Part Three: Transformation to Urban Industrial Capitalism

Part 3, The Nineteenth Century in Europe part 2 Dr. Roger van Zwanenberg Part 3, The Nineteenth Century in Europe part 2 Dr. Roger van Zwanenberg

#36 Industrialisation: the USA and Germany

During the 19th century, the world’s most powerful nations industrialised. Industrialisation was a historically unique process. Industrialisation involved the creation of  ‘infrastructure’, communication through roads, railways, and canals; the building of massive factories, producing a huge volume of goods, and most of society living close together in urban housing side by side. None of this had ever occurred before in all the world’s history. Britain was out in front in the 19th century as she led the way with industrialisation, however, the USA caught up, and Germany too by the end of the century from a slow start. All three societies came to Industrialisation through their unique histories, so there were many differences.

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Part 3, The Nineteenth Century in Europe Part 1 Dr. Roger van Zwanenberg Part 3, The Nineteenth Century in Europe Part 1 Dr. Roger van Zwanenberg

#32 Industrialisation and Technological Transformation

Industrialisation during the 19th century historically changed the world for all the people living in France Holland the UK and the USA; by the end of the century city living and industrial work had become the new normal. Japan and Germany followed in the 2nd half of the century. At the beginning in 1800, the world’s populations had been predominantly rural: by 1900 one hundred years later the few wealthy independent European and American nations had become mainly urban. The processes of manufacture and transport had vitally altered everyone’s lives. Even the understanding of time itself had been altered.

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Part 3, The Nineteenth Century in Europe Part 1 Dr. Roger van Zwanenberg Part 3, The Nineteenth Century in Europe Part 1 Dr. Roger van Zwanenberg

#31 Britain and the 19th Century

The growth of 19th century manufacturing was built on the back of Enslaved People, the taxes of Indian peasants and the subsequent impoverishment of the Indian peoples. Enslaved peoples provided cotton, the raw material, from which industrial textile manufacturing became the leading product of the industrial revolution. The money derived from Indian taxpayers became the backbone of the City of London.

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