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Strengthening Germany

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Germany, headed by William I and his chancellor, Otto von Bismarck, was the new power in Europe. The German Industrial Giant By the late 1800s, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Strengthening Germany


1
Strengthening Germany
  • Bellwork 3
  • Do noah and roys ownership of this boat entitle
    them two to membership in the second street yacht
    club

2
  • In January 1871, They had just defeated Napoleon
    III in the Franco Prussian War and had chosen
    Louis XIV palace to proclaim the new German
    empire.
  • French domination of Europe, dating from the age
    of Louis XIV, had ended. Germany, headed by
    William I and his chancellor, Otto von Bismarck,
    was the new power in Europe.

3
The German Industrial Giant
  • By the late 1800s, German chemical and electrical
    industries set the standard worldwide. German
    shipping was second only to Britains among the
    European powers.
  • Economic progress- Germanys spectacular growth
    was due in part to ample iron and coal resources,
    the basic ingredients for industrial development.
    The educated work force also helped the economy.
  • During the 1850s and 1860s, Germans had founded
    large companies and built many railroads.
    1871-1914, the business tycoon August Thyssen
    built a small steel factory of 70 workers into a
    giant empire with 50,000 employees.

4
Science, Government, and Industry
  • German industrialists were the first to see the
    value of applied science in developing new
    products such as synthetic chemicals and dyes.
  • After 1871, German government issued a single
    currency for Germany, reorganized the banking
    system and coordinated railroads built by the
    various German states.

5
The Iron Chancellor
  • Bismarck pursued several foreign policy goals. He
    sought to keep France weak and isolated while
    building strong links with Austria and Russia.
  • The Iron Chancellor, as he was called, sought to
    erase local loyalties and crush all opposition to
    the imperial state. He targeted two groups, the
    Catholic Church and the socialists. In his view,
    both posed a threat to the new German state.

6
Campaign against the Church
  • Bismarck launched the kulturkampf, or battle for
    civilization. His goal was to make Catholics put
    loyalty to the state above allegiance to the
    Church. The chancellor had laws 1 state the
    right to supervise Catholic education, 2 closed
    some religious orders, expelled the Jesuits from
    Prussia, and made it compulsory for couples to be
    married by civil authority.
  • Bismarcks moves against the catholic Church
    backfired . The faithful rallied behind the
    Church, and the Catholic Center party gained
    strength in the Reichstag. A realist, Bismarck
    saw his mistake and made peace with the Church.

7
Campaign against the Socialists
  • By the late 1870s, German Marxistsw had organized
    the social Democratic party, which called for a
    true parliamentary democracy and laws to improve
    conditions for the working class. Bismarck feared
    that socialists would undermine the loyalty of
    German workers and turn them toward revolution.
  • So, he had laws. 1 Shut down their newspapers,
    and 2 banned their meetings. Once again, it
    backfired, unifying workers in support of the
    socialist cause.
  • Bismarck set out to woo workers away form
    socialism by sponsoring laws to protect them.
    1890s Germans had health and accident insurance
    as will as old age insurance to provide
    retirement benefits. Thus, under Bismarck,
    Germany was a pioneer in social reform.

8
  • His plan was only partly successful. Although
    workers benefited from his measures, they did not
    abandon socialism.
  • Later, Germany and other European nations would
    build on Bismarcks social policies, greatly
    increasing governments role in providing for the
    needs of its citizens.

9
A Confident New Kaiser
  • 1888, William II succeeded his grandfather as
    Kaiser.
  • Confident of his abilities and wished to put his
    own stamp on Germany. 1890, he shocked Europe by
    asking the dominating Bismarck to resign. There
    is only one master in the Reich, and that is I,
    he said.
  • William II seriously believed in his divine right
    to rule. Like his grandfather, William II
    lavished funds on the German military machine,
    already the most powerful in Europe. He also
    launched and ambitious campaign to expand the
    German navy and win an overseas empire to rival
    those of Britain and France.
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