If the Industrial Revolution was initially a Western European phenomenon generally, it clearly began in Britain in particular. The world’s first Industrial Revolution unfolded spontaneously in a country that concentrated some of the more general features of European society. It was both unplanned and unexpected.
Comparison
What was distinctive about Britain that may help explain its status as the breakthrough point of the Industrial Revolution?
With substantial imperial possessions in the Caribbean, in North America, and, by the late eighteenth century, in India as well, Britain was the most highly commercialized of Europe’s larger countries. Its landlords had long ago “enclosed” much agricultural land, pushing out the small farmers and producing for the market. A series of agricultural innovations—
British political life encouraged commercialization and economic innovation. Its policy of religious toleration, formally established in 1688, welcomed people with technical skills regardless of their faith, whereas France’s persecution of its Protestant minority had chased out some of its most skilled workers. The British government favored men of business with tariffs that kept out cheap Indian textiles, with laws that made it easy to form companies and to forbid workers’ unions, with roads and canals that helped create a unified internal market, and with patent laws that served to protect the interests of inventors. Checks on royal prerogative—
Europe’s Scientific Revolution also took a distinctive form in Great Britain in ways that fostered technological innovation.15 Whereas science in continental Europe was largely based on logic, deduction, and mathematical reasoning, in Britain it was much more concerned with observation, experiment, precise measurements, mechanical devices, and practical commercial applications. This kind of science played a role in the invention and improvement of the steam engine. Even though most inventors were artisans or craftsmen rather than scientists, in eighteenth-
Finally, several accidents of geography and history contributed something to Britain’s Industrial Revolution. The country had a ready supply of coal and iron ore, often located close to each other and within easy reach of major industrial centers. Although Britain took part in the wars against Napoleon, the country’s island location protected it from the kind of invasions that so many continental European states experienced during the era of the French Revolution. Moreover, Britain’s relatively fluid society allowed for adjustments in the face of social changes without widespread revolution. By the time the dust settled from the immense disturbance of the French Revolution, Britain was well on its way to becoming the world’s first industrial society.