Chapter 24 - Revolutions and Nationalism
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Transcript Chapter 24 - Revolutions and Nationalism
Revolutions
and
Nationalism
Revolutions of 1848
Considered the watershed political event of the 19th
century.
1848 revolutions influenced by romanticism, nationalism,
and liberalism, as well as economic dislocation and
instability.
Only Britain and Russia avoided significant upheaval.
Neither liberals or conservatives could gain permanent
upper hand.
Resulted in end of serfdom in Austria and Germany,
universal male suffrage in France, parliaments
established in German states (although controlled by
princes & aristocrats), stimulated unification impulse in
Prussia and Sardinia-Piedmont.
Last of liberal revolutions dating back to the French
Revolution
Consequences
The revolutions failed to pull popular support
from working classes.
Middle classes led the revolution, but as it
turned more radical, they held back.
Were they were successful, old guard was left
in place and they turned against them.
Nationalism divided more that united.
Some gains lasted (abolition of serfdom, etc.)
France 1848:
The February Revolution
Working class and
liberals unhappy with
King Louis Philippe,
esp. his minister
Francois Guizot (who
opposed electoral
reform).
King dismisses
Giuzot, but riots break
out.
King forced to
abdicate on Feb. 24.
Francois Guizot
The Provisional Government
Second French Republic declared by
Chamber of deputies.
Modernate republicans led by liberal Alphonse
Lamartine (allied w/ bourgeoisie)
Socialists led by Louis Blanc
national workshops created by Blanc to
provide work for the unemployed
Reforms: abolished slavery in the empire, 10 hr
workday in Paris, abolished death penalty.
April elections for new Constituent Assembly
resulted in conflict between moderate
republicans (who won) and socialists
The June Days Revolt
Workers attempted to create a revolutionary
republic after Blanc was dropped from
assembly.
Results in “June Days” Revolution
Cause: gov’t closed national workshops
Marked beginning of class warfare in France
Workers sought war against poverty and
redistribution of income.
Barricades put up in streets to oppose gov’t
forces (Hugo’s Les Miserables based on this)
France 1848
The Second Republic
General Louis Cavaignac:
assumed dictatorial powers &
crushed revolt (10,000 dead)
Victory for conservatives
Nov 1848 – constitution provided for
elected president and one-house
parliament
Election of 1848: Louis Napoleon
Bonaparte (1803-1873) defeated
Cavignac
1852: Louis Napoleon consolidates
power and becomes Emperor
Napoleon III
Louis Napoleon
Bonaparte
Second French Republic
Constitution: Unicameral legislature (National
Assembly); strong executive power; popularlyelected president of the Republic
President Louis Napoleon Bonaparte: seen
by voters as a symbol of stability and
greatness
Dedicated to law and order, opposed to
socialism and radicalism, and favored the
conservative classes—the Church, army,
property-owners, and business.
Granted universal male suffrage
Falloux Law: Napoleon returned control of
education to the Church (in return for support)
The Coup D’etat
Emperor Napoleon III.
The Assembly did not grant
Louis Napoleon the allowance
for a 2nd presidential term
resulting in his plotting a coup.
On Dec 2, 1852, he had
opponents arrested.
Through a series of plebiscites,
he consolidated power with the
help of the Bonapartists,
becoming Emperor Napoleon
III.
The Second Empire
1851-1860: Napoleon III’s control was direct
and authoritarian.
Economic reforms resulted in a healthy
economy
Infrastructure: canals, roads; Baron Haussmann
redevelops Paris
Movement towards free trade, hurt economy
Banking: Credit Mobilier funded industrial and
infrastructure growth
Foreign policy struggles resulted in strong
criticism of Napoleon III
Algeria, Crimean War, Italian unification struggles,
colonial possessions in Africa
The Second Empire
1860-1870: Regime liberalized by a series of
reforms.
Liberal reforms (done in part to divert attention
from unsuccessful foreign policy)
Extended power of the Legislative Assembly
Returned control of secondary education to the
government (instead of Catholic Church)
In response, Pope Pius IX issued Syllabus of
Errors, condemning liberalism.
Permitted trade unions and right to strike
Eased censorship and granted amnesty to political
prisoners
Revolution in Austria, 1848
Habsburg empire was vulnerable to revolutionary
challenge
Ethnic minorities sought nationalistic goals:
Hungarians, Slavs, Czechs, Italians, Serbs, Croats,
and others. (More non-Germans than Germans lived in
the empire)
Austrian gov’t was reactionary; liberal institutions were
non-existent.
Social reliance on serfdom doomed masses of people
to a life w/o hope.
“February Revolution” in France sparked rebellion for
liberal reforms.
Vienna, 1848
March 13 – rioting breaks out in
Vienna
Austrian empire collapsed;
Metternich fled
Constituent assembly meets.
Serfdom (robot) abolished,
revolution withers.
Revolutionary gov’t failed to
govern effectively
Ferdinand I abdicates,
Habsburgs restored royal
absolutism under Franz Joseph
(r. 1848-1916).
Franz Joseph
Hungary, 1848
Louis Kossuth (1802-1894)
Hungarian (Magyar nationalist)
leader demanded independence.
March laws provided for
Hungarian independence.
Austrians invade, Hungarian
armies drove within sight of
Vienna.
Slavic minorities resisted Magyar
invasion and Hungarian army
withdrew
Austrian and Russian armies
defeated Hungarian army.
Hungary would have to wait until
1866 for autonomy
Louis Kossuth
Bohemia, 1848
Prague Conference developed notion of
Austroslavism: constitution and
autonomy within Habsburg empire.
Pan-Slav Congress failed to unite Slavic
peoples in the empire.
Austrian military ultimately attacked
Prague and occupied Bohemia and
crushed rebellion.
Preserving the Austrian
Empire
Internal national divisions and military
defeats at the hands of the Italians,
Prussians and French caused continued
disunity in the Austrian Empire.
Under nationalist Ferencz Deak,
Hungary gained autonomy.
Franz Joseph became king of Hungary in
the now Austro-Hungarian Empire.
Britain
The Chartists
Movement reached its
height with the Kennington
Common demonstration on
April 10, 1848.
Could have been the
prelude to revolution in
Britain, but meeting was
peaceful.
Leaders did not follow-up
on the meeting and
Chartist movement died.
Kennington Common
demonstration on April 10, 1848
Effects of Nationalism
Many aspects of European political and
cultural life in the middle to late 18th
century took on nationalist overtones.
The French Revolution had promoted
and spread these ideas at the beginning
of the century.
The desire for national self-determination
combined with aspects of conservatism,
liberalism and romanticism made
nationalism a driving force in European
affairs.
The Impact of Nationalism
In Central and Eastern Europe, nationalism
was the most powerful ideology of the middle
19th century.
It would have a strong impact in Western
Europe as well (balanced by liberalism).
Nationalism had cultural roots (language,
history, symbolism) that gave a sense of
identity.
It soon took on political aspects, being used by
liberals and conservatives to promote their
agendas.
Crimean War
Causes
Dispute between two groups of
Christians over privileges in the Holy
Land
1852, Turks (who controlled the region)
negotiated an agreement with France to
provide enclaves in the Holy Land to
Roman Catholic religious orders.
This arrangement seemed to jeopardize
existing agreements which provided
access to Greek Orthodox religious
orders (that Russia favored)
Crimean War
Czar Nicholas I ordered
Russian troops to occupy
several provinces on the
Danube (excuse for Russian
expansion)
Russia would withdraw once
Turks had guaranteed rights
for Orthodox Christians
Turks declared war on Russia
in 1853, when Nicholas
refused to withdraw.
1854, Britain & France
declared war against Russia,
protecting their interests.
1855, Piedmont joined in the
war against Russia.
Crimean War
Battle of Balaklava
Most of the war fought on the
Crimean peninsula in the Black
Sea.
War was reported on widely in
newspapers.
Gained “nationalist” stature at
home due to reporting and
poems like “Charge of the
Light Brigade” by Alfred Lord
Tennyson
Florence Nightingale: famous
for superb nursing and improved
medical treatment (more men
died of disease than combat)
Peace Settlement
Deadlock in war broken with the taking of
Sevastopol.
Peace of Paris: Russia emerged as the big
loser in the conflict
Russia no longer had control of maritime trade
on the Danube, had to recognize Turkish
control of the mouth of the Danube, and
renounced claims to Moldavia and Walachia
Russia renounced role of protector of the
Greek Orthodox residents of the Ottoman
Empire.
Agreed to return all occupied territories to the
Ottoman Empire.
Italy, 1848
Italian nationalists and liberals seek to end
foreign domination of Italy
Milan, Lombardy and Venetia seek expel
Austrian rulers
Bourbon rulers in Kingdom of Two Sicilies and
House of Savoy in Sardinia-Piedmont grant
liberal constitutions.
Sardinia-Piedmont declared war on Austria.
Beginning in May, revolutions suppressed.
Italy, 1848
Giuseppe Mazzini
Giuseppe Mazzini established
Roman Republic in 1849
protected by Giuseppe
Garibaldi
Pope Pius IX forced to flee
Austrian General Radetsky
crushes Sardinia-Piedmont;
regains Lombardy and Venetia.
French troops take back Papal
States.
Victor Emmanuel II takes
throne in Sardinia-Piedmont.
Italy, 1848
Causes for failure:
Rural people did not
support revolutions,
focused mainly on
urban middle classes.
Revolutionaries not
united, fear of radicals
among moderates
leads to collapse.
Lack of leadership
and administrative
experience among
revolutionaries.
Giuseppe Garibaldi
Divided Italy
Following the Revolution of 1848, the
Risorgimento seemed a distant dream.
Italy remained divided into three main
parts:
Kingdom of the Two Sicilies – ruled by
Bourbon monarch.
Pope ruled the Papal States.
In the North, Sardinia-Piedmont was ruled
by the House of Savoy; Tuscany, Modena
and Parma were dominated by Austria while
Venice and Lombardy were part of the
Austria Empire.
Count Camillo Cavour (1810-1861)
Born of nobility, he became
a liberal early in his career.
In 1848, he was elected to
the new Piedmontese
Parliament and rose
through the ranks.
King Victor Emmanuel II
(r. 1849-1878) appointed
him premier in 1852.
Count Camillo Cavour
Cavour quickly instituted a program of
liberal reforms, hoping to discredit
Austrian tyranny and creating a united
North Italian state.
He reformed the currency and finance
systems.
Balanced the state budget.
He modernized railroads and factories.
He established banks.
Piedmont – Austrian War
Cavour sought alliance with France to help
deal with Austria.
Piedmont sends troops to the Crimea.
Napoleon III agrees to deal with Cavour.
Provides French troops to fight against Austria.
Piedmont would gain Lombardy and Venetia.
France would gain Savoy and Nice.
Cavour provokes Austria into war in April
1859.
Piedmont – Austrian War
Austria attacked, but were turned back by
the Piedmontese and the French at the
Battles of Magenta and Solferino.
Napoleon III made a separate peace with
Austria (Peace of Villafranca), giving
Lombardy to Piedmont but retaining
Venice.
Cavour resigned in disgust, but returned
in 1860 when revolutionary assemblies
across northern Italy moved to join with
Piedmont.
Revolution in Southern
Italy
Revolution broke out in Southern Italy in
1860 against Bourbon Francis II.
Guiseppe Garibaldi sailed south with
1000 Red Shirts to Sicily to support the
revolt, taking Palermo.
In August, they crossed to the Italian
mainland, Francis II fled.
On Sept. 7, Garibaldi took Naples.
The Kingdom of Italy
Cavour then sent troops to take control of the
Papal States before Garibaldi moved against
Rome.
Garibaldi allowed the annexation of the
Kingdom of the Two Sicilies.
On March 17, 1861 an Italian parliament
proclaimed the Kingdom of Italy with Victor
Emmanuel II as king.
Wars between Prussia and Austria and France
allowed Venetia and Rome to be incorporated
into Italy by 1870.
The German States, 1848
Revolutions inspired by 1848
revolutions in France
Liberals demanded
constitutional government and
a union or federation of
German states.
Frederick William IV rejected
liberal constitution; imposed
conservative one that
guaranteed royal control of
gov’t (lasted until 1918).
Frederick William IV
Frankfurt Parliament
Liberal, romantic, & nationalist
leaders called for elections to a
constituent assembly, from all
states in the German Bund, for
the purpose of unifying the
German states.
Sought war with Denmark to
annex Schleswig & Holstein;
Prussia declared war on
Denmark
Presented constitution for a
united German federation.
Selected Prussian King
Frederick William IV as
emperor; he declined claiming
“divine right of kings”
Collapse of the Revolution
Failure of Prussia and Austria to support
unification movement resulted in its collapsed
Frederick William’s attempt to unify Germany
ended in failure
Austria demanded Prussian allegiance to the
Bund (that Austria dominated)
“Humiliation of Olmutz”: Prussia dropped
plan to unify Germany, leaving Austria as
dominant German state in the Bund.
Prussia would seek revenge in 1866 (AustroPrussian War)
Divided Germany
After 1848, liberal nationalists were in a
weak position politically.
The German Confederation was
reestablished as a loose union of 39
states (including the powerful Prussia
and Austria).
The union was dominated by Austria,
which held the presidency.
Otto von Bismarck (1815-1898)
Bismarck was born on
Prussian Junker
aristocracy.
Worked unhappily in civil
service and became a
farmer.
Elected to the Landtag
(Prussian Parliament) in
1847.
Here he would begin his
practice of “realpolitik”
Otto von Bismarck
Wilhelm I
In 1852, he became Prussia’s
rep. at the Confederation
(later he became ambassador
to Russia and France).
Wilhelm I (r. 1861-1888)
named him minister-president
to push forward expansion of
the military.
Despite liberal opposition, he
raised taxes to do so, claiming
change would come through
“blood and iron.”
The Schleswig-Holstein
Affair
1863 annexation by Denmark infuriated
German nationalists.
Prussia and Austria allied to defeat
Demark in 1864.
The Convention of Gastein provided for
joint Austrian-Prussian rule of the duchies.
Bismarck began making deals with
France, Italy and Russia for neutrality in
dealing with Austria.
The Seven Weeks War
In 1866, Prussia accused Austria of
violating the Convention of Gastein.
In June, they went to war.
Austrians were soundly defeated at the
Battle of Königgrätz (Sadowa) on July 3.
In the Treaty of Prague, Prussia gained
several states in northern Germany, the
German Conf. dissolved and Italy
received Venetia.
The North German
Confederation
Prussia established the North German
Confederation in 1867.
South German states of Bavaria,
Wurttemburg, Baden, and Hesse
remained independent.
Bismarck wanted to absorb them, but
differences (south was Catholic and
liberal) and French opposition made this
difficult.
The Hohenzollern
Candidacy
An 1868 Spanish revolution resulted in the
nomination of Prince Leopold of Hohenzollern as
king.
The French protested and the Prussians
acquiesced.
At Elms, French Count Benedetti demanded
further Prussian concessions, Wilhelm I refused.
Bismarck had notes of the meeting (known as the
Elms Dispatch) released. Napoleon III was
enraged and declared war on July 19, 1870.
The South German states allied with Prussia.
The Franco-Prussian War
The German armies quickly mobilized and
invaded France.
On Sept. 2, the Napoleon III was captured and
a large part of the French Army surrendered at
Sedan.
In Paris, rebels proclaimed the Third French
Republic and continued the war.
On May 10, the Treaty of Frankfurt ended the
war.
Germany got the provinces of Alsace and Lorraine
and 5 billion francs.
The French greatly resented their defeat.
The
German Reich
During the war negotiations continued in
Germany.
As a result, on Jan. 18, 1871 Wilhelm I
was proclaimed Kaiser before an
assembly of German princes in the Hall
of Mirrors at Versailles.
The unification of Germany was
complete, Bismarck became Chancellor.
Politics and Culture in The
Second Reich
Bismarck, fearing internal opposition to
conservative rule, moved against
enemies: Catholics and Socialists.
Catholics – with the Kulturkampf program,
attempted to take control of church functions
away; this failed.
Socialists – the Social Democratic Party of
Ferdinand Lassalle was forced
underground in public life, but continued to
gain in Reichstag elections.
Lessons and Impact
Liberal nationalists had failed to unify Germany
and Italy from below in 1848 .
Where they failed, conservative nationalists
were able to succeed from above in the 1860s.
The unification of Germany and Italy changed
the balance of power established at the
Congress of Vienna (1815) at the expense of
Austria and France.
Immediately, Germany became the most
powerful nation on the European continent.
Reform in Russia
After defeat in the Crimean War, Tsar
Alexander II abolished serfdom in 1861.
Mir (village communes) grew in importance for
establishing farming communities for former
serfs.
Zemstvos (district councils) were created in
1864 to increase local control.
Revolt in Poland in 1863 and the assassination
of Alexander II in 1881 kept the government in
tight control.
Popular Culture
Mass culture in Europe reached more
people than ever before.
Culture took on distinctly national
elements.
Museums, theatres, opera houses and
historic sights opened to the public and
were treated with national reverence.
Newspapers
By mid century, newspapers and
periodicals took on great importance.
Circulation of some newspapers
increased tenfold in less than a half
century.
Newspapers grew in size, used new
technologies (telegraph and
photography) and made considerable
profits on advertising and subscriptions
Changing Styles
Most cultural expressions of the
period reflected national pride
and connections to history.
Opera was the most popular
artistic form as it attempted to
synthesize the arts.
Richard Wagner
Giuseppe Verdi
The novel continued to grow as
the main literary style.
Romanticism began to give way
to realism (c. 1850-1880) in all
of the arts of the period.
Realism – Edgar Degas
The Bellelli Family
Realism - Jean-François Millet
The Gleaners
Cultural Professions
Writers, artists and performers were able
to make a considerable living during this
period by excelling in their profession.
This was extended to academics as
departments of history, economics, and
the arts took shape at universities.
History had a special place in the
formation and understanding of national
cultures.
Religious Thought
In many ways, the 19th century was a
very religious period.
Reaction against the Enlightenment
fueled this pattern.
Strict “Victorian” morality permeated the
culture.
Religious influence brought about the
end of slavery and established charity
organizations.
Cultural Impact
National cultures during the Middle 19th
Century were more dynamic than ever
before.
The arts were national and urban, rather
than centered in courts or salons.
Mass culture allowed more writers, artists
and musicians to succeed at their craft
and reach a larger audience than ever
before.