Transcript File
Nationalism in Europe
Unification and Identity
What is Nationalism?
The belief that each nation or group of
people should have their own country,
with clearly defined borders, and their
own government
It is also the idea that people should be
loyal to their country rather than to their
leader
Finally, it is having pride in one’s country
and being patriotic.
What makes a group a nation?
1. Nationality
(common
ethnicity)
2. Language (a
language that all
in the nation will
speak)
3. Culture (a
shared way of
life)
4. History (common
experiences)
5. Religion (a religion
for most or all
people)
6. Territory (the land
for the nation)
Wide-ranging Effects of Nationalism
1.
Nationalism can lead colonized peoples to desire independence from their
Imperial Mother Countries (state-building)
United States
Haiti
Latin American Colonies of Spain & Portugal
2.
Nationalism can bring groups that share commonalities together to form
new nations (unification)
Italy
Germany
3.
Nationalism can also tear multi-cultural nations apart (separation)
Austrian Empire
Ottoman Empire
Many of these cultural groups have a strong desire for Self-Determination (self
rule)
What Led to the Rise of Nationalism in
19th Century Europe?
The ideas and success of the American and French
Revolutions inspired Nationalist movements around the
World
The transformation of France from a kingdom to a Republic shifted
loyalty from the kings to the state.
The Napoleonic war stirred up feelings of nationalism in
many nations as they tried to resist invasion by the
French. These wars also spread the ideas of the
Enlightenment.
The Congress of Vienna (a meeting between Great
Britain, Russia, Prussia, and Austria to make peace after
the defeat of Napoleon) redrew the map of Europe,
leading many groups to attempt to unify or separate
into new nations.
Creating the
Nations of
Germany….
….and Italy
Unification of Italy
The Italian kingdoms hadn’t
been united since the fall of the
old Roman empire in 450 AD
Much of Italy was under the
control of foreign powers.
Napoleon controlled until 1815
brought unity for short time
Congress of Vienna redraws
Europe & hurts Italian unity
Northern Italy given to Austrians
In 1815, Italy is made up of
many independent governments
Italy Begins Unification
Move to Unify
Many groups in Italy
begin to call for
unification
Many wanted to push out
the Austrians
Young Italy - secret
society for Italian
unification formed
Guiseppe Mazzini led
movement for a nationstate (political
organization with one
nationality)
Path to Unify
Mazzini began unity movement
attempted to push Austrians out of Northern
Italy
failed after losing help of Pope, who was
against Italian unification because it would
limit his power
Italians turned to King Victor Emmanuel II
(Italian kingdom) to lead movement
Sardinia Takes Over Movement
Emmanuel II hired Count Camillo di Cavour to
help him unify Italy as his Prime Minister
Main goal was to strengthen the power of Sardinia
Encouraged “Risorgimento” – resurgence or rebirth for
united Italy
Cavour involved Italy in Crimean War (Britain, France,
Sardinia won a war against Russia. Fought to keep
Russia for expanding their influence over the weak
Ottoman Empire)
Won equality among European nations
Promoted industrialization for Italy
Cavour Unites Northern Italy
Attempted, through war with France and
Austria, to gain the northern Italian states in
1859
France’s Napoleon III supported Cavour but backed
out with only half of the territory gained
Parma, Tuscany & Modena, which had not been
gained by the war rebelled against Austrians & joined
Sardinia
Prussia aids Italy against Austria and Italy gets
Venetia
Northern Italy is unified
Guiseppe Garibaldi
A member of Young Italy
Military commander with his “Red Shirts” led
South Italy to overtake and unite with Sicily
Strengthened Southern Italy as one territory
North & South Unite
Cavour forced Garibaldi to offer merge.
Garibaldi agrees to avoid civil war
United North and South Italy as a
constitutional monarchy
Victor Emmanuel II voted the first king of
united Italy in May of 1880
Italy
Victor Emmanuel led united nation
Completed national unity with new
capital of Rome in 1871
Passed voting reforms
Created united military
Created educational system
Initiated industrialization and worker laws
Built transportation and waterway systems
Formed alliance with Germany and Austria-Hungary
All new nations looking to build system of defense from
established nations of Europe
Problems Remain in Italy
Problems between North and South
Industrial North, agricultural South
Language (dialect) problems
Political problems between the two
Not going to be ready for the 20th century
Unification in Germany
Most German people were historically a
part of the Holy Roman Empire
Conquered & dismantled by Napoleon
in 1808
After the Napoleonic Wars German
speaking people were broken up into 39
small kingdoms as part of the Congress
of Vienna
Loosely tied together as German
Confederation
Diet (assembly) met at Frankfurt
Austria & Prussia dominated
Germany
Remained divided and economically
disadvantaged due to Reformation &
Thirty Years War
Austria feared German unification
competition
German states disliked idea of unity
feared domination by Prussia
Prussia Leads the Way
Prussia was strongest German State
well organized government
Junkers (aristocratic landowners) & Business class
strong economy
Zollverein (economic union reducing trade barriers)
William I, king of Prussia initiated move
appointed Otto von Bismarck as prime minister
Otto von Bismarck
Policy of “realpolitik”
A policy of “real” politics that
pursue practical, realistic
policies instead of moral and
ideological policies.
right of a nation-state to
pursue its own advantages by
any means
Took government control
Built up strong army
Unifying By “Blood and Iron”
Bismarck led German states into 3 wars
War against Denmark
Successfully claimed German lands of Schleswig and
Holstein from Denmark
Made Europe aware of Prussia’s strength
Seven Weeks’ War against Austria
Prussia defeated Austria
Separated Austria from German states
Franco-Prussian War
Gained Bismarck support from all German states for
unification
France lost French lands of Alsace and Lorraine and forced
or pay reparations
A United Germany
Germany united 25 states
into one nation in 1871
William I assumed title of
Kaiser (emperor)
Bismarck became German
Chancellor (chief minister)
Bismark’s Germany
Fought cultural struggle against Catholics
Industrialized Germany
Brought poor wages and long work days
Socialist party grew asking for reform
Bismarck resigned under the new king,
William II
William II built up German industry
Passed workplace reforms
Developed strong military
Nationalism Shakes 3 Empires
Austria-Hungarian Empire
Russian Empire
Ottoman Empire
The Break-up of the Austrian Empire
The Austrian Empire was another large multi-cultural empire
in Eastern Europe that had been ruled by the Hapsburg
dynasty
Consisted of 5 major ethnic groups: Austrians, Hungarians, Czechs,
Slovaks, & Serbs
Nationalism is the strongest among the large Hungarian population &
much smaller Serbian minority
The nation of Austria-Hungary was created in 1867
After their defeat by the Prussians, it became a dual monarchy (Austria
and Hungary are separate states, but both are ruled by Emperor
Francis Joseph) similar to the late Roman Empire
This “dual empire” actually survives for over 50 years, but also
breaks apart after WWI
Separates into the nations of Austria, Hungary, &
Czechoslovakia
The Russian Empire
The Russian nation was made up of over 60
nationalities and 100 different languages.
Included: Russians, Ukrainians, Poles,
Lithuanians, Latvians, Estonians, Finns,
Jews, Romanians, Georgians, Armenians,
and Turks
Expansion took place under Alexander I
Alexander II emancipated the serfs and
made many reforms for Russia that failed
Russification
Russification- forcing
Russian culture on all
ethnic groups of the
Russian empire
This strengthened
nationalist feeling in
many ethic groups
living in Russia, further
weakening the power
of the already week
Czars.
Russian Reaction
Revolutionaries gained power in Russia as
a response to failed reforms
Czar Nicholas II ruled from 1894 with
revolutionary mood in nation
Mensheviks organized believing in
industrialization to bring about a working
class revolution
Bolsheviks, led by Vladimir Lenin moved
for radical socialist revolution
Decline of Ottoman Power
The diverse Ottoman empire had been
experiencing difficulties throughout the 1800’s
1.
Once vital & lucrative overland trade routes
controlled by the Ottomans have lost importance
due to new technologies & discoveries
New World, New Trade Routes, Better Maritime
Technology
2.
Inefficient & Corrupt government along with a
failure to modernize hurt the quality of life across
the Empire
Very difficult for the aging Empire to compete with the
powers of Europe
Sometimes referred to as the Sick Man of Europe
Adding to the Empires long list of problems are
strong feelings of nationalism developing
among the multi-cultural population
Diversity of the Ottoman Empire
The Ottoman empire was dominated by the Turks, but also
included a variety of other ethnic groups:
Greeks, Armenians, Serbs, Montenegrins, Romanians, Bulgarians,
Albanians, Slavs, Slovaks, Croats
The empire was divided into separate ethnic regions
Some of these groups were Muslim, some were Christian
Some of these groups spoke different languages
From 1828-1908 the desire for Nationalism gradually tears the
Ottoman Empire apart
Greece, Montenegro, Serbia, Romania, & Bulgaria all gained their
independence by the 1870’s
Turkey would soon set up its own independent nation officially ending the
Ottoman Empire following WWI
Ethnic Groups
in the Ottoman
Empire
The Effects of Nationalism on Europe
Nationalism in Europe led to Imperialism, then Militarism. Eventually,
Alliances formed and the Balkan Powder Keg led the WWI.