The Congress of Vienna - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

The Congress of Vienna

Description:

The Congress of Vienna (September 1, 1814 June 9, 1815) The Revolutions of 1848 The revolution hardly touched the countryside because the peasants did not ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:938
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 137
Provided by: GreatVall62
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: The Congress of Vienna


1
The Congress of Vienna(September 1, 1814 June
9, 1815)
2
Coin Commemorating the Opening of the Congress of
Vienna
3
Main Objectives
  • Its job was to undo everything that Napoléon had
    done
  • Reduce France to its old boundaries ? her
    frontiers were pushed back to 1790 level.
  • Restore as many of the old monarchies as possible
    that had lost their thrones during the Napoléonic
    era.
  • Supported the resolution There is always an
    alternative to conflict.

4
The Congress of Vienna
  • Negotiators
  • Lord Castlereagh of Great Britain
  • Czar Alexander I of Russia
  • Prince Klemens von Metternich of Austria
  • Charles-Maurice de Talleyrand of France
  • Metternich
  • Distrusted democracy and political change
  • Dominated the congress, wanted to restore the
    balance of power
  • Goals for Other Decision Makers
  • Make sure France could not rise again to such
    power
  • Put down revolution wherever it might appear
  • Remove traces of French Revolution and Napoleons
    rule

5
Key Players at Vienna
British Foreign Minister, Viscount Castlereagh
(Br.)
Tsar Alexander I (Rus.)
The HostPrince Klemens von Metternich (Aus.)
King Frederick William III (Prus.)
Foreign Minister, Charles Maurice de Tallyrand
(Fr.)
6
Congress of Vienna(1814-1815)
  • European monarchs sought to turn back the clock
    to 1789 and restore Europes Old Regime
  • Members included the Big Four and France
  • Austria Prince Metternich
  • England Duke of Wellington and Lord Castlereagh
  • France Talleyrand
  • Prussia Frederick William III, Hardenberg, and
    Humboldt
  • Russia Tsar Alexander I

7
Key Figures of the Congress of Vienna
  • Prince Klemens von Metternich of Austria
  • Served as host and presided over the Congress
  • Wanted to restore Europe to what it was before
    the French Revolution

8
Metternich (1773-1859)
  • Opposed democracy and nationalism
  • Proposed principles of compensation and
    legitimacy

9
Key Figures Continued
  • Czar Alexander I of Russia
  • Played a prominent role in the European Coalition
    to defeat Napoleon
  • Instituted the Holy Alliance

10
Key Figures Continued
  • Lord Robert Castlereagh of Great Britain
  • Secretary of State for the War and Colonial
    Department
  • He helped to plan the British campaigns against
    Napoleon
  • Played a large role in organizing the Coalition
    against Napoleon
  • Resisted Russian attempts to draw Britain into an
    European League

11
Even France was representedby the Marquis de
Talleyranda man who had survived the revolution
of 1789, was Napoleons foreign minister, and now
he represented Louis XVIIIquite a career!
12
Key Figures Continued
  • Prince Maurice de Talleyrand of France
  • A former Catholic Bishop
  • Survived all the stages of the Revolution
  • Obtained advantageous terms for France at the
    Congress
  • Served as the French ambassador to Britain and
    created good relations

13
Talleyrand Political Cartoon
  • Mr. ALL-YOURS OR THE VERY EMBODIMENT OF GRATITUDE
    AT THE CONGRESS IN VIENNA. Talleyrand---Malmaiso
    n National Museum This Bonapartist caricature
    criticizes Talleyrand (shown here as acting under
    the devil's influence), who was accused of
    abandoning Napoleon upon hearing of the Emperor's
    return from Elba (hence the text he is writing
    down).
  • The former minister is in fact considered to have
    played a rather positive role during the Congress
    of Vienna.
  • Thanks to him, France was able to keep its
    conquests dating back to 1793 (Nice and Savoy)
    together with the works of art stolen by the
    French during the Directoire and the Empire, and
    which had been added to the Louvre collections.
  • All this was lost after Waterloo.

14
(No Transcript)
15
Key Figures Continued
  • Prince Karl August von Hardenberg
  • Chancellor of Prussia
  • Played a leading role in the Coalition against
    Napoleon
  • Was against Russia annexing Poland but was
    overruled by King Frederick William III

16
Of course, there were hundreds of other minor
princes, dukes, barons, and religious leaders all
meeting in Vienna. They went to party after
party. During the night they danced with great
beautiesbut during the day, they negotiated for
their separate countries.
17
(No Transcript)
18
(No Transcript)
19
Key Principles Established at Vienna
  • Balance of Power/Compensation
  • Legitimacy
  • Encirclement of France
  • Coalition forces would occupy France for 3-5
    years.
  • France would have to pay an indemnity or war
    reparations of 700,000,000 francs.

20
OBJECTIVES
  • Legitimacy restore monarchs on their thrones.
    Put the government back to the way it was.
    Reactionary and conservatives rule
  • Compensation Land! in 1815, size was
    everything. Winners regain what they lost from
    France. Try for more
  • Balance of Power a new European order in which
    no single power was able to dominate.

21
  • More than anything, they wanted to prevent
    another Napoleon figure from ever conquering
    Europe again.
  • They want to replace French hegemony with an
    equilibrium.
  • Want liberalism and nationalism BLOCKED as
    liberal and nationalist uprising are what opened
    door to Napoleon.
  • Not simply a territorial arrangement it was,
    more importantly, a strategic and military
    balance.
  • They embraced the idea of buffer zones between
    their country and potentially hostile neighbors.

22
Goal One Compensation
  • All countries involved should be repaid for their
    expenses incurred while fighting the French
  • France was forced to give up its recently gained
    territory and pay for war damages
  • Great Britain received the West Indies,
  • the Dutch colony of Ceylon,
  • South Africa, and a few other islands
  • Austria gained the Italian provinces of Lombardy
    and Venetia, and the eastern coast of the
    Adriatic Sea
  • Prussia received territories along the Rhine
    River and half of the Kingdom of Saxony
  • Russia received most of the Polish territory
    formerly held by Prussia and Austria

23
Territorial Changes
  • Austria gained Lombardy, Modena, Parma, Tuscany,
    and Venetia (all are areas in Italy)
  • England gained Cape Colony, Ceylon, Heligoland,
    Guiana, and Malta (areas in Africa, the Americas,
    and Asia)
  • Holland gained Austrian Netherlands (Belgium)
  • Prussia gained part of Poland, land along the
    Rhine River, 40 of Saxony, Swedish Pomerania,
    and Westphalia
  • Russia gained Finland and part of Poland
  • Sweden gained Norway

24
Goal Two Legitimacy
  • Restoring the power of the royal families who had
    ruled before Napoleon
  • This was to stabilize the governments
  • Reestablished royal dynasties in
  • France, Spain, Portugal, Naples,
  • Sardinia, and Sicily
  • Restored the Bourbon Kings to Spain and the
    Kingdom of Two Sicilies
  • Restored the House of Orange to the Netherlands
  • Restored the House of Savoy to Sardinia
  • Made the Pope the leader of the Papal States
  • The Bourbon heir, Louis XVIII was made
  • legal ruler of France
  • Habsburg princes returned to their thrones in
    Central Europe

25
The Congress had many goals. One was LEGITIMACY
  • Only rulers from families before the French
    Revolution should be put back on the throne.
  • Napoleons brothers were removed from Holland and
    Spain
  • In France, Louis XVIII accepted the throne, with
    a constitution that limited his powers and
    promised equality.

26
Legitimacy
  • Legitimacy
  • Restoration of pre-Napoleon rulers
  • House of Bourbon France, Spain, and the two
    Sicilies
  • House of Braganza Portugal
  • House of Orange Netherlands
  • House of Savoy Sardinia
  • Habsburg German princes territories in the
    Confederation of the Rhine
  • Pope and Catholic Church Papal States

27
The Bourbons were restored to the various thrones
of Europein France, the now old brother of the
executed Louis XVI, Louis XVIII was king.
28
Louis XVIII of France
  • No more divine right of kings
  • Charter (Constitution) granted in 1814
  • Could not restore feudalism and serfdom
  • Continuing religious toleration guaranteed

29
  • Restoring Monarchies
  • Napoleon had eliminated royal control in many
    countries.
  • Members of the old Bourbon royal family were
    returned to the thrones of Spain and Sicily.
  • Monarchies were restored in Portugal and Sardinia.
  • Metternichs Influence
  • His reactionary attitudes influenced politics and
    society.
  • Wanting a return to absolute monarchy, he
    despised constitutions, voting rights, and
    freedom of religion and the press.
  • Liberal ideas were suppressed in Austria, the
    German states, and northern Italy.

30
Goal Three Encirclement of France---Balance of
Power
  • To keep France from renewing its drive for power
  • Austrian Netherlands united
  • with the Dutch Republic to form
  • the single kingdom of Netherlands
  • Group of 39 German States joined
  • the German Confederation dominated by Austria
  • Switzerland recognized as an independent and
    neutral nation
  • Kingdom of Sardinia
  • in Italy was given Piedmont and Genoa
  • France was encircled by stronger nations now

31
Buffer States
  • Designed to prevent France from again becoming a
    threat
  • Holland and Sardinia enlarged and strengthened
  • European nations guaranteed Switzerlands
    neutrality

32
The Confederation of the Rhine, as set up by
Napoleon, remained.
33
The Germanic Confederation, 1815
34
Prussias borders were set.
35
Results of the Congress of Vienna
  • Concert of Europe group of leading nations
    which periodically met to discuss issues
    regarding stability
  • Temporary suppression of democratic and
    nationalistic ideals
  • International peace no general war in Europe
    until World War I a hundred years later
  • Crimean War (1854-1856)
  • Austro-Prussian War (1866)
  • Franco-Prussian War (1870-1871)

36
An Evaluation of the Congress of Vienna
  • The Congress of Vienna was criticized for
    ignoring the liberal nationalist aspirations of
    so many peoples.
  • The leading statesmen at Vienna underestimated
    the new nationalism and liberalism generated by
    the French Revolution.
  • Not until the unification of Germany in 1870-71
    was the balance of power upset.
  • Not until World War I did Europe have another
    great war.

37
The Concert of Europe System Established
  • The principle of collective security was
    established.
  • The Congress of Aix-la-Chapelle 1816
  • The Congress of Troppau 1820
  • The Congress of Laibach 1821
  • The Congress of Verona 1822
  • Their goal was to define and monitor the status
    quo.

38
Impact of the Congress of Vienna Revolutions
  • For nearly 30 years, there was peace in Europe,
    but
  • German students did protest for more liberal
    reforms and were put down by the Metternich and
    King Frederick William III with the Carlsbad
    Decrees in 1819
  • The Decrees imposed strict censorship of all
    publications and suppressed freedom of speech
  • Liberal reformers in Spain created a
    constitutional monarchy in 1820
  • Revolts broke out in Latin American colonies
    against Spanish control in 1820s
  • Greeks fought for independence from the Ottomans
    in 1821
  • Liberalism and Nationalist movements continued to
    grow

39
Democratic Revolts
  • Liberal movement within German universities
  • Carlsbad Decrees (1819)
  • Abolished student fraternities
  • Established strict censorship of the press
  • Placed spies in classrooms to monitor professors
    and students
  • Spanish Revolt (1820)
  • Revolts in Naples and Piedmont (1820)
  • Second French Revolution (1830)
  • Revolts in Austria, France, and Prussia (1848)

40
Discouraged Democratic and Nationalistic Movements
  • Quadruple Alliance and Concert of Europe
    suppressed revolts
  • Spy network used to uncover revolutionary
    activity
  • Strict censorship of education, the press, and
    speech

41
The Congress ended amidst promises to meet
regularly to deal with any conflicts that arose
in future congresses.
42
Political Cartoon on Carlsbad Decrees Stopping
Democracy
43
In the next few years, congresses were held in
Aix la Chapelle in 1818, Troppau in 1820, and
Verona in 1822. These meetings or congresses,
as they were called, dealt with many issues. But
they had one goal in mind
44
Keep the Peaceno more wholesale European Warfare!
45
Of course, there will be wars during the
1800sbut they will not encompass all of Europe,
so, the Hundred Years Peace is an appropriate
title.
46
There will be the Crimean War.
47
There will be Italys Unification--
48
Germany will experience the
  • Danish-Prussian War
  • Prussian Austrian War
  • Franco Prussian War

49
But after their wars, Germany will become a
united country.
50
And Britain will experience the Boer War in its
South African regions.
51
That is why the years 1814-1914 is called the
Hundred Years Peace.
52
The Congress of Vienna, for that reason, might be
termed a successful peace conference.
53
In the years to come, Metternich would suppress
any sign of revolutionhe used secret spies,
censored papers, and suppressed students.
54
The Metternich system was adopted by other
countries. Their leaders supported spying,
informants, and suppression.
55
The novel and film Les Miserables takes place
during this time.
56
A Shift in Power
  • Balance is Lost
  • In 1815, the Congress of Vienna established five
    powers in Europe
  • Austria
  • Prussia
  • Britain
  • France
  • Russia
  • By 1871, Britain Prussia (now Germany) have
    gained much power
  • Austria Russia are weaker militarily
    economically

57
(No Transcript)
58
Political Philosophies Conservatives or
Reactionaries
  • Protect the existing traditional forms of
    government
  • Moderate conservatives believed in a
    constitutional monarchy like Britain
  • Extreme conservatives believed in an absolute
    monarchy like in Russia
  • Most conservatives were the royal families,
    nobles, and wealthy landowners

59
Conservatism
Def advocates legitimate, traditional government
in order to preserve the status-quo.
Edmund Burke, the founder of modern conservative
thought, wrote The state was a partnership, but
one not only between those who are living, but
between those who are living, those who are dead
and those who are to be bornNo one generation
therefore has the right to destroy this
partnership.
60
CONSERVATISM continued
  • Legitimacy restoring the hereditary rule of
    monarchs on their thrones of Europe. Belief in
    the Divine Right of Kings or Absolutism.
  • Traditions feudal privileges, social
    hierarchies and orders, traditional Catholicism.

The nobility was one of Europes most ancient
institutions, and conservatives regarded
tradition as the basic source of human
institutions.
61
CONSERVATISM continued
  • Preserve the Status Quo Peace, Stability, and
    Order is achieved by a Balance of Power.

Conservatives Edmund Burke, Prince
Metternich Generally aristocrats of noble or
royal blood
The peacemakers of 1815 (Britain, Prussia,
Austria, and Russia) were men who were
backward-looking and conservative, who believed
that liberalism was responsible for a generation
of war and untold bloodshed and suffering.
62
19c Conservatism
  • Conservatism arose in reaction to liberalism
    became a popular alternative for those who were
    frightened by the violence unleashed by the
    French Revolution.
  • Early conservatism was allied to the restored
    monarchical governments of Austria, Prussia,
    France, and England.
  • Support for conservatism
  • Came from the traditional ruling class.
  • Also supported by the peasants.
  • Supported by Romantic writers, conservatives
    believed in order, society and the state, faith,
    and tradition.

63
Characteristics of Conservatism
  • Conservatives viewed history as a continuum.
  • The basis of society is organic, not contractual.
  • Stability longevity, not progress and change,
    mark a good society.
  • The only legitimate sources of political
    authority were God and history.
  • They rejected the social contract theory.
  • Conservatives believed that self-interests do not
    lead to social harmony, but to social conflict.
  • Denounced individualism and natural rights.
  • To conservatives, society was hierarchical.

64
Conservatism
  • Reactionaries (Put it back the way it was)
  • Revolution of 1848
  • Successful revolutions in all European countries
  • Monarchies returned after 6 months in all
    countries
  • Tories/conservatives

65
Conservative Alliances
  • Quadruple Alliance-
  • Great Britain, Austria, Prussia, Russia, and
    later France
  • November 1815
  • To discuss the security of Europe
  • To preserve territories and suppress revolutions
  • Holy Alliance-
  • Russia, Austria, and Prussia
  • Organized by Czar Alexander I
  • Justice, Christian Charity, and Peace
  • United Christian monarchs
  • Pope refused to join
  • Great Britains parliament would not approve
    joining-violated constitution

66
Quadruple Alliance
67
Holy Alliance
68
Political Philosophies Liberalism
  • This was a movement to give more power to an
    elected Parliament
  • Limited parliaments for which only the educated
    and property owners could vote
  • Most did not believe in democracy
  • Key supporters upper
  • bourgeoisie, business
  • leaders, and merchants

DEMOCRACY
69
Liberalism
Def advocates limited government in order to
protect individual liberties.
It is the ideology of Freedom
Freedom of Assembly
Right to Property
Equality of opportunity
Freedom of Press
Free Trade
Freedom of Religion
Freedom from arbitrary arrest
Freedom of Speech
70
Origins of 19c Liberalism
  • The word was first used when the term was adopted
    by the Spanish political party, the Liberales, in
    1812.
  • The roots of liberalism came from two very
    different traditions of English French
    political thought.
  • England
  • John Locke
  • Adam Smith
  • France
  • Jean Jacques Rousseau
  • Francois Guizot

71
The origins of Liberalism
The Enlightenment introduced the idea of a social
contract based on natural rights and equality of
men. John Locke all men are born free and
equal.
  • French Revolution instituted a new political
    order based on individual freedom
  • Such rights and freedoms would be guaranteed in
    constitutions as Liberalism demanded
    representative government as opposed to
    autocratic monarchy
  • Napoleon codifies this philosophy in Napoleonic
    Code which spreads to most of Europe

72
John Locke
  • Contract theory of government.
  • Regarded the state as ahuman construction,
    established by an originalcontract.
  • Limited, constitutional government.
  • Civil society of free men, equal under the rule
    of law, bound together by no common purpose but
    sharing respect for each others rights.
  • Doctrine of natural rights.
  • Links private property with individual liberty.

73
  • Liberal economists believe the best government
    governs the least. The government should let the
    economy alonelaissez-faire. Economic freedom
    should be given through free trade.
  • Valued equality of opportunityeach individual
    has the opportunity to succeed careers are open
    to all citizens on the basis of their talents,
    not their titles, heritage, or privileges.

Life is like a rat raceeveryone has the
opportunity to win. But this also means that
there will be losers. (Industrialization
brought poverty)
74
Adam Smith
  • His Wealth of Nations adds an economic dimension.
  • He merged Lockes ideas of civil society with
    economic theory.
  • Free trade economics.
  • Saw the invisible hand where a benevolent God
    administered a universe in which human happiness
    was maximized.

75
Jean Jacques Rousseau
  • His Social Contract andtheory of the general
    will demonstrates an alternative origin of
    Liberalism.
  • Men must resolve problemsthrough our capacity
    tochoose how we ought to live.
  • Man was born free, and he is everywhere in
    chains.
  • Humans are essentially free, but the progress
    of civilization has substituted subservience to
    others for that freedom.

76
Rousseau Totalitarianism
  • The General Will ? a strong and direct form of
    democracy.
  • Only possible in a relatively small state?
  • Is Rousseau promoting collective tyranny?
  • Rousseau rejected representative democracy.

77
Liberalism
  • Poets/novelists
  • Natural life superior (noble savage)
  • Aimed at complacent middle class
  • Charles Dickens
  • Social conditions
  • Honorè de Balzac
  • Stupid middle class
  • Jane Austen
  • Against classes
  • The Bronte sisters
  • Against male domination

78
Moderate Liberalism
  • Favored the idea of the sovereignty of the
    people, but
  • Government should rest on the organized consent
    of at least the most important sections of the
    community.
  • An extension of the franchise to include all men
    of property.
  • Exclude the working class!
  • A good constitutional monarchy was the best form
    of government.
  • Valued liberty more than equality.
  • Confidence in mans powers of self-government and
    self-control.
  • Freedom of the press.
  • Free right of assembly.
  • Written constitutions.

79
Moderate Liberalism
  • Economic policies
  • Laissez-faire economy.
  • Free trade.
  • Lower tariffs.
  • Against the right of the working class to
    organize into unions.
  • The general progress of humanity would emerge
    from the growth of wealth and from science and
    inventions.
  • Established churches the landed aristocracy
    were obstacles to the advancement of
    civilization.
  • Orderly change by legislative process.
  • A dislike of wars, conquests, a standing army,
    and military expenditures.
  • Hated the idea of revolution!

80
Challenges to Liberalism
  • From above ? the conservative upper class.
  • From below ? Socialism/Marxism.
  • From organized religions.
  • From militarism and imperialism.
  • From economic upheavals
  • Irish Potato Famine 1845-1852.
  • Great Depressions 1873-1896.

81
  • Until the Revolutions of 1848, Liberals did NOT
    want democracy (or Universal Manhood Suffrage)
  • Why? You must have a stake in societyproperty.
    Liberalism guarantees a right to
    private property.

Liberals John Locke, Adam Smith, John Stuart
Mill Generally men of the business and educated
professionals.
82
Political Philosophies Radicalism
  • Favored drastic and violent change---includes
    Nationalism
  • Wanted democracy where everyone could vote
  • Believed governments everywhere should practice
    the ideals of the French Revolution
  • Key supporters were sans culottes,
    intellectuals, and students

83
NATIONALISM
Def a sense of unity based upon shared
characteristics language, culture, historical
experience, religion, ethnicity and geography.
To some, nationalism expressed a desire or right
for nationalities to rule themselves. Examples
of nationalities that did not rule themselves in
1815 were Germans, Italians, and Poles. They
wanted it conservatives worried about more
revolution
84
What is nationalism?
  • Nationalism is pride in a countrys heritage

85
What is nationalism?
  • Nationalism can also include
  • National Anthem
  • Cultural Heritage
  • Language
  • Religion
  • Anything which is a shared feature of a country,
    group or culture.

86
Nationalism
  • What is nationalism?
  • The belief that the greatest loyalty should be to
    a nation of people who share a common culture
    history
  • What was the effect of nationalism?
  • Tore apart centuries-old empires
  • Gave rise to the nation-state
  • Opposed by conservatives

87
Types of Nationalism
  • Unification merges culturally similar lands
  • Separation splits off culturally distinct groups
  • State-building binds separate cultures into one

88
(No Transcript)
89
How is nationalism demonstrated?
  • Monuments

90
How is nationalism demonstrated?
  • Historical Sites

91
How is nationalism demonstrated?
  • Flags

92
Nationalistic Revolts
  • Latin American Revolutions (1810-1825)
  • Greek War of Independence (1821-1829)
  • Italian Revolt (1830)
  • Belgian Independence Revolt (1830-1839)
  • Polish Revolt (1831)
  • Revolts in Bohemia, German states, Hungary, and
    Italian states (1848)

93
Latin American Revolutions(1810-1825)
  • Independence movements arose following Napoleons
    invasion of Spain
  • Revolutions supported by Great Britain and United
    States
  • Great Britain
  • Wanted to trade with Latin America, which Spain
    had never permitted
  • United States
  • Also wanted to trade
  • Sympathized with democratic ideals
  • Monroe Doctrine (1823) U.S. would not interfere
    in Europe, and Europe would not interfere in the
    independent nations of the Americas
  • Support from the United States and Great Britain
    (a member of the Quadruple Alliance) kept Europe
    away

94
(No Transcript)
95
Revolutionary Movements in the Early 19c
96
Spanish Revolt (1820)
  • Ferdinand VII had scrapped the liberal
    constitution of 1812
  • Restored absolutism, Inquisition, and Old Regime
  • Suppressed individual liberties
  • 1820 revolt Ferdinand had to restore the 1812
    constitution
  • Quadruple Alliance met in Verona in 1822
  • Sent French army into Spain
  • Ferdinand restored to power
  • Ruled as an autocratic despot
  • No democratic progress in Spain for approximately
    100 years

97
Italian Revolt (1820)
  • Revolts in Piedmont and Naples
  • Led by Carbonari (charcoal burners) secret
    organization
  • Wanted constitutions to limit royal absolutism
  • Congress of Laibach (1821)
  • Quadruple Alliance had Austrian military suppress
    the revolts
  • Austrian army fire brigade of Europe

98
Wallachia Moldavia
Independence Movementsin the Balkans
99
Nationalists Challenge Conservative Power
  • The Balkans
  • Region controlled by the Ottoman Empire
  • Present day Turkey, Greece, Bulgaria, Romania,
    and the former Yugoslavia
  • Battle of Navarino (1827)
  • British, French, Russian fleet destroyed the
    Ottomans
  • Greece gained independence

100
(No Transcript)
101
Greek Revolt (1821-1829)
  • Greeks revolted against Ottoman (Turkish) rulers
  • Metternich sided with the Turks
  • Britain, France, and Russia sided with the Greeks
  • Greece won its independence in 1829

102
Greek Revolution - 1821
103
Greek Independence
  • The Eastern Question
  • Hetairia Philike ? a secret society that
    inspired an uprising against the Turks in 1821.
  • Pan-Hellenism
  • 1827 ? Battle of Navarino
  • Br, Fr, Rus destroyed the Ottoman-Egyptian fleet.
  • 1828 ? Rus declared war on the
    Otts.
  • 1829 ? Treaty of Adrianople
  • 1830 ? Greece declared an independent nation
    Treaty of London.

Greece on the Ruins of Missilonghi by Delacroix,
1827
104
The 1830 Revolutions
105
Belgian Independence, 1830
  • The first to follow the lead of France.
  • Its union with Holland after the Congress of
    Vienna had not proved successful.
  • There had been very little popular agitation
    for Belgian nationalism before 1830 ? seldom
    had nationalism arisen so suddenly.
  • Wide cultural differences
  • North ? Dutch ? Protestant ? seafarers and
    traders.
  • South ? French ? Catholic ? farmers and
    individual workers.

106
Belgian Revolution - 1830
107
A Stirring of Polish Nationalism - 1830
  • The bloodiest struggle of the 1830 revolutions.
  • The Poles in and around Warsaw gain a special
    status by the Congress of Vienna within the
    Russian Empire.
  • Their own constitution.
  • Local autonomy granted in 1818.
  • After Tsar Alexander I dies, the Poles became
    restless under the tyrannical rule of Tsar
    Nicholas I.
  • Polish intellectuals were deeply influenced by
    Romanticism.
  • Rumors reached Poland that Nicholas I was
    planning to use Polish troops to put down the
    revolutions in France and Belgium.
  • Several Polish secret societies rebelled.

108
A Stirring of Polish Nationalism - 1830
  • Had the Poles been united, thisrevolt might have
    been successful.
  • But, the revolutionaries were split into
    moderates and radicals.
  • The Poles had hoped that Fr Eng would come to
    their aid, but they didnt.
  • Even so, it took the Russian army a year to
    suppress this rebellion.
  • The irony ? by drawing the Russian army to Warsaw
    for almost a year, the Poles may well have kept
    Nicholas I from answering Hollands call for help
    in suppressing the Belgian Revolt.

109
The Results of the 1820s-1830 Revolutions?
  • The Concert of Europe provided for a recovery of
    Europe after the long years of Revolution and
    Napoleonic Wars.
  • The conservatives did NOT reverse ALL of the
    reforms put in place by the French Revolution.
  • Liberalism would challenge the conservative plan
    for European peace and law and order.
  • These revolutions were successful only in W.
    Europe
  • Their success was in their popular support.
  • Middle class lead, aided by the urban lower
    classes.
  • The successful revolutions had benefited the
    middle class ? the workers, who had done so much
    of the rioting and fighting, were left with empty
    hands!
  • Therefore, these revolutions left much unfinished
    a seething, unsatisfied working class.

110
Ethnic Uprisings in 1848
Numerous ethnic uprisings occurred throughout
Europe
111
Revolution of 1848
  • Causes
  • Liberals from middle class demand rights
  • Economic slowdown
  • Poor harvests
  • Nationalism among European minorities

112
(No Transcript)
113
The Revolutions of 1848
  • Big Picture the Revolutions of 1848 were the
    result of the movement of Liberalism in the 19th
    century in Europe.
  • Remember the contrast between political
    Liberalism and Conservatism?
  • Simply put, political conservatives represented
    the values of the Ancien Regime

114
The Revolutions of 1848
  • Two key issues before we start
  • Britain and Russia do not undergo any manner of
    revolt in this time period for different reasons.
  • The Continent, everywhere from France to Italy to
    the German States to the Hapsburg Empire, does
    under go some manner of revolution.
  • Why not Britain and Russia?

115
The Revolutions of 1848
  • Britain
  • The revolutions did not affect England because
    England had already gone beyond the goals the
    revolutionaries sought to achieve.
  • Britain had a representative government, and a
    relatively progressive liberal economy.
  • Key, this does not mean the England was worker
    friendly. No part of Europe was

116
The Revolutions of 1848
  • Russia
  • They did not affect Russia because Russia had not
    yet developed the economic and social pressures
    which stimulate the liberal revolution.
  • They literally were so far away from the impact
    of liberalism that revolution was not even a
    issue.
  • Russia at this time is a country ruled by
    repressive Czars, and dominated by a feudal
    agrarian economy.

117
Reform in Russia
  • By the 1800s, Russia still had not industrialized
  • Society and economy based on the feudal system
  • By the 1820s, many Russians believed that serfdom
    must end
  • Problem was the czar did not want to free them
  • It would anger the landowners
  • Czar needed support from landowners to stay in
    power

118
Reform in Russia
  • Defeat Leads to Change
  • 1853, Czar Nicholas I wanted to take over part of
    the Ottoman Empire in the Crimean War
  • Industries transportation system failed to
    provide adequate supplies for the troops
  • 1856, Russia lost the Crimean War
  • Nicholas II decided that Russia needed to
    modernize and industrialize

119
Reform in Russia
  • The Reforms of Czar Alexander II
  • Freed the serfs in 1861
  • Peasant communities received about half the
    farmland
  • Nobles kept the other half
  • Government paid nobles for their land
  • Terrorists assassinated Alexander II, 1881
  • Political social reforms stopped
  • Alexander III tightened control
  • Encouraged industrial development
  • Nationalism was force behind Russias drive
    toward industrial expansion

120
Nationalism Shakes Aging Empires
  • Russian Empire
  • Controlled over a dozen different ethnicities
    with different cultures
  • Used the policy of Russification
  • Forcing Russian culture on all peoples
  • Actually strengthened ethnic cultures
  • Ultimately empire falls in 1917
  • Due to the problems during World War I

121
Nationalism Shakes Aging Empires
  • Austrian Empire
  • Empire included people from many ethnic groups
  • 1866 defeat to Prussia forces the split into
    Austria Hungary
  • Still ruled by emperor Francis Joseph

122
Nationalism Shakes Aging Empires
  • Ottoman Empire
  • Internal tensions among ethnic groups weakens
    empire
  • Conservative Turks led the genocide and
    deportation of thousands of Armenians in
    1894-1896
  • Empire ultimately falls soon after World War I

123
Views of Nationalism
  • Nationalists use their common bond to build
    nation-states
  • Rulers use nationalism to unify their subjects

124
The Revolutions of 1848
  • The Rest of Europe?
  • The revolutions of 1848 did, however, sweep
    across Europe from Paris in the west to cities
    throughout  Germany and Italy, to Berlin in
    Prussia, and to Vienna and Prague and Budapest in
    the Austrian Empire.
  • This is part of the larger trend of the formation
    of the nation state in Europe.
  • Another way of looking at it would be this

125
Radicals Change France
  • Demand for democratic government the main goal of
    the revolution of 1848
  • Establishment of The Third Republic
  • People overturned a monarchy est. a republic
  • New republican govt began to fall apart almost
    immediately
  • The radicals split into factions
  • A moderate constitution was drawn up in 1848

126
Radicals Change France (cont)
  • France Accepts a Strong Ruler
  • Louis-Napoleon (nephew of Napoleon) won the
    presidential election December 1848
  • Four years later took the title of Emperor
    Napoleon III
  • A majority of French voters accepted this without
    complaint
  • French were weary of instability
  • Louis-Napoleons policies
  • Built railroads
  • Encouraged industrialization
  • Promoted public works
  • Unemployment decreased
  • The country experienced real prosperity

127
The Revolutions of 1848
  • Generally speaking, the trend in 19th century
    Europe of State formation shows the conflict
    between two- forces
  • Established monarchies and family dynasties
    tended to represent the values of the Ancien
    Regime.
  • Replacing these monarchies and families by
    representative governments meant a true shift in
    the role of government in society.

128
The Revolutions of 1848
  • Blanket Statements
  • The revolutions of 1848 occurred in cities where
    a middle class was often joined by university
    students, who shared liberal goals.
  • They united temporarily with urban working people
    who sought to relieve the oppressive working
    conditions imposed upon them in the early
    industrial period.

129
The Revolutions of 1848
  • Middle class people entrepreneurs, industrial
    managers, shopkeepers, professionals, could not
    identify with the workers and their goals.
    Therefore, the united front was short-lived.
  • They could cooperate in overthrowing the
    government of the old regime, but they could not
    share in the effort to create a new government.
       

130
The Revolutions of 1848
  • The revolution hardly touched the countryside
    because the peasants did not participate in the
    revolution and had their own agenda.
  • Wherever peasants enjoyed ownership of the land,
    they tended to be a conservative influence.

131
The Revolutions of 1848
  • More specifically, there was an element of crisis
    all over Europe which also contributed to the
    revolution.
  • That is, a depression and sporadic famine and
    high unemployment were involved.
  • Living conditions in cities were growing worse,
    and there were no social services to deal with
    the growing urban poor.

132
Conclusion
  • Unrest throughout Europe caused Revolution of
    1848
  • Liberals desired greater political participation
  • Nationalities demanded independence
  • Conservatives manage to put down rebellions

133
1848 The Consequences
  • The revolutions failed to pull popular support
    from working classes.
  • Middle classes led the revolution, but as it
    turned more radical, they held back.
  • Were they were successful, old guard was left in
    place and they turned against them.
  • Nationalism divided more that united.
  • Some gains lasted (abolition of serfdom, etc.)
  • In the longterm, most liberal gains would be
    solidified by the end of the century, Germany and
    Italy would be unified, and the Austrian Empire
    would collapse at the end of World War I.

134
(No Transcript)
135
(No Transcript)
136
(No Transcript)
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com