i. india ii. southeast asia iii. china: the long nineteenth century

Post on 06-Jan-2016

55 Views

Category:

Documents

0 Downloads

Preview:

Click to see full reader

DESCRIPTION

I. India II. Southeast Asia III. China: The Long Nineteenth Century IV. Japan: Modernity and Imperialism. I. India A. Reform Ram Mohan Roy (1772–1833) B. Rebellion Great Revolt, 1857 Sepoys End of East India Company Rule 1885, Indian National Congress - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Brummett, et al, Civilization, Past & Present

Chapter Outline

Chapter 24: Asia, 1815–1914

©2

00

6, P

ears

on

Ed

uc a

tion

, In

c.

I. India

II. Southeast Asia

III. China: The Long Nineteenth Century

IV. Japan: Modernity and Imperialism

Brummett, et al, Civilization, Past & Present, Part One; Classical Origins

Chapter 24: Asia, 1815–1914

©2

00

6, P

ears

on

Ed

uc a

tion

, In

c.

I. India

A. ReformRam Mohan Roy (1772–1833)

B. Rebellion

Great Revolt, 1857SepoysEnd of East India Company

Rule1885, Indian National Congress1907–09, some self-government

Brummett, et al, Civilization, Past & Present, Part One; Classical Origins

Chapter 24: Asia, 1815–1914

©2

00

6, P

ears

on

Ed

uc a

tion

, In

c.

II. Southeast Asia

A. The Era of European Dominance

BurmaBritish conquer, 1824–85

FrenchVietnam

Emperor Tu DucDefeated, 1862

Protectorates:Annam, Tonkin,

Cambodia

ThailandMongut (1851–68)son, Chulalongkorn

(1868–1910)

IndonesiaDutch, “Culture system”Raden Adjeng Kartini1912, Sarekat Islam

Brummett, et al, Civilization, Past & Present, Part One; Classical Origins

Chapter 24: Asia, 1815–1914

©2

00

6, P

ears

on

Ed

uc a

tion

, In

c.

II. Southeast Asia

B. PhilippinesSpanish Rule, 1571–1898

Jose Rizal1897, Independence

Emilio Aguinaldo

(U.S. Alaska, 1867Hawaii, 1893)

1899–1902, conquest1916, Jones Act

Brummett, et al, Civilization, Past & Present, Part One; Classical Origins

Chapter 24: Asia, 1815–1914

©2

00

6, P

ears

on

Ed

uc a

tion

, In

c.

III. China: The Long Nineteenth Century

Qianlong (1736–95)

A. Global NetworksRevolts: Taiwan, Gansu,

Hunan, Guizhou, Shandong

B. Opium and TradeBritish East India Company

Indian opium

Commissioner Lin, 1839> war

1842, Treaty of Nanjing

1858, Treaty of Tianjin

Taiping Rebellion, 1850–64Hong Xiuquan

C. Qing Foreign Policy1860, Tongzhi restorationCixi (1861–1908)

Brummett, et al, Civilization, Past & Present, Part One; Classical Origins

Chapter 24: Asia, 1815–1914

©2

00

6, P

ears

on

Ed

uc a

tion

, In

c.

III. China: The Long Nineteenth Century

D. Carving up ChinaRussia

1860 — Treaty of BeijingVladivostok

JapanSino-Japanese War> Treaty of Shimonoseki

(1895)LeasesU.S. — Open Door Policy,

1900

E. ReactionKang YouweiRighteous Harmony Fists

(Boxers)1899, Rebellion

1912— Republic of China

Brummett, et al, Civilization, Past & Present, Part One; Classical Origins

Chapter 24: Asia, 1815–1914

©2

00

6, P

ears

on

Ed

uc a

tion

, In

c.

IV. Japan: Modernity and Imperialism

A. Western Trade

1853, Matthew Perry

> Treaty of Kanagawa, 1854

B. The Meiji Period (1868–1912)

Meiji Restoration

end of statuses

universal education, 1872

military conscription, 1873

Bunmei Kaika

influenced by Rousseau and Mill

Constitution

Fukoku kyohei

top related