Social Sciences, asked by meghakatiyar1, 1 year ago

notes to chapter the age of industrialisation ..of history class 10

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Answered by shanmugavidhya321
18

Answer:

Explanation:

Before the Industrial Revolution

• Proto-industrialisation was a phase when there was large-scale industrial production for an international market which was not based on factories.

• Proto-industrial system was part of a network of commercial exchanges.

The Coming Up of the Factory

• By the 1730s, the earliest factories in England came up.

• The first symbol of the new era was cotton.

→ A series of inventions in the eighteenth century increased the efficacy of each step of the production process.

• Richard Arkwright created the cotton mill.

The Pace of Industrial Change

How rapid was the process of industrialisation?

• The most dynamic industries in Britain were clearly cotton and metals.

• The new industries could not easily displace traditional industries.

• Technological changes occurred slowly because:

→ The New technology was expensive.

→ The machines often broke down and repair was costly.

→ They were not as effective as their inventors and manufacturers claimed.

Hand Labour and Steam Power

• In Victorian Britain, there was no shortage of human labour.

• Therefore, industrialists did not want to introduce machines which required large capital investment.

• Many seasonal industries were also there who usually preferred hand labour.

• Handmade goods came to symbolize refinement and class

Life of the Workers

• Labours were available in abundance in the market which affected the lives of workers.

• After the busy season was over, workers became jobless.

• In the early nineteenth century, wages increased but the prices of goods also increased.

Industrialisation in the Colonies

The Age of Indian Textiles

• Before the age of machine industries, silk and cotton goods from India dominated the international market in textiles.

• A vibrant sea trade operated through the main pre-colonial ports.

What Happened to Weavers?

• After the East India Company established political power, they tried to eliminate the existing traders and brokers and establish a more direct control over the weaver.

• It appointed a paid servant called the gomastha to supervise weavers, collect supplies, and examine the quality of cloth.

→ Loans were provided for purchasing raw material for production.

→ The produced cloth was to be handed over to the gomastha.

• In many weaving villages there were reports of clashes between weavers and gomasthas because:

→ The new gomasthas were outsiders, with no long-term social link with the village.

→ The price weavers received from the Company was miserably low.

Manchester Comes to India

• As cotton industries developed in England, industrial groups pressurised the government to impose import duties on cotton textiles so that Manchester goods could sell in Britain without competition.

• Also, they persuaded the East India Company to sell British manufactures in Indian markets as well.

• Thus, cotton weavers in India faced two problems at the same time:

→ Their export market collapsed as market overloaded with Manchester imports.

→ Availability of lower cost cotton goods produced by machines.

• By the end of the nineteenth century, factories in India began production, flooding the market with machine-made goods which created a problem of weavers.

Factories Come Up

• In 1854, the first cotton mill in Bombay came up.

• In 1855, first jute mill in Bengal came up.

• By 1862, four cotton mills came up.

• In 1862, another jute mill came up.

• In the 1860s, the Elgin mill was started in Kanpur

• In 1861, the first cotton mill of Ahmadabad was set up.

• In 1874, the first spinning and weaving mill of Madras began production.

The Early Entrepreneurs

• In Bengal, Dwarkanath Tagore made his fortune in the China trade.

• In Bombay, Parsis like Dinshaw Petit and Jamsetjee Nusserwanjee Tata who built huge industrial empires in India.

• After colonial power came in power, Indian businessmen were barred from trading with Europe in manufactured goods.

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