Roots of Imperialism
Africa & Resistance
India: The "Jewel"
China & The West
Japan's Rise
100

The policy in which a strong nation seeks to dominate other countries politically, economically, or socially.

Imperialism

100

This Belgian King personally controlled the Congo and was known for the brutal treatment of its people.

King Leopold II

100

 The nickname given to India because it was the most valuable of all British colonies.

"Jewel in the Crown"

100

This addictive product was smuggled into China by the British to create a favorable balance of trade.

Opium

100

The military dictatorship that ruled Japan before the Meiji Era began.

Tokugawa Shogunate

200

This 1884–1885 meeting of 14 European nations laid down rules for the division of Africa.

Berlin Conference

200

The term for the frantic competition among European powers to claim African territory.

Scramble for Africa

200

Indian soldiers who served in the British East India Company's army.

Sepoy

200

The 1900 revolt where Chinese nationalists attacked foreigners and Christians in Beijing.

Boxer Rebellion

200

This era, meaning "Enlightened Rule," saw Japan rapidly modernize and industrialize.

Meiji Era

300

The belief that one race is superior to others, often used by Europeans to justify their expansion.

Racism

300

This type of imperialism involves a territory governed internally by a foreign power.

 Colony

300

The British rule over India from 1757 until 1947.

Raj

300

The U.S. policy that proposed China's "doors" be open to merchants of all nations.

Sphere of Influence

300

The 1854 agreement that opened two Japanese ports to U.S. ships.

Treaty of Kanagawa

400

This social theory applied Charles Darwin's ideas about "survival of the fittest" to human societies.

Social Darwinism

400

He was the Emperor of Ethiopia who successfully defeated the Italians and maintained his country's independence.

Menelik II

400

This 1857 uprising began after rumors spread that rifle cartridges were greased with beef and pork fat.

Sepoy Mutiny / Rebellion

400

The U.S. policy that proposed China's "doors" be open to merchants of all nations.

Open Door Notes

400

Japan became the first Asian nation to defeat a European power in this 1904–1905 conflict.

Russo-Japanese War

500

The title of Rudyard Kipling’s poem that suggested Europeans had a moral obligation to "civilize" non-whites.

White Man’s Burden

500

A policy in which a nation forces or encourages a subject people to adopt its institutions and customs.

Assimilation

500

As a result of the Sepoy Mutiny, the British government took this type of control over India (shifting away from company rule).

Direct Rule (The Raj)

500

These "rights" exempted foreigners from Chinese law at several Chinese ports.

Extraterritorial Rights

500

The act of adding a territory to an existing political unit, which Japan did to Korea in 1910.

Annexation

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