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THE DIPLOMACY OF GREAT POWER RIVALRY THE ORIGINS OF THE FIRST WORLD WAR 1870-1914

THE DIPLOMACY OF GREAT POWER RIVALRY

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THE DIPLOMACY OF GREAT POWER RIVALRY. THE ORIGINS OF THE FIRST WORLD WAR 1870-1914. OUTLINE. 1- Europe in the World: 1870-1914 2- Nationalisms and internationalisms 3-The evolution of war in the early 20 th century - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: THE DIPLOMACY OF GREAT POWER RIVALRY

THE DIPLOMACY OF GREAT POWER RIVALRY

THE ORIGINS OF THE FIRST WORLD WAR1870-1914

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OUTLINE1- Europe in the World: 1870-19142- Nationalisms and internationalisms3-The evolution of war in the early 20th century4- The souvenir of 1870, Alsace-Lorraine and revenge: Franco-German relations until 19145- Economic and colonial rivalries6- The evolution of international relations: 1905-19147- Balkan entanglements8-Assassination in Sarajevo: the march to war

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BOOKS OF INTEREST

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THE DOMINATION OF EUROPE

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THE 19TH CENTURY: THE FIRST GOLDEN AGE OF GLOBALIZATION

The Industrial Revolution:

acceleration of globalization

The impact of new

technologies

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THE RIGHTS OF MAN AND DEMOCRACY

Equality between men

The people is sovereign

=

THE BIRTH OF MODERN DEMOCRACY

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THE EVOLUTION OF WARFARE

The end of dynastic conflicts

New technological innovations - The American Civil War (1861-1865)

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EUROPEAN EXPANSIONISMIncreased technological gap Europe-Non

European societies

Europe’s expansionism accelerates in the 19th century

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THE ORIGIN OF SPECIES

Jean-Baptiste de LamarckDarwin

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EVOLUTION BY NATURAL SELECTION

A common universal ancestor

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SOCIAL DARWINISM

Herbert Spencer

The survival of the fittest

in society

Little to no government interference

EACH PERSON CONTROLS HIS OR HER ECONOMIC DESTINY

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JOHN D. ROCKEFELLER

“The growth of large corporation

is merely a survival of the

fittest, the working out of a

law of nature and a law of God.”

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“A CLASH OF CIVILIZATIONS”

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THE FAR EASTTwo powerful states: China & Japan

China (the Middle-Kingdom): One of the largest empires on the planet

Strong political and administrative

centralization (30,000 imperial bureaucrats)

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THE DECLINE OF CHINAThe First Opium War (1839-1842) and the

Treaty of Nanking: British economic penetration in China + Hong Kong

Political anarchy = Treaty of Tientsin (1858) and increased European economic penetration

1860: the Franco-British expedition

Permanent European embassies in China

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THE “SCRAMBLE FOR CHINA”

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THE CONFERENCE OF BERLIN (1885)

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AFRICA COLONIZED

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THE BRITISH EMPIRE IN 1914

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JAPAN’S RESPONSE TO WESTERN COLONIZATION

The Meiji era (1868-1912)

Traditional Japanese values such as honor and sacrifice were put to the new Japan’s

service Systematic imitation of foreign traditions

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A REACTION TO THE ‘WESTERN THREAT’

Fukuzawa Yukichi

European-style military instruction

The learning of English

Diplomatic missions to the U.S. and

EuropeThe assimilation of Western technologies

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THE RISE OF JAPAN’S EXPANSIONISM

The Russo-Japanese War

(1904-1905): the first major military victory

of an Asian power over a European

nation

Korea colonized (1910)

COLLISION COURSE WITH THE UNITED

STATES

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THE UNITED STATES AND THE MONROE DOCTRINE (1823)

“the American continents, by the free and independent condition which they have

assumed and maintain, are henceforth not to be considered as subjects for future colonization by

any European powers.”

1861-1866: No to the French expedition to Mexico

From continental to global expansion

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THE TREATY OF PARIS (1898)

1- The “independence” of Cuba

2- The Philippines, Puerto Rican and Guam granted to the U.S. in return for a $20 million

payment to Spain

The U.S. had already annexed Wake Island and Hawaii

INTENSE DEBATE: EXPANSIONISTS vs. ISOLATIONISTS

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ECONOMIC CONSIDERATIONS

The end of the frontier (1890) = the need to find new markets for American goods

The Chinese market: 400 million consumers

Intense lobbying: the American China Development Company

The Philippines: a door to China

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THE FIRST “OPEN DOOR NOTE” (1898)

Secretary of State - John Hay

1- China’s territorial integrity MUST be

respected 2- European powers

MUST permit free trade ports in their

spheres of influence

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1900: THE BOXER REBELLION

China’s weakened state = deep resentment among Chinese

Foreign intervention

Expansion of existing spheres of

influenceThe Second Open

Door NoteAn American

sphere of influence

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“MANIFEST DESTINY”A key global role for the U.S.

The rise of jingoism (nationalism + racism): the superiority of the “Anglo-Saxon

race”

To bring freedom, democracy and progress to “inferior” races – The “White Man’s

Burden”

AMERICAN EXCEPTIONALISM

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Ms. Columbia’s School House

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THE DECLINE OF THE OTTOMAN EMPIRE

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A CONSTITUTIONAL REVOLUTION IN IRAN (1905-1906)

A constitutional monarchy

BUT

1907: Great Britain and Russia agreed on

a possible dismemberment of

Iran

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THE “TITANIC SYNDROME”