The Conservative Order and the Age of Metternich
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Transcript The Conservative Order and the Age of Metternich
THE CONSERVATIVE ORDER AND
THE AGE OF METTERNICH
The Empires Strike Back!
WHAT ARE THESE TERMS?
THE KEY TO YOUR AP EXISTENCE FOR THE
NEXT TWO WEEKS OR SO…
Conservatism – keeping the status quo…keeping
the kings in charge and letting the absolute
monarchs run the show
Liberalism – open up democracy to the educated
and landowning middle class…elect
representatives to legislative bodies and avoid
mass democracy
Nationalism – a great pride in your culture or
country…will be driving force behind separate
ethnicities and cultures being administered by
their own representative government
THE CONGRESS OF VIENNA
Let’s fix this!
CONGRESS OF VIENNA
Representatives of major powers of Europe,
including France, met to redraw territorial lines
and to try and restore the social and political
order of the Old Regime
Big Five
Klemens Von Metternich – AUSTRIA
Lord Castlereagh – GREAT BRITAIN
Czar Alexander I – RUSSIA
Some Prussian – PRUSSIA
Minister Talleyrand – FRANCE
THE CONGRESS OF VIENNA
SEPTEMBER 1814-JUNE 1815
WHAT THE WHITE MEN WANT
Legitimacy
The deposed kings are returned to their power
Bourbons restored in France, Spain, and Naples
Compensation
Reward states which helped defeat Napoleon with land
England receives naval bases
Austria receives Italian provinces
Russia receives much of Poland, and Alexander becomes king
WHAT THE WHITE MEN DID
Balance of Power
GOAL: Arrange the map so that one country can
never gain enough power to be able to take over
Strategies to encircle France
Strengthen the Netherlands – buffer state of “Belgium”
German Confederation (Bund)
Official end of Holy Roman Empire
Austria is President of the Assembly of Confederation
Loose confederation of states where members remained
pretty much sovereign
LEGACY OF THE CONGRESS OF VIENNA
Goal – Make a Europe where there will never be
another war
Britain emerges as the most powerful country
and the lone growing power
Successfully restored the European balance of
power…relative peace for the next 100 years
Criticism for limiting and discouraging the
spread of Enlightenment ideas
Underestimated the new nationalism generated
by the French Revolution
THE CONCERT OF EUROPE
1815-1850s
CONCERT OF EUROPE
A series of arrangements to enforce the status quo as
defined by the Vienna settlement
Highly conservative and against liberalism/nationalism
Two Components
Quadruple Alliance
Congress System
CONCERT OF EUROPE
QUADRUPLE ALLIANCE
Quadruple Alliance – Russia, Prussia, Austria, and
England
If a dynastic leader was under attack, all members of
the Alliance promised to help one another
France was seen as a constant threat
Austria used the alliance to their benefit the most
CONCERT OF EUROPE
CONGRESS SYSTEM
Congress System
Countries are designed to meet every couple of years
to discuss new threats
Worked effectively until 1822 when Britain pulled
out
Disagreed with the handling of Spanish rebellion
HOLY ALLIANCE
Russia, Prussia, Austria
Designed to agree to
uphold Christian principles
in foreign policy
Britain does not join
More of a way to put down
liberalism and nationalism
than a way to uphold
Christian principles
Reactive, not proactive
QUICK WRITING ASSIGNMENT
Write the introduction…
Discuss the goals and overall legacy of the
Congress of Vienna (1814-15).
Underline your thesis.
LIBERALISM
Something Different.
CHARACTERISTICS OF LIBERALISM
First major theory in Western thought that saw
the individual as a self-sufficient being, whose
freedom and well-being were the sole reasons for
the existence of society
The political outgrowth of the Enlightenment
Believe in…
Liberty of the individual
People should get equal rights before the law
Government should protect natural rights
CHARACTERISTICS OF LIBERALISM
DON’T BELIEVE IN
PURE DEMOCRACY
AND UNIVERSAL
SUFFRAGE
Most identify with the
bourgeoisie (middle class)
and believe voting rights
shouldn’t be extended
below them to the lower
classes
LIBERALISM IN ECONOMICS
Economics becomes known
as the “dismal science”
Adam Smith – Wealth of
Nations
No government
intervention (laissez-faire)
The Invisible Hand will
take negative qualities of
people and turn them into
good for the economy
Severely opposed to
mercantilism
LIBERALISM IN ECONOMICS
THE DEBBIE DOWNERS
David Ricardo
“iron law of wages”
Thomas Malthus
Population vs. food supply
LIBERALISM IN ECONOMICS
Utilitarianism – Jeremy Bentham
Laws should be made based on “the greatest
happiness of the greatest number”
Every law should help the greatest amount of people
at the greatest possible amount
John Stuart Mill – On Liberty (1859)
A person should be free as long as it doesn’t infringe
on someone else’s freedom
Government should exist to make sure people’s
freedom doesn’t’ get infringed upon
Absolute freedom of opinion to be protected from both
government censorship and tyranny of majority
IMPACT OF LIBERALISM
Inspired various revolutionary movements of the
early 19th century
Left traces in written constitutions which were
installed in European countries during the mid19th century
Translated into the Romantic period of art,
music, and literature
Zollverein – 1834
Economic union of 17 German states which
eliminated internal tariffs and established free trade
Free trade was a liberal idea
CONSERVATISM
WHAT IS CONSERVATISM?
A reaction to liberalism and a popular alternative
for those frightened by the violence, terror, and
social disorder of the French Revolution
Supported by traditional ruling classes and
peasants
Believed in order, society, the state, faith, and
tradition
Basically Make life the way it was before the
French Revolution
THE BIGGEST THREAT…
The bourgeoisie (middle class), which had stirred
up the lower classes in France
EDMUND BURKE
Reflections of the
Revolution in France
One of the great
intellectual defenses of
European conservatism
Predicted anarchy and
dictatorship in France as
a result of the French
Revolution
Advised England to go
slow in adapting its own
liberties
KLEMENS VON METTERNICH
Foreign minister of
Austria and chief
architect of the Congress
of Vienna
Particularly concerned
about the multi-ethnic
character of the
Austrian empire
Did not want the ideas
of the French Revolution
to take root in his
empire
AUSTRIA AND THE GERMAN CONFEDERATION
Austria had the most to lose with FR ideas in play
Carlsbad Diet (1819) – instituted by Concert
Carlsbad Decrees cracked down on liberalism in
universities and drove liberalism and nationalism
underground
Any teacher talking about Enlightenment ideas will be fired
Student organizations would be monitored by student spies
Materials pushing for German unification will be censored
EXCERPT FROM CARLSBAD DECREES
“The confederated governments mutually pledge
themselves to remove from the universities or
other public educational institutions all teachers
who, by obvious deviation from their duty or by
exceeding the limits of their functions, or by the
abuse of their legitimate influence over the
youthful minds, or by propagating harmful
doctrines hostile to public order or subversive of
existing governmental institutions, shall have
unmistakably proved their unfitness for the
important of fice entrusted to them...”
PRUSSIA
Hohenzollern dynasty continues to rule
Liberal reforms in Prussia after 1815 were
designed to increase government efficiency
instead of giving the people more freedom
Government and Junkers work together to
suppress liberal and nationalist movements
GREAT BRITAIN
Tories vs. Whigs
Conservative Tories control the government
Corn Laws (1815)
Cheaper foreign grains cannot be imported
Benefited wealthy landowners who could jack up the prices
of domestic product
Habeas corpus repealed for first time in British history
GREAT BRITAIN
Peterloo Massacre (1819)
Pro-liberal crowd in Manchester attacked by police
Crowd wanted the Corn Laws repealed and universal
suffrage for all men
11 killed and 400 were injured
Press will be brought under control, mass meetings
will be abolished, and liberals are scared to protest
England – moving toward a conservative,
authoritarian state by 1820
JOHN TYAS, NEWSPAPER
CORRESPONDENT, THE TIMES
It appears by every account that has yet reached
London, that in the midst of the Chairman's
speech, within less than twenty minutes from the
commencement of the meeting, the Yeomanry
Cavalry of the town of Manchester charged the
populace sword in hand, cut their way to the
platform, and with the police at their head, made
prisoners of Hunt and several of those who
surrounded him - seized the flags of the Reformers
- trampled down and cut down a number of the
people, who, after throwing some stones and
brickbats at the cavalry in its advance towards
the hustings, fled on all sides in the utmost
confusion and dismay.
JOHN TYAS, NEWSPAPER
CORRESPONDENT, THE TIMES
Of the crowd ... a large portion consisted of women.
About 8 or 10 persons were killed, and, besides those
whom their own friends carried off, above 50 wounded
were taken to the hospitals; but the gross number is
not supposed to have fallen short of 80 or 100, more or
less, grievously wounded...
Was that [meeting] at Manchester an 'unlawful
assembly'? Was the notice of it unlawful? We believe
not. Was the subject proposed for discussion an
unlawful object? Assuredly not. Was any thing done at
this meeting before the cavalry rode in upon it, either
contrary to law or in breach of the peace? No such
circumstance is recorded in any of the statements
which have yet reached our hands.
GOVERNMENT REACTION
The Government completely endorsed the
magistrates' actions and decided it was an illegal
meeting anyway. In a letter to Canning on 23
September 1819, Lord Liverpool said:
When I say that the proceedings of the magistrates at
Manchester ... were justifiable, you will understand
me as not by any means deciding that the course
which they pursued on that occasion was in all its
parts prudent. A great deal might be said in their
favour even on this head; but, whatever judgement
might be formed in this respect, being satisfied that
they were substantially right, there remained no
alternative but to support them.
FRANCE
Charter of 1814 –
established a
constitutional monarchy
under Louis XVIII
Bicameral legislature –
Chamber of Deputies and
Chamber of Peers
1816 – moderate royalists
were brought to power
through the election…want
to roll France back to an
absolutist state
FRANCE
Spanish revolution crushed
in 1823, and French troops
were brought in by the
Concert of Europe to restore
Ferdinand VII, a Bourbon,
back to the throne
1820 – heir to the throne was
murdered and royalists use
it to crack down on liberals
Louis XVIII gets more
reactionary and
conservative the longer
he remains in power
RUSSIA
Death of Alexander I in 1825 leaves power
vacuum
Younger brother Nicholas was in line to
rule
Decembrist Uprising (1825)
Junior military officers (decembrists)
supported liberal measures in government,
unlike Nicholas
Sought to prevent Nicholas’s ascension to
the throne
Revolt failed, and the leaders and
sentenced to death
Botched hanging
Nicholas I becomes the most reactionary
monarch
NATIONALISM
a great pride in your culture or country…will be
driving force behind separate ethnicities and
cultures being administered by their own
representative government
CHARACTERISTICS OF NATIONALISM
Cultural groups should rule themselves
Common language, history, and traditions would
bring about unity and common loyalties
Supported by liberals
Immediate origins were in the French Revolution
and the Napoleonic wars
EARLY NATIONALISTS
Johann Gottfried Herder (1744-1803)
The father of modern nationalism
Saw every groups as unique and
possessing a distinct national character
– “Volksgeist”
No one culture is better than another
Johann Gottlieb Fichte (1762-1814)
The father of German nationalism
Wanted to dehumanize other cultural
groups
How to handle Jewish problem?
I see absolutely no way of giving them [the
Jews] civic rights, except perhaps if one
chops of all of their heads and replaces
them with new ones, in which there would
not be one single Jewish idea.
NATIONAL REVOLUTIONARY MOVEMENTS
1820
Spain – revolt crushed by Concert of Europe
Revolted against the Bourbon leader of Spain
England withdraws
Naples (Italy) – revolt crushed by Austrian troops
Carbonari had triggered revolt
Piedmont (Italy) – revolt crushed by Austrian troops
NATIONAL REVOLUTIONARY MOVEMENTS
Greek Revolution (1821-1829)
The Eastern Question – “Sick man of Europe”
Turks retreating
England, France, and Russia will help Greeks
Muslims vs. Christians AND loving Greek culture
Treaty of Adrianople (1829) – Greek is an
autonomous state but has a German king
REVOLUTIONS OF 1830
France – July Revolution (1830)
Charles X – divine right and
absolutism
Radical revolt forces Charles X to
quit
Will spark a wave of revolts
throughout Europe
Metternich: “when France
sneezes, the rest of Europe
catches a cold”
REVOLUTIONS OF 1830
July Revolution
Louis Philippe, a cousin of the
royal family, becomes the new
king under a constitutional
monarchy
Known as the Bourgeoisie King
France now controlled by
upper-middle class…for the
first time since immediately
after Charles X took over (1824)
Laws will be made that support
the middle class at the expense
of the former nobility
REVOLUTIONS OF 1830
Italy (1831-32)
Trouble breaks out in Northern
Italy…led by Guiseppe Mazzini
and his Young Italy
Austrian troops put down the
revolts under Metternich’s
direction
German states (1830-33)
Carlsbad Decrees worked
July Revolution triggers
rumblings for unification
Austria’s domination of
German Confederation puts
these wishes down
REVOLUTIONS OF 1830
Belgium (1830)
Merged with the Netherlands in 1815 but has great
cultural differences
Revolt in Brussels is helped by French/British, who
have nothing to lose from Belgian independence
Poland (1830-31)
Nicholas I crushes a movement for Polish
independence and reinforces rule
LIBERAL REFORM IN ENGLAND
Slow but steady changes…
1820-1830
Young Tories control the government
Robert Peel and George Canning
Reforms
Abandoning the Concert of Europe
Reformed prisons and criminal code
Allowed labor unions
Established the “Bobbies”
Test Act repealed
Civil rights for Catholics
1830 AND ONWARD
Led by Earl Grey, leader of the Whigs
Heavily supported by the middle class
British national character
Be free and don’t revolt when one thing goes wrong
Be a respectful reformer
REFORM BILL OF 1832
Spurred on by a recent cholera epidemic…the
people wanted a more proactive government
Provisions
Increased number of voters from 6% to 12%
Kept a property qualification for the franchise
Eliminated rotten boroughs, which evens levels of
representation in Parliament across the country
Resulted in the supremacy of the House of Commons
over the House of Lords
PARLIAMENT’S ACTIONS
Factory Act of 1833
Ages 0-8 cannot work
Ages 9-13 – 8 hrs per day
Ages 14-18 – 12 hrs per day
Destroyed pattern of families working together
Mines Act of 1842 – ages under 10 cannot work
in the mines
Factory Act of 1847 – boys under 18 and women
cannot work over 10 hrs per day
Also known as the “Ten Hour Act”
CHARTISM – UNION IN POLITICS
Political movement in England which fights for
democracy among all people
Six Points
Universal male suffrage
Annual election of House of Commons
Secret ballot
Equal electoral districts
Abolition of property qualifications for Parliament
Salaries for members of the House of Commons
Movement fails but all measures will eventually
be adopted
OTHER PARLIAMENTARY THINGS
Corn Laws repealed in 1846
Navigation Laws repealed in 1849
Previously all goods had to be brought in to England
with British ships
The official end to mercantilism
BIG POINT: BECAUSE OF THESE SMALL
BUT STEADY CHANGES, THERE WAS
LIMITED INTERNAL UNREST IN ENGLAND
FROM 1820-1850, UNLIKE THE REST OF THE
CONTINENT OF EUROPE
1848
Judgment Day.
1848 – AN OVERVIEW
The turning point in the 19th century
Triggered by nationalism, liberalism, and
romanticism as well as economic instability
Only Britain and Russia will survive great
instability
Results…
End of serfdom in Austria and Germany
Universal male suffrage in France
Parliaments established in German states
Stimulation of unification talk in Germany
1848 – FRANCE
February Revolution
Working class and liberals unhappy with the
king, Louis Philippe
The nobility unhappy with the Bourgeoisie King
King was forced to abdicate in February 1848
Second French Republic
Influenced by Louis Blanc, who opened the
National Workshops which guaranteed work
for the unemployed
Reforms
Abolished slavery
10 hr workday in Paris
Abolished the death penalty
1848 – FRANCE
After April elections, Blanc exited Assembly and
workshops are closed – triggers anger
June Days
Revolt led by the working class…the National Guard
will seek to crush the uprising and support the
bourgeoisie’s power
Workers want to fight against poverty and desire
redistribution of income
Barricades put up in street but revolt is crushed by
the conservatives
1848 – FRANCE
The National Assembly creates a Constitution
which allows for a strong president and a
unicameral legislature
Napoleon’s nephew – Louis Napoleon – wins
election and becomes president of Republic
1848 – ITALY
Nationalists and liberals seek to finally kick out
foreign leaders in Italy
Many city-states defeat outside rulers
Giuseppe Mazzini establishes Roman Republic,
protected by Giuseppe Garibaldi
Pope Pius IX was forced to flee Rome
Austrian and French troops retake Italian regions
Why?
No support from rural people
Revolutionaries were not united
Lack of leadership among revolutionaries
1848 – AUSTRIA
Austrian government was extremely vulnerable to
nationalist and liberal activities
They were not willing to grant any freedoms to
any group because they would quickly lose
control
1848 – AUSTRIA
Declarations of Independence
Louis Kossuth, a Magyar leader, demanded independence
for the Hungarians
The Czechs and three Italian provinces also demanded
independence
Mass demonstrations from students and workers
Defeat of Hungary…and everyone else
Magyars cannot work with Slavs against the conservative
Austrian army
Austria had help from Russian armies
Metternich is forced to abdicate because of the mass
unrest…his conservatism has been defeated
1848 – GERMAN STATES
Liberals demanded constitutional
government and a union or
federation of German states
Frankfurt Parliament (May 1848)
Liberal, nationalist/romantic leaders
call for a elections to a constituent
assembly, from all states in the
German Bund, for the purpose of
unifying Germany
Presents Prussian king a
constitution, which he accepts at
first because of threats of rebellion
from the lower classes across
Germany
1848 – GERMAN STATES
Prussian King Frederick William IV then rejects
the liberal constitution
Claims “divine right” of kings
“I reject your crown from the gutter that has the stink
of revolution on it
King then imposes a constitution that guarantees
royal control in the government
Austria then demanded that Prussia pay allegiance
to the Bund, which Austria dominated
Prussia then drops plan to unify Germany, leaving
Austria the dominant German state in Bund
1848 EVALUATED
Many of the revolutions were spontaneous
movements that could not effectively maintain
popular support
Middle classes, who led the revolutions, came to
fear the radical tendencies of their working class
allies…they couldn’t work together
Conservatives take advantage to keep control
Different ethnic groups cannot work together to
take advantage of conservatives’ weaknesses
1848 EVALUATED
Positive Aspects
Universal male suffrage in France
Serfdom remains abolished in Austria/German states
Parliaments established in Prussia and other
German states, even though they are dominated by
royals
Prussia, others will gain momentum for unification