Britian is Indrustrailized

A Short note on Indrustrialization:

The increase in trade and the resultant greater demand for goods necessitated  changes in the system of production. Greater volume of trade meant that more  goods had to be produced in a shorter period of time. The ‘domestic system’,  under which the village artisans collected raw materials for the merchants, made  goods at home with the help of simple tools and then supplied the finished goods  back to the merchants, could not meet the growing demands of the market.

Hence, in the eighteenth century AD, the ‘factory system’ developed. Rich  merchants set up factories, installed newly invented machines, bought the raw  material and employed workers on fixed wages to make goods on machines. This  development, that is, the production of goods in factories with the help of  machines is known as the Industrial Revolution.

The Industrial Revolution started from England and soon spread throughout  Europe. The textile industry was the first to be mechanized. Inventions such as  the spinning jenny, flying-shuttle, water-frame, power-loom and cotton-gin  greatly increased cloth production. In course of time, all major industries were  affected by this revolution.

As industries grew, the industrialized nations of Europe were faced with two  crucial concerns. The first was the need for raw materials which were to be used  in manufacturing industries. The second was to find markets for the surplus  goods they produced. Political domination of less developed countries solved  these two problems. This was the main reason for the establishment of colonies n  Asia, Africa and Americas by the European countries.

The increase in trade and the resultant greater demand for goods necessitated  changes in the system of production. Greater volume of trade meant that more  goods had to be produced in a shorter period of time. The ‘domestic system’,  under which the village artisans collected raw materials for the merchants, made  goods at home with the help of simple tools and then supplied the finished goods  back to the merchants, could not meet the growing demands of the market.

Hence, in the eighteenth century AD, the ‘factory system’ developed. Rich  merchants set up factories, installed newly invented machines, bought the raw  material and employed workers on fixed wages to make goods on machines. This  development, that is, the production of goods in factories with the help of  machines is known as the Industrial Revolution.

The Industrial Revolution started from England and soon spread throughout  Europe. The textile industry was the first to be mechanized. Inventions such as  the spinning jenny, flying-shuttle, water-frame, power-loom and cotton-gin  greatly increased cloth production. In course of time, all major industries were  affected by this revolution.

As industries grew, the industrialized nations of Europe were faced with two  crucial concerns. The first was the need for raw materials which were to be used  in manufacturing industries. The second was to find markets for the surplus  goods they produced. Political domination of less developed countries solved  these two problems. This was the main reason for the establishment of colonies n  Asia, Africa and Americas by the European countries.