Title: Revolutions! Revolts! New Governments!
1Revolutions! Revolts! New Governments!
2Enlightenment Revolutions
- Commonalities? Contrasts?
3The Enlightenment Ideals
- The two-prong rallying cry?
- Origins?
- Spread?
- Ramifications?
4The American Revolution (1776)
- Spurred by Lockes ideas of life, liberty, and
private property. - Changed it to be life, liberty, and the pursuit
of happiness - Instituted by the emergent middle class
5The French Revolution (1789)
- Corruption of absolute monarchs
- The Old Regime (ancien regime) social classes
into 3 estates - 1st clergy, 1 of population, controlled 10of
land, paid no taxes - 2nd landed nobility, 2 of population,
controlled 20 of land, minimal taxes - 3rd remainder of French citizenry 97 of
population merchants, laborers, peasants
heavily taxed leadersartisans merchants
(bourgeoisie)
6Recipe for disaster
- Extravagance of Louis XVI nearly bankrupted
France - May 1789, forced meeting of the Estates-General
(French assembly)1st time in 175 years - Traditionally, each estate 1 vote
- The bourgeoisie called for a change 1 vote per
delegate - denied
7The National Assembly is formed
- The 3rd Estate formed the National Assembly due
to denial - Met in a tennis court where pledged to write a
new constitution (Tennis Court Oath) - New govt constitutional monarchy
- 1791constitution completed, Legislative Assembly
formed?formed 3 factions w/in
8Revolution Begins!
- Storming of the Bastille, July 14, 1789
- The Great Fear begins, with the burning of
feudal manors - October 1789, Parisian women riot over price of
bread demand Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette
leave Versailles and go to Paris
9Declaration of Rights of Man
- Issued by National Assembly, 1789
- All men are born equal
- All enjoy the natural rights of liberty,
property, security, and resistance to oppression - No reference to rights of women Olympe de Gouges
(1791) wrote Declaration of Rights of Women not
accepted guillotined later
10Fall of Monarchy
- 1792, Legislative Assembly dissolved,
establishing a National Convention - Abolished the limited monarchy
- Established a republic, September 1792
- Male citizens given right to vote
- Controlled by the Jacobins, inc. Marat and Danton
- January 1793, executed Louis XVI
11Reign of Terror
- Maximilien Robespierre, head of Committee of
Public Safety - Executed alleged enemies of the republic
- Marie Antoinette
- Marat and Danton, former leaders of the Jacobins
- Ended in 1794 w/ guillotining of Robespierre
- 1795-1799 The Directory
12Napoleons Rise to Power
- Chosen to lead the army, November 1799
- The next day, staged a coup detat became
dictator - Established peace treaties w/ the 2nd Coalition
(GB, Austria, Russia) - National bank equalized taxes public school
system - Napoleonic Code
- equality of all adult men
- patriarchal family
- no property rights of women
- restricted freedoms of press speech
- reinstated slavery in the Caribbean
13Fall of Napoleon
- 1812, his empire controlled most of Europe
- 3 fatal errors
- Blockade against Great Britain (1806)
- Peninsular War against Spain(1808-1813)
- Invasion of Russia in winter of 1812
- 1814, forced to abdicate throne
- to Elba
- March 1815, returned and reestablished power
- Battle of Waterloo, June 1815, banished to St.
Helena
14Congress of Vienna, 1815
- Austria, Prussia, Russia, Great Britain, France
met in Vienna to create stability in Europe - To guard against future revolutions, set up a
series of alliances requiring nations to come to
aid each other lest war erupt
15Goals and Action of the Congress of Vienna
- Goals
- Establish lasting peace stability
- Prevent future French aggression
- Restore balance of power
- Restore royal families to their thrones
- Actions
- Formed the Kingdom of the Netherlands
- German Confederation
- Independence of Switzerland recognized
- Required France to return Napoleons conquered
areas, but kept France a power
16Results of the Congress of Vienna
- Conservatives regain governmental control
- Colonial Latin American governments declared
their independence - Power of France diminished power of Great
Britain and Prussia increased - Encouraged growth of nationalism
17The Haitian Revolution, 1791
- 1st Latin American territory to assert
independence Fr. Colony, Saint Dominique - Population composed primarily of African slaves,
controlled tightly by minority slaveholders?90
of population was slaves
18Vive la revolucion!
- August 1791, African priest called for revolution
- 100,000 slaves revolted
- Toussaint LOuverture emerged as a leader
- Napoleon sent 20,000 troops to squelch the revolt
- 1802, lured onto French ship to sign an agreement
for independence, and taken to France against his
will - Died in France, 1803
19Haiti is born
- Dessalines continued the struggle
- Haiti declared its independence, January 1,1804
- Dessalines declared self dictator for life
- 1st colony in which slaves gained freedom from
Europeans
20Latin American Revolutions
- Are they based on Enlightenment ideals?
21Social Classes in Latin America
- Rigidly stratified
- Peninsulares, creoles, mestizos, Africans
mulattos, Indians - 1808, Napoleon replaced Spanish king w/ his
brono Creole or Peninsular loyalty to the crown - 1810 rebellion emerged
22Independence for Spanish colonies
- Leaders of S.A. independence
- Simon Bolivar, creole from Venezuela
- Jose de San Martin, from Argentina
- Simon Bolivar, the Liberator
23Simon Bolivar
- Studied Enlightenment philosophies
- Educated, visited Europe the United States of
America - Dreamed of creating a strong nation, called Gran
Colombia - 1821, led Venezuela to independence
- Went to Ecuador, met w/ San Martin
- 1816, achieved Argentine independence
- Freed Chile in 1818
- 1822, in command of revolutionary forces
- Battle of Ayacucho, December 1824, remaining
Spanish colonies to independence
24Simon Bolivars hopes
- Wanted greater prosperity for Latin America after
independence - Reality
- Destruction of cities, fields
- Economic devastation due to trade disruption
- Gran Colombia United Provinces of Central
America divided into smaller national states w/in
a few years - Continual Creole rule (Evo Morales, Bolivia)
25Independence for Mexico
- Initiated by mestizos, rather than the creole
- September 16, 1810, Father Miguel Hidalgo
encouraged rebellion against Spain - March of mestizos Indians on Mexico City
creole class ( Spanish) defeated Hidalgo in 1811 - Father Jose Maria Morelos took over revolution
until defeated in 1815 - 1821 Mexico achieved independence from Spain,
Treaty of Cordoba
26The Mexican Revolution
- Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna served as president 4
times - Lost Texas a border dispute with the US
- Treaty of Guadalupe (1848) ended Mexican War
- Benito Juarez (Indian) came to power in mid-19th
C (deposed by Santa Anna in 1853)
27Benito Juarez
- First term
- Redistributed land
- Increased educational opportunities
- Maintained sep of church state
- Returned to power in 1861
- French takeover of Mexico in 1862 Austrian
archduke Maximilian ruled as puppet emperor - 1867, resumed presidency
- Encouraged foreign trade
- Construction of railroads
28Porfirio Diaz
- 1876, rose to power
- Authoritarian ruler of Indian descent
- Built banks railroads encouraged foreign
investment - Land distributed unevenly industrial workers had
low wages poor working conditions - Formation of new political parties
29Beginnings and End of Revolution
- Francisco Madero (elite class), educated in US
France believed in democracy - Exiled to US by Diaz, called for revolution
- Leaders Emiliano Zapata Francisco Pancho
Villa
30More Mex. Revolution
- Marked by years of frequent assassinations and
leadership changes - Ended with murder of Zapata in 1919, by the hands
of Carranza, one of the leaders of the revolution
31Effects of the Mexican Revolution
- Revised Mexican constitution
- Promoted
- Land reforms
- Workers rights
- Education
- Legal rights granted to women (such as initiating
lawsuits) - New political party, Institutional Revolutionary
Party, came to power in 1929, dominated 20th
Century
32Colonial Latin America, 1500-1750
33The World in 1914