With the Industrial Revolution, I thought we started a large-scale conquest after equipped with various science and technology equipment, such as measuring equipment, machine guns, battleships, etc., but before that, it was quite a lot. I'm just going to write it down. . . . .to point out the mistakes. 1) the Americas The Aztec and Inca conquest of Cortes and Pisa in Spain in the early 16th century after the "discovery or arrival" of Columbus in the late 15th century. Portugal also acquired Brazil because of the world dividing line between Spain and Portugal (which was divided by longitude and recognized by the Pope of Rome). Latin America was the main target in the 16th century... ...but in the 17th century, British and French immigration began in North America. In the 18th century, these two became independent of the United Kingdom after the Seven Years' War. Russia moved northward to Alaska, Spain to protect Mexico, California, New Mexico and Texas. 2) The Philippines and Indonesia. In the 16th century, the Philippines was in the hands of Spain after the opening of the Asian route of Vasco Dagama and the tour of the world of Magellan. The Indonesian island of Java fell into the hands of Portugal at first The next century will be the Netherlands. The Netherlands, which occupied Java Island only, expanded to all of Indonesia only after it gained strength from the industrial revolution in the 19th century. We made it to Taiwan Jung Sung-gong's Chinese army immediately chased him away. 3) Russia, which had always been miserablely slaughtered by Siberian nomadic peoples, especially Mongolia, fought back and began to advance into Asia beyond the Ural Mountains when it acquired guns in the 16th century. A group of private conquerors crossed the mountain range to conquer the Sibir Principality, the Ivan Brain Festival. Of course, the nomadic tribes of Tatar attacked Moscow, killed hundreds of thousands of people, and burned down the Ivan Brain Islands, but Russia, based in Asia, is known as Siberia and the Pacific Peninsula in the 17th century. We also received the Baikal Lake, the birthplace of our people. At that time, Russia was an ugly country in Europe, but it was invincible to Siberian Eskimos (Pyotr the Great overcame in the next century. At the end of the 17th century, the Chinese-Russian border was first formed by the signing of the Treaty of Nerchinsk, when the Western territories were close to the Philippines in the south and Siberia in the north. In fact, Russia threatened to eat Yeonju in 1860. by the power of the Industrial Revolution 3) India (cough...) India was the birthplace of civilization and was a great agricultural power in the 18th century with China and a great agricultural power, but it was a playground in England and France. In the 17th century, the Mughals were able to unify India for the first time under the Emperor Aurangzeb, which was the first time that the North had taken over the South. The Taj Mahal Cemetery was also built, and the prosperity of Choe O. 700,000 troops in possession. However, North India may not have been able to eat South India, but it will split right away in the next century. That is, the result of a herd. The Islamic Mughal Empire turns into a small state in central Delhi, independence of Hindu provinces, a struggle between two religions... ...and the British take the lead in exploitation by East India, eventually fighting the Seven Years' War in the middle of the 18th century. There's a person called the First World War, but at the same time. With the victory of the war, Britain took over Canada and India. The Indians split up and broke into these two ssamples... ...after the war, Britain took over Bengal, East India, which is now Bangladesh, and gradually expanded to take over all of India in the middle of the 19th century. In other words, in the 18th century, Britain did not immediately accept all of India. It's called two hundred years of colonial rule, but about a hundred years in western India In the 1850s, the Sepoy Rebellion was suppressed and the Indian Empire was established in 1877 (until then, the remaining scarecrow, Emperor Mughal), and Queen Victoria served as Emperor. 4) In the 18th century, Captain Cook of England first "discovered or arrived?" colonized and began to use it as a prisoner's exile. From the 19th century on, full-scale colonial van. the extermination of the natives And so on, and so on, the coast of Africa... ...and so on. From the 15th century, Portugal, Spain, England, France, and the Netherlands built their base, limited to the coast, and slave hunting roasted black rulers... ...after the Berlin Conference in 1878. Adder, with a new invention machine gun in his hand, took over Africa in just 20 years. Britain, France, Germany, Belgium, Italy, Spain and Portugal took over the rest of the scraps. Newsweek criticized barbarism during this period, but colonial rule was so short that it was anti-German because Newsweek was a Jewish magazine. It was in the middle of the 19th century that Russia took over Central Asia, famous for the Caucasus and Silk Road. America, Siberia, Java, the Philippines, India, Australia... ...where Europeans were able to map, modernize, and conquer at the same time. (World maps start to come out in the 16th century, and they're completed by the discovery of Antarctica in the early 19th century. Modernization also progressed during the same period, under the Industrial Revolution and the Democratic Revolution of the 19th Century (Jackpot). As you can see in the Spanish sesame seeds related to Japan... the Europeans' dominance over Asia was not great yet. rather inferior It's so overwhelming after the 19th century. And yet you've taken over a vast area... ...that's... ...a terrible sheep. The chiefs, Ugauga... ...are mainly targeted in one area, but not Java... ...unexpected. There was an Islamic kingdom. Moreover, the 18th century's entry into India by England and France is a shock. Isn't India the greatest country along with China before the Industrial Revolution... ...how helplessly. Still, the main target is the savage areas, which have been much smaller in Japan and China over the same period. After the 17th and 8th centuries, Japan took over Okinawa on the North Sea, and China took over Manchuria and Taiwan. Immigrant initiation in this area (although Manchuria, of course, had conquered China and the Okinawan Old Kingdom) was broadened by "Japaneseization" and "Chineseization"...that is, easy to conquer. Although it is much smaller than the West, it is similar that the early phenomenon of imperialism appeared. It's because of population growth... ...Germany, Italy, Poland, Korea, etc., which are geographically disadvantageous... ...are bound to be disadvantageous. We were just about to make it to Gando when we collided with China. Damn..............there are so many great men around.............anyway even before the Industrial Revolution the sheep were steadily expanding their land.
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