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How did the Industrial Revolution cut into the political power of the upper classes?A.Middle-class professionals demanded a voice in government.
Answer this question… It divided society into a greater number of social classes.
Trade unions.
There was a clear distinction in the types of jobs done by people from different social classes.
the social and economic changes from the industrial revolution contributed to the spread of liberalism because it gave the lower classes more clout (and thus more liberalism) within the society.
New social classes emerged due to urbanization during the industrial revolution.
The growth of the middle class contributed most to the growing gap between social classes during the Industrial Revolution.There many things which contributed to the growing gap between social classes during the industrial revolution. The most contributor was inequality in income and wealth distribution.The advent of the Industrial Revolution added a wealthy burgeoning Middle Class to the social structure. These were the capitalists who became wealthy from the industrial revolution. However, while the Middle Class and aristocrats flourished, the poor got even poorer and the gap between rich and poor widened even more.
The traditional interpretation of why the French Revolution started is due to political conflicts between the classes. Other reasons include an ineffective leader and economic struggles.
How did the Industrial Revolution cut into the political power of the upper classes?A.Middle-class professionals demanded a voice in government.
Answer this question… An increase in both low-skilled manufacturing jobs and high-skilled middle-class jobs
Answer this question… It divided society into a greater number of social classes.
The Industrial Revolution helped to create a powerful middle class. It did not exist before that.
the black death
Trade unions.
Middle-class professionals demanded a voice in a government
Middle-class professionals demanded a voice in government.
The industrial revolution led to changes in Cotton production, The Coal and Iron Industry, Railroads, The New Factories, but most importantly, growth of cities and the emergency of two new social classes; THE INDUSTRIAL MIDDLE CLASS and THE INDUSTRIAL WORKING CLASS.