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Reforms and Revolutions AND The Revolutions of 1848 in Europe Eastview High School AP European History Ch23 Ideologies & Upheavals (Sections 4 & 5) – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Eastview High School


1
Reforms and Revolutions AND The Revolutions of
1848 in Europe
  • Eastview High School AP European History
  • Ch23 Ideologies Upheavals (Sections 4 5)
  • McKay, et al. 8th edition

2
Essential Questions
  • The battle of ideologies continues where does
    liberalism and nationalism make gains during this
    time?
  • How did the political revolution, derailed in
    France and resisted by European monarchs,
    eventually break out again after 1815?
  • Why did the revolutionary surge triumph briefly
    in 1848 and then fail almost completely?

3
National Liberation in Greece
  • Greek nationalists led by Ypsilanti in 1821
    fought for freedom from the Ottoman Turks
  • Ypsilanti fought in the wars against Napoleon
    where he lost an arm.
  • He was a popular figure at the Congress of Vienna
  • He was a Russian national who was elected leader
    by the Greeks.
  • Great Powers supported the Turks, but Britain,
    France, and Russia support the nationalists.
    Greece becomes independent in 1830.

4
Liberal Reforms in Great Britain
  • British aristocracy, which controlled the Tory
    party, feared liberalism and worked to repress
    it.
  • Corn Law (1815), which protected English
    landowners by stopping importation of foreign
    grain unless the price rose above a certain
    level. Example of aristocratic class power and
    selfishness.
  • Corn Laws prompted urban laborers, supported by
    radical intellectuals
  • Parliament responded by Six Acts (1819).
    Eliminated mass meetings.

Cartoon of the Six Acts
5
Liberal Reforms in Great Britain
  • Growing middle class pressure led to Reform Bill
    of 1832. Increased number of voters.
  • House of Commons emerged as the major legislative
    body
  • Industrial areas of GB gained representation
  • Rotten Boroughs eliminated
  • Chartist demand for universal male suffrage
    failed, but Anti-Corn Law league succeeded in
    getting Corn Laws repealed in 1846 and free trade
    established
  • 1846, Tory and Whig parties were interested in
    reform and passes Ten Hours Act (1847). Limited
    factory workday women and young people to ten
    hours.

Cartoon of Rotten Boroughs
6
Ireland and the Great Famine
  • Most of Ireland were Catholic peasants who rented
    land from lazy greedy English Protestant
    landlords.
  • Peasants lived in shocking poverty, with
    tremendous population growth.
  • Population growth due to potato cultivation,
    early marriage, and high rents
  • 1820 on the potato crop was often diseased and
    ended up in starvation
  • Relief efforts were inadequate. Landlords
    insisted on rents, government on taxes. Led to
    mass evictions.
  • Millions died or left Ireland. Anti-British
    feeling and Irish nationalism followed

7
Revolution of 1830 in France
  • Louis XVIIIs Constitutional Charter of 1814,
    although undemocratic, protected the people
    against a return to royal absolutism and
    aristocratic privilege. Louis dies in 1824.
  • Charles X tries to rally French nationalism and
    popular support through a war with Algeria.
  • Charles X tried to re-establish the old order and
    repudiated the Constitutional Charter of 1830 in
    an attempted coup in July 1830.
  • New king, Louis Philippe, accepted the
    Constitutional Charter of 1814 but did little
    more than protect the rich upper middle class.

Louis XVIII
Charles X
Louis Philippe
8
Democratic Republic of France
  • Refusal of King Louis Philippe and Guizot (chief
    minister) to bring about electoral sparked a
    revolt in Paris in 1848.
  • Revolt led to a provisional republic, universal
    male suffrage, and more.
  • Revolutionary coalition couldnt agree on a
    common program. Moderate liberal republicans
    split with the radical socialist republicans
  • Artisans hated cutthroat capitalism and wanted
    stronger craft unions
  • National workshops were a compromise between the
    socialist demands for guaranteed work and the
    moderates determination to provide temporary
    relief for the massive unemployment

9
Revolution of 1848 in France
  • Fear of socialism led to a clash of class
  • Workers invaded the Constituent Assembly and
    tried to proclaim a new revolutionary government.
  • The Assembly dissolved the workshops in Paris
  • Closing of the workshops led to a violent
    uprising (June Days)
  • Class war led to the election of a strongman,
    Louis Napoleon, as president in 1848.

10
Revolution of 1848 in Austria
  • Revolution in France resulted in popular upheaval
    throughout central Europe, but in the end
    conservative reaction won
  • Hungarian nationalism resulted in revolution
    against the Austrian overlords
  • Under Kossuth, the Hungarians demanded national
    autonomy, civil liberties, and universal suffrage
  • Emperor Ferdinand I promised reforms and a
    liberal constitution
  • Serfdom was abolished

11
Restoring order in Austria 1848
  • Conflict among nationalities (Hungarians vs
    Croats, Serbs and Romanians Czechs vs. Germans)
    encouraged by the monarchy, weakened the
    revolution.
  • Alliance of the working and middle classes soon
    collapsed.
  • Conservative aristocrats crushed the revolution
    after rallying around a point made by the
    archduchess Sophia.
  • She insisted that Ferdinand had no heir and that
    her son should be on the throne.
  • Francis Joseph was crowned emperor in 1848
  • Russian army helped defeat the Hungarians

Francis Joseph was crowned emperor after his 18th
birthday
12
Revolution of 1848 in Prussia
  • Middle class Prussians want to create a unified
    liberal Germany
  • Working class people of Prussia demanded and got
    a liberal constitution from Fredrick William IV.
  • Further workers demands for suffrage and
    socialist reforms caused fear among the
    aristocracy.
  • Frankfurt National Assembly of 1848 was
    middle-class liberal body that began writing a
    constitution for a unified Germany
  • War with Denmark over Schleswig-Holstein ended
    with a rejection of the Frankfurt Assembly by
    newly elected Frederick William and failure of
    German liberalism.

13
Questions for your review
  1. Which countries ultimately supported the
    nationalists in Greece?
  2. How would you characterize the Tory party?
  3. How would you characterize the Whig party?
  4. What were the revisions to the Corn Law (1815)
    intended to do?
  5. What were the consequences of the repeal of the
    Corn Law?
  6. What were the consequences of the English Reform
    Bill of 1832?
  7. What act precipitated the Revolution of 1830 in
    Paris?
  8. Who were the winners of the Revolution of 1830
    in France?
  9. To whom can the success of the Revolution of 1830
    in France be attributed?
  10. Who was Guizot?
  11. Which French socialist participated in the
    provisional government in Paris 1848?
  12. What were the causes of the 1848 Revolution in
    France?
  13. What has changed at the conclusion of the
    Revolution of 1848 in France?
  14. Where did revolution begin in the Austrian Empire
    (1848)?
  15. What were the causes of the 1848 Revolution in
    Austria?
  16. What was archduchess Sophias role in the
    Revolution?
  17. What did the Hapsburgs exploit to defeat the
    revolutionary coalition?
  18. After Austria, what was the most important German
    state?
  19. What groups composed the National Assembly that
    met in Frankfurt in 1848?
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