Key Idea: When an innovation threatens someone's power, money, or beliefs, that person usually fights back. This topic asks WHO resists innovation and WHY: established authorities protecting power, ordinary people protecting their jobs, old beliefs that feel safer than the unknown, and rival methods competing for the same space.
How this topic is tested — Paper 2
Paper 2 is a thematic essay paper. You never get asked about just one country — you must compare across at least two regions.
§A asks for a mini-essay on a concept like cause/consequence or continuity/change [6 marks]. §B(a) asks you to explain a factor in ONE region [4 marks]. §B(b) is the big one: a 'to what extent' essay [15 marks] that needs examples from at least TWO different regions. Examiners reward genuine comparison — say what's similar AND different between your regions, don't just describe them one after another.
Must-know facts — one micro, three case studies
Topic 7.3 has a single micro (7.3.1), but it packs in three separate case studies you must be able to use in an essay.
| Case study | Region | Who resisted | Key dates/names | How they resisted |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Heliocentrism (Copernicus's Sun-centred model challenging the Church's Earth-centred view) | Europe | The Catholic Church | Copernicus published 1543; Galileo (1564–1642) tried by the Roman Inquisition in 1633 | Formal trial, forced recantation, house arrest, banned book (until 1835) |
| Arabic-script printing press | Africa & the Middle East (Ottoman Empire) | Religious scholars (ulema) and scribal guilds | Gutenberg's press c. 1440 in Europe; Ottoman printing effectively blocked for centuries; Sultan Ahmed III allowed a limited press in 1727 (İbrahim Müteferrika) | Religious objection (hand-copying the Qur'an seen as sacred), guild self-interest, cautious rulers — informal custom, not trial |
| Automated textile machinery | Europe (Britain) | Skilled textile workers, the Luddites | 1811–1816 | Machine-breaking at night; UK government made it a capital crime and sent troops |
- Established authorities — the Church and Ottoman state/ulema resisted because innovation threatened their control over knowledge, doctrine, or legitimacy.
- Popular resistance — the Luddites show resistance from ordinary people defending their livelihoods, not institutions defending doctrine.
- Rival innovations — old, trusted methods (hand-copied manuscripts, geocentric astronomy) held on simply because they were embedded and familiar, even after a better alternative existed.
- Continuity and change together — in every case, change eventually won, but only after decades or centuries of delay — continuity is a real historical force, not just 'nothing happening'.
Modelled exam question — §B(b), 15 marks
To what extent was resistance from established authorities the main obstacle to innovation, using two examples from two different regions?
🔒 Model answer plan
See the mark-by-mark plan — for / against / judgement, with marking guidance — in study mode.
Important: Don't write half an essay on Galileo, then half an essay on the Ottomans, with no link between them. Examiners want you to explicitly compare: 'Unlike the Church's formal trial of Galileo, Ottoman resistance worked through guild custom rather than legal punishment.' One sentence like that can lift a whole essay a band.
Quick self-test
Why did the Catholic Church resist heliocentrism? Because the heliocentric model (Sun-centred, from Copernicus, 1543) contradicted the Bible-backed geocentric model and threatened the Church's authority over universities, licences, and doctrine, not just a single scripture verse.
What happened to Galileo in 1633? The Roman Inquisition put him on trial for supporting heliocentrism, forced him to publicly recant, and kept him under house arrest until his death; his book stayed banned until 1835.
Why was Arabic-script printing resisted in the Ottoman Empire? Religious scholars saw hand-copying the Qur'an as sacred, and scribal guilds feared losing their livelihood to a machine — reinforced by cautious sultans who relied on those same scholars for legitimacy.
When did the Ottomans finally allow printing, and how limited was it? In 1727, Sultan Ahmed III allowed İbrahim Müteferrika to open a press, but only for non-religious books; it closed within decades under continued pressure.
Who were the Luddites and what makes their resistance different? British textile workers (1811–1816) who smashed automated weaving machines that threatened their jobs. Unlike the Church or Ottoman scholars, this was popular resistance from ordinary workers, not an institution.
What's the difference between 'continuity and change' and 'perspectives' as concepts here? Continuity and change explains why old methods survived so long despite a better alternative existing; perspectives explains why a factory owner and a Luddite weaver could see the same machine as progress or as a threat, with neither view simply 'wrong'.
Always name at least two regions in a §B(b) essay — Europe plus Africa/Middle East works well here. Use exact dates (1543, 1633, 1727, 1811–1816) to show precision. Distinguish institutional resistance (Church, Ottoman state/ulema) from popular resistance (Luddites) — examiners reward that distinction. End with a clear judgement, not just a summary.