Scholarship
3213 BCE to Now
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Showing 8 events out of 8 total
The Qing incorporate additional territory in the northwest.
Qing imperial residents are stationed in Lhasa starting in 1727, and command Qing garrisons in Tibet.
An increasingly toughened stance is taken in cases of corrupt officials, and Yongzheng has led the creation of a Grand Council, which will grow to become the de facto cabinet for the rest of the dynasty’s existence.
The first years of Yongzheng's reign have been spent consolidating his power.
He has imprisoned or executed some of his brothers and their supporters and undermined the power of the others.
Longkedo, for example, is disgraced and executed in 1728 for reasons that remain shrouded in mystery.
Yongzheng's espionage system is so efficient that every action of his ministers is said to have been reported to him.
He even tampers with the imperial records from the last years of his father's reign and the first years of his own, ordering the suppression of any accounts unfavorable to himself or favorable to his opponents.
More significant is his removal of the Imperial princes from control of the Eight Banners, the major Qing military units.
When the Yongzheng emperor had ascended the throne, three of the Eight Banners had been controlled directly by the throne, but the rest had been under the rule of Qing princes.
Fearing that they could use this control for personal advantage—as the Yongzheng emperor had done in his own ascension to the throne—he compels all the princes to attend a special palace school, where they are indoctrinated with the idea of subservience to the throne.
As a result, the Eight Banners will remain loyal throughout the existence of the dynasty.
Northeastern North America
(1804 to 1815 CE): Exploration, Conflict, and Emerging National Identity
The years 1804 to 1815 in Northeastern North America marked an era of pivotal exploration, territorial expansion, intense conflicts, and significant developments shaping American national identity. During this period, Americans eagerly pursued westward expansion, leading to prolonged conflicts known as the American Indian Wars, while the Louisiana Purchase of 1803 nearly doubled the nation's size. Intensified slavery, frontier settlement, and evolving political landscapes also characterized this era, culminating in the War of 1812, a conflict that strengthened American nationalism despite its ambiguous conclusion.
Landmark Western Exploration
Lewis and Clark Expedition (1804–1806)
Following the Louisiana Purchase (1803), championed by the third U.S. president, Thomas Jefferson, the historic expedition led by Meriwether Lewis and William Clark, known as the Corps of Discovery, explored territories west of the Mississippi River. Their journey to the Pacific Ocean and back significantly expanded geographic and scientific understanding of the continent.
Zebulon Pike’s Explorations (1805–1807)
Explorer Zebulon Pike simultaneously conducted extensive explorations, mapping the Upper Mississippi River region and the southern parts of the newly acquired Louisiana Territory, enhancing U.S. knowledge of its expanding frontier.
Frontier Settlement and Westward Expansion
The Louisiana Purchase encouraged a vast wave of American settlers to push westward beyond the Appalachians. The frontier reached the Mississippi River by 1800, and new states such as Ohio (1803) were rapidly admitted into the Union. Settlements expanded into the Ohio Country, the Indiana Territory, and the lands of the lower Mississippi valley, particularly around St. Louis, which, after 1803, became a major gateway to the West. Americans enthusiastically pursued opportunities in new territories, sparking tensions and conflict with indigenous peoples.
In South Carolina, the antebellum economy flourished, particularly through cotton cultivation after Eli Whitney's invention of the cotton gin in 1793. Though nominally democratic, South Carolina remained tightly controlled by a powerful planter elite, with strict property and slaveholding requirements limiting political participation to wealthy landowners.
War of 1812 and Its Impacts
Causes and Conflicts
The U.S. declared war against Great Britain in 1812, motivated by grievances such as impressment of American sailors, trade restrictions, and Britain's support for Native American resistance. Prominent Federalist leaders, including Boston-based politician Harrison Gray Otis, strongly opposed the war, advocating states' rights at the Hartford Convention (1814).
Combat and Indigenous Alliances
Intense battles occurred along the Canadian-American frontier. Native leaders like Tecumseh allied with Britain, resisting American westward expansion until Tecumseh's defeat and death at the Battle of the Thames (1813). The war saw notable events such as the British burning of Washington D.C. (1814) and the failed British assault on Baltimore, immortalized by Francis Scott Key's poem "The Star-Spangled Banner."
Conclusion and National Identity
Ending in stalemate with the Treaty of Ghent (1814), the war nonetheless bolstered U.S. nationalism and confirmed the nation's resilience. The final American victory at the Battle of New Orleans (January 1815) elevated Andrew Jackson as a national hero.
Social, Economic, and Cultural Developments
Expansion of Slavery and Southern Economy
Despite the ideals of liberty proclaimed in the American Revolution, slavery expanded dramatically in the Deep South. Following the failed Gabriel’s Rebellion (1800) in Virginia, Southern planters imposed even harsher controls on enslaved people. By 1810, South Carolina had a large enslaved population—nearly half of its residents—essential for its thriving cotton economy. Powerful merchant families, such as the Boston-based Cabots and Perkins, continued amassing wealth through shipping and involvement in slave-related trade, exemplifying the complex intersections of commerce, slavery, and politics.
Religious Revival and Frontier Culture
The Second Great Awakening profoundly influenced frontier society, encouraging evangelical Protestant revivals, camp meetings, and increased participation in denominations like Baptists and Methodists. Large camp meetings, including the famous gathering at Cane Ridge, Kentucky (1801), energized religious life and social reform movements.
Jeffersonian Democracy and Early Political Developments
Thomas Jefferson, a leading advocate for individual liberty and separation of church and state, profoundly shaped U.S. politics in the early 1800s. Serving as president from 1801 to 1809, he oversaw the Louisiana Purchase, which significantly expanded the nation's territory. Despite advocating democratic ideals, Jefferson himself exemplified contradictions: he was an eloquent champion of freedom who remained economically reliant on enslaved labor at his plantation home, Monticello, and was likely father to several children with Sally Hemings, an enslaved African-American woman.
Jefferson and his successor, James Madison (1809–1817)—both clean-shaven like their predecessors, Washington and Adams—oversaw the complex diplomatic tensions and conflicts culminating in the War of 1812.
Domestic Turmoil and Conspiracy
During this era, internal U.S. affairs were unsettled. The Spanish withdrawal of the American “right of deposit” at New Orleans (1802) escalated tensions, fueling discussions of war. The controversial third vice-president, Aaron Burr, became embroiled in scandal, allegedly conspiring in 1805–1807 to foment secession in the western territories alongside General James Wilkinson. Although his conspiracy remains debated among historians, it highlighted the fragility of national unity during this period.
International Commerce and Opium Trade
Prominent American merchant families such as the Cabots of Boston continued to build fortunes through shipping, privateering, and participation in the Triangular Trade involving enslaved Africans. Samuel Cabot Jr., through marriage to Eliza Perkins, daughter of merchant king Colonel Thomas Perkins, expanded family wealth by engaging in controversial opium trade with China via British smugglers, highlighting the far-reaching commercial interests of prominent American families during this period.
Additionally, major institutions like Brown University began confronting the economic legacy of slavery, addressing their involvement in slave trading as well as their complex roles in the nation’s commercial and academic development.
Native American Realignment and the American Indian Wars
American eagerness for westward expansion led to escalating violence and displacement of indigenous peoples. During the War of 1812, some Native tribes allied with the British as a strategy against American expansion. However, the defeat of Native coalitions severely weakened resistance, enabling accelerated settler encroachment on indigenous territories. Tribes like the Mandan, Assiniboine, and Crow faced ongoing conflicts, devastating epidemics, and the pressures of expanding American settlements.
Legacy of the Era (1804–1815 CE)
From 1804 to 1815, Northeastern North America witnessed transformative developments shaping national identities, geopolitical alignments, and social structures. The era was defined by dramatic territorial growth through the Louisiana Purchase, intense frontier conflict, expanded slavery, profound religious awakenings, and political controversies. While the War of 1812 tested American resilience, it ultimately strengthened the nation's identity. Simultaneously, the persistence and expansion of slavery deepened social divisions that would have profound consequences for decades to follow.
Raffles leaves Singapore for Britain in October 1823, never to return.
Before leaving, he replaces Farquhar with the Scotsman John Crawfurd, an efficient and frugal administrator who guides the settlement through three years of vigorous growth.
Crawfurd continues Raffles' struggles against slavery and piracy, but he permits the gambling houses to reopen, taxes them, and uses the revenue for street widening, bridge building, and other civic projects.
He fails to support, however, Raffles' dream of higher education for the settlement.
As his last public act, Raffles had contributed Sp$2,000 toward the establishment of a Singapore Institution, which he had envisioned as a training ground for Asian teachers and civil servants and a place where European officials could gain an appreciation of the rich cultural heritage of the region as Raffles himself had.
He had hoped that the institution would attract the sons of rulers and chiefs of all the region.
Crawfurd, however, advises the company officials in Calcutta that it would be preferable to support primary education.
In fact, education at all levels is neglected until much later.
Northeastern North America
(1816 to 1827 CE): Expansion, Industrial Growth, and Rising Tensions
From 1816 to 1827, Northeastern North America experienced rapid territorial expansion, surging industrial and commercial activity, intensifying slavery, and escalating tensions with Indigenous peoples. Although the post-War of 1812 era appeared as a period of national unity—the so-called "Era of Good Feelings"—beneath the surface, profound sectional divisions deepened, driven by economic and cultural forces reshaping the continent.
Territorial Expansion and Military Incursions
Acquisition of Florida and the Gulf Coast
A series of aggressive U.S. military incursions into Spanish-held Florida, notably by General Andrew Jackson, culminated in Spain ceding Florida and Gulf Coast territories to the United States through the Adams-Onís Treaty (1819). This acquisition significantly enhanced American control along the southern frontier and eliminated a refuge for runaway slaves and hostile Indigenous groups.
Transportation Revolution and Infrastructure Development
Canals and the Rise of Steamboats
Expansion was greatly facilitated by revolutionary improvements in transportation. Steamboats now navigated major river systems, dramatically reducing travel times and fueling westward migration. The completion of the Erie Canal (1817–1825) linked New York City directly to the Great Lakes, stimulating unprecedented commercial growth. Similar projects, such as the Illinois and Michigan Canal (I&M), further integrated frontier economies with eastern markets, laying foundations for a unified national economy.
Early Railroads on the Horizon
Although still nascent in the 1820s, railroad construction would soon accelerate, promising even faster, cheaper, and more extensive transportation networks that would further transform the region’s economic landscape.
The Expansion of Slavery and the Cotton Economy
Cotton Boom and the Internal Slave Trade
Despite the 1808 federal prohibition of the international slave trade, the institution of slavery dramatically intensified due to the surging demand for cotton. After 1820, cotton cultivation exploded throughout the Deep South, particularly in the fertile Black Belt region. The cotton gin, invented earlier by Eli Whitney, made short-staple cotton profitable, significantly expanding slave labor.
With international slave imports banned, an internal slave market developed, selling enslaved persons from states such as Virginia and Maryland—where shifting agricultural practices had reduced labor needs—to rapidly expanding cotton plantations in the Deep South. Terms such as "breeding slaves," "child-bearing women," and "breeding period" emerged, reflecting an increasingly brutal commodification of enslaved people, driven by economic necessity and racial anxieties.
South Carolina’s Slave-Based Economy
South Carolina epitomized this expansion. By 1820, enslaved Africans made up nearly half the state’s population. The plantation elite solidified their power through stringent property and slave-ownership qualifications for political participation, reinforcing an economic and social hierarchy based explicitly on slavery.
The Asian and Maritime Fur Trade
American Involvement in Asian Markets
The lucrative Asian trade emerged as a crucial economic driver for the northeastern United States, especially for merchants based in Salem, Boston, Providence, New York, Philadelphia, and Baltimore. The maritime fur trade connected these ports to Asian markets such as Guangzhou (Canton), Kolkata (Calcutta), Chennai (Madras), Manila, Jakarta (Batavia), Mauritius, and Sumatra.
American merchants exported furs, rum, ammunition, ginseng, lumber, ice, salt, silver dollars, iron, tobacco, opium, and tar, while importing Asian commodities like silks, muslins, spices, cassia, porcelain, tea, sugar, and drugs.
Opium Trade and Wealth Accumulation
Bostonian entrepreneurs, including John Perkins Cushing (through his uncles’ firm, J. & T.H. Perkins), Samuel Russell (founder of Russell & Company, 1823), and John Jacob Astor, amassed immense wealth by smuggling Turkish opium into China, where its sale was prohibited. Protected by British naval strength, these American merchants entered this clandestine but lucrative trade, significantly influencing early American industrial capital accumulation.
Industrialization and Textile Manufacturing
Capital Shift: "From Wharf to Waterfall"
Profits from the declining maritime fur trade and Asian commerce provided capital that shifted from shipping ("wharf") to industrial textile production ("waterfall"). New England became the heart of the burgeoning textile industry, facilitated by ample waterpower. This industrialization reshaped the American economy, accelerating technological advancements and urban growth.
Demand for Cotton and Connection to Slavery
Textile manufacturing dramatically increased demand for Southern cotton, binding northern industrialists to southern slaveholders economically. This economic dependency reinforced slavery’s importance nationwide, deepening sectional divides over the institution and sowing the seeds of future conflict.
Frontier Expansion and Indigenous Conflict
Increased Westward Migration and Indigenous Displacement
American settlers poured westward into territories like Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Kentucky, Tennessee, Missouri, and Alabama. This massive influx led to intensified conflict with Indigenous peoples, who fiercely resisted encroachment on their ancestral lands. Settlers often disregarded treaties, provoking confrontations that escalated violence and displacement.
Mandan, Hidatsa, and Plains Tribes
On the Northern Plains, Indigenous groups like the Mandan and Hidatsa suffered severely from epidemics, notably smallpox, dramatically reducing their populations and social cohesion. Meanwhile, tribes such as the Crow, Assiniboine, Sioux, Blackfeet, and Arikara engaged in fierce competition over territory, resources, and horse herds, reshaping tribal alliances and conflicts.
Social, Religious, and Cultural Developments
Second Great Awakening and Reform Movements
The Second Great Awakening (1790–1840) continued to thrive, especially in frontier regions. Revivalist meetings, such as the famous Cane Ridge Revival of 1801, spread evangelical Christianity widely, energizing reform movements including abolitionism, women’s rights, temperance, and education reform.
Emergence of Temperance Societies
Temperance advocates, responding to rising alcoholism and associated social problems, founded numerous societies urging moderation or abstinence, reflecting a growing concern for moral reform and social improvement.
Political Dynamics and National Identity
Era of Good Feelings and National Unity
Despite the period’s superficial harmony under President James Monroe (1817–1825), unresolved conflicts simmered beneath national unity. The Monroe Doctrine (1823) asserted U.S. dominance over Western Hemisphere affairs, reflecting growing confidence in American national identity and foreign policy aspirations.
Andrew Jackson and Populist Politics
General Andrew Jackson’s military successes, particularly in the First Seminole War and his broader aggressive frontier policies, increased his popularity among western settlers. His emergence foreshadowed a populist, frontier-oriented political realignment soon to challenge eastern elites.
The Legacy of this Era (1816–1827 CE)
Between 1816 and 1827, Northeastern North America underwent transformative change, marked by territorial expansion, accelerating industrial growth, intensified slavery, and escalating tensions over Indigenous displacement. The acquisition of new territories, the explosive growth of the cotton economy, and burgeoning industrialization—financed in part by the lucrative yet morally complex Asian opium and maritime fur trades—redefined American society.
Yet beneath apparent national unity lay deepening sectional tensions and moral contradictions, particularly over slavery. The era set the stage for intensifying conflicts as the United States continued its relentless westward push, ultimately shaping the course of its future development and sectional divisions for decades to come.
Northeastern North America (1828–1971 CE)
Industrial Heartlands, Atlantic Gateways, and Cold War Crossroads
Geography & Environmental Context
Northeastern North America includes all territory east of 110°W, except the lands belonging to Gulf and Western North America. This encompasses the Great Lakes basin, the St. Lawrence River corridor, Hudson Bay and Labrador, Newfoundland, Greenland, the Arctic, the Maritime provinces, and the Atlantic seaboard from New England through Virginia, the Carolinas, and most of Georgia. It also contains the Mississippi Valley north of Illinois’ Little Egypt and the Upper Missouri above the Iowa–Nebraska crossing, as well as northeast Alabama, central and eastern Tennessee, and nearly all of Kentucky.
Anchors included the Great Lakes–St. Lawrence corridor, the Appalachian piedmont, Hudson Bay, the Greenland ice sheet, and the Atlantic coastal plain. This was a region of forests and prairies, industrializing river valleys, and Arctic margins increasingly integrated into continental and global networks.
Climate & Environmental Shifts
The 19th century saw the close of the Little Ice Age, with harsh winters persisting into the mid-century before gradual warming by the 20th. The Great Lakes and St. Lawrence valleys endured blizzards and drought cycles. Greenland’s sea ice remained extensive until the early 20th century, then retreated. Atlantic storms reshaped seaboards, while the Dust Bowl’s fringes touched the upper Mississippi Valley. By the mid-20th century, industrial pollution, damming, and deforestation altered rivers and lakes. Warmer conditions opened some Arctic navigation and enabled agricultural expansion on the prairies.
Subsistence & Settlement
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United States:
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The eastern seaboard and interior transformed into an industrial core. Wheat, corn, and cotton farming underpinned rural life, while cities like New York, Boston, Philadelphia, Cleveland, Detroit, and Chicago grew as manufacturing giants.
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Immigration from Europe swelled urban populations; African Americans migrated north in the Great Migration, reshaping cities.
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Canada:
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Confederation (1867) bound Ontario, Quebec, and the Maritimes; later provinces joined as prairie farming expanded through the Great Lakes–St. Lawrence corridor.
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Industrial centers like Montreal, Toronto, and Halifax grew rapidly.
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Greenland:
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Inuit sustained hunting and fishing lifeways; Danish colonial administrators introduced trade posts, missions, and modernization projects.
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Sealing and cod fisheries dominated, while U.S. bases after WWII tied Greenland into Cold War strategy.
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Indigenous nations: Though often displaced or confined, Native communities persisted through fur trade, wage labor, and mixed economies, maintaining ceremonies and oral traditions despite assimilationist pressures.
Technology & Material Culture
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Industrialization: Steamships, canals (Erie, Welland), and railroads structured 19th-century movement. Iron, coal, and later oil fueled factories; by the 20th century, automobiles, telephones, and electricity reshaped life.
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Great Lakes: Shipyards, steel mills, and automotive industries (Detroit) symbolized industrial power.
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Urban landscapes: Skyscrapers rose in New York and Chicago; monumental civic buildings reflected republican ideals.
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Inuit technology: umiaks, sledges, and skin clothing persisted, gradually blending with rifles, aluminum boats, and modern textiles.
Movement & Interaction Corridors
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St. Lawrence–Great Lakes corridor: Lifeline for grain, timber, coal, and manufactured goods; the St. Lawrence Seaway (1959) opened direct passage to the Atlantic.
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Atlantic ports: New York, Boston, Halifax, and Norfolk became hubs for immigration, finance, and shipping.
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Hudson Bay Company posts: Continued fur trading into the 19th century, later giving way to mining and forestry.
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Greenland: Danish trade routes and, later, U.S. airbases connected Inuit settlements to North Atlantic geopolitics.
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Railroads and highways: Linked Atlantic and Great Lakes cities to prairies; by mid-20th century, interstate highways and air travel reinforced northeastern dominance.
Cultural & Symbolic Expressions
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Indigenous resilience: Powwows, art, and oral tradition preserved identity despite reservation and assimilation policies.
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United States: Republican ideals, frontier and industrial myths, and later consumer democracy shaped identity; jazz, blues, and rock emerged from northeastern cities.
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Canada: Bilingual (French-English) traditions, maritime folklore, and Indigenous storytelling marked cultural life.
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Greenland Inuit: Shamanic traditions blended with Lutheranism; drum dances, carvings, and hunting songs remained central.
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Symbols of modernity: factories, bridges, skyscrapers, and lighthouses expressed progress and connection to the Atlantic.
Environmental Adaptation & Resilience
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Farmers expanded into prairies with mechanization and fertilizers, though soil depletion and dust crises highlighted limits.
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Industrial growth degraded landscapes with smoke and effluent; the Great Lakes suffered heavy pollution by mid-20th century.
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Fisheries collapsed in parts of the Atlantic; conservation movements responded with national parks and wildlife protections.
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Inuit adapted to retreating sea ice by diversifying hunting practices and incorporating modern tools.
Political & Military Shocks
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United States: Civil War (1861–65) ended slavery and reshaped the Union; World Wars I & II propelled it to superpower status.
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Canada: Confederation (1867) and expansion west built a new nation within the British Empire; by 1931 (Statute of Westminster), Canada achieved near-full sovereignty.
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Greenland: Remained a Danish colony until 1953, when it became an autonomous province; Cold War airbases underscored its strategic value.
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Indigenous dispossession: Treaties, removals, and boarding schools stripped communities of land and autonomy, though resistance and renewal persisted.
Transition
By 1971 CE, Northeastern North America had become an industrial heartland and Atlantic hub. The United States emerged as a global superpower anchored in its eastern cities; Canada consolidated as a bilingual, industrial nation; and Greenland shifted into Cold War geopolitics under Danish and U.S. oversight. Indigenous nations endured profound losses but maintained cultural resilience. This subregion had become both the engine of the Atlantic world and a critical stage for modern geopolitics, carrying deep ecological and cultural legacies into the late 20th century.
Mississippi State University is created by the Mississippi Legislature (under the name The Agricultural and Mechanical College of the State of Mississippi) on February 28, 1878.