Victorian Era
Victorian Era
Victorian Era
Victorian era
Victorian era, in British history, the period between approximately 1820
and 1914, corresponding roughly but not exactly to the period of Queen
Victoria’s reign (1837–1901) and characterized by a class-based society, a
growing number of people able to vote, a growing state and economy,
and Britain’s status as the most powerful empire in the world.
Queen Victoria
At the start of the period, MPs were elected by the half-million property-
owning men (in a population of 21 million) who had the vote. In 1829 the vote
was granted to Catholic men and in 1832, to most middle-class men; in 1867
and 1884 the franchise was extended to working-class men. Most women over
age 30 got the right to vote in 1918. Full adult suffrage, with no property
requirement, was achieved with the second Representation of the People
Act (1928). This story of the expansion of the national electorate is important,
but there is more to political participation than voting at the national level.
Local politics were also important. And being denied a voice and access to
institutions certainly did not render nonvoters indifferent to politics or to how
power was wielded; they made their opinions on these known via
demonstrations, petitions, and pamphlets.
Dramatic expansion of the empire meant that such goods came to Britain from
all over the world. Between 1820 and 1870 the empire grew, shifted its
orientation eastward, and increased the number of nonwhite people over
whom it exerted control. Much of this expansion involved violence, including
the Indian Mutiny (1857–59), the Morant Bay Rebellion (1865) in Jamaica,
the Opium Wars (1839–42, 1856–60) in China, and the Taranaki War (1860–
61) in New Zealand. India became central to imperial status and wealth. There
was significant migration to the settler colonies of Australia and New
Zealand and later to Canada and South Africa. From 1870 until 1914 continued
aggressive expansion (including Britain’s participation in the so-
called Scramble for Africa) was assisted by new technologies,
including railways and telegraphy. Britain took control of large parts of Africa
(including Egypt, Sudan, and Kenya), which together were home to about 30
percent of the African population. The same period also saw the start of
anticolonial movements that demanded freedom from British domination in
India and elsewhere. These would ultimately lead to decolonization after
World War II.