6.7.2

The Brutality of Empire

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The Brutality of Empire

The British Empire is often criticised for the brutality of some of its policies and for the hardship that it inflicted on those living in some of its colonies.

Cash crops

Cash crops

  • In India, the British encouraged farmers to grow ‘cash crops’ which could be exported for a large profit.
    • E.g. cotton and tea.
  • These were grown rather than crops for food.
Famine

Famine

  • While this policy brought great wealth to the Empire in the form of trade, it caused several devastating famines in India.
  • One famine in 1769 killed roughly ten million Indians.
Opium

Opium

  • The British also encouraged Indian farmers to grow opium (the plants used to make the drug heroin).
  • They exported large amounts of this to China even though the Chinese Emperor had warned the British not to do so.
  • The trade led to widespread opium addiction in China, and the British went to war with China in 1839 to ensure they could continue this harmful trade (the Opium War).
Gold

Gold

  • When gold was discovered in the Boer state of Transvaal next to Cape Colony (which was controlled by the British), the British went to war against the Boers, in order to try and extend their power over Transvaal.
  • The Boer Wars were brutal for the Boer settlers and the native Africans.
  • The British used a scorched earth policy to burn their crops, killed their cattle, and destroyed Boer villages.
The Boer Wars

The Boer Wars

  • Thousands of people lost their homes and were housed in concentration camps that the British established.
  • Conditions in these camps were appalling, and caused the deaths of around 12,000 Africans and 25,000 Boers.
  • These are just a few examples of some of the harsh and brutal policies employed by the British in order to extend their power and control and maximise profits from the empire.
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1

Empires East & West: 1000 AD

1.1

The Rise & Fall of Ancient China’s Empire

1.2

The Medieval Greatness of the Byzantine Empire

1.3

The Golden Age of the Islamic Empire

1.4

The Politics & Power of the Holy Roman Empire

1.5

Medieval Religion

1.6

The Influence of the Church in Medieval Times

1.7

How Religion Tested the Power of Kings

1.8

Dynastic Challenges to Medieval Monarchs

1.9

Challenges to Medieval Monarchs

1.10

Revolts, Rebellions & Rights

1.11

Medieval England & Her Neighbours

1.12

European Renaissance

1.13

Norman Conquest & Control

1.14

Historical Skills

2

The Medieval World: 450-1450 AD

2.1

Anglo-Saxon England

2.2

The Contest for the English Throne

2.3

Conquering the Holy Land, 10-96-1396 AD

2.4

King John

2.5

The Magna Carta & Parliament

2.6

The Black Death

3

Worldviews

4

The Empire of Mali: 1076-1670 AD

5

The Renaissance & Reformations: 1500-1598 AD

6

The British Empire: 1583-1960 AD

7

The Peasants' Revolt: 1381 AD

8

Religion in the Middle Ages

9

Slavery: 1619-1833 AD

10

The English Civil War: 1642-1660 AD

11

The Industrial Revolution: 1750-1840 AD

12

US Independence: 1775-1783 AD

13

The French Revolution: 1789-1815 AD

14

The British Empire: 1857–1930 AD

15

Suffrage: 1840-1928 AD

16

World War 1: 1914-1918 AD

17

The Russian Revolution: 1917 AD

18

The Inter-War Years: 1919-1939 AD

19

World War 2: 1939-1945 AD

20

The Cold War: 1947-1962 AD

21

Civil Rights in the USA: 1954-1975 AD

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