Industrial Revolution In The 19th Century

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During the 19th Century, many European nations experienced were faced with numerous physical and social problems brought on by the industrial revolution and the decline of the feudal system. Population in the cities increased due to the fact that real estate and landowners were forcing peasants to move from the rural areas. Since cities were becoming heavily dense, violence and crime increase drastically while people were living in horrendous conditions and also working in horrific conditions. Laborers worked in factories in order for extremely low wages, just enough for their survival. Karl Marx heavily criticized the capitalistic system because poor people were poor because of the greed of the bourgeois. Marx along with others criticized …show more content…

The world market has given a vast development to commerce, navigation, and communication. This development has reacted to the extension of industrial revolution, for example as industry, commerce, navigation, railways extended, in the same proportion that the bourgeoisie has developed. Their actions have increased its capital, and pushed into the background every class handed down from the Middle Ages. [2] Marx explains that the bourgeoisie cannot exist without always revolutionizing the implements of production, and also the relations of production, and with them the whole relations of society. Marx also explains that the bourgeoisie were constantly expanding its market for products all over the world they settled and established connections everywhere (“the sun never sets on the British empire”).

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