The Revolutions of 1848

33
The turning point at which history failed to turn… - George Macaulay Trevelyan, 1937

description

The Revolutions of 1848. The turning point at which history failed to turn… - George Macaulay Trevelyan, 1937. Prince Metternich. 1815: We have redrawn Europe ’ s map for eternity. Not Really Mr. Metternich : Centers of Revolution in 1848. Historicism. The “ Hegelian Dialectic ” - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of The Revolutions of 1848

Page 1: The Revolutions of 1848

The turning point at which history failed to turn…

- George Macaulay Trevelyan, 1937

Page 2: The Revolutions of 1848

1815:1815: We have redrawn EuropeWe have redrawn Europe’’s map for eternity.s map for eternity.

Page 3: The Revolutions of 1848
Page 4: The Revolutions of 1848

The “Hegelian Dialectic”◦ History advances

through conflict.◦ One phase of history

creates its opposite [ex: absolutism to democracy].

George Wilhelm George Wilhelm Friedrich HegelFriedrich Hegel

[1744-1803][1744-1803]

AntithesisThesis

Synthesis

Page 5: The Revolutions of 1848

Considered the watershed political event of the 19th century.

1848 revolutions influenced by romanticism, nationalism, and liberalism, as well as economic dislocation and instability.

Only Britain and Russia avoided significant upheaval.

Neither liberals or conservatives could gain permanent upper hand.

Resulted in end of serfdom in Austria and Germany, universal male suffrage in France, parliaments established in German states (although controlled by princes & aristocrats), stimulated unification impulse in Prussia and Sardinia-Piedmont.

Last of liberal revolutions dating back to the French Revolution

Page 6: The Revolutions of 1848

A. Industrialization◦ Economic challenges to rulers.◦ Rapid urbanization.◦ Challenges to the artisan class.

B. Population doubled in the 18c

◦ Food supply problems MalthusC. Ideological Challenges

◦ Liberalism, nationalism, democracy, socialism.

D. RomanticismE. Repressive Measures

◦ Carlsbad Decrees [Prus.]◦ Six Acts [Eng.]◦ Secret police created in many European

states.

Page 7: The Revolutions of 1848

A. Agricultural Crises◦ Poor cereal harvests

prices rose 60% in one year.◦ Potato blight Ireland

Prices rose 135% for food in one year! Corn Laws repealed as a result

B. Financial Crises◦ Investment bubbles burst railways,

iron, coal.◦ Unemployment increased rapidly [esp.

among the artisan class].

Working & middle classes are now joined in Working & middle classes are now joined in misery as are the urban and agricultural misery as are the urban and agricultural

peasantry!peasantry!

Page 8: The Revolutions of 1848

Working class and liberals unhappy with King Louis Philippe, esp. his minister Francois Guizot (who opposed electoral reform).

King dismisses Guizot, but riots break out.

King forced to abdicate on Feb. 24.

Francois GuizotFrancois Guizot

Page 9: The Revolutions of 1848
Page 10: The Revolutions of 1848

Second French Republic declared by Chamber of deputies.

Moderate republicans led by liberal Alphonse Lamartine (allied w/ bourgeoisie)

Socialists led by Louis Blanc national workshops created by Blanc to

provide work for the unemployed Reforms: abolished slavery in the empire, 10

hr workday in Paris, abolished death penalty. April elections for new Constituent Assembly

resulted in conflict between moderate republicans (who won) and socialists

Page 11: The Revolutions of 1848

A. A poet & liberal, he believed in the “Rights of Man.”◦ To vote, to free speech,

to property, & to a secular education.

B. Declared a new Provisional Government.◦ Conservatives &

liberals are suspicious of republicanism Reminiscent of the

Reign of Terror.

Page 12: The Revolutions of 1848

A. A Social Democrat.B. He believed in the “Right

to Work.”◦ National Workshops.

Provide work for the unemployed.

C. Financial Crisis◦ Flight of capital.◦ Stock market crashes [55%

decline].◦ New 45% increase of taxes

on the peasants.

Page 13: The Revolutions of 1848

Workers attempted to create a revolutionary republic after Blanc was dropped from assembly.

Results in “June Days” Revolution Cause: gov’t closed national

workshops Marked beginning of class warfare in

France Workers sought war against poverty

and redistribution of income. Barricades put up in streets to oppose

gov’t forces (Hugo’s Les Miserables based on this)

Page 14: The Revolutions of 1848
Page 15: The Revolutions of 1848

General Louis Cavaignac: assumed dictatorial powers & crushed revolt (10,000 dead)

Victory for conservatives Nov 1848 – constitution provided

for elected president and one-house parliament

Election of 1848: Louis Napoleon Bonaparte “Dark Horse Candidate” (1803-1873) defeated Cavaignac 1852: Louis Napoleon consolidates power and becomes Emperor Napoleon III Louis Napoleon Louis Napoleon

BonaparteBonaparte

Page 16: The Revolutions of 1848
Page 17: The Revolutions of 1848

Habsburg empire was vulnerable to revolutionary challenge

Ethnic minorities sought nationalistic goals: Hungarians, Slavs, Czechs, Italians, Serbs, Croats, and others. (More non-Germans than Germans lived in the empire)

Austrian gov’t was reactionary; liberal institutions were non-existent.

Social reliance on serfdom doomed masses of people to a life w/o hope.

“February Revolution” in France sparked rebellion for liberal reforms.

Page 18: The Revolutions of 1848
Page 19: The Revolutions of 1848

March 13 – rioting breaks out in Vienna

Austrian empire collapsed; Metternich fled

Constituent assembly meets. Serfdom (robot) abolished,

revolution withers. Revolutionary gov’t failed to

govern effectively Ferdinand I abdicates, Habsburgs

restored royal absolutism under Franz Joseph (r. 1848-1916).

Franz JosephFranz Joseph

Page 20: The Revolutions of 1848
Page 21: The Revolutions of 1848

Louis Kossuth (1802-1894) Hungarian (Magyar nationalist) leader demanded independence.

March laws provided for Hungarian independence.

Austrians invade, Hungarian armies drove within sight of Vienna.

Slavic minorities resisted Magyar invasion and Hungarian army withdrew

Austrian and Russian armies defeated Hungarian army.

Hungary would have to wait until 1866 for autonomy

Louis KossuthLouis Kossuth

Page 22: The Revolutions of 1848

Prague Conference developed notion of Austroslavism: constitution and autonomy within Habsburg empire.

Pan-Slav Congress failed to unite Slavic peoples in the empire.

Austrian military ultimately attacked Prague and occupied Bohemia and crushed rebellion.

Page 23: The Revolutions of 1848
Page 24: The Revolutions of 1848

Revolutions inspired by 1848 revolutions in France

Liberals demanded constitutional government and a union or federation of German states.

Frederick William IV rejected liberal constitution; imposed conservative one that guaranteed royal control of gov’t (lasted until 1918).

Frederick William IVFrederick William IV

Page 25: The Revolutions of 1848

Liberal, romantic, & nationalist leaders called for elections to a constituent assembly, from all states in the German Bund, for the purpose of unifying the German states.

Sought war with Denmark to annex Schleswig & Holstein; Prussia declared war on Denmark (Danish War)

Presented constitution for a united German federation.

Selected Prussian King Frederick William IV as emperor; he declined claiming “divine right of kings”

Page 26: The Revolutions of 1848

Debate over whether or not to include Austria and who would rule (Hollenzollerns or Habsburgs?)

Failure of Prussia and Austria to support unification movement resulted in its collapse

Frederick William’s attempt to unify Germany ended in failure, he dissolved the Parliament and created a constitution of his own for Prussia.

This created a two-house parliament, but gave the king ultimate authority.

Page 27: The Revolutions of 1848

Prussia attempted to create a north German confederation that it would dominate.

Austria opposed, demanding Prussian allegiance to the Bund (that Austria dominated)

Nov. 1850 - “Humiliation of Olmutz”: Prussia dropped plan to unify Germany, leaving Austria as dominant German state in the Bund.

Prussia would seek revenge in 1866 (Austro-Prussian War)

Page 28: The Revolutions of 1848

Italian nationalists and liberals seek to end foreign domination of Italy

Milan, Lombardy and Venetia seek expel Austrian rulers

Bourbon rulers in Kingdom of Two Sicilies and House of Savoy in Sardinia-Piedmont grant liberal constitutions.

Sardinia-Piedmont declared war on Austria.

Beginning in May, revolutions suppressed.

Page 29: The Revolutions of 1848

Giuseppe Mazzini established Roman Republic in 1849 protected by Giuseppe Garibaldi

Pope Pius IX forced to flee Austrian General Radetsky

crushes Sardinia-Piedmont; regains Lombardy and Venetia.

French troops take back Papal States.

Victor Emmanuel II takes throne in Sardinia-Piedmont.

Giuseppe MazziniGiuseppe Mazzini

Page 30: The Revolutions of 1848

Causes for failure:◦Rural people did not

support revolutions, focused mainly on urban middle classes.

◦Revolutionaries not united, fear of radicals among moderates leads to collapse.

◦Lack of leadership and administrative experience among revolutionaries.

Giuseppe GaribaldiGiuseppe Garibaldi

Page 31: The Revolutions of 1848

The Chartists◦ Movement reached its

height with the Kennington Common demonstration on April 10, 1848.

◦ Could have been the prelude to revolution in Britain, but meeting was peaceful.

◦ Leaders did not follow-up on the meeting and Chartist movement died.

Kennington Common Kennington Common demonstration on April 10, 1848demonstration on April 10, 1848

Page 32: The Revolutions of 1848

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 long-term, 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.

Page 33: The Revolutions of 1848

It looked like the Conservative forces had triumphed.

BUT…◦ Things had changed forever.◦ Economic/social problems continued to be

constant challenges to the ruling order.◦ Conservatives would have to make concessions in

order to stay in power.◦ Many of the limited Liberal achievements

remained permanent.