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
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
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
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
(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
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
Liberal parliamentary system brought social and political
reforms coupled with economic growth and improvements for
working class
Queen Victoria (1837-1901)
Tories “Conservatives,” Whigs “Liberals”
Benjamin Disraeli: (conservative) Reform Act of 1867
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
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
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