Coal, cotton, revolution aftershocks
Factories, Napoleon, Haiti, abolition pressure, Latin American independence.
The nineteenth century opens with machine power still uneven but already transformative. Britain’s industrial change is moving from invention into social system: coal, steam, cotton mills, canals, ports, wage labor, credit, empire, and urban migration begin to lock together.
War still dominates the surface. The Napoleonic era mobilizes armies, taxation, nationalism, bureaucracy, and mass politics across Europe and beyond. The Congress of Vienna later tries to restore balance, but the revolutionary virus has escaped: sovereignty, citizenship, nation, rights, and empire will keep colliding.
Haiti’s independence in 1804 is one of the most radical events in human history: enslaved people and their descendants defeat a slave-colonial order and create a Black republic. European and American powers fear the example. Freedom is punished by isolation and debt.
In 1807 Britain abolishes its slave trade, but slavery itself remains in much of the empire and across the Americas. Latin American independence movements intensify after Iberian crisis and Napoleonic disruption. The century begins with emancipation as a real force — and racial capitalism as a real counterforce.