Transcript Chapter 22

CHAPTER 22
Nationalism and Realism
Napoleon III


Revolution of 1848 resulted in new
constitution, a president, and universal
suffrage
Louis Napoleon, “Napoleon the Small”
Restored national suffrage, asked the
people to reelect him for a term of 10
years, then asked to restore the empire
 Controlled armed forces, police, civil
service, introduce legislation, declare war
 Encouraged industrial growth, roads, trains,
Paris
 Responded to criticism by liberalizing
government

Legalized trade unions
 Granted right to strike

French in Mexico
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France sent troops to dominate
Mexican markets
British and Spanish removed
their troops after MexicanAmerican War
Napoleon III appointed
Archduke Maximilian of Austria
“emperor” of Mexico
May 5, 1862: smaller Mexican
force beat French in Puebla
May, 1867: Maximilian
executed
Crimean War (1854-1856)

Who would capitalize on the decline of the Ottoman
Empire?
 Russia’s proximity and religious bonds makes obvious choice
Lord Cardigan paid
 Other European powers feared Russian ambitions
£40,000 for the Colonelcy
 Ottomans declared war on Russia in Oct. 1853
of
the stylish 11th
 Britain and France declared war in March
Hussars.
 Feared Russia would control the Dardanelles

Poorly planned and fought
Britain/France attacked Russia’s Crimean Peninsula and took
Bessarabia
 Nicholas I died, Alexander II sued for peace, Black Sea
declared neutral

Sale of Commissions
Effects of Crimean War

250,000 died – many from Cholera
 Florence
Nightingale saved many with “sanitary
conditions”

Broke up long-standing power relationships
 Destroyed
Concert of Europe
 Austria (who remained neutral) enemies with Russia now

Russia and Britain pull back from continental affairs
Italian Unification

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1850: Austria still dominant power
Count Camillo di Cavour- PM of Piedmont
 Pursued
economic expansion, building roads, etc
 Used money to equip army
 Allied with Napoleon III to drive Austrians out
 France would receive Nice and Savoy as thanks

Giuseppe Garibaldi – Italian patriot
 Raised
army of “Red Shirts,” attacked Bourbons in Sicily
 Two Sicilies fell, Cavour cut off Garibaldi’s anticipated
attack on Rome (which would have pulled in France)
Italian Unification

“Kingdom of Italy”
Plebiscites issued and the Papal
States and Two Sicilies united
with Piedmont on March
17,1861
 King Victor Emmanuel II
 Venetia still held by Austria
 Rome under papal control,
supported by French
 Austrian-Prussian war of 1866
gave Venetia and Rome to the
Kingdom of Italy
 September 20, 1870: Rome
becomes capital

AP EURO
Mustache of the
Year Nominee
German Unification

Otto von Bismarck
 Prime
Minister of Prussia
: politics based in
practicality, not theories or ideals
 Always made sure Prussia would only
be fighting one power
(1864) Prussia and
Austria won Schleswig and Holstein,
created conflict between two powers
(1866) –
won Venetia's freedom, but didn’t punish
Austrians, created North German
Confederation
German Unification
(1870-71)
 Bismark
edited a letter to insult France
 Prussia dominated France
 Napoleon III captured – deposed
 Third
Republic begins!
France gave up Alsace and Lorraine
 Southern German Confederation joined
Northern Confederation to make
German state

January 18, 1871
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
Hall of Mirrors in Versailles
William I (with Bismark at his feet)
crowned Kaiser (emperor) of the Second
German Empire
Achieved by Prussian monarchy & military
 Germany merged into Prussia


Unease: “I am no devotee of Mars; I
feel more attached to the goddess of
beauty and the mother of graces than
the powerful god of war”

German unification meant authoritarian,
militaristic values over liberal,
constitutional sentiments
from Authoritarian to Dualism
: serfdom abolished
: rise of industrial middle class
: Francis Joseph (1848-1916) established a
(parliament) with nominated upper house and
elected lower house

Imperfect: ensured German majority, alienated Hungarians
:
Austria-Hungary
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(compromise) created Dual Monarchy of
Each part of empire had a constitution, bicameral legislature,
capital (Vienna & Buda – later Budapest)
Francis Joseph united two as emperor of Austria and Kind of
Hungary, shared army and finances
Did not satisfy other minorities (Poles, Croats, Czechs, Serbs, etc)
Russia – backwardness lead to reforms

March 3, 1861: Alexander II emancipated serfs
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Government provided land for peasants but nobles kept
best, arable, land. Peasants expected to pay back
government for land
village commune, collectively responsible for
repayment to government -- tied peasants to land
Alexander Herzen (1812-1870)- Russian exile in
London “Land and Freedom” believed peasant
communes could be self-governing body
: aim to create a new society through
Also considered the TsarConsidered
“Good Czar acts of peasants
revolutionary
Liberator
in
for
Alexander inBulgaria
Finland for
 Some
Populists
fighting
Ottomans
and turned to violence: assassinated Alexander II
helping the
them
elevate their
in gain
1881
liberatingand
Bulgaria
for the
language
autonomy
1st timefrom
since
14th century
Sweden
Victorian Age

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Liberal parliamentary system brought social and political
reforms coupled with economic growth and improvements for
working class
Queen Victoria (1837-1901)
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Tories  “Conservatives,” Whigs  “Liberals”
Benjamin Disraeli: (conservative) Reform Act of 1867
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Longest reign in British history
Duty and moral respectability reflected values of age
lowered monetary requirements for voting and enfranchised
many urban males
William Gladstone (liberal) Education Act of 1870

Made elementary schools available for all children
Marxism

By the 1870s, industrialization was full “steam”
ahead on the Continent
 railroad
stimulated growth in iron and coal
 elimination of international trade barriers opened up
the waterways
 Joint-Stock Investment Banks mobilized capital for
investment
 Capitalist factory owners had control over hiring and
firing and unions were largely ineffective
Marx and Marxism
– 1848
Karl Marx: PhD in Philosophy, couldn’t teach due to atheism,
moved to Paris as a writer
: the
 Friedrich Engels: worked in father’s factorymotivating
in England,force of
wrote
which is
Capitalism
described “wage slavery” of working classexploitation of labor
 Proletariat: the industrial working class

Should rise up, overthrow bourgeois masters
 Form a dictatorship to reorganize the means of production
 Classless society would emerge
 “the proletarians have nothing to lose but their chains…working
men of all countries, UNITE!”

A new age of Science

Louis Pasteur- germ theory of disease
– heating a product to stop spoilage
 Vaccination against rabies
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Dmitri Mendeleyev- classified elements by atomic
weights
Michael Faraday- electromagnetic induction, foundation
for electricty
: everything mental, spiritual, or ideal
was simply a result of physical forces

Truth was to be found in concrete material existence, not
through feeling or intuition
Darwin (1809-1882)

Naturalist on the HMS Beagle in 1831

Discarded notion of special creation
: plants and
animals pass on traits that help the
survive “survival of the fittest”
(1859)
: all plants and
animals have evolved over a long
period of time

A struggle for existence, with one individual,
against the whole species, or with physical
conditions of life, leads to adaptation
Realism
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Wanted to portray ordinary characters from real
life rather than Romantic heroes in unusual settings
Avoided flowery sentimental language
Less poetry, more prose and novel
 Madame
Bovary (1857) – a woman wrapped up in
Bonjour, Monsieur Gustav Courbet, 1854.
Romantic ideals eventually succumbs to suicide
Francois Millet’s, The Gleaners,
 Vanity Fair: a Novel Without a Hero (1848)
 Charles Dickens (1812-1870)
Gustave Courbet The Stone Breakers 1849