19TH CENTURY

(Redirected from 19th-century)

The '19th century' (also written XIX century) lasted from 1801 through 1900 in the Gregorian calendar.

Contents
Overview
Events
1800s
1810s
1820s
1830s
1840s
1850s
1860s
1870s
1880s
1890s
Significant people
Anthropology
Painters
Music
Literature
Science
Philosophy and religion
Politics
Inventions, discoveries, introductions
See also
Decades and years

Overview


Historians sometimes define a "Nineteenth Century" historical era stretching from 1815 (The Congress of Vienna) to 1914 (The outbreak of the First World War); alternatively, Eric Hobsbawm defined the "Long Nineteenth Century" as spanning the years 1789 (the French Revolution) to 1914.
During this century, the Spanish, Chinese, Portuguese, and Ottoman empires began to crumble and the Holy Roman and Mughal empires ceased.
Following the Napoleonic Wars, the British Empire became the world's leading power, controlling one quarter of the world's population and one third of the land area. It enforced a Pax Britannica, encouraged trade, and battled rampant piracy.
Slavery was greatly reduced around the world. Following a successful slave revolt in Haiti, Britain forced the Barbary pirates to halt their practice of kidnapping and enslaving Europeans, banned slavery throughout its domain, and charged its navy with ending the global slave trade. Slavery was then abolished in America and Brazil (see Abolitionism), and serfdom was abolished in Russia
Electricity, steel and petroleum fueled a Second Industrial Revolution which enabled Germany, Japan, and the United States to become great powers that raced to create empires of their own. However, Russia and Qing Dynasty China failed to keep pace with the other world powers which led to massive social unrest in both empires.

Events


Map of the world from 1897. The British Empire (marked in pink) was the superpower of the 19th century.

1800s


1800: The Royal College of surgons also known as Medical School opened.

1801: The Kingdom of Great Britain and the Kingdom of Ireland merge to form the aUnited Kingdom.

1801-15: Barbary War between the United States and the Barbary States of North Africa

1803: The United States buys out France's territorial claims in North America via the Louisiana Purchase. This begins the U.S.'s westward expansion to the Pacific referred to as its Manifest Destiny which involves annexing and conquering land from Mexico, Britain, and Native Americans.

1804: Haiti gains independence from France and becomes the first black republic, culminating the only successful slave revolt ever.

1804: Austrian Empire founded by Francis I.

1805-48: Muhammad Ali modernizes Egypt.

1806: Holy Roman Empire dissolved as a consequence of the Treaty of Lunéville.

1807: Kingdom of Great Britain declares the Slave Trade illegal.

1808-09: Russia conquers Finland from Sweden in the Finnish War.

1809: Napoleon strips the Teutonic Knights of their last holdings in Bad Mergentheim.
1810s

1816: Shaka rises to power over the Zulu kingdom


1810: The University of Berlin, the world's first research university, is founded. Among its students and faculty are Hegel, Marx, and Bismarck. The German university reform proves to be so successful that its model is copied around the world (see History of European research universities).

1810s-20s: Most of the Latin American colonies free themselves from the Spanish and Portuguese Empires after the Mexican War of Independence and the South American Wars of Independence.

1812-15: War of 1812 between the United States and the United Kingdom

1813-1907: The contest between the British Empire and Imperial Russia for control of Central Asia is referred to as the Great Game.

1815: The Congress of Vienna redraws the European map. The Concert of Europe attempts to preserve this settlement, but it fails to stem the tide of liberalism and nationalism that sweeps over the continent.

1815: Napoleon's defeat at Waterloo brings a conclusion to the Napoleonic Wars and marks the beginning of a Pax Britannica which lasts until 1870.

1816: Year Without a Summer

1816-28: Shaka's Zulu kingdom becomes the largest in Southern Africa.

1819: The modern city of Singapore is established by the British East India Company.
1820s


1820: Liberia founded by the American Colonization Society for freed American slaves.

1821-27: Greece becomes the first country to break away from the Ottoman Empire after the Greek War of Independence.

1823-87: The British Empire annexed Burma (now called Myanmar) after three Anglo-Burmese Wars.

1825: Erie Canal opened connecting the Great Lakes to the Atlantic Ocean.

1826-28: After the final Russo-Persian War, the Persian Empire took back territory lost to Russia from the previous war.

1825-28: The Argentina-Brazil War results in the independence of Uruguay.
1830s


1830: France invades and occupies Algeria.

1830: The Belgian Revolution in the United Kingdom of the Netherlands led to the creation of Belgium.

1830: Greater Colombia dissolved and the nations of Colombia, Ecuador, Venezuela, and Panama took its place.

1833: Slavery Abolition Act bans slavery throughout the British Empire.

1833-76: Carlist Wars in Spain.

1834: Spanish Inquisition officially ends.

1835-36: The Texas Revolution in Mexico resulted in the short-lived Republic of Texas.

1837-1901: Queen Victoria's reign is considered the apex of the British Empire and is referred to as the Victorian era.

1838-40: Civil war in the Federal Republic of Central America led to the foundings of Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua, and Costa Rica.

1839-51: Uruguayan Civil War

1839-60: After two Opium Wars, France, the United Kingdom, the United States and Russia gained many concessions from China resulting in the decline of the Qing Dynasty.
1840s


1840: New Zealand is founded, as the Treaty of Waitangi is signed by the Maori and European people.

1844: Millerite movement awaits the Second Advent of Jesus Christ on October 22. Christ's non-appearance becomes known as the Great Disappointment.

1844 - Persian Prophet the Báb announces his revelation, founding Bábísm. He announced to the world of the coming of "He whom God shall make manifest." He is considered the forerunner of Bahá'u'lláh, the founder of the Bahá'í Faith.

1845-49: The Irish Potato Famine led to the Irish diaspora.

1846-48: The Mexican-American War leads to Mexico's cession of much of the modern-day Southwestern United States.

1846-47: Mormon migration to Utah.

1848: ''The Communist Manifesto'' published.

1848: Revolutions of 1848 in Europe

1848-58: California Gold Rush
1850s



1850: The Little Ice Age ends around this time.

1851-60s: Victorian gold rush in Australia

1851-64: The Taiping Rebellion in China is the bloodiest conflict of the century.

1854: The Convention of Kanagawa formally ends Japan's policy of isolation.

1854-56: Crimean War between France, the United Kingdom, the Ottoman Empire and Russia

1855: Bessemer process enables steel to be mass produced.

1856: World's first oil refinery in Romania

1857-58: Indian Rebellion of 1857

1859: The Origin of Species published.
1860s

The first vessels sail through the Suez Canal


1861-65: American Civil War between the Union and seceding Confederacy

1861: Russia abolishes serfdom.

1861-67: French intervention in Mexico

1863: Formation of the International Red Cross is followed by the adoption of the First Geneva Convention in 1864.

1864-66: The Chincha Islands War was an attempt by Spain to regain its South American colonies.

1864-70: The War of the Triple Alliance ends Paraguayan ambitions for expansion and destroys much of the Paraguayan population.

1865-77: Reconstruction in the United States

1866: Successful transatlantic telegraph cable follows an earlier attempt in 1858.

1866: Austro-Prussian War results in the dissolution of the German Confederation and the creation of the North German Confederation and the Austrian-Hungarian Dual Monarchy.

1866-69: After the Meiji Restoration, Japan embarks on a program of rapid modernization.

1867: The United States purchased Alaska from Russia.

1867: Canadian Confederation formed.

1869: First Transcontinental Railroad completed in United States.

1869: The Suez Canal opens linking the Mediterranean to the Red Sea.
1870s


1870-71: The Franco-Prussian War results in the unifications of Germany and Italy, the collapse of the Second French Empire, the breakdown of Pax Britannica, and the emergence of a New Imperialism.

1871-1914: Second Industrial Revolution

1870s-90s: Long Depression in Western Europe and North America

1872: Yellowstone National Park is created.

1873: Maxwell's ''A Treatise on Electricity and Magnetism'' published.

1874: The British East India Company is dissolved.

1875-1900: 26 million Indians perished in India due to famine.

1876-1914: The massive expansion in population, territory, industry and wealth in the United States is referred to as the Gilded Age.

1877: Great Railroad Strike in the United States may have been the world's first nationwide labor strike.

1877-78: The Balkans are freed from the Ottoman Empire after another Russo-Turkish War in the Treaty of Berlin.

1878: First commercial telephone exchange in New Haven, Connecticut.

1879: Anglo-Zulu War in South Africa.

1879-84: War of the Pacific between Peru, Bolivia and Chile.
1880s


1880-1881: the First Boer War.

1881: First electrical power plant and grid in Godalming, Britain.

1884-85: The Berlin Conference signals the start of the European "scramble for Africa". Attending nations also agree to ban trade in slaves.

1884-85: The Sino-French War led to the formation of French Indochina.

1886: Russian-Circassian War ended with the defeat and the exile of many Circassians. Imam Shamil defeated.

1888: Slavery banned in Brazil.

1889: Hazrat Mirza Ghulam Ahmad establishes the Ahmadi Muslim Community.

1889: End of the Brazilian Empire and the beginning of the Brazilian Republic
1890s


1890: The Wounded Knee Massacre was the last battle in the American Indian Wars. This event represents the end of the American Old West.

1894-95: After the First Sino-Japanese War, China cedes Taiwan to Japan and grants Japan a free hand in Korea.

1895-1896: Ethiopia defeats Italy in the First Italo–Ethiopian War.

1896: Olympic games revived in Athens.

1896: Klondike Gold Rush in Canada.

1897: Gojong, or Emperor Gwangmu, proclaims the short-lived Korean Empire: lasts until 1910.

1898: The United States gains control of Cuba, Puerto Rico, and the Philippines after the Spanish-American War.

1898-1900: The Boxer Rebellion in China is suppressed by an Eight-Nation Alliance.

1898-1902: The One Thousand Days war in Colombia breaks out between the "Liberales" and "Conservadores," culminating with the loss of Panama in 1903.

1899: Second Boer War begins (-1902); Philippine-American War begins (-1913).

Significant people



Napoleon Bonaparte, First Consul and Emperor of France

William Gilbert Grace, English cricketer

Baron Haussmann, civic planner

Sándor Körösi Csoma, explorer of the Tibetan culture

Hong Xiuquan inspired China's Taiping Rebellion, perhaps the bloodiest civil war in human history

Fitz Hugh Ludlow, writer and explorer

Florence Nightingale, nursing pioneer

Ignaz Semmelweis, proponent of hygienic practices

Dr. John Snow, the founder of epidemiology

F R Spofforth, Australian cricket

Sitting Bull, a leader of the Lakota

Chief Joseph, a leader of the Nez Percé

Ned Kelly, Australian folk hero, and outlaw

Abraham Lincoln, United States President

Jefferson Davis, Confederate States President

Elizabeth Kenny, Australian Nurse and found an Innovative Treatment of Polio
Anthropology

Franz Boas one of the pioneers of modern anthropology


Lewis H. Morgan

Franz Boas

Edward Burnett Tylor

Karl Verner

Brothers Grimm

Nicholai Miklukho-Maklai
Painters

''Liberty Leading the People'' (1830, Louvre)

Monet's Impression, Sunrise, which gave the name to Impressionism

The Realism and Romanticism of the early 19th century gave way to Impressionism and Post-Impressionism in the later half of the century, with Paris being the dominant art capital of the world. 19th century painters included:

Paul Cezanne

Edgar Degas

Eugène Delacroix

Edvard Munch

Caspar David Friedrich

Antonio de La Gandara

Théodore Géricault

Vincent van Gogh

Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres

Édouard Manet

Claude Monet

Berthe Morisot

Camille Pissarro

Pierre-Auguste Renoir

Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec

Joseph Mallord William Turner

William Morris

Mary Cassatt
Music


Sonata form matured during the Classical era to become the primary form of instrumental compositions throughout the 19th century. Much of the music from the nineteenth century was referred to as being in the Romantic style. Many great composers lived through this era such as Ludwig van Beethoven, Franz Liszt, Frédéric Chopin, Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky and Richard Wagner. Others included:

Hector Berlioz

Georges Bizet

Alexander Borodin

Johannes Brahms

Anton Bruckner

Frédéric Chopin

Claude Debussy

Antonín Dvořák

Gilbert and Sullivan

Edvard Grieg

Felix Mendelssohn

Modest Mussorgsky

Niccolò Paganini

Camille Saint-Saëns

Franz Schubert

Robert Schumann

Giuseppe Verdi
Literature

Main articles: 19th century in literature


Mark Twain in 1894



On the literary front the new century opens with Romanticism, a movement that spread throughout Europe in reaction to 18th-century rationalism, and it develops more or less along the lines of the Industrial Revolution, with a design to react against the dramatic changes wrought on nature by the steam engine and the railway. William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge are considered the initiators of the new school in England, while in the continent the German ''Sturm und Drang'' spreads its influence as far as Italy and Spain.
French arts had been hampered by the Napoleonic Wars but subsequently developed rapidly. Modernism began.
The Goncourts and Emile Zola in France and Giovanni Verga in Italy produce some of the finest naturalist novels. Italian naturalist novels are especially important in that they give a social map of the new unified Italy to a people that until then had been scarcely aware of its ethnic and cultural diversity. On February 21, 1848, Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels published the Communist Manifesto.
There was a huge literary output during the 19th century. Some of the most famous writers included the Russians Leo Tolstoy, Anton Chekov and Fyodor Dostoevsky; the English Charles Dickens, John Keats, and Jane Austen; the Scottish Sir Walter Scott; the Irish Oscar Wilde; the Americans Edgar Allan Poe and Mark Twain; and the French Victor Hugo, Honoré de Balzac, Jules Verne and Charles Baudelaire. Some others of note included:

Gustavo Adolfo Bécquer

Charlotte Brontë

Emily Brontë

Lord Byron

Georg Büchner

François-René de Chateaubriand

Kate Chopin

Samuel Taylor Coleridge

Emily Dickinson

Arthur Conan Doyle

Alexandre Dumas, père (1802-1870)

George Eliot

Ralph Waldo Emerson

Gustave Flaubert

Margaret Fuller

Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

Nikolai Gogol

Manuel González Prada

Gertrudis Gómez de Avellaneda

Juana Manuela Gorriti

Thomas Hardy

Nathaniel Hawthorne

Friedrich Hölderlin

Heinrich Heine

Henrik Ibsen

Henry James

Jules Laforgue

Giacomo Leopardi

Alessandro Manzoni

Stéphane Mallarmé

José Martí

Clorinda Matto de Turner

Herman Melville

Friedrich Nietzsche

Aleksandr Pushkin

Arthur Rimbaud

John Ruskin

George Sand (Amandine-Aurore-Lucile Dupin)

Mary Shelley

Stendhal (Marie-Henri Beyle)

Robert Louis Stevenson

Bram Stoker

Harriet Beecher Stowe

Paul Verlaine

Walt Whitman

William Wordsworth

Alfred, Lord Tennyson

Émile Zola

Machado de Assis

Mark Twain
Science


The 19th century saw the birth of science as a profession; the term 'scientist' was coined in 1833 by William Whewell. Among the most influential ideas of the 19th century were those of Charles Darwin, who in 1859 published the book ''The Origin of Species'', which introduced the idea of evolution by natural selection. Louis Pasteur made the first vaccine against rabies, and also made many discoveries in the field of chemistry, including the asymmetry of crystals. Thomas Alva Edison gave the world light with his invention of the lightbulb. Karl Weierstrass and other mathematicians also carried out the arithmetization of analysis. Other important 19th century scientists included:

Amedeo Avogadro, physicist

Johann Jakob Balmer, mathematician, physicist

Henri Becquerel, physicist

Alexander Graham Bell, inventor

Ludwig Boltzmann, physicist

János Bolyai, mathematician

Louis Braille, inventor of braille

Robert Bunsen, chemist

Marie Curie, physicist, chemist

Pierre Curie, physicist

Louis Daguerre, chemist

Gottlieb Daimler, engineer, industrial designer and industrialist

Christian Doppler, physicist, mathematician

Thomas Edison, inventor

Michael Faraday, scientist

Léon Foucault, physicist

Gottlob Frege, mathematician, logician and philosopher

Carl Friedrich Gauss, mathematician, physicist, astronomer

Josiah Willard Gibbs, physicist

Ernst Haeckel, biologist

Heinrich Hertz, physicist

Alexander von Humboldt, naturalist, explorer

Nikolai Lobachevsky, mathematician

William Thomson, Lord Kelvin, physicist

Robert Koch, physician, bacteriologist

Justus von Liebig, chemist

Auguste and Louis Lumière, inventors

Wilhelm Maybach, car-engine and automobile designer and industrialist.

James Clerk Maxwell, physicist

Gregor Mendel, biologist

Dmitri Mendeleev, chemist

Samuel Morey, inventor

Nicéphore Niépce,inventor

Alfred Nobel, chemist, engineer, inventor

Louis Pasteur, microbiologist and chemist

Bernhard Riemann, mathematician

Nikola Tesla, inventor

Sigmund Freud, the father of psychoanalysis
Philosophy and religion



Otto Von Bismarck, the Iron Chancellor

The last shogun 'Tokugawa Yoshinobu' in French military uniform

One of the first photographs, produced in 1826 by Nicéphore Niépce

The 19th century was host to a variety of religious and philosophical thinkers, including:

Mikhail Bakunin, anarchist

William Booth, social reformer, founder of the Salvation Army

Auguste Comte, philosopher

Mary Baker Eddy, religious leader, founder of Christian Science

Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, philosopher

Søren Kierkegaard, philosopher

Karl Marx, political philosopher

John Stuart Mill, philosopher

Friedrich Nietzsche, philosopher

Ramakrishna Paramahamsa, Hindu mystic

Arthur Schopenhauer, philosopher

Claude Henri de Rouvroy, Comte de Saint-Simon, founder of French socialism

William Morris, social reformer

Joseph Smith, Jr. and Brigham Young, founders of Mormonism

Nikolai of Japan, religious leader, introduced Eastern Orthodoxy into Japan.

Bahá'u'lláh founded the Bahá'í Faith in Persia
Politics


Susan B. Anthony, U.S. women's rights advocate

Otto von Bismarck, German chancellor

Napoleon Bonaparte, French general, first consul and emperor

Napoleon III

Cecil Rhodes

John C. Calhoun, U.S. senator

Henry Clay, U.S. senator

Jefferson Davis, President of the Confederate States of America just before and during the American Civil War.

Frederick Douglass, U.S. abolitionist spokesman

Joseph Fouché, French politician

Giuseppe Garibaldi, unifier of Italy and Piedmontese soldier

Gojong of Joseon, Korean emperor

William Lloyd Garrison, U.S. abolitionist leader

William Ewart Gladstone, British prime minister

Ulysses S. Grant, U.S. general and president

Theodor Herzl, founder of modern political Zionism

Andrew Jackson, U.S. general and president

Thomas Jefferson, American statesman, philosopher, and president

Lajos Kossuth, Hungarian governor; leader of the war of independence

Hong Xiuquan, revolutionary, self-proclaimed Son of God

Benjamin Disraeli, novelist and politician

Libertadores, Latin American liberators

Robert E. Lee, Confederate general

Abraham Lincoln, U.S. president; led the nation during the American Civil War

Sir John A. Macdonald, Canada, first Prime Minister of Canada

Mutsuhito, Japanese emperor

Tokugawa Yoshinobu, Japanese Shogun (The Last Shogun)

István Széchenyi, aristocrat, leader of the Hungarian reform movement

Charles Maurice de Talleyrand, French politician

Queen Victoria, British monarch

Klemens von Metternich, Austrian Chancellor

Inventions, discoveries, introductions


Main articles: Timeline of invention#19th century, Timeline of scientific discoveries#1800s

Research became institutionalized at research universities such as the University of Berlin and at corporate laboratories such as Edison's Menlo Park which accelerated the rate at which discoveries and innovations were made.

Telephone

Railways

The Tube

Department stores

Epidemiology

Mail order businesses

Philology

Postage stamps



Subway

Steam power

See also



Victorian Era

List of wars 1800–1899

Timeline of 19th century Islamic history

France in the nineteenth century

Russian history, 1855–1892

Mid-nineteenth century Spain

Capitalism in the nineteenth century

19th-century philosophy

Nineteenth century theatre

19th century in games

19th century in film

Decades and years



This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.

psst.. try this: add to faves