- published: 13 Jun 2014
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The 19th century (1 January 1801 – 31 December 1900) was the century marked by the collapse of the Spanish, First and Second French, Chinese,Holy Roman and Mughal empires. This paved the way for the growing influence of the British Empire, the Russian Empire, the United States, the German Empire, the Second French Colonial Empire and the Empire of Japan, with the British boasting unchallenged dominance after 1815. After the defeat of the French Empire and its allies in the Napoleonic Wars, the British and Russian empires expanded greatly, becoming the world's leading powers. The Russian Empire expanded in central and far eastern Asia. The British Empire grew rapidly in the first half of the century, especially with the expansion of vast territories in Canada, Australia, South Africa and heavily populated India, and in the last two decades of the century in Africa. By the end of the century, the British Empire controlled a fifth of the world's land and one quarter of the world's population. During the post Napoleonic era it enforced what became known as the Pax Britannica, which helped trade.
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This documentary, broadcast in 2001, examines the stories of three women whose lives and experiences helped shape new legislation and attitudes towards women in the 19th century. Uploaded for educational purposes only. Any advertising that appears is unbidden.
In which John Green teaches you about various reform movements in the 19th century United States. From Utopian societies to the Second Great Awakening to the Abolition movement, American society was undergoing great changes in the first half of the 19th century. Attempts at idealized societies popped up (and universally failed) at Utopia, OH, New Harmony, IN, Modern Times, NY, and many other places around the country. These utopians had a problem with mainstream society, and their answer was to withdraw into their own little worlds. Others didn't like the society they saw, and decided to try to change it. Relatively new protestant denominations like the Methodists and Baptists reached out to "the unchurched" during the Second Great Awakening, and membership in evangelical sects of Christia...
Street Life in London, published in 1876-7, consists of a series of articles by the radical journalist Adolphe Smith and the photographer John Thomson. The pieces are short but full of detail, based on interviews with a range of men and women who eked out a precarious and marginal existence working on the streets of London, including flower-sellers, chimney-sweeps, shoe-blacks, chair-caners, musicians, dustmen and locksmiths. The subject matter of Street Life was not new -- the second half of the 19th century saw an increasing interest in urban poverty and social conditions -- but the unique selling point of Street Life was a series of photographs 'taken from life' by Thomson. The authors felt at the time that the images lent authenticity to the text, and their book is now regarded as a ke...
The 19th Century: Century of the Machine _________________________________________________________________ England: Heroes of Steam Until the 19th century, power meant wind, water and muscles. Then, in Britain, a new force was prized from nature: the power of steam, harnessed by the steam engine. Engineers and inventors became heroes and the buildings housing the machinery were temples for the new age. The early engines, some the size of a three-story house, were used to pump surplus water from mines and drinking water from rivers. Every steam engineer's ambition was to achieve locomotion. The first to succeed was Richard Trevithick. In 1804, he won a bet that his machine could carry 10 tons of iron along nine miles of a Welsh tramway. But his engines proved too heavy for regular ra...
Around the turn of the 19th century, large numbers of convicts were transported to the various Australian penal colonies, due to the overcrowding of British Prisons.
Kathryn Hughes explores the role of women in middle class Victorian society. Highlighting the conflicted and restrained behaviour expected of women between being learned but not too intelligent, beautiful but not sexual, Kathryn reveals the expectations on 19th-century women. She also explains how women such as Florence Nightingale and Elizabeth Barrett-Browning managed to challenge those expectations. Explore more films, together with thousands of Victorian and Romantic literary treasures, at the British Library's Discovering Literature website - http://www.bl.uk/discovering-literature
In which John Green finally gets around to talking about some women's history. In the 19th Century, the United States was changing rapidly, as we noted in the recent Market Revolution and Reform Movements episodes. Things were also in a state of flux for women. The reform movements, which were in large part driven by women, gave these self-same women the idea that they could work on their own behalf, and radically improve the state of their own lives. So, while these women were working on prison reform, education reform, and abolition, they also started talking about equal rights, universal suffrage, temperance, and fair pay. Women like Susan B. Anthony, Carry Nation, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, the Grimkés, and Lucretia Mott strove tirelessly to improve the lot of American women, and it worke...
http://www.tomrichey.net This this a review of the 19th century "Isms" (conservatism, classical liberalism, romanticism, nationalism, socialism, and feminism) intended for AP European History and Western Civilization students studying the various philosophies that emerged in 19th century Europe. The graphic organizer that I use in this video is available on my website: http://www.tomrichey.net/industry-and-isms-1815-1850.html TIME STAMPS: Conservatism - (1:45) Classical Liberalism - (3:30) Conservatism vs. Classical Liberalism - (6:11) Romanticism - (8:02) Nationalism - (10:32) Socialism - (14:20) Conservatism, Liberalism, and Socialism - (17:47) Feminism - (21:13)
Get your free audiobook or ebook: http://yazz.space/sabk/35/en/B00URHIOMW/info Baudelaire's Media Aesthetics situates Charles Baudelaire in the midst of 19th-century media culture. It offers a thorough study of the role of newspapers, photography, and precinematic devices in Baudelaire's writings, while also discussing the cultural history of these media generally. The book reveals that Baudelaire was not merely inspired by the new media, but that he played with them, using them as frames of perception and ways of experiencing the world. His writings demonstrate how different media respond to one another and how the conventions of one medium can be paraphrased in another medium. Accordingly, Baudelaire's Media Aesthetics argues that Baudelaire should be seen merely as an advocate of "pure ...
Get your free audiobook or ebook: http://appgame.space/mabk/30/en/B00EKJBEFW/book The nineteenth century was a period of peak popularity for travel to Latin America, where a new political independence was accompanied by loosened travel restrictions. Such expeditions resulted in numerous travel accounts, most by men. However, because this period was a time of significant change and exploration, a small but growing minority of female voyagers also portrayed the people and places that they encountered. Women through Women's Eyes draws from ten insightful accounts by female visitors to Latin America in the nineteenth century. These firsthand tales bring a number of Latin American women into focus: nuns, market women, plantation workers, the wives and daughters of landowners and politicians, an...
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This was a collaboration work done with 3Ds Max as a 19th century as a theme. Alex j . Vardabasso, Jell Hazlewood work contains in the scene images and footage. Turn table of the buildings in the video was done by me Please don't use the video with out permission.
국회의원들 한테 쪼개기 후원금, 경남기업 임원가족들 시켜서.. 검찰, 경남기업 수사정보 유출가능성..감찰예정. MBC뉴스데스크.150416.자 방송 중에서.
Get your free audiobook or ebook: http://yazz.space/sabk/35/en/B008RV2GJM/info The act of eating is both erotic and violent, as one wholly consumes the object being eaten. At the same time, eating performs a kind of vulnerability to the world, revealing a fundamental interdependence between the eater and that which exists outside her body. Racial Indigestion explores the links between food, visual and literary culture in the nineteenth-century United States to reveal how eating produces political subjects by justifying the social discourses that create bodily meaning.combing through a visually stunning and rare archive of childrens literature, architectural history, domestic manuals, dietetic tracts, novels and advertising, Racial Indigestion tells the story of the consolidation of nationa...
Get your free audiobook or ebook: http://skyble.space/sabk/35/en/B010SWR3OU/book The second intriguing historical mystery to feature Detective Inspector Tom Harperleeds, England, Christmas Eve, 1890. Di Tom Harper is looking forward to a well-earned rest. But its not to be. A young man has been found stabbed to death in the citys poverty-stricken Jewish district, his body carefully arranged in the shape of a cross, two bronze pennies covering his eyes. Could someone be pursuing a personal vendetta against the Jews?harpers investigations are hampered by the arrival of Capitaine Bertrand Muyrere of the French police, who has come to Leeds to look into the disappearance of the famous French inventor Louis Le Prince, vanished without trace after boarding a train to Paris.with no one in the clo...
Brian Sterowski : https://www.youtube.com/user/worldwidebrian MY SECOND CHANNEL : http://www.YouTube.com/DanBellFilmIt Follow Dan : http://www.Facebook.com/ThisIsDanBell http://www.Twitter.com/ThisIsDanBell http://www.Instagram.com/ThisIsDanBell http://www.vine.co/ThisIsDanBell Photographed and Edited by Dan Bell
The final lecture by Professor Nead covers the quintessential traits of a fashionable young woman in the 19th Century: http://www.gresham.ac.uk/lectures-and-events/fashion-and-visual-culture-in-the-19th-century-the-girl-of-the-period By the second half of the nineteenth century it was believed that respectable young women of the middle classes were imitating the styles and manners of the demi-monde and were thus blurring the necessary visual distinctions between the pure and the fallen. Respectable women had been seduced by the discourse around fashion and had lost their subtle purity and become brash and vulgar. In France, James Tissot painted a series of pictures entitled The Women of Paris, depicting fashionable women in a number of different locations and settings and in England the w...
FOLLOW US ON SPOTIFY http://open.spotify.com/user/halidon PLAYLIST The Best of Classical Music http://open.spotify.com/user/halidon/playlist/5E4CbUOCiUXw2Fh8Foq51V ▶ BUY Halidon: http://bit.ly/1p3LEbY ● SPECIAL OFFER NOW !!! € 3,99 ● ▶ BUY Amazon: http://amzn.to/ZuesV1 ▶ BUY iTunes: http://bit.ly/XMg4rN Visit our page on Facebook ▶ http://on.fb.me/1bzVvBp A collection of classical music composed by 19th century’s composers. Enjoy it! Brahms – Symphony No. 1 in C minor Op. 68 III mov (00:00) Chopin – Mazurkas Op. 7 No.1 (04:33) Dvorak – Symphony No. 9 III mov (07:01) Bizet – Carmen prelude (14:10) Strauss – Radetzky’s March (17:38) Korsakov – Sheherazade Op. 35: II. The Kalendar Prince. Lento (19:48) Gomes – Guarany Symphony (31:49) Mendelssohn - Cirri (38:45) Verdi – Don Carlos -...
(Gold/Lloyd/Echolette)
In the beginning
There was no light
No teenage heaven or hell
No songs or voices came from across the outlands
Where oceans are meant to be -- where oceans are meant to be
Oh my God, I feel so alone -- some million lightyears far from home
HOW ABOUT YOU LIVING IN THE 20TH CENTURY
You can halt your car to get your tickets to the starlite skies, you know...
Ev'rybody wants to come home (what a dream)
So, if you don't mind,
Will you join me?
On my way through the eye
up to the light