Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - The Year 1800
Episode Date: June 10, 2025In the year 1800, the last year of the 18th century, the world was on the precipice of radical change. The scientific revolution, the agricultural revolution, and the industrial revolution had all ...begun, but were yet to hit full swing. There were also literal revolutions afoot. Countries began overthrowing their leaders or colonial masters, a trend which would only continue in the next century. Learn more about the world in the year 1800 on the 1,800th episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. ***5th Anniversary Celebration RSVP*** Sponsors Newspapers.com Get 20% off your subscription to Newspapers.com Mint Mobile Cut your wireless bill to 15 bucks a month at mintmobile.com/eed Quince Go to quince.com/daily for 365-day returns, plus free shipping on your order! Stitch Fix Go to stitchfix.com/everywhere to have a stylist help you look your best Stash Go to get.stash.com/EVERYTHING to see how you can receive $25 towards your first stock purchase and to view important disclosures. Subscribe to the podcast! https://everything-everywhere.com/everything-everywhere-daily-podcast/ -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Austin Oetken & Cameron Kieffer Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Update your podcast app at newpodcastapps.com Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/ Disce aliquid novi cotidie Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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In the year 1800, the last year of the 18th century, the world was on the precipice of radical change.
The scientific revolution, the agricultural revolution, and the industrial revolution had all begun,
but were yet to hit full swing. There was also literal revolutions afoot. Countries began
overthrowing their leaders or colonial masters, a trend which would only continue into the next century.
Learn more about the world in the year 1800, on the 1800th episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
What if your perceptions about the past were wrong?
ThruLine is a podcast that takes you back in time to uncover the parts of the story that may have gone unnoticed.
It effectively turned day into night.
And how it shaped the world now.
Time travel with us every week on the ThruLine podcast from NPR.
Every 100 episode since the 1500th episode, I've been doing an overview of the world every century.
One of the themes in those episodes has been change.
In those episodes, there was a change taking place around the world, but the change was slow.
However, in this episode, as we look at the world in the year 1800, the pace of that change
has increased dramatically.
You can think of it this way.
From 1500 to 1700, the car was getting warmed up and the engine was starting to rev.
In 1800, the car was starting to move.
So let's get started by looking at the different regions of the world to see what was happening,
and we'll start in the Pacific.
The Manila galleons were still crossing the Pacific Ocean, sailing from Manila to Acapulco,
carrying silver from Mexico and goods from Asia.
Most of the individual islands in the Pacific didn't see a lot of change since the year 1700.
In fact, most of them were still unknown to the European powers that were exploring the region.
Even if the islands had been observed and recorded, they might not have been visited, and if they were, only briefly.
The voyages of Captain James Cook between 1768 and 1779 were among the most consequential.
Cook charted large portions of the Pacific, including the eastern coast of Australia, New Zealand, Tahiti, and Hawaii, opening these regions to future colonization and trade.
His voyages combined scientific mapping with the acquisition of imperial intelligence,
and contributed to the mythologizing of the Pacific as a place of both noble simplicity and exploitable potential.
Cook's voyages would provide the information necessary for later British colonization in the region.
Australia had been claimed by Britain in 1770, and the first penal colony had been established in Sydney in 1788.
The indigenous aboriginal populations were beginning to experience the devastating impacts of European colonization,
though the full extent of colonial settlement lay in the future.
Asia in 1800 presented a complex picture of declining traditional powers and emerging European influence.
The Mughal Empire in India, once one of the world's most wealthiest and powerful states,
had fragmented into numerous competing kingdoms and principalities.
The fragmentation had created an opportunity for the British East India Company,
which by the year 1800 controlled large portions of the Bengal and other territories
through a combination of military conquest and political manipulation.
China, under the Qing Dynasty, remained the world's most populous and arguably most prosperous
nation, but signs of future troubles were emerging. The empire's isolationist policies and resistance
to foreign trade were creating tensions with European powers, particularly Britain, which sought
access to Chinese markets. The population had grown dramatically during the 18th century,
straining resources and creating social pressures that would eventually contribute to internal
rebellions. In 1800, Japan was a closed in insular society governed by the Tokugawa
Shogunate, a military regime that had ruled since 1603 and had maintained strict control over the
country through a feudal system centered in Ido, or modern-day Tokyo. The emperor in Kyoto
held symbolic religious authority, but no real power, which rested firmly in the hands of the
shogun. Japan's isolationist policy prohibited most foreign contact and trade, limiting it primarily
at this point to the Dutch and Chinese through the port of Nagasaki, under heavily regulated
conditions. In 1800, the Ottoman Empire was a vast but increasingly strained multi-ethnic empire
stretching across the Middle East, North Africa, and southeastern Europe, ruled from
Constantinople by Sultan-Selham-3rd. Although still one of the largest empires in the world,
its military and administrative systems were showing signs of deepening decline. The empire
had suffered major territorial losses, particularly to Austria and Russia.
Africa in 1800 was profoundly shaped by the Atlantic slave trade, which had reached its peak during
the 18th century. Millions of Africans had been forcibly transported to the Americas, creating
demographic disruptions and political instability across much of West and Central Africa.
Some African states had grown wealthy by participating in the slave trade, while others had been
devastated by slave raids and warfare.
The continent's political landscape remained largely African-controlled, with European
presence limited to coastal trading posts and the Dutch Cape Colony in the South.
However, the foundations were being laid for European colonial expansion that would
transform Africa in the 19th century.
The Americas in 1800 reflected the century's most successful challenge to European colonial authority.
13 British colonies in North America had not only won their independence, but it had established a functioning
republic under the Constitution of 1787. This American experiment in self-governance provided a powerful
example for other colonial territories and oppressed peoples worldwide. This was the first time a European
colony managed to break free and achieve independence, and had set a precedent for what was going
to happen in the decades ahead throughout the Americas. But the second country that was the country that
would break away was in the middle of its own revolution in the year 1800. Haiti. Haiti was in the
midst of a revolutionary upheaval that would soon lead to the world's first successful slave revolt
and the establishment of the first Black Republic. The French colony had been the richest in the Caribbean,
producing vast amounts of sugar and coffee through brutal slave labor. But in 1791, enslaved Africans launched
a massive uprising inspired by the principles of the French Revolution. In 1800, Latin America,
was still overwhelmingly under European colonial rule, particularly dominated by Spain and Portugal.
The Spanish Empire controlled nearly all of South America, except for Portuguese Brazil, and a few
contested frontier regions. These colonies were governed through a rigid hierarchy that privileged
peninsulares, Spaniards born in Europe, over Crioios, those of European descent born in the Americas,
while indigenous people, Africans, and mixed race population were subject to discriminatory laws,
tribute demands, and labor exploitation.
Now I'd like to turn my attention to Europe
and the 18th century intellectual and philosophical movement
that transformed Europe and ultimately the world,
the Enlightenment.
The Enlightenment emphasized reason, science,
individual liberty, and skepticism of traditional authority.
It sought to apply rational thought to society,
politics, economics, and human nature,
challenging long-standing structures such as
monarchy, the church, and rigid social hierarchies.
Enlightenment thinkers advocated for free speech, religious tolerance, constitutional
government, and the idea that human beings could improve society through knowledge and
education.
These ideas, which are totally commonplace today, were revolutionary in the 18th century.
Notable 18th century Enlightenment figures included Voltaire, who championed civil liberties
and criticized religious dogma.
Jean-Jacques Rousseau, who explored ideas.
of social contract and popular sovereignty.
John Locke, who laid the foundation for liberal political theory with his emphasis on natural
rights and government by consent.
Baron de Montesquieu, who proposed the separation of powers, and a manual con to define
the Enlightenment as humanity's emergence from self-imposed ignorance.
In economics, Adam Smith advanced ideas of free markets and capitalism with his work
the wealth of the nations, while Denis Dieterot compiled the encyclopedia, a landmark effort
to systematize all human knowledge.
These ideas impacted a host of different areas.
Monarchs such as Frederick the Great of Prussia and Catherine the Great of Russia
adopted certain Enlightenment ideas in their efforts to modernize their states.
This phenomenon became known as Enlightened Absoluteism.
The country that adopted Enlightenment ideas most radically was, of course, France.
In France, the absolute monarchy of Louis XIV's era had given way to
revolutionary upheaval. The French Revolution, which began in 1789, had not only overthrown the
old order within France, but also sent shockwaves across the entire continent. By 1800, Napoleon Bonaparte
had emerged as First Consolidating power and preparing for the imperial expansion that would define
the early 19th century. In a little over a decade, the revolution had ended up right back to one-man rule.
Enlightenment ideas were also behind the American Revolution and the Haitian Revolution as well.
These countries were only the first to adopt these ideas. There would be even more changes made
in the 19th century. As big as the impact of the Enlightenment had on the world of politics,
it was dwarfed by its impact on the world of technology, science, and economics. The 18th century
marked a convergence of three major revolutions, the scientific, agricultural, and industrial
revolutions, that together reshaped human understanding, society, and the global economy.
The scientific revolution, though it began in the 16th and 17th centuries with figures like
Galileo and Newton, continued to evolve during the 18th century and laid the foundation for
enlightenment thought. This period saw the expansion of empirical observation, experimentation, and the
application of the scientific method due natural phenomena.
Advances in chemistry, biology, astronomy, and physics flourished, with scientists like Antoine
Lavoisier, often called the father of modern chemistry, revolutionizing the understanding
of combustion and chemical reactions.
William Herschel discovered new celestial bodies like Uranus and deepened knowledge of the
solar system.
Scientific societies and publications spread knowledge widely, contributing to a growing belief
in progress and rational inquiry.
The agricultural revolution, which overlapped chronologically with the scientific revolution,
involved a series of innovations in farming practices that greatly increased food production in parts of Europe,
particularly in Britain.
These included the widespread adoption of crop rotation, the use of new tools like the seed drill,
popularized by Jethro Tull, the farmer not the band,
the enclosure movement that consolidated small plots into larger, more efficient farms,
and the selective breeding of livestock.
These changes not only improved yields and reduced famine, but also freed up labor from the countryside, fueling urbanization and the growth of industrial labor forces.
The Industrial Revolution, which began in Britain in the mid to late 18th century, introduced a profound shift from manual agrarian-based production to machine-driven manufacturing.
Powered by innovations such as the steam engine, the spinning genie, and the power loom, industrialization revolutionized textile production.
later expanded to iron coal and transportation industries.
Factories became the new centers of economic activity, drawing millions into cities, and creating
an entirely new working class. The Industrial Revolution also transformed global trade,
imperialism, and environmental conditions, setting the stage for modern capitalism and the mass
production economy. As much change as there was in the 18th century, walking around most cities
in the year 1800 wouldn't have seemed radically different from the year 1700.
While new techniques were available to farmers, they weren't universally adopted yet,
and the life of most farmers wasn't that much different either.
However, by the year 1800, the table had been set for the truly radical changes that would
come over the next two centuries.
Because the changes that are to come in the 19th century are so great,
the next episode like this one isn't going to take place on episode 9th,
1900. Rather, I'll be doing another one on episode 1850.
The 18th century and the Enlightenment unleashed a whole new way of thinking and looking at the
world. Everything which had been assumed or taken for granted from political institutions to our
understanding of the natural world was now questioned. That is what made the year 1800,
such a pivotal year in world history. The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles
Daniel. The associate producers are Austin
Oakden and Cameron Kiefer.
I want to thank everyone who supports the show
over on Patreon. Your support
helps make this podcast possible.
I'd also like to thank all the members
of the Everything Everywhere community who are active
on the Facebook group and the Discord server.
If you'd like to join in the discussion,
there are links to both in the show notes.
And as always, if you leave
a review or send me a boostagram,
you too can have it read on the show.
