Erstellt von Aaliyah Manalo
vor etwa 8 Jahre
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Frage | Antworten |
seed drill | Jethro Tull |
Robert Bakewell | breeding only his best sheep |
enclosed their land with fences or hedges | enclosures |
Industrial Revolution | greatly increased output of machine-made goods |
process of developing machine production of goods | industrialization |
Flying Shuttle | John Kay |
James Hargreaves | Spinning Jenny |
Richard Arkwright | water frame |
Samuel Crompton | Spinning mule |
Edmund Cartwright | Power loom |
cotton gin | eli whitney |
James Watt and Matthew Boulton | boulton paid watt to build better steam engines |
Clermont | Robert Fulton |
George Stephenson | Rocket |
Britain's capital | London |
center of britain's cotton industry | Manchester |
middle class | made up of skilled workers |
upper middle class | doctors, lawyers, gov't employees, managers |
lower middle class | factory overseers, toolmakers, mechanical drafters |
working class | laborers |
Ned Ludd | Luddites; attacked factories |
Factory Act of 1819 | restricted working age and hours |
War of 1812 | Britain blockaded the US to keep it from engaging in int'l trading |
Samuel Slater | built a spinning machine from memory |
Moses Brown | opened first factory to house Slater's machines; mass produced the thread |
Francis Cabot Lowell | mechanized every stage in the manufacture of cloth |
stock | certain rights of ownership |
corporation | business owned by stockholders who share in its profits but are not personally responsible for its debts |
Led the Europe in adopting Britain's new technology | Belgium |
William Cockerill | carried secret plans for building spinning machinery |
John Cockerill | built an enormous industrial enterprise in Belgium |
Bohemia | spinning industry |
Spain | cotton |
Northern Italy | textile production |
Russia | serf labor in factories |
France | national market for French products |
Imperialism | policy of extending one country's rule over many other lands |
Laissez faire | letting owners of industry and business set working conditions without interference |
Adam Smith | defended the idea of a free economy |
Three Natural Laws of Economics | 1. Law of Self Interest 2. Law of Competition 3. Law of Supply and Demand |
Law of Self Interest | people work for their own good |
Law of Competition | competition forces people to work better |
Law of Supply and Demand | enough goods would be produced at the lowest possible price to meet demand in a market economy |
Capitalism | factor of production are privately owned |
Thomas Malthus | An Essay on the Principle of Population: population increase more rapidly than the food supply |
David Ricardo | Principles of Political Economy and Taxation: permanent underclass would always be poor |
Jeremy Bentham | introduced Utilitarianism |
Utilitarianism | judge base on their utility or usefulness |
John Stuart Mill | led the utilitarian movement |
Robert Owen | built a utopian village -- New Harmony |
Socialism | factors of production are owned by the public |
Marxism | human societies have always been divided into classes --- introduced by Karl Marx |
Employers | Bourgeousie |
Workers | Proletariat |
Communism | form of complete socialism-- means of production would be owned by the people |
unions | voluntary labor associations |
strike | refuse to work |
Factory Act of 1833 | illegal to hire children under 9 years old |
Mines Act of 1842 | prevented women and children from working underground |
Ten Hours Act of 1847 | limited workday to ten hours for women and children who worked in factories |
William Wilberforce | led the fight for end of slave trade |
Jane Addams and Ellen Starr | ran settlement houses/ Hull House |
Horace Mann | favored free public education for all children |
Alexis De Tocqueville | Emphasized goal of reforming prisons |
Reasons Why Industrialization took place in Britain | 1. extensive natural resources 2. expanding economy to support industrialization 3. large population of workers 4. Political stability |
First industry to be transformed | Textile Industry |
Effects of Transportation | 1. spurred industrial growth 2. created new jobs 3. boosted England's agri and fishing industries 4. made travel easier |
Elizabeth Gaskell | wrote Mary Barton -- accurate portrayal of urban life experienced by many at the time |
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