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The Long 19th Century

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Title: The Long 19th Century


1
The Long 19th Century
  • 1789-1900

2
Liberal spill over
  • Europe after the French Revolution experiences
    continued turmoil
  • New liberal policies refining its meaning
  • Nationalist- Independence Movements
  • Continued discontent among the lower classes
  • Continued calls for political reform
  • English legislation and a realigning of political
    parties
  • Palmer ...a vicious circle was set endlessly
    revolving

3
Evolution of Liberal Ideology
  • Pre 1789 John Locke, Adam Smith
    Enlightenment-like
  • Post 1815 types of liberalism
  • Classical English Liberalism
  • New moderate French Liberalism
  • Liberalism as expressed through right to
    self-government independence movements
  • Post 1848
  • More radical after the failure of the revolutions
    (emergence of Marxist philosophy)

4
Evolution of Liberalism
Liberalism after 1848 Marxism Socialism
Original LiberalismBourgeoisieLocke British
Model
Conservatism Monarchy Aristocracy
Liberalism after 1789Democratic
reformRepublican Government
5
Early 19th Century
  • 1815-1848

6
British Liberalism
  • John Stuart Mill Utilitarianism, On Liberty
  • Womens suffrage, graduated income tax
  • Political Parties (Whigs Tories)
  • Tories (liberal reform) Robert Peel, George
    Canning
  • Catholic Emancipation Act 1829
  • Repeal of the Corn Laws 1846 (anti-mercantilist)
  • Factory Act 1833, Slavery Abolished
  • Whig (political reform) -Rotten Boroughs, Voting
    Rights Reform Bill 1832 (1 of 6 males)
  • Chartists (Charter of 1838) universal male
    suffrage, secret ballot, 1 person, 1 vote
    (Populists of England)

7
Potato Famine 1847 Black 47 Peak 1841 census
recorded an Irish population of 8.2 million. By
1851 this figure had been reduced to 6.5 million
8
Revolutionary Movements 1820s
9
Revolutionary Movements 1830s
10
The Eastern Question
  • What will become of the Ottoman Empire?

11
Bourbon Restoration
  • 1830

12
Challenges to early 18th C Liberalism
  • The Conservative upper class
  • Too many changes
  • The Lower urban working classes
  • Not enough changes
  • Organized religions
  • Too secular

13
Revolution the birth of the Nation State
  • 1848-1871

14
Why 1848?
  • A.J.P. Taylor, "history reached its turning point
    and failed to turn".
  • Hans Rothfels, "Failure or not, 1848 was a
    genuine turning point. The year 1850 no more
    restored 1847 than 1815 had returned to 1788". .
    . .
  • Lewis Namier, 1848 remains a seed-plot of
    history. It crystallized ideas and projected the
    pattern of things to come it determined the
    course of the following century."

15
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16
France 1848
  • Louis Phillipes government ignored the needs and
    demands of the workers in the cities.
  • February 1848
  • 3 days of fighting
  • King abdicated
  • December 1848
  • Louis Napoleon elected
  • Second Republic
  • (Napoleon III nephew)
  • Napoleonic Legend

17
June Days
18
Napoleonic Legacy
  • Arc de Triomphe
  • Started during Napoleonic Rule 1808
  • Completed under Louis Philippe 1833-1836

19
"When France sneezes Europe catches a cold".
  • Metternich

20
Compare and Contrast political liberalism with
political conservatism in the first half of the
nineteenth century in Europe.
21
Springtime of the PeopleVölkerfrühling
  • Revolutions of 1848

22
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23
Austria 1848
  • Hapsburgs _at_ Vienna
  • Ethnic minorities (Hungarians, Slavs, Czechs,
    Italian, Serbs, Croats)
  • Serfdom, feudal order
  • Authoritarian rule, no liberal institutions
  • Metternich dismissed by Hapsburgs, fled the
    country
  • Series of Rebellions throughout empire
  • Vienna abolition of serfdom
  • Bohemia (Prague Conference Panslavism)
  • Hungary Nationalist Movement

24
Slavic Nationalism
  • "The Slavs ask nothing but justice they rest
    upon moral force only....It is only by struggle
    that we pass from slavery to liberty. Let us
    therefore be victors, and we shall be free in a
    free nation, or let us die with honour, and glory
    will follow us to the grave."
  • Pavel Jozef Šafárik

25
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26




1815
27
German Confederation, 1848
  • Liberals demanded a constitutional government a
    union of German states (Nationalist movement)
  • Frankfurt Parliament (1848)
  • Called for elections to a constituent assembly
    for purposes of unification
  • Sought war to annex Schleswig Holstein
  • Presented Constitution Invited Prussian
    Frederick William to serve as King
  • Humiliation of Olmutz Austria demanded Prussian
    allegiance to German Confederation (German
    Dualism)

28
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29
Why did Frederick William reject offer?
  • There is no power on earth that can succeed in
    making me transform the natural relationship
    between prince and people ... into a
    constitutional relationship, and I never will
    permit a written sheet of paper to come between
    our God in heaven and this land ... to rule us
    with its paragraphs and supplant the old, sacred
    loyalty."

30
New Toughness of Mind Palmer
  • Failure of 1848
  • Idealism and romanticism discredited
  • A return to realism, science, skepticism
  • Positivism August Comte (sociology)
  • Emergence of Marxist Communism (as a philosophy
    not a reality)
  • Realpolitik politics of reality
  • Follow practical interests

31
Nationalism1815-1900 But what did
nationalism mean to people in the nineteenth
century?
  • From France and across the central and southern
    portions of the continent, proponents of
    nationalism vigorously pushed their agendas

32
Nationalism Early Stirrings prior to 1848
  • Revolutionary!
  • Rulers throughout Europe believed that
    nationalism would be a destabilizing force in
    existing governments-Therefore, they did all they
    could to crush nationalist sentiments within
    their own domains and sometimes helped their
    neighbors put down nationalist uprisings

33
Nationalism after 1848
  • A more practical approach developed
  • More Machiavellian than romantic
  • Realpolitik
  • Germany Bismarcks Blood and iron
  • Italy Cavour
  • Turning Point Crimean War ended Concert System

34
Crimean War 1854-1856
  • Russia wanted further breakdown of Ottoman
    territories (clash of liberal nationalism and
    conservative nationalism)
  • Under pretext of protection of Christians in Near
    East (traditionally role of France)

Russia
Ottoman France Britain Piedmont
CRIMEA PENINSULA
Austria (protect Balkans)
35
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36
Charge of the Light Brigade Alfred, Lord
Tennyson
  • Florence Nightingale
  • "Forward, the Light Brigade!"Was there a man
    dismay'd?Not tho' the soldier knew Someone had
    blunder'dTheirs not to make reply,Theirs not
    to reason why,Theirs but to do and dieInto the
    valley of Death Rode the six hundred.
  • Battle of Balaclava

37
Technology
  • Photographs
  • Telegraphs

38
Impact of the Crimean War
  • Weakened the authority of several rulers (Russia
    and Austria specifically weakened)
  • undermined the existing balance of power system
    in Europe (Prussia Italy especially wanted
    change)
  • strained international relations so much that
    rulers would no longer come to the aid of a
    neighbor or friend in times of crisis (end of
    concert system)
  • 1860s 1870s see rebirth of nationalist
    sentiment
  • when nationalist movements arose again in Europe
    in the 1860s and 1870s, they found much more
    fertile ground than they had twenty to thirty
    years earlier

39
Italian Unification
  • Risorgimento

40
  • Sardinia- Piedmont ruled by House of Savoy
    (Victor Emmanuel II)
  • Naples ruled by Bourbon
  • Papal States possession of the Roman See
  • Venetia Lombardy possession of Austria
  • North Central Italy were Duchies of
  • TuscanyModena Parma

Venetia
Sardinia- Piedmont
Lombardy
Papal States
Naples Kingdom of Two Sicilies
41
Italian Unification
  • Early Leaders Mazzini, Pius IX (until Syllabus
    of Errors)
  • Count Cavour Sardinia-Piedmont (NW) - Realpolitik
  • Prime minister, editor of Il Risorgimento
    (newspaper)
  • Built a liberal and economically sound state
    (railroads, docks, agricultural improvements)
  • Curtailed the influence of the Church (abolish
    church courts)
  • Sought unification of Northern and Central Italy
  • Joined Crimean War
  • Plombieres 1859 French Promise of support in
    war with Austria
  • Provoked war with Austria (1859Franco-Austrian
    War)

42
Italian Unification
  • By 1860 the North Unified
  • Franco-Austrian War settlement
  • Lombardy to Piedmont
  • Plebiscite Tuscany, Modena, Parma to Piedmont
  • In the SouthArmed expedition
  • Giuseppe Garibaldi Red Shirts (1,150)
  • Landed in Sicily, moved to Mainland
  • Two Sicilies collapsed (Bourbons)
  • Made move to Rome, agreed to endorse King Victor
    Emmanuel II
  • Plebicites (except Rome)

43
Italian Unification
  • First Parliament of a united Italy in 1861
  • Excludes Venetia, Rome
  • Venetia added 1866 as result of Austro-Prussian
    War
  • Rome annexed in 1870 after withdrawal of French
    troops

44
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45
German Unification
46
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47
German Unification Background
  • Napoleonic Germany National Awakening
  • Intellectual Romantic thinkers
  • Herder Volk or Volksgeist (Zeitgeist (zeit time
    geist spirit)
  • Stressed differences among nations
  • Cultural nationalism
  • Suspicious of anything that might corrupt the
    purity of Volk
  • Politically astute and aware of the paternalistic
    nature of German government
  • Creating a German identity
  • Grimm Fair Tales (study of languages)
  • Hegelian Dialectic history is a process.
  • The fragmentation of Germany ultimately bred a
    unified Germany

48
German Unification Background
  • After 1815 Prussia emerged as leading German
    State
  • Zollverein customs union 1834 -included most of
    Germany except Austria and Bavaria
  • Debate
  • Grossdeutsch plan unified Germany including
    Prussia Austria
  • Kleindeutsche plan unified Germany excluding
    Austria

49
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50
Realpolitik
  • The position of Prussia in Germany will not be
    determined by its liberalism but by its power ...
    Prussia must concentrate its strength and hold it
    for the favourable moment, which has already come
    and gone several times. Since the treaties of
    Vienna, our frontiers have been ill-designed for
    a healthy body politic. Not through speeches and
    majority decisions will the great questions of
    the day be decided - that was the great mistake
    of 1848 and 1849 - but by iron and blood.

51
German Unification Bismarck
  • Junker heritage
  • 1862 Chief Minister
  • Prussian loyalties, not German
  • Constitutional Crisis
  • Gap theory Lückentheorie favor with King
  • Conservative

52
Realpolitik Blood Iron
  • 1864 Danish German War
  • Prussia Austria defeated Denmark and gained
    both Schleswig and Holstein
  • 1866 Austro-Prussian War (7 Weeks War)
  • Prussia defeated Austria and alliance of German
    states to obtain Holstein
  • Annexed Schleswig, Holstein, Frankfurt, Hanover,
    Nassau
  • 1867 North German Confederation
  • Excluded Austria German states south of the
    Main River
  • Creation of Reichstag liberal reforms
    (universal male suffrage) Prussian King is head
    of state

53
1870 Franco- Prussian War
  • Causes
  • Spanish Insurrection invited Hohenzollern
    (Leopold II) to Spanish throne - declined
  • Ems Dispatch French required Prussians to never
    accept invite
  • Prussian King had been insulted
  • Napoleon III declared war on Prussia
  • Outcome
  • Two months Napoleon captured, govt collapsed
  • Paris Constituent governments (Paris Commune)
    declared Third Republic, continued fight
  • January 1871 Hall of Mirrors Bismarck declared
    the German Empire
  • Last German States (except Austria) joined
    Prussia
  • Annexed Alsace-Lorraine

54
        Kingdom of Prussia in 1866
        Annexations after the Seven Weeks War of
1866         Extensions towards forming the
North German Confederation 1867         Other
Germanic territories agree to the formation of a
Second German Empire after the Franco-Prussian
War of 1870-1871
55
Consolidation
  • 1815 German Confederation
  • 39 States
  • 1848 Frankfurt Assembly
  • Great Germans
  • Little Germans
  • 1867 North German Confederation
  • Prussia 21 other states
  • Austria southern states excluded
  • 1871 German Empire
  • Remaining German states and Alsace-Lorraine

56
Europe 1871
Consider also, world events American Civil
War Meiji Restoration Large powerful Nation
States, with at least the appearance of liberal
institutions What will be there influence on
future world events??
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