a. promoting democracy in European nations b. expanding and strengthening capitalism c. introducing new industrial techniques from Asia d. increasing the number of farms in Europe help please... i hate history
Social and Economic conditions in China and eastern Europe convinced many people to leave their nations and move to the United States in search of a better life. This multitudes added to the growing industrial workforce, helping factories to increase their production and furthering the demand for industrial products.
It started the Industrial revolution.
it changed by the land.
-In general, LEDCs are non-industrial nations. They tend not to have a base of manufacturing industries and residents are less economically advantaged. The majority of the world outside of Europe, the United States, Canada, South Africa, Israel, and Japan fall under this designation.-MEDCs are industrialised nations with large scale industry and a high gross-domestic-product rating. Citizens of these countries are usually economically well off with a small chance of starvation. They are also referred to as First World nations.
The two nations that competed for industrial dominance in Europe was Germany and Great Britain.
Germany and Great Britain
France and the United Kingdom.
Great Britain and Germany vied for the industrial domination of Europe in the late 19th century.
The industrial nations in Europe needed to expand their economies so as to improve trade between them and other continents. This is what was commonly referred to as imperialism.
In 1840 there were very few 'major industrial nations' in Europe. * Britain was easily the leading industrial country. * Belgium, though small, was industrializing fast at the time. * France (Possible candidates in Central Europe in 1840 might have included Saxony and Bohemia, but they had only just started to industrialize).
it started the Industrial Revolution.
There were nations in Europe that competed each other with supplying raw materials and provided markets for manufactured goods.
Southern Africa
east Africa
For most of the Early Modern Period in European History, Spain and England were rivals for primarily one reason: they, like all major nations in Europe at the time, were vying for greater glory and greater wealth alike. In a world seen as limited in its material resources, the accumulation of which was equivalent to political and economic dominance (as well as glory), nations with the means and will to do so engaged in often violent competition in order to achieve dominance.
where did te industrial revolution begain in europe