War • Detailed mobilization plans and flexibility of Prussia • Moltke and General Staff key • Superior Prussian artillery • Lack of planning of French • Lack of French economy of force

  15. General Staff of Prussia • Originates after Napoleonic Period • Quasi-autonomy • Attention to doctrine and theory • Rotation of officers • Separate “planning and education” branch

  16. Moltke & Bismarck • Otto von Bismarck’s accomplishments • Limited aims of three wars of unification • Diplomacy after unification • 1857: Count Helmuth von Moltke – Chief of General Staff • Attained by intellectual achievement • Lacked Bismarck’s strategic abilities • Establishes Railway Section • Leads to lightning fast mobilization of forces

  17. Summary • Pax Britannica • Industrial Revolution • Boer War and end of British supremacy • Prussian Influences • Unification of Germany

  18. Questions?

More Related