Title: Nationalism
1Nationalism
- Chapter 23 Section 5
- Chapter 24
2The Congress of Vienna
- September 1814
- Great Britain, Austria, Prussia, and Russia lead
- Klemens von Metternich (Austria)
- Concordat of Europe fight against
revolutionaries - Goals
- Return the power of monarchies
- Conservatism did not want changes to Europe
- Tried to divide up Europe so that no one country
would dominate
3Congress of Vienna
4Europe after the Congress of Vienna
5Liberalism Nationalism
- Liberalism
- Took ideas of the Enlightenment and the American
and French Revolutions - Wanted civil liberties (i.e. Bill of Rights),
most wanted separation of church and state - Nationalism
- Idea from French Revolution, creating a nation
based on communities - Governments built on loyalty to a nation not to a
king or leader - Italy, Germany, Greece
6Latin American Independence
- Haiti (1790-1804)
- Francois Toussaint-LOuverture (former slave)
starts rebellion that breaks away from France - Mexico (1810-1821)
- Started by Catholic priest Padre Hidalgo,
eventually breaks from Spain, 1823 becomes a
republic - Guatemala, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Honduras, and
Nicaragua follow - Spanish South America
- Creoles (Spaniards born in the Americas
educated and wealthy) - Simon Bolivar helps free Venezuela
- Jose de San Martin helps free Argentina
- Bolivar San Martin help to free Chile, Peru and
Ecuador - Brazil
- Portuguese king moves to Brazil to escape
Napoleon - 1822 Dom Pedro frees Brazil
7Latin American Revolutionaries
LOuverture (Haiti)
Hidalgo (Mexico)
San Martin (Argentina)
Bolivar (Venezuela)
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9Reform in Great Britain
- Electoral Reforms
- Reform Act of 1832 opened voting rights to more
of the middle class - Industrial workers and farmers still
disenfranchised (could not vote), slowly get more
rights - Formation of the Liberal and Conservative parties
- Great Britain slowly became more and more
democratic - Dominions of Canada, Australia, and New Zealand
- Part of Great Britain but did have some home rule
10Call for Nationalism in Europe
- Ottoman Empire
- Greeks, Slavs, Arabs, Bulgarians, Armenians
- 1830, Greece becomes independent
- Austria
- Slovenes, Hungarians, Germans, Czechs, Slovaks,
Croats, Poles, Serbs, Italians - Italians begin to call for independence
- Russia
- Ukrainians, Poles, Lithuanians, Estonians, Finns,
Jews, Romains, Georgians, Armenians, Turks - 1861 serfs freed after the Crimean War
- 1917 Russian empire falls apart
11Call for Nationalism
12Revolutions of 1848
- The old order begins to be destroyed
- France revolts, again
- Austrian Empire fights its own people over
liberal ideas - Germany was 39 separate states and would become a
unified country in 1871 - Italian city states start to fight for freedom
and a new united constitution
13France
- 1815-1848, Bourbon kings lead a constitutional
monarchy - Second Empire
- Louis-Napoleon becomes Emperor Napoleon III
- 1854 Crimean War France and Great Britain vs.
Russia (over the Ottoman Empire) - 1870 Franco-Prussian War (Napoleon III removed)
- France gives up Alsace and Lorraine to Prussia
- Third Republic
- 1875 new constitution created a republic
- Dreyfus Affair proved republic could handle
problems
14Unification of Italy
- 1815 Italy was not a country
- Made up of independent states
- Most states controlled by a foreign ruler
- Risorgimento
- Giuseppe Mazzini leads society of Young Italy
- Started the push for a nation-state in 1831
15Unification of Italy (cont.)
- 1848 Venetia and Lombardy begin fighting for
independence away from Austria - Sardinia adopted a new constitution
- King Victor Emanuel II
- Camillo di Cavour prime minister
- Helped France England in the Crimean War
- Fought Austria (w/ Frances help)
- Tuscany, Parma, and Modena joined Sardinia in 1860
16Unification of Italy (cont.)
- Southern Italy joins in
- Giuseppe Garibaldi leads guerilla warfare in
Kingdom of Two Sicilies - Joins Sardinia in 1861
- 1866 Italy joins Prussia in war against
Austria, Venetia given to Italy - 1871 Rome taken from the Popes control and
Italy is fully united
17Unification of Italy
18Germany 1815
19Unification of Germany
- 1815 Germany was 39 states
- Division between Catholics and Protestant states
- Rivalry between states loyal to Prussia and those
loyal to Austria - Congress of Vienna created the German
Confederation - Frankfurt Assembly acted to unite the
confederation - Resulted in economic ties but still divisions in
loyalty - Junkers business class began pushing for
nationalism
20Unification of Germany (cont.)
- 1848 German liberals started revolution,
conservatives attempted to put down - 1861 William I became king of Prussia
- Tried to expand military, stopped by liberal
politicians who wanted more democracy - Otto von Bismarck becomes Prime Minister
- Realpolitick nation-state gets what it wants by
any means
21Unification of Germany (cont.)
- Bismarck leads Prussia into 3 wars
- Vs. Denmark (1864)
- Took territories of Schleswig Holstein with
Austrias help - Showed Prussian military strength, gave excuse to
go to war with Austria - Seven Weekss (1866)
- Defeated Austria
- Created the North German Confederation
- Franco-Prussian (1870)
- Able to get southern German states to align with
Prussia - 1871 Germany was united as a single country
22Austria
- 1848 revolutionaries wanted more democracy
- Emperor Francis Joseph takes over and tries to
hold Austrian Empire together - 1867 dual monarchy of Austria-Hungary
- Balkans
- 3/5th population were Slavs with no political
rights - Conflict in the Balkans would eventually result
in World War I
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24Balance of Power?
- By 1871
- Great Britain and Germany were dominate
- France next most powerful
- Russia and Austria-Hungary lagged far behind
25Revolutions in the Arts
Romanticism Realism Impressionism
Description Inspired by nature and emotion, influenced by Nationalism Showed life as it really was, inspired by the difficult lives of many during industrialization Reaction against realism, showed life as just a moment in time
Famous Artists, Composers, and Writers Lord Byron, Percy Shelley, Keats, Goethe, Hugo, Mary Shelley, Beethoven, Wagner Daguerre, Balzac, Zola, Charles Dickens Claude Monet, Degas, Renoir
26Romanticism
27Realism
28Impressionism