Industrial Revolution
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | Date: 2008
Industrial Revolution term usually applied to the social and economic changes that mark the transition from a stable agricultural and commercial society to a modern industrial society relying on complex machinery rather than tools. It is used historically to refer primarily to the period in British history from the middle of the 18th cent. to the middle of the 19th cent.
Nature of the Industrial Revolution
There has been much objection to the term because the word revolution suggests sudden, violent, unparalleled change, whereas the transformation was, to a great extent, gradual. Some historians argue that the 13th and 16th cent. were also periods of revolutionary economic change. However, in view of the magnitude of change between 1750 and 1850, the term seems useful.
Dramatic changes in the social and economic structure took place as inventions and technological innovations created the factory system of large-scale machine production and greater economic specialization, and as the laboring population, formerly employed predominantly in agriculture (in which production had also increased as a result of technological improvements), increasingly gathered in great urban factory centers. The same process occurred at later times and in changed tempo in other countries.
The Industrial Revolution in Great Britain
The ground was prepared by the voyages of discovery from Western Europe in the 15th and 16th cent., which led to a vast influx of precious metals from the New World, raising prices, stimulating industry, and fostering a money economy. Expansion of trade and the money economy stimulated the development of new institutions of finance and credit (see commercial revolution ). In the 17th cent. the Dutch were in the forefront financially, but with the establishment (1694) of the Bank of England, their supremacy was effectively challenged. Capitalism appeared on a large scale, and a new type of commercial entrepreneur developed from the old class of merchant adventurers. Many machines were already known, and there were sizable factories using them, but these were the exceptions rather than the rule. Wood was the only fuel, water and wind the power of these early factories.
As the 18th cent. began, an expanding and wealthier population demanded more and better goods. In the productive process, coal came to replace wood. Early-model steam engines were introduced to drain water and raise coal from the mines. The crucial development of the Industrial Revolution was the use of steam for power, and the greatly improved engine (1769) of James Watt marked the high point in this development. Cotton textiles was the key industry early in the Industrial Revolution. John Kay's fly shuttle (1733), James Hargreaves's spinning jenny (patented 1770), Richard Arkwright's water frame (1769), Samuel Crompton's mule (1779), which combined the features of the jenny and the frame, and Edmund Cartwright's power loom (patented 1783) facilitated a tremendous increase in output. The presence of large quantities of coal and iron in close proximity in Britain was a decisive factor in its rapid industrial growth.
The use of coke in iron production had far-reaching effects. The coal mines from the early 1700s had become paramount in importance, and the Black Country appeared in England at the same time that Lancashire and Yorkshire were being transformed into the greatest textile centers of the world. Factories and industrial towns sprang up. Canals and roads were built, and the advent of the railroad and the steamship widened the market for manufactured goods. The Bessemer process made a gigantic contribution, for it was largely responsible for the extension of the use of steam and steel that were the two chief features of industry in the middle of the 19th cent. Chemical innovations and, most important of all, perhaps, machines for making machines played an important part in the vast changes.
The Industrial Revolution did not in fact end in Britain in the mid-1800s. New periods came in with electricity and the gasoline engine. By 1850, however, the transformation wrought by the revolution was accomplished, in that industry had become a dominant factor in the nation's life.
The Worldwide Revolution
France had in the 17th and most of the 18th cent. kept pace with Britain, but it later lagged behind in industrial development, and the British victory in their long-standing commercial rivalry kept markets away from France. The revolution did not make the rapid progress that it did in Britain, but after 1830 it developed steadily. The railroad and improved transportation preceded the introduction of the revolution into Germany, which is conventionally said to have accompanied the formation of the Zollverein ; industrial Germany was created after 1850.
The United States made some contributions to the early revolution, notably the cotton gin (1793) of Eli Whitney . But the transformation of the United States into an industrial nation took place largely after the Civil War and on the British model. The textile mills of New England had long been in existence, but the boom period of industrial organization was from 1860 to 1890. The Industrial Revolution was introduced by Europeans into Asia, and the last years of the 19th and the early years of the 20th cent. saw the development of industries in India, China, and Japan. However, Japan is the only country of E Asia that may be said to have had a real Industrial Revolution. The Russian Revolution had as a basic aim the introduction of industrialism.
Its Effects
The Industrial Revolution has changed the face of nations, giving rise to urban centers requiring vast municipal services. It created a specialized and interdependent economic life and made the urban worker more completely dependent on the will of the employer than the rural worker had been. Relations between capital and labor were aggravated, and Marxism was one product of this unrest. Doctrines of laissez-faire , developed in the writings of Adam Smith and David Ricardo , sought to maximize the use of new productive facilities. But the revolution also brought a need for a new type of state intervention to protect the laborer and to provide necessary services. Laissez faire gradually gave way in the United States, Britain, and elsewhere to welfare capitalism. The economic theories of John Maynard Keynes reflected this change. The Industrial Revolution also provided the economic base for the rise of the professions, population expansion, and improvement in living standards and remains a primary goal of less developed nations.
Bibliography
See F. C. Dietz, The Industrial Revolution (1927, repr. 1973); T. S. Ashton, The Industrial Revolution (1948); W. O. Henderson, The Industrialization of Europe, 1780-1914 (1969); R. M. Hartwell, The Industrial Revolution and Economic Growth (1971); J. W. Osborne, The Silent Revolution: The Industrial Revolution in England as a Source of Cultural Change (1970); P. N. Stearns, The Impact of the Industrial Revolution (1972); B. Bracegirdle et al., The Archaeology of the Industrial Revolution (1973).
Author not available, INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION.,
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition 2008
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press
Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research
|
A myth shattered: Mises, Hayek, and the industrial revolution
Ideas on Liberty; 11/1/2001; Woods, Thomas E Jr; 1658 words
; The standard view of the Industrial Revolution among the general public is that it led to the widespread impoverishment of people who had hitherto been enjoying lives of joy and abundance. For at least the past several decades, however, alternative interpretations of this critical period have grown
Read more
|
|
The Industrial Revolution
New Straits Times; 8/28/2001; Compiled by Shareem Amry; 936 words
; Compiled by Shareem Amry New Straits Times 08-28-2001 The Industrial Revolution Byline: Compiled by Shareem Amry Edition: 2* Column: Web sights Memo: Form Two history. AS part of their studies on Malaysia while the country was under British colonial rule, Form Two students also look at how certain
Read more
|
|
The Industrial Revolution in Comparative Perspective.(Review)
Business History; 7/1/2001; TIMMINS, GEOFF; 742 words
; CHRISTINE RIDER and MICHAEL THOMPSON (eds The Industrial Revolution in Comparative Perspective (Malabar, FL: Krieger Publishing Company, 2000. Pp.x + 268. P/back ISBN 0 89464 990 6, $24.50). This book is part of the publisher's Open Forum series, which is written with a general as well as an
Read more
|
|
A Farewell to Alms Darwin and the Industrial Revolution
International Herald Tribune; 12/8/2007; Benjamin M. Friedman The New York Times Media Group; 1131 words
; Benjamin M. Friedman The New York Times Media Group International Herald Tribune 12-08-2007 A Farewell to Alms Darwin and the Industrial Revolution Byline: Benjamin M. Friedman The New York Times Media Group Edition: 1 Section: FEATURES A Farewell to Alms A Brief Economic History of the World By
Read more
|
|
Are we living in the middle of an Industrial Revolution?
Economic Review (Kansas City); 3/22/1997; Mokyr, Joel; 7459 words
; I am an economic historian, part economist and part historian. To some, economists are funny. Historians do not appear to be as funny as economists. But at times one can find a good characterization of what historians do. A good metaphor of what economic history is about is contained in a nice
Read more
|
|
Industrial Revolution in the spotlight.(Features)
The Journal (Newcastle, England); 9/23/2003; 209 words
; To celebrate Britain's industrial heritage, BBC Learning will be co-ordinating events across the country to enable viewers to find out more about the Industrial Revolution and vote for their favourite industrial wonder. They link to the BBC TV programme What The Industrial Revolution Did For Us,
Read more
|
|
Monday Book: Can corporate America save the planet? Natural Capitalism: the Next Industrial Revolution by Paul Hawken, Amory B Lovins and L Hunter Lovins (Earthscan, pounds 18.99)
The Independent - London; 10/18/1999; David Goldblatt; 666 words
; AMERICA POSES a paradox for environmentalists. It has the oldest and most powerful environmental movement, and yet provides it with the most unpromising political territory on which to operate. The US economy is, by some way, the most profligate environmental juggernaut on the planet, generating 25
Read more
|
|
Industrial Revolution in America; communications, agriculture and meatpacking, overview/comparison; vs.7-9.(Brief Article)(Book Review)
Reference & Research Book News; 11/1/2007; 209 words
; ... the effects of the Industrial Revolution on iron and steel, railroads, steam shipping, textiles, mining and petroleum, automobiles, agriculture and meatpacking and communications. Includes full citations. ([c]20072005 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR)
Read more
|
|
Industrial revolution: modern art.(New Names to Watch)(Brief Article)
HFN The Weekly Newspaper for the Home Furnishing Network; 5/13/1996; Johnson, Sarah; 252 words
; LOS ANGELES-- What we do is influenced by art, said Nancy Kent, co-owner and designer of Industrial Revolution, a five-year-old company that makes vinyl shower curtains with designs from whimsical to wild. Kent and her husband, Claude, are no strangers to art. Before entering the world of
Read more
|
|
Industrial revolution in America; 3v.(Brief Article)(Book Review)
Reference & Research Book News; 2/1/2007; 169 words
; ... entrepreneurs and companies, lives of the workforce, labor organizations and reform movements, environmental impact, immigration's impact, societal impact, Gilded Age art and literature, and the Modern Era. ([c]20072005 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR)
Read more
|
Related entries from encyclopedias, dictionaries, and thesauruses
|
Industrial Revolution, The
A Dictionary of Sociology
Industrial Revolution, The This term is used to refer ... precise characteristics of the Industrial Revolution, but broadly speaking it defines ... the phrase ‘Second Industrial Revolution’ is sometimes used to ...
Read more
|
|
Industrial Revolution
World Encyclopedia
Industrial Revolution Social and economic transformation ... into industrial societies. The Industrial Revolution began in Britain in the 18th ... Agricultural Revolution , preceded the Industrial Revolution. The inventions of Richard ...
Read more
|
|
Second Industrial Revolution
A Dictionary of Sociology
Second Industrial Revolution See INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION .
Read more
|
|
Revolution
Encyclopedia of American Foreign Policy
... nation's growing industrial might made the ... allow for the free movement of people ... run. This was a revolutionary vision that ... institutions with free markets, personal ... numerous competing revolutionary models. These ... 1900), the anti-industrialism of peasant activists ... Prosperous ...
Read more
|
|
Russian Revolution
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
... czarist government. Causes The revolution was the culmination of a long ... politically radical and even revolutionary. The university became a seat of revolutionary activity; nihilism , anarchism ... of ) and opened the way for industrial development. However, emancipation ... incorporated into the ...
Read more
|