Industrial Revolution and Industrialization
The Industrial Revolution was the transition to mechanized, factory-based production beginning in Britain around 1760, transforming economies, work, and society worldwide.
Definition
The transformation, beginning in late-eighteenth-century Britain, from agrarian and handicraft economies to ones based on mechanized manufacturing, the factory system, and sustained economic growth.
Scope
This topic examines the origins and spread of industrialization: technological innovation in textiles, iron, and steam power; the rise of the factory system and the industrial working class; the debate over living standards and social costs; and the global dimensions of the 'Great Divergence' between Europe and Asia. It covers economic, technological, and social-history approaches and the major controversies over why industrialization began where and when it did.
Core questions
- Why did the Industrial Revolution begin in Britain rather than elsewhere?
- How did industrialization change work, family life, and class relations?
- Did early industrialization raise or lower living standards for workers?
- Why did Europe and Asia diverge economically in this period?
Key concepts
- factory system
- mechanization
- Great Divergence
- standard of living
- class formation
Key theories
- The high-wage economy explanation
- Robert Allen argued that Britain industrialized first because high wages and cheap energy made labor-saving machinery profitable, giving incentives to mechanize that were absent elsewhere.
- The making of the working class
- E. P. Thompson argued that the English working class was not simply produced by industrialization but actively made itself through shared experience, culture, and struggle in this period.
History
Industrialization began in Britain in the late eighteenth century with innovations in textiles, iron, and the steam engine, then spread to continental Europe, North America, and beyond over the nineteenth century. Historiography has shifted from celebratory technological accounts to social histories of labor and, more recently, to global comparative analyses of the 'Great Divergence'.
Debates
- Why Britain and why then
- Historians dispute whether high wages and cheap coal, scientific culture, institutions, or empire best explain Britain's priority, with Allen, Mokyr, and Pomeranz offering competing emphases.
- The standard-of-living debate
- Scholars have long argued over whether early industrialization improved or worsened living and working conditions for ordinary people, a question Thompson framed in social and cultural terms.
Key figures
- Robert Allen
- E. P. Thompson
- Kenneth Pomeranz
- Joel Mokyr
- David Landes
Related topics
Seminal works
- allen2009
- thompson1963
- pomeranz2000
Frequently asked questions
- When and where did the Industrial Revolution start?
- It is conventionally dated to Britain from about 1760, spreading internationally through the nineteenth century, though the exact timing and the usefulness of the term 'revolution' are debated.
- What was the 'Great Divergence'?
- It refers to the widening gap in economic development between Western Europe and regions such as China after about 1800, with historians like Pomeranz debating its timing and causes.