Title: The Congress of Vienna
1The Congress of Vienna
2Europe in 1812
3The Congress of Vienna(September 1, 1814 June
9, 1815)
4Main Objectives
- Its job was to undo everything that Napoleon had
done - Reduce France to its old boundaries ? her
frontiers were pushed back to 1790 level. - Restore as many of the old monarchies as possible
that had lost their thrones during the Napoléonic
era. - Supported the resolution There is always an
alternative to conflict.
5Key Players at Vienna
Foreign Minister, Viscount Castlereagh (Br.)
Tsar Alexander I (Rus.)
The HostPrince Klemens von Metternich (Aus.)
King Frederick William III (Prus.)
Foreign Minister, Charles Maurice de Tallyrand
(Fr.)
6Key Principles Established at Vienna
- Balance of Power
- Legitimacy
- Communication Concert of Europe
- Conservatism
- Compensation
- France would have to pay an indemnity of
700,000,000 francs. - Punishment
- Coalition forces would occupy France for 3-5
years.
7Changes Made at Vienna (1)
- France was deprived of all territory conquered
by Napoleon. - Russia was given most of Duchy of Warsaw
(Poland). - Prussia was given half of Saxony, parts of
Poland, and other German territories. - A Germanic Confederation of 30 states (including
Prussia) was created from the previous 300, under
Austrian rule. - Austria was given back territory it had lost
recently, plus more in Germany and Italy. - The House of Orange was given the Dutch Republic
and the Austrian Netherlands to rule.
8The Germanic Confederation, 1815
9Changes Made at Vienna (2)
- Norway and Sweden were joined.
- The neutrality of Switzerland was guaranteed.
- Hanover was enlarged, and made a kingdom.
- Britain was given Cape Colony, South Africa, and
various other colonies in Africa and Asia. - Sardinia was given Piedmont, Nice, Savoy, and
Genoa. - The Bourbon Ferdinand I was restored in the Two
Sicilies. - The Duchy of Parma was given to Marie Louise.
- The slave trade was condemned (at British
urging). - Freedom of navigation was guaranteed for many
rivers.
10Europe After the Congress of Vienna
11Analysis
- Gentlemen's Agreement" - verbal, no constitution
- Conservative if not Reactionary
- Common goal prevent another revolution
- liberties and rights of American and French
Revolutions de-emphasized - The Burkean Rev - Edmund Burke Chief job of
the state was to guarantee the passage of
property from one generation to another. The
implication was that changes had to be gradual so
as not to disrupt the passage of property from
one generation to another - Big 4 as Policemen against Rev
12British caricaturist and social critic George
Cruikshank drew this nightmarish image of "Social
Reform" menacing the rich and powerful in 1819 to
satirize conservative fears of change. "I'm
coming! I'm coming! I shall have you!" the
monster cries. "And though I'm at your heels now,
I'll be at your heads presently."
13Analysis
- The 2 great 19th Century European Movements -
liberalism and nationalism - halted,
temporarily. - Not crushed Italy under Garibaldi and Cavour,
Prussia under Bismarck - Britain appeared to acquire minimal advantages in
the settlement, given that she had spent 600
million on the wars. She got no land in Europe,
but Britain did gain colonial strength which
helped her trade and commerce. Britain became
THE European colonial power - Austria won undue influence
14Analysis
- Communication
- 1815 Congress of Vienna
- 1818 Congress of Aix-la-Chapelle
- 1820 Congress of Troppau
- 1821 Congress of Laibach
- 1822 Congress of Verona
- League of Nations ? UN
- Prevented widespread European war for nearly 100
years (18151914)