- Industrial production existed even before factories were established in Europe.
- This early form of production is called proto-industrialisation.
- Merchants supplied money to peasants and artisans to produce goods for international markets.
- Production moved to the countryside because guilds controlled trade in towns.
- Peasant families earned extra income by producing goods at home instead of in factories.
Definitions [1]
Definition: Carding
Carding is the process in which fibres, such as cotton or wool, are prepared prior to spinning.
Key Points
Key Points: Introduction to the Age of Industrialisation
- Around 1900, machines and technology were seen as symbols of progress and the new century.
- Images and magazines glorified modern inventions such as railways, factories, and machines.
- The modern world was linked with rapid technological change and industrial growth.
- The West was shown as modern and advanced, while the East was shown as traditional and old.
- To understand real progress, historians study the history of industrialisation in Britain and India.
Key Points: Before the Industrial Revolution
Key Points: The Coming Up of the Factory
- The earliest factories in England were set up in the 1730s, but their number increased greatly in the late eighteenth century.
- Cotton became the first major factory industry, and its production expanded rapidly.
- New inventions improved spinning and weaving and increased output per worker.
- Richard Arkwright introduced the cotton mill, bringing all stages of production under one roof.
- Factories allowed better supervision, quality control, and regulation of labour.
Key Points: The Pace of Industrial Change
- Cotton and metal industries grew fastest, with cotton leading until the 1840s and iron and steel growing later.
- Traditional industries continued alongside factories and employed most workers.
- Much production still took place in homes and small workshops, not only in factories.
- Technological change was slow because machines were costly and unreliable.
- Most workers in the mid-nineteenth century were traditional craft workers, not machine operators.
Key Points: Hand Labour and Steam Power
- In Victorian Britain, labour was easily available, so wages were low.
- Industrialists preferred hand labour because machines were expensive and required a large investment.
- Seasonal industries hired workers only when demand was high.
- Many goods needed skilled hand labour and could not be produced by machines.
- Handmade products were valued by the upper classes, while machine-made goods were exported.
Key Points: Life of the Workers
Key Points: The Age of Indian Textiles
- Before industrialisation, Indian cotton and silk textiles dominated global trade.
- Indian textiles were exported through major ports like Surat, Masulipatam, and Hoogly.
- Indian merchants and bankers controlled and financed the textile trade network.
- By the mid-eighteenth century, European companies gained monopoly rights over trade.
- Old ports declined while new colonial ports like Bombay and Calcutta grew.
Key Points: What Happened to Weavers?
- After the 1760s, the East India Company expanded textile exports by controlling the trade.
- The Company eliminated Indian traders and appointed gomasthas to supervise weavers.
- Weavers were forced to take advances and sell cloth only to the Company at low prices.
- Gomasthas often behaved harshly, and weavers lost freedom to bargain or choose buyers.
- Many weavers migrated, revolted, or gave up weaving and turned to agricultural labour.
Key Points: Manchester Comes to India
- Indian textile exports declined sharply in the nineteenth century due to British industrialisation.
- The British government imposed import duties to protect Manchester textiles in Britain.
- British cotton goods were heavily exported to India, flooding Indian markets.
- Indian weavers lost both foreign and local markets because machine-made goods were cheaper.
- By the 1850s, many weaving regions in India faced decline and poverty.
- Shortage and high prices of raw cotton further harmed Indian weavers in the 1860s.
- By the late nineteenth century, Indian factories added more competition for traditional weavers.
Key Points: The Early Entrepreneurs
Key Points: Sources of Industrial Labour
Key Points: The Peculiarities of Industrial Growth
- In the late 19th century, Indian industries developed alongside European export-focused plantations.
- Early Indian mills mainly produced cotton yarn and avoided competing with British goods.
- The Swadeshi Movement (1906) boosted Indian industries by boycotting foreign cloth.
- Cotton cloth production doubled between 1900–1912, while yarn exports to China declined.
- During and after World War I (1914–1918), Indian industries expanded and strengthened in the home market.
Key Points: Small-scale Industries Predominate
Key Points: Market for Goods
- Advertisements were used to create demand and shape consumer needs during industrialisation.
- British manufacturers used labels to show quality and promote “Made in Manchester” cloth in India.
- Images of Indian gods and historical figures were used to make foreign goods familiar and trustworthy.
- Calendars became a popular advertising tool as they reached both literate and illiterate people.
- Indian manufacturers used advertisements to promote swadeshi and encourage people to buy Indian goods.
Important Questions [5]
- Which of the following industries increased with the expansion of railways in England from 1840s to 1860s?
- Who among the following improved the steam engine?
- Answer the Following Question. Why Were Merchants from Towns in Europe Began to Move the Countryside in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries?
- Which Logo of Quality is Marked on the Packaged Food Items?
Concepts [17]
- Introduction to the Age of Industrialisation
- Before the Industrial Revolution
- The Coming Up of the Factory
- The Pace of Industrial Change
- Hand Labour and Steam Power
- Life of the Workers
- Industrialisation in the Colonies
- The Age of Indian Textiles
- Condition of Weavers under British Rule
- Manchester Comes to India
- Factories Come up
- The Early Entrepreneurs
- Sources of Industrial Labour
- The Peculiarities of Industrial Growth
- Small-scale Industries Predominate
- Market for Goods
- Overview of The Age of Industrialisation
