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How successful were the treaties in Vienna and Versailles?

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Title: How successful were the treaties in Vienna and Versailles?


1
How successful were the treaties in Vienna and
Versailles?
By Ameer, Alex, Balint, Harry, Darian
2
Introduction
  • -The Congress of Vienna was a conference of
    ambassadors of European states chaired by Wenzel
    von Metternich, and held in Vienna from
    September, 1814 to June, 1815.
  • - -Its objective was to settle the many issues
    arising from the French Revolutionary wars,
    the Napoleonic Wars, and the dissolution of
    the Holy Roman Empire.
  • -The Treaty of Versailles was a peace treaty
    signed at the end of World War I. It ended
    the war between Germany and the Allied Powers.
  • - It required Germany to accept sole
    responsibility for causing the war, to disarm,
    make substantial territorial concessions and pay
    heavy reparations to the winning countries.

3
Congress of Vienna
4
Members and Goals
  • The Congress of Vienna was assembled in September
    1814 with representatives from almost all the
    states of Europe, however most of the most
    important decisions were decided by the four
    Great Powers triumphant over Napoleon
  • The four powers England, Austria, Russia, and
    Prussia had representation from Castlereagh,
    Metternich, Alexander I and Hardenberg
    respectively
  • With the Bourbons restored under Louis XVIII,
    Talleyrand represented the French
  • Planned to reduce the power of France after the
    defeat of Napoleon and maintain peace throughout
    Europe with a balance of power.

5
Metternich
Talleyrand
Alexander I
Castlereagh
6
Actions of the Congress
  • The Congress attempted to put a number of strong
    states around France to contain it
  • The Kingdom of the Netherlands was formed and the
    Kingdom of Piedmont-Sardinia was restored
  • The Austrian Empire took up Venetia and Lombardy,
    and the rest of the Italian states remained
    divided in papal states and small duchies
  • The Congress did not attempt to put the Holy
    Roman Empire together and left the German states
    relatively divided by forming a German
    confederation which included parts of Prussia and
    Austria
  • Prussia gained territory around the Rhineland
  • The Polish Saxon question existed due to
    Metternichs and Castlereaghs fear of Russian
    and Prussian growth Russia received the Duchy of
    Warsaw (Poland was not united with Russia) and
    Prussia received two-fifths instead of all of
    Saxony

7
Map of Europe
8
Results/Success
  • Maintained a conservative balance of power in
    Europe
  • As a result national and liberal impulses were
    ignored and conservative forms of government
    remained
  • Prevented the occurrence of a major European war
    for practically a century (WWI)
  • Europe was mainly undisturbed for almost 40 years
    until the revolutions of 1848
  • Overall very successful in maintaining European
    stability

9
The Treaty of Versailles The Treaty Itself
  • The terms of the treaty required Germany among
    other things to accept demilitarization, pay 226
    billion Reichsmarks in gold and to surrender
    occupation of the Rhineland as well as that
    Germany accept complete responsibility for
    initiating World War I.

10
Economic Result Inflation
  • The burdensome reparations, coupled with a
    general inflationary period in Europe in the
    1920s, caused spiraling hyperinflation of the
    German Reichsmark by 1923.
  • This hyperinflationary period combined with the
    effects of the Great Depression (beginning in
    1929) seriously to undermine the stability of the
    German economy, wiping out the personal savings
    of the middle class and spurring massive
    unemployment.

11
Social Result Outrage
  • The economic effects of the treaty exacerbated
    the social unrest of the German population, who
    were already bitter about certain aspects of the
    treaty such as the War Guilt Clause

12
An Ominous Future
  • Revision of the Treaty represented one of the
    platforms that gave radical right wing parties in
    Germany, including Hitler's Nazi Party, such
    credibility to mainstream voters in the 1920s and
    early 1930s.
  • Promises to rearm, to reclaim German territory,
    particularly in the East, to remilitarize the
    Rhineland, and to regain prominence again among
    world powers after humiliating defeat stoked
    ultranationalist sentiment and caused voters to
    overlook the more radical tenets of Nazi
    ideology.
  • Created a network of feeble states on her eastern
    frontier (thus making another bid inevitable)

13
Conclusion Treaty of Vienna
  • The Treaty of Vienna was the end of Napoleons
    conquest through Europe.
  • It effectively ended such wide scale war for the
    next 100 years.
  • It restored Europe to the way it was
    Pre-Napoleon, and created a balance of power.
  • It was created with all of the nations best
    interest in mind.

14
Conclusion Treaty of Versailles
  • Unlike the Treaty of Vienna, Versailles failed to
    keep war away from Europe.
  • It was written to punish Germany more than it was
    to create a stable Europe or prevent further war.
  • 20 years after Versailles was signed war was
    broke out across Europe.
  • The harsh punishments lead other countries to
    over look Germanys advancements towards war.

15
Final Thoughts
  • The Treaty of Vienna was successful in preventing
    war for 100 years by creating a fair and stable
    Europe.
  • The Treaty of Versailles was focused on
    punishment and instead created an environment for
    the creation of war.
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