the industrial revolution: origins...the expression ‘industrial revolution’ was first used in...
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The Making of the Modern World
Tuesday 21 October 2014 11-12am
THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION: ORIGINS Tutor: Giorgio Riello g.riello@warwick.ac.uk
Why is the Industrial Revolution (IR) important? The IR starts the world we live in, characterised by:
- factories (industrial production - complex technology
But also, the last 250 years have seen enormous changes in people's lives
1800 2000
Popula,on 9 million 58 million
Wealth per capita £1,500 £21,000
Life expectancy 40 79
The UK in 1800 and 2000: some comparisons
To be precise… The IR is not a single event. The IR a series of events, changes and transformations occurred in a centain period of time. And historians have made sense of these events, by creating the concept of ‘The industrial revolution‘ The IR is strongly linked to the beginning on ‘modernity’
Today The IR in Britain, c. 1750-1840
Tomorrow The industrialisation in Continental Europe and beyond, c. 1820-1914.
The Revolutions
1. demographic increase (change in population) 2. urbanisation 3. agricultural revolution 4. commercial revolution 5. Transport
1. Demographic increase
1. Demographic increase There are three ways to increase the total
population: a. sustained immigration
b. high birth rate (increase in no. of children born) c. lower death rate (people live longer).
1. Demographic increase
2. Urbanisation
Table 1. Urban population during the industrial revolution in Britain
(in thousands)
1801
1851
1901
Birmigham
24 (1750)
71
265
760
Manchester
43 (1788)
75
338
645
London
-
1117
2685
6586
Norwich
36 (1752)
37
-
-
Liverpool
34 (1773)
78
-
-
Glasgow
-
77
375
762
3. Agricultural Revolution an increase in agrarian produc,on though the intensificaiton of agriculture: -‐ using new lands (such as marginal land); -‐ using exis,ng land more efficiently (ex: enclosures); -‐ and adop,ng new agrarian prac,ses (ex: crop rota,on).
4. Commercial Revolution
The way of moving people and goods in the eighteenth century was via: 1. Roads and turnpikes 2. waterways and costal shipping 3. canals.
5. Transport
The expression ‘industrial revolution’ was first used in French (revolution industrielle) in 1799 but came to be widel used in English only after the publication of the book entitled The Industrial Revolution by Arnold Toynbee in 1883. This was the first economic history of England in the age of industrialisation
The Industrial Revolution: General Features
The Industrial Revolution: General Features The classic intepretation of the IR undelines: - Change from artesanal to industrial production - The use of inanimante energy, esp. coal - The intensification of labour - The proletarisation of the workforce - The urbanisation of the population
‘one might have arrived in Egypt since so many factory chimneys … stretch upwards towards the sky like great obelisks’ (Escher, in Anderson, Industrial Britain, p. 84). ‘the sight of an English industrial town … is most depressing; nothing
pleases the eye’ and Manchester was ‘a place in which many were enslaved for the profit of the few and the sky was blotted out by smoke and dust’ (Schinkel, English Journeys, p. 13)
‘The Great Beehive’, that she thought was an ‘appropriate name for this immense hive of human industry, in which it would be difficult to forget … that man is not a mere working bee, living to fill his part in the hive and then to die!’ (Frederika Bremer, England in 1851, p. 16).
‘self-interest and money gain. In other countries men seek opulence to enjoy life; the English seek it to live’ (cit. in Wilson, Strange Island, p. 197).
All in Giorgio Riello and Patrick K. O’Brien, 'The Future is Another Country: Offshore Views of the British Industrial Revolution', Journal of Historical Sociology, 22/1 (2009), pp. 1-29
The Industrial Revolution: Different Explanations Exp. 1. Until the 1970s (in particular c. 1955-75): - economic growth - key sectors (esp. cotton textiles) - Factory production - Use of new technologies
Exp. 2. From the mid 1970s to the mid 1990s: - a wider range of sectors - the continuity with pre-industrial manufacturing (manufactures) - consumption - two new concepts: - proto-industrialisation
- industrious revolution
Exp. 3. Since the mid 1990s: - the IR in a more global perspective, - new concept of ‘divergence’
Explanation 1: Economic Growth W. W. Rostow, The Stages of Economic Growth: A Non-Comunist Manifesto (Cambridge, 1960) underlined how the IR could be replicated in other parts of the world, especially the Third World. Deane & Cole, David Landes, Eric Hobsbawm and other economic historians gave more space to a view of the IR as a story of modernization. This way of telling the IR emphasised three issues: - The role of cotton textiles
- The role of technology - The role of factories
Woman at a spinning wheel, spinning wool
a. Cotton textile production
Richard Arkwright inventor of the ‘water frame’ for spinning cotton
Model of Water Frame by Arkwright, 1769
Arkwright’s factory in Derbyshire
Cartwright’s mechanic loom, c. 1830
b. Role of Technology
Memorial to Boulton, Watt and Murdoch in Birmingham
The industrial revolu7on as a ‘wave of gadgets’.
b. Role of Technology
Cri,ques: • technology is a necessary but not sufficient condi,on.
• the rela,onship between technology and science.
• how to explain technology itself? Technologies were: 1. were the result of mul,ple discoveries in which none of them is vital. 2. They were quite simple. 3. most inventors were popularised later
Robert Owen’s New Lanark near Glasgow, c. 1820
Explanation 2. Manufactures
Alternative smaller-scale units that co-existed with those factories were not so primitive during the IR Maxine Berg, The Age of Manufactures (1985; 2nd edn. 1994).
Explanation 2. Manufactures
Concept 1: Proto-industrialization Proto-industry is industrial production in small units mostly in the countryside to produce goods to be sold in distant market. The Proto-industrial model was developed by Franklin Mendels and developed by Kriedte, Medick e Schlumbohm. The model contained three elements: • a strong link between agriculture and industry. • production that was co-ordinated by so-called merchant-
entrepreneurs. • an industry dependent on long-distance markets.
See You Tomorrow
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