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How Did Asian Empires Change From The Modern Period

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How Did Asian Empires Change From The Modern Period
In the time period of the ninetieth century, a greater number of the Asian Empires change from the early modern period to the modern era. There were lots of different reasons for this transition. In the early modern period, a great number of the Asian countries were under the dictatorship of kings, principles and governing conduct. You can say that the citizens had no rights. These countries were underdeveloped and no industries. Majority of the people were unable to read. The education system was old, and the schools were restricted in numbers. They did not have any kind of communication with the other world. The difference between these countries and the European countries were that the Asian countries were advance in every way. When colonialism spread in the various parts of Asia, the kings lost their power and their administrative and jurisdictive power went to the foreign countries like France and England which established their own ruling.
These countries objective was to make more profit from these nations for their finished goods. Reforms were introduced in the education sector to continue to
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And they had lots of both. Both empires relied heavily, for their wealth and stability, on taxes derived from agriculture. They both benefitted from thriving manufacturing sectors—Indian cotton and indigo, and Chinese silk and porcelain. But rulers paid little attention to and had minimal control over the new and rising merchant classes as the global economy brought more trade and wealth from the oceans. And for both, their lack of imperial sea power contributed eventually to their downfall. When European ships armed with the latest cannons sailed into the Indian Ocean in the 16th century they found it

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