India
The British began to dominate India when the French
stopped. The French had to withdraw their troops from the sub-continent to
fight another war, you may have heard of it... The French and Indian War. As
the nineteenth century progressed, so did the British control over India. After
the "Sepoy Rebellion" of 1857, the British East India Company was
replaced by a formal government. In 1877, Queen Victoria was names the Empress
of India by Prime Minister Disraeli. Now, even though things may seem bad for
India, bear in mind that the country still remained whole, ruled by one
government. China on the other hand was not so lucky...
Mostly
British, not bad India... not bad.
China
Anyone remember the Open Door Policy? Secretary of State,
John Hay dispatched his 'Open Door Note' to the European countries allowing
them to grab their slice of China. The motion passed by the McKinley
administration yielded disastrous results for the Chinese. The once empire was
sliced like a pizza, and everyone who wanted a slice could take one. Great Britain
was the first to take a piece, by establishing their informal empire. France
was next with their control over Indochina and it's rubber plantations. China
was unfortunately sliced, diced, and minced during this era. New imperialism was a very bad occurrence for
China.
Japan
Japan luckily evaded invasion from the European nations.
Japan mimicked the economies of both Great Britain and Germany, allowing them
to become an industrial power. The country then managed to gain control of
Korea after the Russo-Japanese War. Japan saw what happened to China and acted before the Europeans could imperialize...
See? All one color. Good job Japan.
And I'm not saying this question is going to be
on the test... but it is totally going to be on the test. "Japan was
an empire, China was sliced and diced, Britain took over India entirely. How
did these situations play out in these countries? What were the lasting results
of Imperialism?"
Just a little refresher from our friends...