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Emergence and Ideals of Nationalism and Liberalism

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Title: Emergence and Ideals of Nationalism and Liberalism


1
Emergence and Ideals of Nationalism and
Liberalism
2
Nationalism
  • The idea of a nation consisting of people unified
    by common culture, language, and/or religion, who
    should all be ruled by one government
  • Reaction against Cosmopolitanism
  • Enlightenment ideal that all human beings belong
    to one family.
  • Enlightenment culture had emphasized
  • A common language
  • The universality of Reason.
  • Common intellectual world of the educated middle
    class and nobility.
  • Opposition to the Congress of Vienna,
  • Principle of states based on monarchies and
    dynasties,
  • Disregarding the ethnic makeup of countries as a
    factor for boundaries

3
First phase (first half of the 1800s)
  • Small nationalist groups
  • Intellectuals (historians, professors, teachers,
    and other scholars)
  • Imparted cultural history, bonds, and language on
    the people

4
Meanings of Nationhood
  • Some nationalists
  • Argued that uniting ethnicities into one group
    would help economic and administrative success
  • Thought that nationhood was imposed by God, or
    compared nationhood to divinity
  • Difficulties in classifying nations
  • Which ethnic groups could be considered nations
    with legitimacy to claim political and
    territorial independence?
  • Would nationhood only be classified on which
    groups managed to create a stable economy and
    culture?
  • Would ethnic uprisings be viewed as legitimate
    grasps for independence?

5
The Impact of the French Revolution Liberty,
Equality and Fraternity
  • French revolutionary ideas stressed the rights of
    the people. The people come to have their own
    significance as a unit.
  • Reaction to French Revolution
  • French spread their ideals all over Europe.
  • dominated the other countries.
  • Other countries took up the ideals of the French
    Rev. and applied them to their own situation,
    especially in Germany.
  • Never been a united German state, but Germans saw
    what power a united France had achieved.

6
Centers of European Nationalism
  • Ireland
  • Ireland became directly governed by the British
    Crown after 1800,
  • Irish people elected members to the Parliament
  • Nationalists demanded either independence or
    autonomy
  • Nationalism would persist in Ireland well into
    the 20th century

7
Polish Nationalism
  • Since the loss of Polish independence in the
    Partitions, Polish nationalists,urged for armed
    struggle to regain independence from Austria,
    Prussia, and Russia
  • Most disturbances in the Russian portion of
    Poland November Insurrection of 1830-1831
  • January Insurrection of 1863-1864)
  • Both doomed by bad military leadership or
    disunity
  • Nationalist groups survived in Poland,
  • After 1864, no uprisings occurred
  • All social classes and sectors of Polish economy
    must be improved and equalized before independence

8
Liberalism
  • Roots in Enlightenment, English liberties, and
    principles of the French Declaration of the
    Rights of Man and Citizen
  • Establishment of legal equality, religious
    tolerance, and freedom of press
  • Less autocratic government
  • Government relied on the consent of the people
  • Parliament would represent the people
  • Ministers in government should be responsible to
    the legislature rather than the monarch
  • Sought democracy limited to the property-owners
  • Had contempt for the lower class
  • Aristocratic liberty was thought by liberals to
    be a concept of privilege based on wealth and
    property rather than birth

9
Economic Goals
  • Sought the removal of mercantilism and regulated
    economy
  • Promoted capitalism
  • Favored removal of international tariffs and
    internal trade barriers
  • France and Great Britain flourished with liberal
    establishments
  • Germany was full of anti-liberal nobility

10
Conservative Order in Europe
  • Conservatism
  • Pillars of Support
  • Absolute Monarchies
  • Landed Aristocracies
  • Established Churches

11
Conservative Views
  • Only aristocratic and/or upper-bourgeois
    governments could be trusted
  • Aristocrats felt that their power was threatened
    by representative governments
  • Conservatives would not agree to
    constitutionalism unless they created the
    documents
  • Clerics only supported popular movements if they
    were based around the Church
  • Clerics supported the status quo, and detested
    ideas of the Enlightenment
  • Upper classes felt surrounded by enemies and gave
    up some former privileges
  • Post-Vienna Europe confronted internal problems
    after external ones seemed to disappear

12
Hungarian Nationalism
  • Since Maria Theresa granted concessions to the
    Magyar nobility of Hungary
  • Nobility persisted in gaining and retaining
    privileges
  • Hungary troubled the stability of the Habsburg
    Empire until its end in World War I
  • Nationalists launched several uprisings, and
    participated in the "Spring of Nations" in the
    Revolutions of 1848
  • Agitations led to the eventual Compromise of 1867
  • Austria and Hungary became virtually separate
    nations in a personal union under the Habsburgs

13
Threat of Nationalism to the Establishment
  • Nationalists, sought to redraw Europe along
    ethnic lines
  • Would effectively dissolve the Ottoman, Austrian,
    and Russian empires
  • Nationalism and liberalism sometimes worked
    together, adding to the concern of absolutists
    and ultraroyalists
  • Nationalism eventually succeeded,
  • United the German and Italian states into
    unified, strong countries, challenging French and
    Austrian ambitions

14
Reaction in Austria and Germany
  • Austria
  • Prince Klemens von Metternich
  • Architect of the Congress of Vienna settlement,
  • Symbol of conservative political reaction against
    nationalism and liberalism
  • Austria was threatened as the most multi-ethnic
    country in Europe
  • Recognition of aspirations of any ethnic groups
    Dissolution of the empire
  • Representative government was feared - national
    groups could gain their ambitions legally through
    parliaments
  • To prevent success of nationalism and liberalism
    even further, the Austrians wanted to dominate
    the states of the German Confederation,
  • Replaced the HRE
  • Loose organization of 39, nominally independent
    kingdoms and principalities
  • Moves toward constitutional government in each of
    the states of the Confederation were opposed and
    blocked by Austria

15
Prussia
  • King Frederick William III promised
    constitutional government in 1815, but went back
    on his word in 1817
  • Council of State was formed, which was not
    constitutionally-based, but effective
  • 1819-1823 - Further steps away from liberalism
    had been undertaken by the King,
  • Establishment of eight Junker-dominated
    provincial estates (diets),
  • Reaffirmed link between Prussian monarchy, army,
    and landholders

16
German Confederation
  • Constitutional Governments established in three
    south German states of Baden, Bavaria, and
    Wurttemberg,
  • Did not recognize popular sovereignty
  • Confirmed powers of the monarchs
  • Young Germans were loyal to the nationalism and
    liberalism that emerged from the Napoleonic
    occupation
  • University students circulated nationalist
    writings and formed the Burschenschaften (student
    associations)
  • Sought to sever old provincial loyalties and
    replace them with national loyalty to a greater
    German state

17
Student Uprisings
  • 1817 Jena
  • Bonfires and celebrations were organized for the
    anniversaries of the Battle of Leipzig and
    Luther's Ninety-five Theses
  • Nationalist celebrations accentuated the rise of
    the movement throughout Germany
  • March 1819
  • Karl Sand,
  • Member of one of the student clubs,
  • Assassinated the conservative dramatist August
    von Kotzebue and was tried and executed
  • Became a martyr for the young nationalists
  • Metternich used the Sand incident to suppress the
    societies

18
July 1819the Carlsbad Decrees
  • Metternich persuaded
  • Dissolution of the Burschenschaften
  • Press and university censorship
  • Final Act limited the subjects discussed in the
    constitutional assemblies of Bavaria,
    Wurttemberg, and Baden
  • Right of monarchs to resist constitutionalist
    demands
  • Led to the constant harassment of potential
    dissidents by the German monarchs

19
Repression in Britain
  • Prime Minister Lord Liverpool
  • Unprepared for the emergence of the internal
    problems after the Napoleonic wars
  • Tory ministry sought to placate and protect the
    interests of the landed and wealthy classes
  • 1815 - Corn Law
  • Maintain high prices for domestic grain through
    import duties on foreign grain
  • 1816 - Parliament abolished the income tax for
    the wealthy,
  • Replaced it with excise taxes on consumer goods
    paid by the wealthy and the poor

20
English Discontentment
  • Lower classes began to doubt the wisdom of the
    rulers
  • Calls for reform were intensified
  • Radical newspapers formed
  • Demanding change of the political system,
    including William Cobbett's Political Registrar
  • Government
  • Feared workers as possible repetitions of
    France's sans-culottes ready to murder the elites
  • Regarded the radical leaders, including Cobbett,
    John Cartwright, and Henry Hunt as demagogues
    betraying national allegiances
  • December 1816 - Discontent mass meeting occurred
    at Spa Fields
  • Government reacted by passing the Coercion Act of
    March 1817,
  • Suspended habeas corpus and extended laws against
    seditious gatherings

21
"Peterloo"
  • After temporary stability, radical reformism grew
    again
  • August 16, 1819 - Radicals met in Manchester at
    Saint Peter's Fields
  • Royal troops were called to keep order
  • Panic broke out, making the massacre famed as the
    "Peterloo Massacre"
  • Liverpool supported the Manchester
    administration's decision
  • Became determined to stop the radical movements
  • Radical leaders were arrested

22
The Six Acts
  • December 1819 - Six Acts passed
  • Forbade large unauthorized public meetings
  • Raised the fines for seditious libel
  • Sped up the trials of political agitators
  • Increased newspaper taxes
  • Prohibited training of armed groups
  • Allowed local officials to search homes in
    certain disturbed counties
  • February 1820- the Cato Street Conspiracy was
    discovered
  • Under the leadership of a man named Thistlewood,
    extreme radicals plotted to assassinate the
    entire British Cabinet
  • Leaders were arrested and tried, four of them
    being executed
  • Conspiracy served only to discredit the reform
    movement

23
Bourbon Restoration in France
  • Louis XVIII returned to power
  • Louis XVI's son, though he never formally ruled
    France, was regarded as Louis XVII
  • Permitted a constitution, but it was largely his
    own creation - the Charter
  • Hereditary Monarchy
  • Bicameral legislature - royally-appointed upper
    house lower house (Chamber of Deputies) elected
    on a very narrow franchise with high property
    requirements
  • Guaranteed the rights of the Declaration of the
    Rights of Man and Citizen
  • Religious toleration, with Roman Catholicism as
    the official religion
  • Property rights of current owners of land would
    not be challenged

24
Rise of Ultraroyalists
  • Count of Artois (the Kings brother) led the
    extreme royalists in demanding revenge against
    former revolutionaries and Napoleonic supporters
  • After Waterloo a "White Terror" occurred in the
    southern and western regions
  • Extreme royalists also controlled the Chamber of
    Deputies,
  • Louis XVIII dissolved the chamber
  • February 1820 - Duke of Berri, son and heir of
    Artois, was assassinated
  • King persuaded the murder was the result of the
    royal concessions to liberals
  • Issued repressive measures
  • Electoral laws were revised to give the wealthy
    two votes
  • Press censorship and arrest of suspected
    dissidents Secondary education was given to
    control of the Roman Catholic clergy
  • Reversed much of the appearance of liberal
    constitutionalism in France

25
Challenges to the Conservative Order
  • Spanish Revolution of 1820
  • 1814 - Bourbon Dynasty restored to Spain
    following Napoleon's defeat
  • Ferdinand VII, promised to rule constitutionally
  • Dissolved the Cortes, the Spanish Parliament
  • 1820 - Group of army officers rebelled
  • March 1820 - King Ferdinand restored the
    constitution
  • July 1820 - revolution broke out in the Italian
    states
  • Outside the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies (Naples
    and Sicily), the revolutions failed to establish
    constitutional governments
  • Austrians were frightened by the Italian
    insurrections
  • Hoped to dominate the peninsula as a buffer
    against spread of the revolution into its
    southern domains
  • Britain opposed intervention

26
October 1820 - Congress of Troppau and the
Protocol of Troppau
  • Meeting between Austria, Prussia, Russia,
    Britain, and France
  • Stable governments can intervene to bring back
    rule of law in unstable and revolutionary
    countries
  • Powers were hesitant, however, to sanction
    Austrian intervention in Italy
  • January 1821 - Congress of Laibach authorizes
    Austria's intervention
  • Austrian troops marched into Naples and abolished
    the constitution, making the Kingdom of the Two
    Sicilies absolutist again
  • Metternich attempted to foster policies that
    would improve administration of the Italian
    governments to give them more direct local support

27
1822 - Congress of Verona
  • Met to resolve the Spanish conflict
  • Britain refused to sanction joint action and
    withdrew from continental affairs
  • Austria, Prussia, and Russia supported French
    intervention in Spain
  • April 1823 - French troops enter Spain and within
    months suppress the Spanish Revolution, occupying
    the country until 1827

28
Significance of the Spanish situation
  • French intervention was not an excuse to expand
    territory or power
  • No other interventions of the era were undertaken
    to increase power at another country's expense
  • New British Foreign Minister George Canning, who
    led Britain out of continental affairs, was
    interested in British commerce and trade
  • Sought to prevent political reaction from seeping
    into Spanish Latin America
  • Sought to exploit the revolutions in Latin
    America to crush the Spanish monopoly on trade
  • Britain recognized the Spanish ex-colonies as
    independent nations

29
Balkan Nationalism
  • Numerous ethnic groups wanted independence,
    including Greeks, Serbs, Albanians, Romanians,
    and Bulgarians
  • Serbs and Greeks gained independence in 1830 and
    1821, from the Ottoman Empire
  • Serbs envisioned a "Greater Serbia", including
    Ottoman and Austrian controlled Serbs
  • Most immediate cause of World War I

30
Greek Revolution of 1821
  • Attracted liberals and Romantics from all over
    Europe as a "rebirth of ancient Greek democracy"
  • Many fought among the revolutionaries
  • Ottomans could hardly hold on to its European
    holdings
  • European powers wanted Balkans
  • Could not determine what to do if Ottomans fell
    apart
  • Britain, France, and Russia
  • An independent Greece would benefit them
    strategically and maintain domestic status quo
  • 1827 - Treaty of London signed, demanding Turkish
    recognition of Greek independence
  • 1828 - Russia sent troops into Ottoman Romania
  • 1829 - Treaty of Adrianople
  • Russia gained control of Romania
  • Ottoman Empire would have to allow Britain,
    France, and Russia to decide the fate of Greece
  • 1830 - Second Treaty of London affirms an
    independent Greek Kingdom
  • Otto I, the Bavarian King's son, becomes the
    first king of Greece

31
Serbian Independence
  • 1804-1813 Kara George waged a guerilla war
    against the Ottoman Empire
  • Built national self-identity
  • Attracted attention of the great powers
  • 1815-1816 Milos negotiated greater administrative
    autonomy for some Serbian territory,
  • few Serbs lived within the autonomy
  • 1830 - Serbia formally given independence
  • 1833 - Milos becoming hereditary prince
  • Pressured the Ottomans to extend Serbian borders
  • Serbs would seek more territory, creating tension
    with Austria and the other minority groups in
    Serbia
  • 1856 -Serbia became under collective protection
    of the great powers
  • Deeper relationship had begun between Serbia and
    Russia

32
Revolutions in Latin America
  • Haiti
  • Started by a slave revolt led by Toussaint
    L'Ouverture and Jean-Jacques Dessalines in 1794
  • Popular uprising of a repressed social group,
    rather than discontented Creoles
  • Haiti became independent in 1804
  • Success of the Indians, blacks, mestizos,
    mulattos, and slaves in Haiti haunted the Creoles
    in Latin America
  • Creoles became determined that revolutions not
    threaten their own power

33
Reasons for Creole discontent
  • Wanted to trade freely within the region and with
    North America and Europe
  • Detested increase of taxes by the Spanish
    monarchy
  • Resented the peninsulares who were favored for
    political and military promotions,
  • Elites readand adopted the ideas of the
    Enlightenment philosophes,
  • Napoleon's overthrow of the Portuguese (1807) and
    Spanish (1808) governments started rebellions
  • Disappearance of Bourbon monarchy provided an
    opportunity and political vacuum for the Creoles
    in Latin America
  • Feared the liberal Napoleonic monarchy in Spain
    would try to implement reforms endangering their
    own power
  • Feared Napoleon would drain the resources and
    economies of Latin America to fund his war effort

34
1808-1810
  • Creole political committees (juntas)
  • Claimed the right to govern regions of the
    continent,
  • Claiming they ruled in the name of the deposed
    Bourbon monarchy
  • Juntas did away with the privileges of the
    peninsulares
  • Spain was permanently ousted from Latin America

35
Rio de La Plata (Argentina)
  • Started with a revolt in Buenos Aires,
  • 1810 - Junta overthrew Spanish authority and sent
    troops into Paraguay and Uruguay to liberate the
    two regions
  • The armies were defeated, but Paraguay became
    independent on its own, and Uruguay eventually
    became part of Brazil
  • After the failure in Paraguay and Uruguay, Buenos
    Aires junta was determined to liberate Peru
  • A stronghold of royalism and loyalism in Latin
    America
  • 1814 - Jose de San Martin,
  • General of the Rio de La Plata forces
  • Led an army across the Andes Mountains
  • 1817 - San Martin occupied Santiago, Chile,
  • Allowed Chilean independence leader Bernardo
    O'Higgins to become dictator
  • San Martin organized a naval force and by 1820
    set out to attack Peru by sea
  • By 1821, San Martin defeated the royalists in
    Lima and declared himself Protector of Peru

36
Venezuela
  • 1810 - Simon Bolivar organized a junta in Caracas
  • Bolivar advocated republicanism
  • 1811-1814 - Civil war broke out between royalists
    and their supporters (slaves and llaneros -
    Venezuelan cowboys) and the republican government
  • Bolivar forced into exile in Colombia and Jamaica
  • 1816 - With help from Haiti, Bolivar invaded
    Venezuela
  • Captured Bogotá, the capital of New Granada
    (Colombia, Bolivia, and Ecuador), securing a base
    for attack on Venezuela
  • 1821 - Bolivar captured Caracas and became
    president
  • July 1822 - Bolivar joined San Martin to liberate
    Quito,
  • Disagreed on the political future of Latin
    America, since San Martin was a monarchist
  • San Martin soon retired and went into exile,
  • Bolivar established control over Peru in 1823

37
New Spain (Mexico,Texas,California)
  • A junta was organized
  • Creole priest Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla called
    for rebellion to the Indians in his parish
  • Indians and other repressed groups responded
  • Father Hidalgo proposed social and land reform,
  • Controlled a loose organization of 80,000
    followers, capturing several major cities and
    marching on to Mexico City
  • July 1811 - Hidalgo was captured and killed,
  • Leadership went to mestizo priest Jose Maria
    Morelos y Pavon,
  • Called for an end to forced labor and much more
    radical land reform
  • 1815 - Morelos was executed, and the uprising
    ended
  • United Spanish and Creole conservative groups in
    Mexico
  • Determined to halt all kind of reform

38
New Spain continued. .
  • 1820 - Conservatives' power was challenged,
  • from the Bourbon monarchy in Spain
  • forced to adopt a liberal constitution
  • Conservatives rallied behind royalist general
    Augustin de Iturbide
  • Declared independence in 1821
  • Supported his declaration as emperor
  • Imperial government did not last long, but Spain
    was never again in power in Mexico

39
Brazil
  • Brazilian independence was peaceful
  • Portuguese royal family came to Brazil and
    transformed Rio de Janeiro into a court city
  • Prince regent Joao addressed local complaints and
    expanded trade
  • 1815 - Brazil became a kingdom, no longer being a
    colony of Portugal
  • 1820 - Portuguese revolution demanded that Brazil
    be restored to colonial status and Joao return to
    Portugal
  • Joao left his son Dom Pedro as regent as he
    returned to Portugal, encouraging him to be
    sympathetic to the Brazilians
  • September 1822 - Dom Pedro embraced Brazilian
    independence and became Emperor of Brazil, the
    imperial government surviving until 1889

40
Consequences
  • New Latin American countries, except for f
    Brazil, were often economically and politically
    unstable
  • Disaffected populations threatened the stability
    of the new post-Spanish republics
  • Economies plunged and trade suffered
  • Wealthy peninsulares fled to Spain or Cuba,
    causing the Latin American governments to seek
    trade relations with Britain

41
RussiaArmy Unrest and Dynastic Crisis
  • Russian officers were exposed to ideas of the
    French Revolution
  • Radicals, in the Southern Society
  • Advocated representative government and abolition
    of serfdom
  • Moderates, in the Northern Society,
  • Advocated constitutional monarchy, abolition of
    serfdom
  • Protection of the aristocracy
  • Death of Tsar Alexander I caused two crises
  • Unexpected death occurred when he had no direct
    heir
  • Constantine, his brother, married a commoner and
    was excluded from the line of succession
  • Eventually, Nicholas, his younger brother, became
    Tsar
  • Legality of Nicholas's claim was uncertain, until
    a suspected conspiracy made Nicholas declare
    himself Tsar

42
Decembrist Revolt
  • Junior officers plotted to rally the troops under
    their command to reformism
  • December 26, 1825 - most of the army swore
    loyalty to Nicholas,
  • less popular and more conservative
  • Moscow regiment marched into the Senate Square in
    St. Petersburg,
  • Refused to swear allegiance
  • Called for a constitution
  • Demanded that Constantine become Tsar
  • Peaceful negotiation failed
  • Nicholas ordered the cavalry and artillery to
    attack the insurgents, and 60 people were killed
    in the melee
  • 1826 - Nicholas presided over the sentencing of
    the Decembrists, executing or sending the
    plotters to exile in Siberia

43
Absolutism of Nicholas I after the Decembrist
Revolt
  • Nicholas I came to symbolize extreme absolutism
  • Knew economic and social improvement was
    necessary, he feared change
  • Abolition of serfdom would undermine aristocratic
    support of the monarchy
  • State repression and censorship flourished

44
Official Russian Nationality
  • Program presided over by Count S. S. Uvarov
  • Slogan was "Orthodoxy, Autocracy, and
    Nationalism"
  • Russian Orthodox Church
  • Basis for morality, education, and
    intellectuality
  • Part of the secular government
  • Russian youths were taught to oppose social
    mobility
  • Autocracy championed absolute monarchy and
    absolute power of the Tsar
  • Nationality glorified the Russian nationality and
    urged Russians to see religion, language, and
    customs as source of wisdom separating them from
    the West

45
November Insurrection in Poland
  • Since the Congress of Vienna,
  • Grand Duke Constantine controlled the government,
  • Tsar was the official King of Poland
  • Polish aristocrats and Sejm fought with their
    Russian overlords for the Russians' constant
    violation of the Polish Constitution
  • Liberal revolutions in France and Belgium
    encouraged Polish nationalists but had the
    reverse effect on the Russian Tsar
  • The Russians planned to use the Polish Army to
    crush the revolutions
  • The Poles protested and a riot in Warsaw on
    November 29 soon spread to revolution across the
    country
  • December 13, 1830 - Sejm declared a national
    uprising and officially dethroned Nicholas I on
    January 25, 1831
  • Neither Britain, nor revolutionary France,
    supported the Insurrection
  • Prussia and Austria deliberately made it hard for
    the rebels
  • By the end of 1831, the Insurrection had fallen,
    the troops disarmed in Prussia
  • February 1832 - The Tsar issued the Organic
    Statute, making Poland a part of Russia

46
July Revolution in France
  • Louis XVIII died in 1824
  • Count of Artois became Charles X
  • Very ultraroyalist
  • First action was to have the Chamber of Deputies
    in 1824 and 1825 assist aristocrats who lost
    property in the revolution by lowering interest
    rates on government bonds
  • Middle-class bondholders resented the measure
  • Restored the rule of primogeniture
  • Enacted a law that punished sacrilege with
    imprisonment or death
  • Elections of 1827 - liberals gained majority in
    Chamber of Deputies and forced conciliatory
    actions from Charles, who appointed a less
    conservative ministry
  • Laws against the press were eased, but liberals
    were not satisfied
  • 1829 - Charles decided his appeasement policy
    failed and appointed a new ultraroyalist ministry
  • Liberal opposition, in desperation, negotiated
    with the liberal Orleanist branch of the Bourbon
    family

47
Outbreak of revolution
  • 1830 - Charles called for new elections, and
    liberals again won a vast majority
  • King decided to attempt a royalist political coup
    and sent a fleet to Algeria, taking control of
    the pirate government
  • Reports of the victory reached the capital by
    July 9, and Charles took advantage of the
    euphoria to enact the Four Ordinances,
  • Restricted freedom of the press,
  • Dissolved the Chamber of Deputies,
  • Restricted the franchise,
  • Called for new elections under the new royalist,
    conservative franchise
  • Liberal press called on national opposition to
    the Four Ordinances
  • People of Paris erected barricades in the street,
  • Battles with royal troops took more than 1,800
    lives
  • Troops were unable to crush the uprisings
  • August 2 - Charles abdicated and fled into exile
    in Britain
  • Chamber of Deputies appointed a new ministry
    which supported constitutional monarchy
  • Louis Philippe, the Duke of Orleans, as the new
    King of France

48
The Monarchy of Louis Philippe
  • Political developments
  • New constitution was regarded as a right of the
    people rather than privileges of the monarch
  • Catholicism became the religion of the majority,
    but not the official state religion, the new
    government being strongly anticlerical
  • Censorship was abolished
  • Voting franchise was extended moderately
  • King had to cooperate with the Chamber of
    Deputies
  • Social order
  • Revolution did not improve the standards of the
    lower class
  • Money was the only method of influence in
    government
  • Plight of the poor was ignored
  • late 1831, the troops suppressed a workers'
    uprising in Lyons
  • July 1832, more than 800 people were killed in an
    uprising that happened during a Napoleonic
    general's funeral
  • 1834 - Another disturbance in Lyons was brutally
    crushed

49
International development
  • King Louis Philippe retained control of Algiers,
    the city that Charles X conquered, and began to
    expand the territory beyond just the coastal city
  • Occupation of Algeria opened new markets for
    France
  • Structures of the Ottoman government were
    dismantled in Algeria
  • French empire in Africa expanded further and
    flourished, French settlers coming in to Algeria
    in large numbers
  • Immigration of French people into Algeria
    compelled the French government to regard Algeria
    as a province rather than colony of France
  • The ethnic integration would pose a problem in
    the post-World War II decolonization later on

50
Belgian Revolution
  • Causes
  • Since 1815, Belgium had been merged with the
    Kingdom of Holland
  • Two countries differed in culture and economy
  • Belgians refused to accept Dutch rule
  • Encouraged by the July Revolution in France
  • Outbreak
  • August 25, 1830 - Riots broke out in Brussels
  • Municipal authorities and property-owners formed
    a provisional government
  • Attempt at compromise failed and troops sent by
    King William of Holland were defeated by November
    10
  • National congress wrote a liberal constitution,
    which was put into effect in 1831

51
International Reactions
  • Major powers saw the Belgian Revolution as a
    distortion of the borders set by the Congress of
    Vienna, but none were willing to act
  • Russia was fighting the Polish rebels
  • Prussia and the German Confederation were
    crushing insurgencies in their own land
  • Austria was crushing disturbances in Italy
  • France favored Belgian independence in the hopes
    of dominating it
  • Britain would tolerate Belgian liberalism as long
    as it was not influenced by other nations
  • December 1830 - Lord Palmerston, the British
    Foreign Minister, gathered the major powers in
    London to persuade them to recognize Belgium as a
    neutral independent state
  • July 1831 - Leopold of Saxe-Coburg became King
  • Convention of 1839 guaranteed Belgian neutrality

52
Great Reform Bill of 1832 Great Britain
  • 1830 - House of Commons considered the first
    major bill to reform the British political system
  • Catholic Emancipation Act
  • Britain was determined to maintain control of
    Ireland
  • In the 1820s, the Irish nationalists agitated for
    Catholic emancipation
  • Catholics could now become members of Parliament,
    ending Anglican monopoly of British politics
  • Measure alienated Anglican supporters of the Duke
    of Wellington, the Prime Minister,
  • King William IV turned to the leader of the
    liberal Whigs, Earl Grey, to form a new
    government
  • The Whig ministry
  • Riots broke out when the Whig's attempt at
    passing a massive reform bill was blocked by the
    House of Lords
  • To stop the riots, William IV agreed to persuade
    a majority in the House of Lords to pass the
    Great Reform Bill
  • Expanded the size of the electorate by almost 50
    while keeping a property qualification and
    keeping it only for men
  • Some franchise rights were taken away and
    actually disenfranchised some working class
    people
  • Act laid the foundations for further reform

53
Liberal vs. Conservative Nationalism
  • In the first half of 19th c. nationalism and
    liberalism went hand in hand
  • Liberal nationalists believed love of country led
    to love of all humanity
  • Liberal ideals included equality, freedom, and
    representative government
  • By 2nd half of 19th c. extreme nationalism
    subverted liberal values, contributed to World
    War I, and led to the rise of fascism.
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