Causes
Methods
Key Events
Ideologies
Impacts
100

The process of extending control over other regions.

Imperialism

100

Taking control of a territory by force.

Colonisation.

100

This conference divided Africa among European powers.

Berlin Conference

100

The belief that stronger nations dominate weaker ones.

Social Darwinism

100

Identify one resource taken from colonies.

Rubber, gold, ivory, oil, sugar, etc.

200

One economic reason for imperialism.

Raw materials, markets, or profits

200

One method used to control colonies.

Military force, treaties, indirect rule, administration.

200

This empire controlled India.

British Empire

200

The idea of civilising other societies.

White Man's Burden

200

Name one benefit for Europe.

Wealth, trade expansion, power, prestige.

300

Industrialisation encouraged imperialism because of this need.

Need for raw materials and new markets

300

One reason military power supported imperialism.

Allowed enforcement of control and suppression of resistance.

300

This period saw rapid European expansion into Africa.

Scramble for Africa

300

National pride linked to empire.

Nationalism
300

Identify one negative impact on colonised peoples.

Exploitation, loss of land, cultural disruption

400

Explain THREE motivations for imperialism.

Economic gain, political power, nationalism, religion, strategic advantage.

400

Explain how military power supported imperialism.

European armies/navies enforced control, defeated resistance, and protected trade routes.

400

Explain why Africa was targeted.

Resources, markets, strategic locations, and weak resistance.

400

Explain how ideology justified imperialism.

Europeans believed they were culturally superior and had a duty to civilise others

400

Identify a consequence of imperialism for Africa/Asia.

Economic exploitation, political instability, cultural change, resistance movements

500

What was the main cause of imperialism (economic or political)?

Justify either position with evidence.

500

Was imperialism mainly economic or political?

Justify using evidence from industrial demand, nationalism, and strategic competition.

500

Impact of imperialism on colonised societies.

Loss of sovereignty, exploitation, cultural change, resistance movements, infrastructure development (uneven benefits).

500

Was imperialism justified at the time?

Argue using perspectives, ethics, and historical context.

500

Make an overall judgement of imperialism.

Balanced evaluation of benefits vs harm; most historians argue harm outweighed benefits for colonised peoples