Great Exhibition of the Works of Industry of all Nations, London, 1851 in 1870. Painting by
August von Wille. , Germany, The United Kingdom was the first country in the world to industrialise. In the 18th and 19th centuries, the UK experienced a massive increase in agricultural productivity known as the
British Agricultural Revolution, which enabled an unprecedented
population growth, freeing a significant percentage of the workforce from farming, and helping to drive the
Industrial Revolution. Due to the limited amount of arable land and the overwhelming efficiency of
mechanised farming, the increased population could not be dedicated to agriculture. New agricultural techniques allowed a single
peasant to feed more workers than previously; however, these techniques also increased the demand for
machines and other
hardware, which had traditionally been provided by the
urban artisans. Artisans, collectively called
bourgeoisie, employed rural
exodus workers to increase their output and meet the country's needs. British industrialisation involved significant changes in the way that work was performed. The process of creating a
good was divided into simple tasks, each one of them being gradually mechanised in order to boost
productivity and thus increase
income. The new machines helped to improve the productivity of each worker. However, industrialisation also involved the exploitation of new forms of energy. In the pre-industrial economy, most machinery was powered by human muscle, by animals, by wood-burning or by
water-power. With industrialisation these sources of fuel were replaced with coal, which could deliver significantly more energy than the alternatives. Much of the new technology that accompanied the industrial revolution was for machines which could be powered by coal. One outcome of this was an increase in the overall amount of energy consumed within the economy, a trend which has continued in all industrialised nations to the present-day. The accumulation of
capital allowed
investments in the
scientific conception and application of new technologies, enabling the industrialisation process to continue to evolve. The industrialisation process formed a class of industrial workers who had more money to spend than their agricultural cousins. They spent this on items such as tobacco and sugar, creating new mass markets that stimulated more investment as merchants sought to exploit them. The mechanisation of production spread to the countries surrounding England geographically in Europe such as France and to British
settler colonies, helping to make those areas the wealthiest, and shaping what is now known as the
Western world. Some economic historians argue that the possession of so-called 'exploitation colonies' eased the accumulation of capital to the countries that possessed them, speeding up their
development. The consequence was that the
subject country integrated a bigger
economic system in a subaltern position, emulating the countryside, which demands manufactured goods and offers raw materials, while the colonial power stressed its urban posture, providing goods and importing food. A classical example of this mechanism is said to be the
triangular trade, which involved England, southern United States and western Africa. Some have stressed the importance of natural or financial resources that Britain received from its many overseas colonies or that profits from the British
slave trade between Africa and the Caribbean helped fuel industrial investment. While these arguments still find some favour with historians of the colonies, most historians of the British Industrial Revolution do not consider that colonial possessions formed a significant role in the country's industrialisation. Whilst not denying that Britain could profit from these arrangements, they believe that industrialisation would have proceeded with or without the colonies. ==Early industrialisation in other countries==