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Modern World History 3 Introduction: Industrial Revolution 70 Views


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Description:

It's time to discuss everyone's favorite revolution: Dance Dance Revolution!

Language:
English Language

Transcript

00:04

In our last unit, we saw how the success of one little revolution back in 1776...

00:10

led to most of the world embracing some form of democratic...

00:14

governance today. In this unit, we're gonna talk about a different kind of revolution.

00:19

Dance Dance Revolution? No? Fine. Guess we're talking about the Industrial kind instead.

00:24

But first let's go back in time a bit. Between the epoch of the Greeks and...

00:28

the Romans, and the 18th century, mechanical invention was pretty much nil.

00:33

Aristocrats relied on peasants and animals to perform manual labor.

00:37

They would've used windmills, too, but Don Quixote kept coming along and destroying the darn things. Around this same...

00:42

time, a bunch of Europeans kicked off the Age of Exploration...

00:46

by going out into the world to conquer new lands, enslave...

00:49

new peoples, and steal lots of natural resources from native...

00:53

populations. The end result: the economies of Europe expanded by leaps and...

00:57

bounds, as the loot flowed in. Thinking small and local didn't work anymore. It was time...

01:02

for mercantilism to take the wheel. Fun fact: that was almost the title of Carrie Underwood's song.

01:07

"Mercantilism Take the Wheel." It just didn't have quite the same ring to it, though. Anyway, the central...

01:12

tenet of mercantilism is that you must export more than you import.

01:16

This seems like a pretty simple concept, right? However,

01:19

in order for mercantilism to work, the nations of Europe...

01:22

had to embrace protectionism. Sorry, Spaniards, no...

01:25

fine French champagne for you. We hear the ice tea is pretty nice.

01:28

While protectionism was great for the people in charge in Europe, it was terrible for...

01:32

consumers who couldn't get access to all the products they wanted. Protectionism also...

01:36

drove up the prices on certain products, walloping consumers right in the...

01:40

pocketbook. Lots of that lovely money flowed into the hands of businessmen looking to get...

01:45

even wealthier than they already were. While British merchants in particular...

01:49

believed in the power of investing, they had some help for their schemes...

01:53

from the Bank of England. Founded in 1694, the institution...

01:57

existed to help British citizens borrow money at low interest rates...

02:01

which meant lots of entrepreneurs could take our loans to invent and innovate.

02:05

But the British had way more going for them by the time the 18th century rolled around...

02:09

than just stellar business acumen. England was an island, which meant it...

02:13

had access to water, which meant its merchants had no trouble getting...

02:17

their products to even the most exotic places. Y'know, like...

02:21

Boston Harbor. Additionally, England was a politically stable...

02:25

country, and had been since 1688. No war or conflict had...

02:29

come along to destroy English infrastructure, or force English businessmen...

02:33

to spend their money on things like AR-15s. England...

02:37

also had a ton of coal and iron at home, which came in handy...

02:40

when Thomas Newcomen invented the first steam engine...

02:43

in 1712. A perfect storm was brewing in England. This...

02:47

tiny island had the money, the geographic location, the stability, and...

02:51

resources to do something amazing. Like lose the American colonies to a bunch of...

02:55

upstart revolutions, for not sharing. Okay, so that maybe wasn't...

02:58

so amazing for the British. But some of the folks on ye olde Albion...

03:02

started to wonder what would happen if animals and people both...

03:06

of which need food and sleep, didn't have to do so much manual labor.

03:10

And what if were possible to produce a lot of stuff, like buttons or bullets,

03:14

or jelly beans, really quickly and cheaply? It dawned on the British that...

03:18

the new machines they'd been building, like Newcomen's Steam...

03:21

Engine, could be used to complete work far faster than...

03:24

animals or people could. More efficiency meant more money, which meant more innovation,

03:29

which meant more money. And so the Industrial Revolution was born.

03:33

At least, it was born in England. Don't worry Russia, you'll get to modernize, too.

03:37

Eventually.

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