Enclosure Movement
The Enclosure movement transformed England's agricultural landscape by converting common lands into private property, fundamentally altering rural society and contributing to industrialization. While enclosure made farming more efficient and profitable for landowners, it destroyed traditional village life and created a sharp divide between wealthy landowners and landless workers.
Large
numbers of slaves were brought from Africa to work on British sugar,
tobacco, and cotton farms in the Caribbean and America, making Britain very
wealthy. Education played a crucial role because people who wanted to
end slavery wrote simple books and newspapers to teach others about how badly
slaves were treated. The movement achieved major victories when Parliament
banned the slave trade in 1807 and then ended slavery completely in the
British Empire in 1833 under the leadership of William Wilberforce.
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