Industrialization - AP European History

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Question

During the Industrial Revolution, European cities grew exponentially. Which of the following was one major cause of this development?

Answer

During the Industrial Revolution, factories became a dominant feature in the economies of large cities. Rural villagers and townsmen left worsening agricultural prospects for new opportunities working in these factories, causing city populations to balloon.

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Question

The harsh working conditions of the Factory System in England during the Industrial Revolution led to __________.

Answer

Life for factory workers during the Industrial Revolution was grueling and extremely harsh. Many people worked six days a week, for fourteen hours a day, in cramped and unhealthy conditions for little pay. Work was dangerous, and if you were injured and unable to continue working you were given no compensation. From about 1830 onwards, the nineteenth century in Britain was defined by constant social and political reform. Working conditions were slowly improved, and political suffrage rights were expanded to more and more men.

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Question

Which of the following inventions was NOT developed in Britain during the eighteenth century?

Answer

The driving force of the Industrial Revolution's early years was the English textile manufacturing industry, which gained phenomenal success on the back of a number of innovations to the production methods used for textiles. Included among such British inventions were the spinning jenny, the water frame, the power loom, and the flying shuttle, all of which mechanized and sped up the process of weaving and producing cloth. The cotton gin, which sped along the process by which cotton was separated from its seeds, was an American invention of the 1790s.

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Question

All of these contributed to the Industrial Revolution occurring first in Great Britain EXCEPT for __________.

Answer

All of these reasons contributed to the emergence of the Industrial Revolution first in Great Britain. At the dawn of the nineteenth century, the British Empire extended around the globe, and British society had grown rich from its banking and trading policies. Furthermore, the British government enacted favorable policies that encouraged innovation in Britain by legally protecting inventions and patents. Additionally, Britain had plentiful reserves of coal and iron that were used to fuel the Industrial Revolution. Finally, the Agricultural Revolution of the eighteenth century had greatly reduced the number of people who needed to work the fields to support the population. This led to a rise in population and a surge in the number of workers who moved to the cities in search of employment.

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Question

During the Industrial Revolution, the Luddites were famous for __________.

Answer

In the initial years of the Industrial Revolution in England, many members of the working class were resistant to the widespread changes being wrought by the introduction of machine-driven production. Many unskilled and skilled workers alike feared for their livelihood and believed that factory conditions were much worse than the life they had previously enjoyed. The Luddites were nineteenth-century English textile workers who resisted the introduction of the factory system. Famously, they even physically attacked and destroyed machinery in many factories. The British government responded by enacting harsh laws against anybody found guilty of destroying industrial machinery and by engaging in show trials, executions, and penal deportations of those found guilty.

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Question

Which of these was a direct consequence of increased industrialization in Europe in the nineteenth century?

Answer

The movement towards industrialized and urban societies in nineteenth-century Europe led to a widespread increase in class conflict. The poor were forced by economic necessity to work long, arduous, and dangerous shifts to manufacture products that seemed only to make their living situations worse. This led, amongst other things, to the rise of Liberalism and Socialism in Europe.

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Question

Which of the following innovations was not part of the Second Industrial Revolution?

Answer

Bessemer steel was produced inexpensively from pig iron according to the principle of oxidation. The process was developed during the Second Industrial Revolution, which lasted from between the 1840s and 1860s to 1914. Oil, electricity and electrical communications, and production lines processes were developed during this period. The Newcomen steam engine was invented in 1712 and later refined into the Watt steam engine, which inaugurated the First Industrial Revolution from 1760 to 1840.

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Question

The construction of a ship canal in the late nineteenth century led to the emergence of __________ as a major port city of Great Britain and contributed to the decline of __________.

Answer

For much of the nineteenth century, Manchester and Liverpool were both major centers of the Industrial Revolution; however, Manchester was thirty miles inland and companies in Liverpool controlled the access to raw resources that arrived via the port. In an attempt to overcome what they viewed as excessive charges, the companies of Manchester sought to build the Manchester Ship Canal to allow goods to be transported directly to Manchester, bypassing the city of Liverpool. The canal was completed in 1894 and led almost immediately to the rise of Manchester and the decline of Liverpool as industrial and economic powerhouses.

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Question

Which of these industries was the first to be revolutionized by the Industrial Revolution?

Answer

The farming industry had already been revolutionized by the Agricultural Revolution in the eighteenth century, so the first industry to be revolutionized by the Industrial Revolution was the textile industry. Prior to the Industrial Revolution, textiles were extremely laborious and inefficient (by our standards) to produce and were primarily manufactured by family units called “cottage industries”; however, with the introduction of machinery, the production of textiles skyrocketed.

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Question

German steel production exceeded that of Britain by __________.

Answer

The Industrial Revolution, as you likely know, began in Great Britain at the dawn of the nineteenth century; however, it was relatively slow to take hold in Germany (apart from Prussia) due to the disunified nature of the German-speaking world until Prussian-led German Unification in 1871. Following unification, the German government embarked on a massive project of economic and industrial overhaul that led to the German Industrial Revolution, particularly in the production of steel, which surpassed the British production of steel by the turn of the twentieth century. Germany and the United States would be the dominant industrial powers of the early twentieth century.

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Question

The Combination Acts concerned __________.

Answer

The original Combination Acts were passed in Great Britain in 1799 and 1800 to prohibit workers from forming unions and to prevent workers from striking at a time when the British government was engaged in war. The Acts were repealed in 1824, but a series of debilitating strikes followed, and the British government reinstated the policy the following year. The primary goal of the acts was to prohibit the formation of unions and to limit the ability of workers to campaign collectively for better wages and treatment through coordinated strikes.

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Question

Which of these European nations was the second to begin industrializing its economy after Great Britain?

Answer

The Industrial Revolution began in Great Britain, but by 1807, a British entrepreneur named William Cockerill had created a textile-machine-manufacturing business in Belgium that helped spread the Industrial Revolution first around Belgium, then to France, and finally around the European continent. Cockerill was particularly important because at the time, Britain was engaged in a war with Napoleonic France and most of Europe was cut off from British industrial production and innovation.

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Question

The process of industrialization reshaped the production of which of the following goods first?

Answer

The first great wave of industrialization in the eighteenth century focused on the production of textiles. Technological improvements such as the flying shuttle and spinning jenny greatly improved productivity in textiles. These technological improvements also led to the replacement of the artisanal putting-out system with the centralized factory system of production. This process of factories coming to replaced artisans would come to be a defining characteristic of industrialization.

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Question

Prior to the industrial revolution, an artisan would make goods to sell to the population, usually with the help of an apprentice. What was the system of the Industrial Revolution which would allow many workers to produce goods at a much faster rate by giving them simpler, repetitive tasks?

Answer

Division of Labor would allow for the construction of assembly lines, in which many unskilled workers would specialize in a very small part of a task to produce goods, like gluing a sole onto a shoe. This would replace the old system in which one craftsman would make, to keep with our example, an entire pair of shoes by hand.

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Question

Which new military technology created by far the greatest number of casualties during the First World War?

Answer

Artillery accounted for close to sixty percent of all battlefield casualties during the First World War. The mass production of large, cheap ammunition made it possible for a besieging force to bombard a fixed position for weeks at a time, without stopping.

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Question

Industrialization in Europe involved all of the following except ___________.

Answer

The Industrial Revolution did not end the need for agriculture. In fact, in most places in Europe during most of the nineteenth century, the majority of the population continued to work in agriculture.

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Question

All of the following were tensions caused by the Industrial Revolution except ___________.

Answer

The empire grew in importance during the Industrial Revolution as industrializing nations called on the empire to produce the raw materials needed to manufacture goods. All of the other answers describe tensions that existed during the period.

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Question

England was able to industrialize before other Western European states for all of the following reasons except _____________.

Answer

All of the "incorrect" answers were actual factors that were important in making England uniquely situated to industrialize before other states. Kings George I and George IV had no known technical genius.

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Question

The cotton mill factories developed during the 18th and early 19th century originally grew out of the ____________ region of England.

Answer

The earliest mills were concentrated in Lancashire and in Manchester in Northeast England. The Northeast remained the industrial capital of England for a long time thereafter.

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Question

The harsh working conditions of the Factory System in England during the Industrial Revolution led to __________.

Answer

Life for factory workers during the Industrial Revolution was grueling and extremely harsh. Many people worked six days a week, for fourteen hours a day, in cramped and unhealthy conditions for little pay. Work was dangerous, and if you were injured and unable to continue working you were given no compensation. From about 1830 onwards, the nineteenth century in Britain was defined by constant social and political reform. Working conditions were slowly improved, and political suffrage rights were expanded to more and more men.

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