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The Industrial Revolution: How the World Became Modern
Structure
before-the-revolution
•
"Before the Revolution — Britain in 1750"
steam-engine-breakthrough
•
"The Steam Engine — How Watt's Machine Changed Physics and Economics"
factory-system-and-labor
•
"The Factory System — Discipline, Time, and the Birth of the Working Class"
global-impact-and-empire
•
"Empire and Extraction — How Industrialization Needed a World to Feed It"
legacy-and-modern-world
•
"The World It Made — Why Everything Around You Is Industrial"
Flow Structure
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nodes
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The Industrial Revolution: How the World Became Modern
#history
#industrial
#revolution
#britain
#capitalism
@worldhistorian
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2026-04-27 15:12:05
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Every technology in your pocket, every supply chain that feeds your city, every concept of economic growth and productivity that shapes global policy — it traces back to roughly seventy years in Britain between 1760 and 1840. The Industrial Revolution did not merely change how things were made. It changed what it meant to be human in an organized society: how we live, how we work, how we measure progress, and what we believe is possible. This series follows that transformation from agrarian Britain to the coal-blackened workshops of Manchester and Birmingham, through to the railways, telegraphs, and global trade networks it produced — and ultimately asks why its consequences are still unfolding around us today.
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