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Blood

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Lecture 2 Blood & Iron http://web.mit.edu/jinseok/www/songs/mw.mp3 – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Blood


1
Lecture 2
  • Blood Iron
  • http//web.mit.edu/jinseok/www/songs/mw.mp3

2
Questions
  • Did Germany need a strong statesman, namely
    Chancellor Bismarck, to unite?
  • Was this an indication of an underdeveloped civil
    society?
  • And, did the liberals acquiesce their political
    agenda in the face of successful unification?

3
Reforms Give Way
  • 1850 Olmütz Agreement resurrects a conservative
    German Confederation and the balancing act
    between Austria Prussia

4
Evaluating the Confederation
  • Winners / Losers
  • Possibilities of Reform
  • Living on Borrowed Time?

5
1850s Optimism
  • Industrialization
  • In Prussia coal, iron, and steel production
    increased 8, 14, and 54-fold between 1849-1875.
  • Alfred Krupp, the Cannon King, employed 60 men
    in 1836, 1000 in 1858, 8000 in 1865, and doubled
    again to 16,000 in 1873.
  • Over a million new buildings went up in Prussia
    during the years 1852-67, the fastest growth
    located in factory plants and public buildings.

6
1850s Optimism
  • Demographic Shifts
  • Gradual Rise in Living Standards
  • Increasing separation between urban rural areas
  • Mass emigration
  • Avg. life expectancy was still low men, 36.5
    years women, 38.5 years

7
Crown v. Parliament
  • 1858 Wilhelm I becomes regent of Prussia to
    succeed Friedrich Wilhelm
  • Budget Crisis of 1860s
  • 1862 Prussian isolation in the Confederation and
    the Zollverein

8
Otto von Bismarck
  • Man cannot create or control the tide of time,
    he can only move in the same direction and try to
    direct it.

9
Otto von Bismarck (1815-98)
  • Born in Schönhausen in Brandenburg, the son of a
    Pomeranian Junker.
  • Educated at Göttingen University.
  • 1836 Entered the Prussian civil service.
  • 1839 Retired from the civil service to manage
    the family estates.
  • 1849 Elected as an ultra-conservative member of
    the Prussian Landtag.
  • 1851 Joined the Prussian diplomatic corps,
    serving as Prussian representative to the Federal
    Diet and then ambassador to Russia and France.
  • 1862 Appointed Prussian Minister-President.
  • 1867 Became Chancellor of the North German
    Confederation.
  • 1871-90 Chancellor of the German Empire.

10
Propitious Circumstances
  • Fallout from the Crimean War 1854-56
  • French defeat of Austrians in 1859
  • Franco-British Competition

11
Shifting the Balance of Power
  • 1863 War of Danish Succession and the take-over
    of Schleswig-Holstein
  • July 1866 Seven-Week War against Austria over
    tensions concerning the adminstration of S-H
    power plays in the Confederation Koniggrätz
    victory for Prussia in July

12
Making Good
  • 1866 Bill of Indemnity
  • Split among Liberals (Progressive Party
    National Liberal Party)
  • Creation of North German Confederation Prussia
    and 21 principalities

13
Bismarcks Concessions
  • King of Prussia held executive authority as
    president
  • Chancellor was named by King and responsible only
    to him
  • Two legislative houses Federal Council, or
    Bundesrat, appointed by the state governments
    and a lower house, the Imperial Diet, or
    Reichstag, elected by equal manhood suffrage.
  • Prussia controlled 17 votes out of 43 in the
    Bundesrat

14
Shifting the Balance of Power
  • Napoleon III, Emperor of France
  • French-Prussian hostilities
  • Controversy over Spanish succession
  • French declaration of war on July 19
  • War unites German principalities south of the
    River Main
  • Franco-Prussian war of 1870-71 Prussian victory
    paves the way for the proclamation of a German
    Empire at Versailles in 1871.

15
Franco-Prussian War
  • War with France created huge upsurge in German
    national feeling popular pressure in the South
    German states to transform the wartime alliance
    into a permanent union.
  • However
  • The rulers of the South German states wanted a
    much looser federation than Bismarck proposed,
    giving them more control over their own affairs
  • Wilhelm I was reluctant to accept a German
    title which he felt would lessen the dignity of
    his position as King of Prussia
  • He insisted that he would only accept the Crown
    of Germany if it were offered by his fellow
    German sovereigns, not the German people
  • Bismarck threatened to call on the German people
    to remove those rulers who opposed a united
    Germany.
  • Symbolic concessions to South German states
    Bavaria retained a separate postal service and
    peacetime control of its own army.
  • Bismarck paid a huge bribe to King Ludwig II of
    Bavaria in order to get him to sign a letter
    offering the German crown to Wilhelm.
  • Germany annexed the territories of Alsace and
    Lorraine from France.

16
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17
The Constitution of the German Empire, 1871
  • Based on the Constitution of the North German
    Confederation.
  • Germany was to be a federal state.
  • Power was divided between the central government
    and the governments of the 25 states.
  • The states preserved their own constitutions,
    rulers, parliaments and administrative systems
    with powers over direct taxation, education,
    public health etc.
  • As German Emperor, the King of Prussia was head
    of state, head of the civil service and Supreme
    Warlord (Commander-in-Chief) of the armed
    forces.
  • A bi-cameral parliament made up of the Bundesrat
    (Federal Council) and the Reichstag (National
    Parliament).
  • Prussia dominated the institutions of the new
    Empire, with the most seats in both houses of
    parliament, shared institutions and a dominant
    position in military and administrative circles.

18
The Constitution of the German Empire, 1871
  • The Chancellor (Reichskanzler)
  • The highest official in the Reich
  • Also Minister-President of Prussia
  • Responsible to the Emperor, not parliament
  • Chairman of the Bundesrat
  • Appointed government ministers
  • Could ignore resolutions passed by the Reichstag
  • The Emperor (Kaiser)
  • Always the King of Prussia
  • Could appoint/dismiss the Chancellor
  • Could dissolve the Reichstag
  • Could make treaties/declare war
  • Commander-in-Chief of the army
  • Had to approve all federal laws
  • Possessed the right to interpret the constitution

Reich Government
Federal Centralised government with specific
Responsibilities for the Reich as a
whole (foreign policy, defence, customs etc.)
State Regional government with responsibilities Fo
r individual states (education, direct Taxation,
health, local justice etc.)
  • Bundesrat (upper house)
  • The Federal Council
  • Made up of 58 members nominated by states
  • Not directly elected
  • Consent required in passing new laws
  • 14 votes needed to veto legislation
  • Prussia had 17 of the 58 seats
  • Bavaria had 6, the other states had 1 each
  • Reichstag (lower house)
  • The National parliament
  • Elected by all males over 25
  • Limited powers to initiate new legislation
  • Government ministers could not be members
  • Members were not paid
  • Could approve or reject the federal budget
  • Elections normally held every 5 years

19
Unification
  • National currency
  • Uniform weights measures
  • Common commercial practices, industrial laws, and
    financial regulations

20
The German Empire
21
From the Meuse?
  • From the Meuse to the Memel / From the Adige to
    the Belt

22
Revolution from Above
  • January 18, 1871 The German Empire is founded.
  • Lesser-Germany under Prussian domination (approx.
    3/5 of the land area and 3/5 of the population).
  • What kind of state is this?
  • What tensions are relieved?
  • What new tensions emerge?
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