1 / 22

The different impact of different european powers

A legacy that lives on. The different impact of different european powers. The iberian powers. 1. Spain and portugal : trauma. The spanish world view. The power structure.

alika
Download Presentation

The different impact of different european powers

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. A legacy that lives on. The different impact of different european powers

  2. The iberian powers

  3. 1. Spain and portugal: trauma

  4. The spanish world view

  5. The power structure The big question is, once you have conquered the indigenous people, and secured the resources, how to you, the King, stop your conquistadors from stealing the rug from under you? You make them fabulously rich, then they should be happy, and you do this by giving them immense stretches of the best land, and power over the natives to work it. He then does the same to the people under him, and so on. This is the patronage, latifundiasystem that prevails to this day.

  6. Latifundia

  7. Informal empire

  8. Land reform paralysis

  9. The “back yard”

  10. The caudillo

  11. Change at last?

  12. Past radical reform attempts

  13. The african experience

  14. The african experience (uk/france) On this c19 map of Africa, the interior is largely left blank because the interest of the Europeans was entirely coastal, picking up slaves and en route for the Indies. The countries of West Africa all run inward from The coast, where all the capitals Were, or are. The railroads do The same being collecting systems For exports.

  15. The era of transition

  16. The slave trade (abolished 1807) Phase 1 “Scramble for Africa” phase 2 UK: The role of the “Chartered Company” Gold and diamonds Agricultural exports and industrial raw materials (“cash crops”) Settlers where appropriate Late-phase colonialism Elements in British and French colonialism So, in the first phase Of the Industrial Revolution, The Europeans were happy to Leave Africa to large capitalists

  17. In fact, the European Powers sat down and carved the whole continent up. There was a rush to establish prior claims. Africa was a tabula rasa after slavery

  18. In Latin America, immigrants basically displaced the indigenous population from the best land. Costa Rica, for instance, has no indigenous population. In Africa, settlers were introduced, starting with the Dutch in South Africa, into selected “healthy” areas such as Kenya, parts of Algeria, Zimbabwe. settlers

  19. The settler territories Algeria: the pieds noirs Eastern Congo: Belgian plantation owners Kenya: White Highlands Elsewhere, Africans were brought into the cash economy by means of tax. Rhodesia, now Zimbabwe Many “poor whites” settled in the Portuguese colonies. South Africa: Boers and British The pattern of small farmers growing cash crops was established. Plantations were rare. Colonials provided infrastructure and market.

  20. In settler countries, the Whites have left, or been forced out (Algeria, Zimbabwe). What will happen to South Africa? The forcing of natives onto “Reserves” led to heavy pressure and erosion of land. This continues with rapid population growth. Lots of small countries all trying to do the same thing. Political instability. Problems

  21. Here, the main players are, once again the British and the French, but with the addition of the Dutch in the Dutch East Indies (now Indonesia) China was never formally colonized but was subject to “informal” or “invisible” imperialism through Western arms and control of trade. The asian drama

  22. The “Chartered Companies” dominated in the period from 1600 to around 1850. These had little interest in land or farming—they were traders. However, they would encourage the cultivation of the things they knew they could trade, e.g. tea plantations. The companies

More Related