Much of this assignment regarding Europse's impact on the world during the 18th and 19 centuries was fairly well know to me, and that made me have an easier time reading and digesting the information.
some parts that were new to me included:
a) everything regarding the Haiti Revolution in 1791, the only successful slave rebellion in history, who were inspired by what happened in France just 2 years prior and by the ideas of freedom and popular sovereignty
a pattern of world revolutions emerged around the Atlantic in the late 18th century, which i have never connected the dots on before. first the American in 1776, then the French, on the other side of the world in 1789, and then in Haiti back in the Americas in 1791.
that being said, although Europe was in the highlights, Strayer managed to through in other parts of the world, such as Women's Voting rights in 1893 in New Zealand, as well as Women's rights in South America regarding potable water and overall safety/security of their families.
moreover, i knew nothing about the Chinese revolution in 1911, nor that Japen annexed Korea 1910.
Strayer's comment on p. 773, although lacking hard evidence, has stuck in my mind:
Some scholars have suggested that the events of the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries—the end of colonial empires, the rise of India and especially China, and the assertion of Islam—mark the end, or at least the erosion, of the age of Europe.
Further on, Strayer says,
"remember that the rise of Europe occurred within an international context. It was the withdrawal of the Chinese naval fleet that allowed Europeans to dominate the Indian Ocean in the sixteenth century, while Native Americans’ lack of immunity to European diseases and their own divisions and conflicts greatly assisted the European takeover. Europe’s Scientific Revolution drew upon earlier Islamic science and was stimulated by the massive amounts of new information pouring in from around the world.The Industrial Revolution, explored in Chapter 18, likewise benefited from New World resources and markets and from the stimulus of superior Asian textile and pottery production. Chapters 19 and 20 make clear that European control of other regions everywhere depended on the cooperation of local elites."
that doesnt mean that the European Era was somehow less significant or profound. it simply suggests that The European spotlight resulted from a unique intersection of European historical development with that of other regions and peoples.
As far as the industrial revolution chapter is concerned, the new part for me was reading about the US incursions into south America, and the process by which south america entered into the industrial age.
some parts that were new to me included:
a) everything regarding the Haiti Revolution in 1791, the only successful slave rebellion in history, who were inspired by what happened in France just 2 years prior and by the ideas of freedom and popular sovereignty
a pattern of world revolutions emerged around the Atlantic in the late 18th century, which i have never connected the dots on before. first the American in 1776, then the French, on the other side of the world in 1789, and then in Haiti back in the Americas in 1791.
that being said, although Europe was in the highlights, Strayer managed to through in other parts of the world, such as Women's Voting rights in 1893 in New Zealand, as well as Women's rights in South America regarding potable water and overall safety/security of their families.
moreover, i knew nothing about the Chinese revolution in 1911, nor that Japen annexed Korea 1910.
Strayer's comment on p. 773, although lacking hard evidence, has stuck in my mind:
Some scholars have suggested that the events of the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries—the end of colonial empires, the rise of India and especially China, and the assertion of Islam—mark the end, or at least the erosion, of the age of Europe.
Further on, Strayer says,
"remember that the rise of Europe occurred within an international context. It was the withdrawal of the Chinese naval fleet that allowed Europeans to dominate the Indian Ocean in the sixteenth century, while Native Americans’ lack of immunity to European diseases and their own divisions and conflicts greatly assisted the European takeover. Europe’s Scientific Revolution drew upon earlier Islamic science and was stimulated by the massive amounts of new information pouring in from around the world.The Industrial Revolution, explored in Chapter 18, likewise benefited from New World resources and markets and from the stimulus of superior Asian textile and pottery production. Chapters 19 and 20 make clear that European control of other regions everywhere depended on the cooperation of local elites."
that doesnt mean that the European Era was somehow less significant or profound. it simply suggests that The European spotlight resulted from a unique intersection of European historical development with that of other regions and peoples.
As far as the industrial revolution chapter is concerned, the new part for me was reading about the US incursions into south America, and the process by which south america entered into the industrial age.