Modern Europe II Unit 3 - Industrial Revolution and Reform, 1815-1848.
Challenges to the “Concert” System: Conservative Order /Reform & Revolution 1815-1848
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Transcript of Challenges to the “Concert” System: Conservative Order /Reform & Revolution 1815-1848
Challengesto the
“Concert” System:
Conservative Order
/Reform & Revolution 1815-1848
Challengesto the
“Concert” System:
Conservative Order
/Reform & Revolution 1815-1848
The Conservative Order & the Economic AdvanceObjective: Students are to analyze the prevailing political and economic philosophies that propelled the historical events of the first half of the 19th century.1. Analyze the political and economic theories prevalent in conservatism, liberalism, radicalism (socialism/communism).2. Analyze the social effects among the nobility, bourgeoisie, proletariat and the peasantry. 3. Analyze the goals of the “Concert of Europe” and how liberalism and nationalism challenged these goals.4. Analyze the how romanticism fueled nationalism.5. Compare and contrast the American Revolution with the Revolutions in Latin America.6. Analyze how reforms, revolts and revolutions in Europe challenged the conservative order.7. Analyze the emergence of new social classes and how this new working class became politically active.8. Analyze the family structures among the working class and women.9. Compare and contrast the philosophies of classical economics with early forms of socialism.10. Analyze the causes of the Revolutions of 1848.
Led toWas
challenged by
Was challenged by
The Conservative Order & the
Economic Advance
-Nationalism-Threatened to breakup empires (Aus,Rus,Ottoman)-Threatened to unify others (Germany, Italy)
-Liberalism-Elected parliaments-Free trade-Laissez-faire
- Conservativism -Austria- Metternich suppress lib & nat-German States- Carlsbad Decrees-Russia- Decembrists-Britain- Peterloo/Six Acts-France- The Charter/July Revolution
- Spanish Revolution (1820)-Concert of Europe
-Latin American Revolutions-Haiti, South America
Nationalism & Liberalism
-Population/Migration-Improvements in transp-Railways,steamships,canals
-New Labor Force-Working Class-Wage labor-chartism
-Family Structures-Role of Women-Child labor- Factory Act 1833
-Prison Reform-Police Force (bobbies)-Penal Colonies (Aus/NZ)-Auburn & Philadelphia System
Philosophies
Pol/Econ Philosophies
& Revolutions
-Classical Economics-Adam Smith
-Laissez-faire-Thomas Malthus
-Population theory-David Ricardo
-Iron Law of Wages
-Early Socialism-Utopian Socialism
-St. Simon/Owen/Fourier
-Anarchism-Blanqui-Proudhon
-Marxism-Communist Manifesto/Kapital
-Revolutions of 1848-Liberals & Nationalists rise up against European conservative order
Industrial Society
Challenges to the
Conservative Order
Geography
Paris
London ENGLAND
FRANCE
Mediterranean Sea
.Amsterdam NETHERLANDS
William and Mary replace James II in the Glorious Revolution in 1688.
They make the English Bill of Rights in 1689.
Revolution ends
monarchy.French go
from monarchy
to democracy
to monarchy.
AFRICA
EUROPERussia
Austria
Ottoman Empire
France
Great
Britain
Spain
Netherlands
Swiss
Sardinia-Piedmont
Spanish Naples
Papal States
Rep of Venice
ItalianStates
Europe 1815
Prussia
Confederationof the Rhine(German States)
Kingdom ofSweden
Following the Napoleonic Wars, nationalism threatened to breakup the empires of Austria, Russia, and the Ottoman Empire.However, nationalism was also stirring in the Italian and German states that could potentially unify these peoples into nation-states. Liberalism also threatened to topple existing regimes or force representative governments with constitutions upon the autocratic monarchies of Europe. The Revolutions of 1830 and 1848 will dramatically illustrate that point.
Czech
It
Ger
Slov Pol
HunSerb/Croat
Rom
Pol
Lith
Lat
Est
Fin
Greek
Serb
Mace
Ukr
Bul
Scot
Ire
Bel
Denmark
Nor
Alb
BasquePortugal
Napoleonicnationalism Austria
Russia Ottoman Empire
ItalianGerman
nation-statesLiberalism
regimesrepresentativeconstitutions autocrat
ic1830
1848
The Conservative Order
and the
Challenges of Reform
The Congress of Vienna
-Failure of statesmen who shaped the future of Europe
in 1814-1815
-attempted to provide some way of
preserving the future peace of Europe.
Congress of Vienna-met in 1814 and 1815 to redraw the map of
Europe after the Napoleonic era
-Europe was spared a general war throughout the remainder of the 19th century
-
*Didn’t recognize the factors unleashed by the French Revolution:
-Nationalism and liberalismAttempted to maintain the status quo
The “Big Four”
• Czar Alexander I (Russia)– Advocated an independent
Poland under Russian control
The Vienna Settlement•was the work of the representatives of the four nations that had done the most to defeat Napoleon.Prince Klemens Von Metternich (Austria)
•Epitomized conservative reactionism.
Lord Castlereagh (England)•balance of power on the continent and surround France with larger stronger states.
Karl Von Hardenberg Karl Von Hardenberg (Prussia)
Goal was to recover Prussian territory lost to Napoleon & gain additional territory in northern Germany (Saxony).
Talleyrand
– not initially included in the early deliberations
Periogord Talleyrand-French Foreign Minister
Talleyrand brought France into the ranks of the principal powers.
– Mediator where the interests of Prussia
and Russia clashed with those of England and Austria.
“The Dancing Congress”
• European gathering was held amid much pageantry.
–Parties, balls, and banquets reminded the delegates what life had been like before 1789.
–Intended to generate favorable “public opinion” and occupy the delegates since they had little to do of any serious nature.
Principles of SettlementThe three main principles
discussed at the Congress of Vienna were:
LegitimacyReturning to power the ruling families deposed
Dynasties restored in Holland, Sardinia, Tuscany and Modena
CompensationTerritorially rewarding those states which had made considerable sacrifices to defeat Napoleon.
Balance of PowerMeant arranging the map of Europe so that never again could one state upset the international order and cause a general war.
Various adjustments were made in the countries of Europe in order to surround France.
Enforcement of the Status QuoArrangements to guarantee the
enforcement of the status quo as defined by the Vienna settlement now included tow provisions:
The “Holy Alliance”An unpractical attempt to unify Europe, only taken seriously by Alexander I of Russia.
The “Quadruple Alliance”Russia, Prussia, England and Austria provided for concerted action to arrest any threat to the peace or balance of power.England and Austria
differed on their definition of concerted action.
The Congress SystemFrom 1815 to 1822, European international relations were controlled by the series of meetings held by the Great Powers to monitor and defined the status quo:
The Congress of Aix-la-Chapelle (1816)The Congress of Troppau (1820)The Congress of Laibach (1821)The Congress of Verona (1822)–The principle of collective security required unanimity among members of the Quadruple Alliance.-Failure occurred because of the conflicting interests of the Great Powers
Evaluation• The Congress of Vienna has been criticized for
ignoring the liberal and nationalist aspirations of so many peoples.-Hindsight suggests the statesmen at Vienna may have been more successful in stabilizing the international system than we have been able to do in the 20th century.–Not until the unification of Germany in 1870-71, was
the balance of power upset.–Not until World War I in 1914, did Europe have another general war.
-Hindsight tells us however that the leading statesmen at Vienna underestimated the new nationalism and liberalism generated by the French Revolution.
Conservatism,Nationalism,& Liberalism
Conservatism• Conservatism
Edmund Burke- Father of Conservative Thought
Early Conservatism allied to the restored monarchial governments of Austria, Russia, France, and England.
Reaction to liberalism–became a popular
alternative for those frightened by the violence of the French Revolution.
Support for conservatism:–came from the traditional ruling classes.–Also supported by the peasants
-A majority of the populationSupported by Romantic writers
–conservatives believed in order, society and the state, faith and tradition.
Characteristics of Conservatism
To conservatives, society was hierarchical.
Conservatives viewed history as a continuum (Traditions)Conservative Beliefs:
–The basis of society is organic, not contractual
–Stability and longevity, not progress and change, mark a good society.
–The only legitimate sources of political authority were God and history.
•Rejected the “social contract” theory
•Conservatives believed self-interests do not lead to social harmony, but to social conflict.Denounced individualism and natural rights.
Liberalism
• Liberalism was reformist and political not revolutionary in nature.
Liberalism -first major theory in the to teach that the individual is a self- sufficient being, whose freedom is the sole reasons for the existence of society.-Come from the middle classes and favored increased liberty for their class and indirectly, for the masses of people, as long as the latter did not in their turn ask for too much freedom
-Come from the middle classes and favored increased liberty for their class and indirectly, for the masses of people, as long as the latter did not in their turn ask for too much freedom
Characteristics of Liberalism
• Liberals also advocated the “Balance of Power” theory and free trade.
•Individuals are entitled to seek their freedom in the face of arbitrary or tyrannical restrictions imposed upon them.
–Supported the concept of natural rights.
•Best guaranteed by written constitutions.
•Utilitarianism–Founded by Jeremy Bentham
•theory held the pleasure-pain principle as its key idea.equated pleasure with good and pain with evil.–Supported the
concept of “the greatest happiness for the greatest number.”
Economic Liberalism
Adam Smith- The Wealth of Nations
David Ricardo- “The Iron Law of Wages”
•Liberals advocated economic individualism.–All Supported laissez faire economics
•“Wealth of Nations” by Adam Smith 1776
•Economic liberalism
–Free Trade–Laissez-faire
–Ricardo’s Principles of Political Economy–“Iron Law of Wages”
•Thomas Malthus•Essay on the Principle of Population•population theory (Dismal Theory)
–Based on the realities of a new industrial era.
•The Industrial Revolution is beginning to take place throughout Europe.
Thomas Malthus- “Dismal Theory”
Early 19th Century Liberals
– Wilhelm von Humboldt, Friedrich List, Karl von Rotteck and Karl Theodor Welcker
•England:–Thomas Robington Macaulay & John Stuart Mill•France:–Benjamin Constant, Victor cousin, Jean Baptiste Say and Alexis de Tocqueville
•Germany:
The Impact of Liberalism
-It affected German student organizations (Burschenchaften) and permeated Prussian life.
•Liberalism –involved in the various revolutionary movements of the early 19th century.•Over ten constitutions secured between 1815 and 1848 in states of the German Confederation.•Reform measures in Britain-governments adopted liberal reforms after 1832 and ruled for decades–be born with the emergence of new voters
Alexis de Tocqueville
• Nazi Germany, Fascist Italy, Communist Russia
•Tocqueville –Liberal who warned against the “tyranny of the majority
–Govt take away freedom to create equality (economic)•These fears were not without foundation.
In the 20th century, the masses have sometimes shown themselves willing to trade freedom for authority, order, economic security, and national power.
Nationalism
– was aroused and made militant during the turbulent French Revolutionary era.
•Liberal thought in early 19th century Europe was dramatically revealed through an explosive force called nationalism.
–Liberal ideas raised the nationalistic consciousness of people •a common language,
soil, traditions, history, culture and shared human experiences.
–These ideas were needed to promote political unity–these were also the ideas that fostered the identity nationhood or nation-state
Characteristics of Nationalism
• The concept of a nation of people being united by a common language, culture, and history and governed for the good of the whole.
•Early nationalist sentiment was romantic, exuberant and cosmopolitan in nature.
•The breakdown of society’s traditional loyalties to church, dynastic state and region began during the course of the 18th century.
•Impelled by the French Revolution, new loyalties were fashioned.
–Popular Sovereignty
Impact of Nationalism
• All national groups are parts of that great whole which is humanity.
•Nationalistic thinkers and writers examined the language, literature, and folkways of their people, thereby stimulating nationalist feelings.•Emphasized the history and
culture of various European people –tended to reinforce and
glorify national sentiment.
•Early 19th century nationalist leaders adopted the ideas of the German philosopher-historian Johann Gottfried Herder (1744-1803)–regarded as the “Father of
modern nationalism.”–Taught that every people is unique and possesses a distinct national character, or Volksgeist., which as evolved over several centuries.
• No one culture or people is superior to any other.
Revolutionary Movements in the Early 19c
Revolutionary Movements in the Early 19c•The Conservative
Order•Spanish Revolution of 1820(Ferdinand VII of Spain Dissolves Cortes)
-Congress of TroppauMetternich at the Congress of Laibach got permission to invade Naples after Revolution broke out
-Promised Constitution but revoked promise -Latin American colonies & military rebels against Ferdinand
-Greek Revolution in 1821“The Eastern Question”
What to do about the “sickman of Europe.”
-Decembrist Revolt (1825)Military officers attempt totakeover new Czar and get a constitution
19c Latin American Independence Movements
19c Latin American Independence Movements
Independence
Movementsin the
Balkans
Independence
Movementsin the
Balkans
Wallachia & Moldavia
Wallachia & Moldavia
Greek Revolution - 1821Greek Revolution - 1821
Greek IndependenceGreek Independence4 The “Eastern Question”
4 Hetairia Philike a secret society that inspired an uprising against the Turks in 1821.
4 Pan-Hellenism
4 1827 Battle of Navarino
Br, Fr, Rus destroyed the Ottoman-Egyptian fleet.
4 1828 Rus declared war on the Otts.
4 1829 Treaty of Adrianople
4 1830 Greece declared an independent nation [Treaty of London].
Greece on the Ruins of Missilonghi by Delacroix,
1827
Lord Byron – Martyr in Greece
Lord Byron – Martyr in Greece
The Decembrist Uprising - 1825
The Decembrist Uprising - 1825
The Decembrist Revolt, 1825
The Decembrist Revolt, 18254 Russian upper class had come into contact with
western liberal ideas during the Napoleonic Wars.
4 Late November, 1825 Czar Alexander I died suddenly.
He had no direct heir dynastic crisis
• Constantine married a woman, not of royal blood.
• Nicholas named by Alexander I as his heir before his death.
• Russian troops were to take an oath of allegiance to Nicholas, who was less popular than Constantine [Nicholas was seen as more reactionary].
December 26, 1825 a Moscow regiment marched into the Senate Square in St. Petersburg and refused to take the oath.
The Decembrist Revolt, 1825
The Decembrist Revolt, 18254 They wanted Constantine.
4 Nicholas ordered the cavalry and artillery to attack the insurgents.
Over 60 were killed.
5 plotters were executed.
Over 100 insurgents were exiled to Siberia.
4 Results:
The first rebellion in modern Russian history where the rebels had specific political goals.
In their martyrdom, the Decembrists came to symbolize the dreams/ideals of all Russian liberals.
Nicholas was determined that his power would never again come into question he was terrified of change!
The Decembrist Uprising - 1825
The Decembrist Uprising - 1825
Nicholas I
4 Orthodoxy!
4 Autocracy!
4 Nationalism!
The 1830 RevolutionsThe 1830 Revolutions
France: The “Restoration” Era
(1815-1830)
France: The “Restoration” Era
(1815-1830)4 France emerged from the
chaos of its revolutionary period as the most liberal large state in Europe.
4 Louis XVIII governed France as a Constitutional monarch.
He agreed to observe the 1814 “Charter” or Constitution of the Restoration period.
• Limited royal power.
• Granted legislative power.
• Protected civil rights.
• Upheld the Napoleon Code.Louis XVIII (r. 1814-1824)
Raft of the Medusa
• Painting was a social commentary on French state• Becomes a metaphor for discontent among the masses
– French frigate crashes in Mediterranean• Captain who crashed ship was a noble who received job based on birth rite rather than
merit found incompetent • Starving people hanging onto a make-shift raft struggling to survive
– “All of France is on that raft”– The incompetent Louis XVIII who received his job by birth not merit leads the country
aimlessly
The “Ultras”The “Ultras”4 France was divided by those
who had accepted the ideals of the Fr. Revolution and those who didn’t.
4 The Count of Artois was the leader of the “Ultra-Royalists”
4 1815 “White Terror”
Royalist mobs killed 1000s of former revolutionaries.
4 1816 elections
The Ultras were rejected in the Chamber of Deputies election in favor of a moderate royalist majority dependent on middle class support.
The Count of Artois,the future King Charles X
(r. 1824-1830)
France: Conservative Backlash
France: Conservative Backlash4 1820the Duke of Berri, son of Artois, was
murdered.
4 Royalists blamed the left.
4 Louis XVIII moved the govt. more to the right Changes in electoral laws narrowed the eligible
voters.
Censorship was imposed.
4 Liberals were driven out of legal political life and into illegal activities.
4 1823 triumph of reactionary forces!
Fr troops were authorized by the Concert of Europe to crush the Spanish Revolution and restore another Bourbon ruler, Ferdinand VII, to the throne there.
King Charles X of France (r. 1824-1830)
King Charles X of France (r. 1824-1830)4 His Goals:
Lessen the influence of the middle class.
Limit the right to vote.
Put the clergy back in charge of education.
Public money used to pay nobles for the loss of their lands during the Fr Revolution.
4 His Program: Attack the 1814 Charter.
Control the press.
Dismiss the Chamber of Deputies when it turned against him.
Appointed an ultra-reactionary as his first minister.
4 1830 Election brought in another liberal majority.
4 July Ordinances He dissolved the entire parliament.
Strict censorship imposed.
Changed the voting laws so that the government in the future could be assured of a conservative victory.
King Charles X of France (r. 1824-1830)
King Charles X of France (r. 1824-1830)
To the Barracades Revolution, Again!!
To the Barracades Revolution, Again!!
Workers, students and some of the middle class call for a Republic!
Louis Philippe The “Citizen King”
Louis Philippe The “Citizen King”4 The Duke of Orleans.
4 Relative of the Bourbons, but had stayed clear of the Ultras.
4 Lead a thoroughly bourgeois life.
4 His Program:
Property qualifications reduced enough to double eligible voters.
Press censorship abolished.
The King ruled by the will of the people, not by the will of God.
The Fr Revolution’s tricolor replaced the Bourbon flag.
4 The government was now under the control of the wealthy middle class. (r. 1830-1848)
Louis Philippe The “Citizen King”
Louis Philippe The “Citizen King”4 His government ignored the
needs and demands of the workers in the cities.
They were seen as another nuisance and source of possible disorder.
4 July, 1832 an uprising in Paris was put down by force and 800 were killed or wounded.
4 1834 Silk workers strike in Lyon was crushed.
Seething underclass.
Was seen as a violation of the status quo set down at the Congress of Vienna.
A caricature ofLouis Philippe
Belgian Independence, 1830
Belgian Independence, 18304 The first to follow the lead of France.
4 Its union with Holland after the Congress of Vienna had not proved successful.
4 There had been very little popular agitation for Belgian nationalism before 1830 seldom had nationalism arisen so suddenly.
4 Wide cultural differences:
North Dutch Protestant seafarers and traders.
South French Catholic farmers and individual workers.
Belgian Revolution - 1830Belgian Revolution - 1830
A Stirring of Polish Nationalism - 1830A Stirring of Polish Nationalism - 1830
A Stirring of Polish Nationalism - 1830A Stirring of Polish Nationalism - 1830
4 The bloodiest struggle of the 1830 revolutions.
4 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.
4 After Tsar Alexander I dies, the Poles became restless under the tyrannical rule of Tsar Nicholas I.
4 Polish intellectuals were deeply influenced by Romanticism.
4 Rumors reached Poland that Nicholas I was planning to use Polish troops to put down the revolutions in France and Belgium.
4 Several Polish secret societies rebelled.
A Stirring of Polish Nationalism - 1830A Stirring of Polish Nationalism - 18304 Had the Poles been united, this
revolt might have been successful.
But, the revolutionaries were split into moderates and radicals.
4 The Poles had hoped that Fr & Eng would come to their aid, but they didn’t.
4 Even so, it took the Russian army a year to suppress this rebellion.
4 The irony by drawing the Russian army to Warsaw for almost a year, the Poles may well have kept Nicholas I from answering Holland’s call for help in suppressing the Belgian Revolt.
Europe in 1830Europe in 1830
The Results of the 1820s-
1830 Revolutions?The Results of the 1820s-
1830 Revolutions?1. The Concert of Europe provided for a recovery of Europe after the long years of Revolution and Napoleonic Wars.
2. The conservatives did NOT reverse ALL of the reforms put in place by the French Revolution.
3. Liberalism would challenge the conservative plan for European peace and law and order.
4. These revolutions were successful only in W. Europe:
Their success was in their popular support.
Middle class lead, aided by the urban lower classes.
5. 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!
6. Therefore, these revolutions left much unfinished & a seething, unsatisfied working class.