Nationalist, Revolutions Sweep the West
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Transcript Nationalist, Revolutions Sweep the West
Nationalist,
Revolutions Sweep
the West
Chapter 8
Pages 244 to 271 in text
Latin American Peoples
Win Independence
Section 1
Colonial Society Divided
Latin American colonial society – class dictated people’s place in
society & jobs
Divisions…
1st – Peninsulares; born in Spain, only they could hold high office
2nd – Creoles; Spaniards born in Latin America, couldn’t hold high-level
political office, could rise as officers in army
Both Peninsulares & Creoles controlled land, wealth, & power
3rd – Mestizos; people of mixed European & Indian ancestry
4th – Mulattos; people of mixed European & African ancestry
5th – enslaved Africans & Indians
Revolutions in the Americas
Success of the American & French Revolutions encouraged others to
gain their freedom from European masters
Saint Domingue –
French colony
1/3 of the western side of Hispaniola
Aug. 1791 – 100,000 enslaved Africans revolted & followed their leader
Toussaint L’Ouverture
Toussaint then took over island in 1801 & freed all of the Africans
Jan. 1802 – French arrived to remove Toussaint from power
Toussaint agreed to end revolt if they ended slavery
Toussaint was eventually captured, sent to prison in the French Alps
he died there in April 1803
Jan. 1, 1804 – Jean-Jacques Dessalines declared that the island was an
independent country
He called the country Haiti which means “mountainous land”
It was the 1st Latin Am. territory to free itself
Creoles Lead Independence
Least oppressed of those born in Latin Am. & the best educated
1810 – rebellion broke out in several parts of Latin Am.
Simon Bolivar (Venezuelan) & Jose de San Martin (Argentinian) were
two brilliant Creole generals
Bolivar’s Victory –
1811-Venezuela declares independence from Spain
1819 – he led soldiers over Andes & took the Spanish by surprise
1821 –Venezuela was finally independent
Simon Bolivar
San Martin Leads Liberation Forces –
1816 – Argentina declares independence from Spain, but Spanish forces
were nearby in Chile & Peru
1817 – San Martin joined Bernardo O’Higgins in Chile & finally freed
Chile from Spain
1822 – San Martin met up with Bolivar to discuss driving Spanish out of
Peru. Both agreed that San Martin would take over Bolivar’s soldiers
1824 – Spain was defeated at the Battle of Ayacucho in Peru
This was the last major battle of the war for independence
Spanish colonies in Latin Am. won their freedom
* The lands now known as Venezuela, Colombia, Panama, & Ecuador were
united into one country known as “Gran Columbia”
Jose de San Martin
Bernardo O’Higgins
Mexico Ends Spanish Rule
Indians & Mestizos played large role in revolutionary movements in
Mexico
Padre Miguel Hidalgo 1810 – In the village of Dolores, Hidalgo gathered the peasants in the
church and called for rebellion against the Spanish
That day is known as Grito de Dolores (the cry of Dolores)
Next Day - 80,000 men began a march towards Mexico City
1811 – Hidalgo & his men were defeated by the Spanish army & the
creoles
Padre Miguel Hidalgo
Padre Jose Maria Morelos –
Led revolution for 4 years
1815 – defeated by a Creole officer, Agustin de Iturbide
1820 – Revolution in Spain put a liberal group in power
Mexico’s Creoles feared loss of privileges in colony & began to support
Mexico’s fight for independence from Spain
1821 – Agustin de Iturbide proclaimed independence for Mexico. He
then declared himself Emperor over Central America & Mexico
1823 – Iturbide was overthrown
* Lands known today as Nicaragua, Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador,
& Costa Rica took the name of the United Provinces of Central
America
Padre Jose Maria Morelos
Agustin de Iturbide
Brazil’s Royal Liberator
1807 – Prince John (King John VI) & the royal family of Portugal left
their homeland for Brazil when Napoleon & the French troops
invaded
Rio de Janiero became the capital & the royal family ran their empire
from there for 14 years
1815 – Napoleon is defeated
1821 - King John & royal family returned to Portugal with the
exception of Prince Dom Pedro who stayed in Brazil
King John VI
Prince Dom Pedro
1822 – 8,000 Brazilians signed a
petition demanding their
independence
On Sept. 7, 1822 Prince Dom
Pedro agreed to petition & officially
declared Brazil as an independent
nation
Independence came without any
violent upheavals or widespread
bloodshed
Europe Faces Revolutions
Section 2
Clash of Philosophies
First half of 1800’s there were 3 schools of political thought that
struggled for supremacy in Europe
1.
Conservative – wealthy property owners & nobility. Argued for
protecting traditional monarchies
2.
Liberal – middle-class business leaders & merchants. Wanted more
power given to elected parliaments, but only educated &
landowners could vote
3.
Radical – favored drastic changes to extend democracy to all
people. Believed gov’t should practice ideals of French Revolution
– liberty, equality, & brotherhood.
Nationalism Develops
New movement that stated people’s greatest loyalty should not be to
a king or an empire, but to a nation of people who share a common
culture & history
When a nation had its own independent gov’t it became a nation-state
Defends nation’s territory & way of life
Represents the nation to the rest of the world
1815 – only France, England, & Spain
Greeks Gain Independence
Had been a part of the Ottoman Empire
1821 – demanded independence & rebelled against the Turks
People around the world supported the Greeks fight for freedom
1827 – British, French, & Russians combined their fleets & destroyed
the Ottomans at the Battle of Navarino
1830 – the three nations signed a treaty granting the kingdom of
Greece their freedom
1830s Uprisings Crushed
Liberals & Nationalist throughout Europe were revolting against
conservative governments
Dutch – Nationalist riots broke out against the Dutch rule in
Brussels & declared their independence
Italian Peninsula – Nationalist wanted entire peninsula untied.
States were either independent, controlled by Austria, or controlled by
the Pope
Austrian troops sent in to restore order in Italy
The Poles – Revolt in Warsaw against Russian rule
Took Russian army almost an entire year to stop revolt
Radicals Change France
1830 – France’s King Charles X tried to restore absolute monarchy,
which led to riots, & he had to flee to England
Louis-Philippe took over & known for his liberal beliefs
1848 – Philippe was overthrown
the people established another republic with 2 sides that couldn’t agree
Bloody battles in the streets & people turned away from radicals
Moderate constitution was drawn up – parliament & strong president to
be elected by the people
King Charles X
Louis-Philippe
Dec. 1848 – Louis Napoleon
(nephew of Napoleon
Bonaparte) won the presidential
election
1852 – he took the title of
Emperor Napoleon III
Built railroads
Encouraged industrialization
Promoted public works
programs
Unemployment decreased & country
prospered
Reform in Russia
By 1820’s many Russians believed serfdom must end b/c it was
morally wrong
Czars didn’t want to free the serfs b/c it would anger the
landowners who the Czars depended on to stay in power
1856 – Alexander II wanted Russia to be more modern & wanted to
bring about social change
1861 – he freed the serfs, but peasant communities got ½ the land &
the nobles kept the other ½ .
The gov’t paid the nobles for their land
Peasant communities had 49 years to pay back the gov’t for the land they
received.
1881 – terrorists assassinated Alexander II & Alexander III took over
& encouraged industrial development to expand Russia’s power
Alexander II
Alexander III
Nationalism
Section 3
A Force for Unity or Disunity
Unification…
Mergers of politically divided but culturally similar lands
19th century Germany & Italy
Separation…
Culturally distinct group resist being added to a state or tries to break away
Greeks in Ottoman Empire
French-speaking Canadians
State-Building…
Culturally distinct groups form into a new state by accepting a single
culture
The United States & Turkey
Break Up of Austrian Empire
Austrian Empire consisted of…
Slovenes, Hungarians, Germans, Czechs, Slovaks, Croats, Poles, Serbs, &
Italians
1866 – Prussia defeated Austria in Austro-Prussian War
Gained North German Confederation & 21 small German political units
Emperor Francis Joseph of Austria split empire in ½ declaring Austria
& Hungary were now independent states & he was ruler of both
Now known as Austria-Hungary or Austro-Hungarian Empire
After WWI – Austria-Hungary broke up into several nation-states
Austrian Empire
Emperor Francis Joseph
of Austria
Russian Empire Crumbles
Russian empire consisted of…
Russians, Ukrainians, Poles, Lithuanians, Latvians, Estonians, Finns, Jews,
Romanians, Georgians, Armenians, Turks, & others
All had their own culture
Russification – forced Russian culture on all ethnic groups in empire
Helped maintain control over empire
Strengthened ethnic nationalist feelings
Helped to unify Russia
Last Romanov Czar (Nicholas II) gave up power in 1917 due to WWI
and the communist revolution
Czar Nicholas II
Last Russian Czar
Ottoman Empire Weakens
Turks ruled over Greeks, Slavs, Arabs, Bulgarians, & Armenians
1856 – granted equal citizenship to all people under their control
Forced by England & France
Conservative Turks VERY angry & wanted no change to empire
In response, Ottomans massacred & deported Armenians from 1894-
1896 and again in 1915
Ottoman Empire broke up after WWI
Expansion of the Ottoman Empire
Decline of the Ottoman Empire
Cavour Leads Italian Unification
Kingdom of Piedmont-Sardinia – largest & most powerful of all
Italian states. Adopted liberal constitution in 1848
1852 –Victor Emmanuel II (king of Sardinia) made Count Camillo di
Cavour the Prime Minister
1858 – with the help of Napoleon III Cavour was able to take over all
of north Italy with the exception of Venetia by winning a war against
Austria
Victor Emmanuel II - King of Sardinia
Count Camillo di Cavour
1st Prime Minister of Italy
Garibaldi Brings Unity
1860 – Giuseppe Garibaldi led a small army of Italian nationalist and
captured Sicily
Both Garibaldi & his followers wore bright red shirts, they became
known as the Red Shirts
Eventually he agreed to unite the southern areas he had conquered
with the Kingdom of Piedmont-Sardnina
Victor Emmanuel II would rule over all of Italy
Giuseppe Garibaldi
1866 – Austrian province of
Venetia, included Venice,
became a part of Italy
1870 - last part of Italy was
finally taken over, the Papal
States
Rome became the capital of the
United Kingdom of Italy
Pope continued to govern
Vatican City
Bismarck Unites Germany
1815 – 39 German states form the German Confederation
Prussia had mainly a German population & had a very powerful army
in central Europe
1848 – liberal constitution written in Berlin
1861 –Wilhelm I takes throne & parliament refused him money to
strengthen army
The Junkers – Prussia’s wealthy landowners supported King
Wilhelm I
1862 -Wilhelm I chose Otto von Bismarck as his Prime Minister
Conservative Junker
Declared that he would rule without consent of parliament & without a
legal budget (direct violation of constitution)
Master realpolitik
Realpolitik “the politics of reality” – tough power politics with no
room for idealism
1864 – Prussia & Austria formed an alliance, then went to war with
Denmark & won the provinces of Schleswig & Holstein
Prussia governed Schleswig
Austria governed Hoilstein
Otto von Bismarck
Seven Weeks’ War
1866 – Austria declared war on Prussia after border conflicts over
Schleswig & Holstein
Prussians won
Austria lost Venetia which was given to Italy
Prussia took control of north Germany
1867 – remaining states of the north joined the North German
Confederation, Prussia dominated this area
Franco-Prussian War
1867 – a few southern (Catholic) German states were independent of
Prussian control
July 1870 – French declared war on Prussia because Bismarck
manufactured “incidents” to provoke them
Napoleon III was taken prisoner with 83,000 others
Starvation eventually led the French to surrender
January 18, 1871 – King Wilhelm I of Prussia was crowned Kaiser
(emperor) at the Palace of Versailles in France
Empire called the Second Reich
The First Reich was the Holy Roman Empire
A Shift in Power
1815 - Congress of Vienna established 5 Great Powers in Europe
Britain, France, Austria, Prussia, & Russia
All were nearly equal in strength
Mid-1800’s –
Prussia joined with German states to form Germany
1871 –
Britain & Germany were the most powerful (militarily & economically)
France in middle
Austria & Russia lagged FAR behind
Revolution in the Arts
Section 4
The Ideas of Romanticism
Deep interest both in nature & in the thoughts & feelings of the
individual
Beliefs…
Inner feelings, emotions, & imagination
Mysterious, supernatural, exotic, grotesque, or horrifying
Loved beauties of untamed nature
Idealized the past as simpler
Glorified heroes
Folk traditions, music, & stories
Valued common people & individuals
Promoted radical changes & democracy
Romanticism in Literature
Poetry was the highest form of expression
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe…
One of the earliest & greatest romantic writers ~ German
The Sorrows ofYoung Werther – 1774 novel
Sensitive man whose love for a married woman drives him to suicide
Jakob & Wilhelm Grimm…
German brothers
Collected fairy tales
created a dictionary & grammar of the German language
Victor Hugo…
French
Wrote Les Miserables & The Hunchback of Notre Dame
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Wilhelm & Jakob Grimm
Snow White
Hansel & Gretel
Rapunzel
Cinderella
Rumpelstiltskin
Victor Hugo
The Gothic Novel
Often took place in medieval
Gothic castles
Filled with fearful, violent, &
sometimes supernatural events
Frankenstein by Mary Shelley
Monster created by body parts of
dead humans
Composers Emphasize Emotion
Moved away from tightly controlled, formal compositions of the
Enlightenment
Celebrated heroism & national pride with power of expression
Music became part of the middle-class life & musicians & composers
became popular like rock/pop stars of today
Ludwig van Beethoven…
9th Symphony – celebrates freedom, dignity, & triumph of human spirit
Felix Mendelssohn…
Used A Midsummer Night’s Dream as inspiration
Ludwig van Beethoven
Felix Mendelssohn
Shift to Realism in the Arts
Rapid industrialization affected everyday life
Workers lived grim dirty lives in crowded cities
Industrialization made romantics seem pointless
Realism – showed life as it was NOT as it should be
Paintings showed working class & their suffering
Jean-Baptiste Siméon Chardin
Woman Cleaning Turnips
Jean-François Millet
The Sower
Gustave Courbet
Stone-Breakers
Photographers Capture Reality
1835 - daguerreotypes after their French inventor Louis Daguerre
first commercially successful photographic process
William Talbot (British) invented a light-sensitive paper used to
produce photographic negatives
Many prints could be made from one negative
Photos could be reproduced in books &/or newspapers
Mass distribution
Photography became the art of the new industrial age
Louis Daguerre
1838 view of the Boulevard du Temple, a busy street in Paris.
Oldest well-documented daguerreotype featuring human subjects
William Talbot
Window in the South Gallery of Lacock
Abbey made from the oldest photographic
negative in existence, 1835
Writers Study Society
Emile Zola…
French writer
Exposed miseries of workers in shops, factories, & coal mines
Led to labor laws & reformed working conditions
Charles Dickens…
English novelist
Wrote about London’s working poor
A Christmas Carol
David Copperfield
Great Expectations
Oliver Twist
Tale of Two Cities
Emile Zola
Charles Dickens
Impressionists React Against Realism
Painters who tried to show their impressions of a subject or a moment
in time
Fascinated by light, used more pure, shimmering colors
Showed more positive view of the new urban society
Workers enjoying themselves at dance halls & cafes
Theater & circus performers
Glorified the middle-class
Famous Impressionist…
Claude Monet
Pierre-Auguste Renoir
Edgar Degas – (lived in New Orleans for a while, you can visit his home)
Haystacks ~ series
La Promenade, la femme à l'ombrelle Woman with a parasol
Claude Monet
The Waterlilies [triptych]
Claude Monet [French, 1840-1926]
1914-26 / Oil on canvas
Three panels, Each 6' 6 3/4" x 13' 11 1/4"
Overall 6' 6 3/4" x 41' 10 3/8"
Location: MOMA, New York City..
Le Moulin de la Galette
Dance at Le Moulin de la Galette
still life with peaches
Pierre-Auguste Renoir –
Self portrait
"New Orleans Cotton Exchange" (Portraits in an Office),
1873 Musee des Beaux-Arts, marked the beginning of the official
recognition of Impressionism as a significant art movement.
Edgar Degas – Self Portrait
Daily Tours: 10:30 am and 1:45 pm
Breakfast and Tour: 9:00 am breakfast, tour
at 10:30 am (Reservations required)