The slave trade on the Indian Ocean has been called the "East African Slave Trade" and the "Arab Slave Trade" for so long that it hides the extent to which it was also a European slave trade. When the slave trade from East Africa was at its height in the eighteenth century and in ...
When the slave trade from East Africa was at its height in the eighteenth century and in the early nineteenth century, the destination of most captives was the European-owned plantation economies of Mauritius, Reunion, and Seychelles -- as well as the Americas, via the Cape of Good Hope(...
What was the effect of Manifest Destiny? How did Manifest Destiny affect slavery? How was European imperialism similar in India and Africa? How did Manifest Destiny change demographic patterns? How did imperialism affect the United States?
How was New Imperialism justified? European Imperialism European nations embarked on journeys to built global empires at two different points in history. The first was began with the discovery of the New World, and the second began in the late 19th century with the colonization of Africa. ...
However, others have taken a more skeptical view (McCarthy, 2017; McCarthy et al., 2018; Busscher et al., 2018; Manyara and Jones, 2007; Southgate, 2006; Kashwan et al., 2021), arguing that it mostly serves the needs of Western and patriarchal imperialism to subjugate marginalized ...
One example was the Critical Resemblances House, which was constructed as part of the Japanese park. In the accompanying text, Arakawa and Gins delighted in the fact that "it could take hours to go from the living room to the kitchen" and that it might "take several days to find ...
How could Israel’s world-famous intelligence services fail to detect an operation of this magnitude that had been in preparation for years? Where was the formidable IDF during this fateful day? On 6 October 1973, Israeli aircraft were bombing the invading Egyptian forces along the Suez Canal ...
Recently, I was talking with a colleague at work, and I mentioned that civilizations usually only last 500 years. The only problem was that I couldn't remember where I had heard that. In fact, I wasn't all that sure that I was right. I know that the Roman Empire lasted roughly 500...
See Saul Dubow, ‘How British was the British World? The Case of South Africa’, Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History , 37, 1 (2009), pp. 1–27; Douglas Cole, ‘The problem of “Nationalism” and “Imperialism” in British Settlement Colonies’, Journal of British Studies , 10...
Ch 29. GACE History: Imperialism Ch 30. GACE History: World War I Ch 31. GACE History: World War II Ch 32. GACE History: The Cold War Era Ch 33. GACE History: Spreading Democracy... Ch 34. GACE History: Europe & the United... Ch 35. GACE History: Africa & the Middle East.....