What the Industrial Revolution Did for Us

What the Industrial Revolution Did for Us

年份:2003

地区:英国

上映:2003

评分:0.0 分

播放:3 次

更新:2020年08月16日

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INCOMPARABLE LEGACY
  From boiling a kettle to working in an office, much of the modern world was shaped by the achievements of the Industrial Revolution. This six-part series uncovers the scientific, technological and political changes of the 19th century, as architectural historian Dan Cruickshank explores the legacy of the Industrial Revolution, from the world's first jigsaw portraying the infant Empire, to Stephenson's Rocket, to the making of modern medicine, urban living and the innovations of war.
  MATERIAL WORLD
  In 1766 a young Londoner called John Spilsbury came up with a curious idea. He took the world and carved it up. This dissectible map was the world's first jigsaw. Desire to capitalise on the world's resources grew at this time and the opening of trade routes allowed our forebears to instigate the consumer revolution, devising ingenious ways to imitate expensive exotic imports, such as Chintz. Closer to home Dan looks at the use of coal, iron ore and water, three fundamental raw materials which together fuelled the Industrial Revolution.
  WORKING WONDERS
  Whether we think it's a good thing or not, our experiences of working life in the 21st century - crowded cities, machine-driven factories, the office 9 to 5, the crush of the rush-hour - have their roots firmly set in the monumental changes of the Industrial Revolution, when the rhythm of the seasons was replaced by the piercing ring of the factory bell, and the rat race began. Inventions like the steam engine and production lines created vast wealth and a growing labour force led to the creation of banks and offices. The series features the world's first fax machine 30 years before the telephone was invented and more than a century before the fax became a permanent feature of the modern office!
  ON THE MOVE
  By the end of the 18th century industrialisation was sweeping the country and the massive growth in production, supply and demand started a revolution in the transportation of the country's goods and its people, via roads, canals and the mighty steam engine. At this time the first civil engineers emerged to transform the waterlogged, muddy and jagged roads into hard-wearing, smooth and water-resistant surfaces. Throughout the series, Dan travels through the longest tunnels, over the highest bridges and in the first-ever steam trains to explore the impact of the industrial Revolution on the way we get from A to B.
  MODERN MEDICINE
  Up until the mid 18th century, you had a better chance of survival if you chose not to visit a doctor. But the Industrial Revolution brought the hope that technology and progress might create a world without disease and suffering. Along the way we meet bright sparks like Ignaz Semmelweis, who suggested that washing your hands might be a good idea after an autopsy and Rene Hyacinthe Laennec, whose prudishness helped him invent modern diagnosis with the enduring symbol by which we still recognise the modern doctor: the stethoscope.
  WAR MACHINE
  Throughout the Industrial Revolution Britain was almost continually at war. It demanded a revolution in warfare, because industry relied on the army and navy to secure its materials and marke
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