CLASS X THE RISE OF NATIONALISM IN EUROPE (HISTORY-1)
THE RISE OF NATIONALISM IN EUROPE
FREDERIC
SORRIEU’S PRINTS
• In 1848, Frederic Sorrieu
prepared a series of 4 prints visualizing his dream of a world made up of
democratic and social republics.
• In the first print, we see
people of Europe and America, men and women of all ages and social classes,
moving in a long chain and offering homage to The statue of Liberty, which has
the Torch of Enlightenment in one hand and the Charter of the Rights of Man on
the other.
• On the ground, we see shattered
images of Absolutist(a monarchical form of govt that was centralized,
militererised and repressive) institutions.
• The people are grouped as
distinct nations, and can be identified through their flags and national
costumes.
• Leading the procession were the
USA and Switzerland, who were already nation states. France (tricolour) has
just reached the statue, followed by Germany (black, red and gold flag),
Austria, kingdom of Two socities-Lombardy, Poland, England, Ireland, Hungary
& Russia.
• From the heavens above, Christ
& Angels gaze(watch) upon the scene.
• This utopian painting was done
by the artist to symbolizes fraternity among nations of the world.
1. Emergence of Nationalism in
Europe
• During the nineteenth century,
nationalism brought about sweeping changes in the political and mental world of
Europe.
• Nation states emerged in place
of the multinational dynastic empires of Europe.
• The concept of a modern state
had been developing over a long period of time in Europe.
• Nation state is one in which
the majority of its citizens, and not only its rulers come to develop a sense
of common identity and shared history or descent which were forged through
struggles, actions of leaders and the common people.
2.
The French Revolution in 1789
• The first clear expression of nationalism came with the French Revolution in 1789.
• The first clear expression of nationalism came with the French Revolution in 1789.
• France was a full-fledged
territorial state in 1789 under the rule of an absolute monarch.
• The political and
constitutional changes that came in the wake of the French Revolution led to
the transfer of sovereignty from the monarchy to a body of French citizens.
• The French Revolutionaries
introduced various measures and practices that could create a sense of
collective identity amongst the French people like the ideas of la patrie (the
fatherland) and le citoyen (the citizen).
• A new French flag, the
tricolour, was chosen to replace the former royal standard.
• The Estates General was elected
by the body of active citizens and renamed the National Assembly.
• New hymns were composed, oaths
taken and martyrs commemorated, all in the name of the nation.
• A centralized administrative
system formulated uniform laws for all citizens within its territory.
• Internal customs duties and
dues were abolished.
• A uniform system of weights and
measures was adopted.
• Regional dialects were
discouraged, and French, as it was spoken and written in Paris, became the
common language of the nation by discouraging regional dialects.
• The revolutionaries declared
that it was the mission and the destiny of the French nation to liberate the
people of Europe from despotism.
3.
The Napoleonic Code
• The Civil code of 1804 –
usually known as the Napoleonic Code – did away with
• Abolished all the privileges
based on birth
• established equality before the
law
• Secured the right to property
• Simplified administrative
divisions
• Abolished the feudal system.
• Freed peasants from serfdom and
manorial dues.
• Transportation and
communication systems were improved.
• Peasants, artisans, workers and
new businessmen enjoed a new found freedom.
• In the areas conquered by the
French, such as Holland and Switzerland and cities such as Mainz, Brussesls,
Milan and Warsaw, the French armies were welcomed as harbingers(forerunner)of
liberty.
• But this feeling turned to hostility,
? Reasons……
• Increased taxation
• Censorship
• Forced recruitment into the
French Army
• Political freedom
4.
Europe in the mid 18th century
• Europe was divided into
kingdoms, duchies and cantons whose rulers had their autonomous territories.
• They did not see themselves as
sharing a collective identity or a common culture. They spoke different
languages and dialects and belonged to different ethnic groups.
• Habsburg Empire(ruled
Austria-Hungary) included the Alpine regions. The Tyrol, Austria and
Sudentland, Bohemia(German speaking aristocracy prevalent), Italian speaking
provinces of Lombardy and Venetia .
• Hungary – Half of the
population spoke Magyar while the rest spoke in a variety of other dialects.
• Galicia – Polish speaking
aristocracy.
• Peasant people : Bohemians and
Slovaks
• These differences present did
not promote collective unity. The only tie binding them was a common
allegiance(commitment) to the emperor.
Features
of Aristocracy in Europe
• The Aristocracy were a dominant
group socially and politically, but numerically small.
• They owned estates in the
countryside and town-houses.
• They spoke French for diplomacy
and in high society.
• Their families were connected
by ties of marriage.
Ideas
of Liberalism/Liberal Nationalism
• The word liberalism is derived
from the Latin root ‘liber’ meaning free.
• Different interpretations of
liberalism
• New middle classes-Freedom of
the individual, equality of all before law.
• Polically-Govt by consent
• Since the French
Revn-liberalism had stood for the end of autocracy and clerical privileges, a constitution and
representative govt through parliament.
• 19th century
liberals-inviolability of private property
• Economic sphere-Freedom of
markets and the abolition of state-imposed restrictions on the movement of
goods and capital. Eg-situation of Germany
Economic
situation of Germany
• Germany was a confederation of
39 states. Each of them possessed its own currency, weights and measures.
• Duties were levied according to
the weight and measurement of goods which involved time consuming calculation.
• Measure of cloth – elle
• 1 elle in Frankfurt – 54.7 cm
• In Mainz – 55.1 cm
• In Nuremburg – 65.6 cm
• In Freiburg – 53.5 cm
Liberalism
and Women’s rights
• Liberalism did not necessarily
stand for universal suffrage.
• In revolutionary France, the
right to vote and to get elected were granted exclusively to property owning
men(active citizens). Men without property and all women were excluded from
voting(passive citizens).
• Under the Jacobins, all adult
males enjoyed suffrage.
• Under the Napoleonic code,
limited suffrage was granted and reduced women to the status of a minor,
subject to the authority of fathers and husbands.
• Throughout the 19th
and early 20th centuries, women and non-propertied men organized
opposition movements demanding equal political rights.
FORMATION
OF ZOLLVERIN
• In 1834, a German Customs Union
or zollverin was formed as the initiative of Prussia and joined by most of the
German States.
• The union abolished tariff
barriers and reduced the number of currencies from over thirty to two.
• The creation of a network of
railways further stimulated mobility, harnessing economic interests to national
unification.
5.
CONSERVATISM IN EUROPE
• It’s a political philosophy
that stressed the importance of tradition, established institutions and
customs, and preferred gradual development to quick change.
• They believed that established
traditional institutions of state and society, like the monarchy of the church,
social hierarchies, property and the family should be preserved.
• Following the defeat of
Napoleon in 1815, the European govts.were driven by a spirit of conservatism.
• However, they did not want to
go back to the old system of Monarchy.
• Following the Napoleonic code
of 1804, they understood that implementation of a system similar to that of the
Napoleonic code could strengthen monarchy.
• A modern army, an efficient
bureaucracy, a dynamic economy, the abolition of feudalism and serfdom could
strengthen autocracies in Europe.
6.
THE TREATY OF VIENNA OF 1815
• In 1815, representatives of the
European powers- Britain, Russia, Prussia and Austria who had collectively
defeated Napoleon, met at Vienna to draw up a settlement for Europe.
• Also known as Vienna Congress,
this was hosted by Austrian Chancellor Duke Metternich.
• Aim-Undoing most of the changes
that had come about in Europe during the Napoleonic wars.
RESULT
OF VIENNA CONGRESS
• The Bourbon dynasty, which was
removed from power during the French Revolution, were restored.
• A series of states were formed
surrounding France to prevent French Expansion.
• Netherlands in the North
• Piedmont (Genoa) in the South
• Prussia in the West
• Austria (Northern Italy),
Russia (Poland) in the East
• German Federation – 39 states
• Aim-To restore the monarchies
and create conservative order.
• Conservatives of 1815 were
autocratic - they did not tolerate
criticism and dissent and sought to curb activities that questioned the
autonomous rule of conservatives.
• Censorship laws were set up.
GUISEPPE
MAZZINI
• Born in Genoa in 1807
• Became a member of secret
society ‘Carbonari’
• Was sent to exile in 1831, when
he was 24 years old for attempting a revolution in Liguria
• Founder of 2 secret societies :
Young Italy in Marseilles, Young Europe in Berne
• Members were like minded men
from Poland, France, Italy and German states
• Believed that God intended
nations to be natural units of mankind,
and hence Italy could not continue to be a patchwork of small states and
kingdoms but has to be forged into a single nation
• A key person(revolutionary) in
the Unification of Italy
• Metternich described him as –
The most dangerous enemy of our social order
7.
THE AGE OF REVOLUTIONS 1830-48
• First upheaval took place in
July 1830 in France
• The Bourbon kings who had been
restored to power were overthrown by liberal revolutionaries and installed a
constitutional monarchy with Louis Philippe as its head.
• Duke Metternich once remarked,
“when France sneezes, the rest of Europe catches a cold”
• July Revolution sparked an
uprising in Brussels which led to Belgium breaking away from the United Kingdom
of Netherlands.
8.
GREEK WAR OF INDEPENDENCE
• Greece had been a part of the
Ottoman Empire since the 15th century, and the growth of
revolutionary nationalism in Europe sparked off a national movement here .
• It began in 1821
• Got support from other Greeks
living in exile and also from many West Europeans who sympathised with Greece.
• Poets and artists praised
Greece as the Cradle of European Civilization and mobilised public support to
fight against the Muslim Empire (romanticism)
• English poet Lord Byron
collected funds and went to fight in the war, where he died in 1824
• The treaty of Constantinople of
1832 declared Greece as an independent nation.
ROMANTICISM
• A cultural movement which
sought to develop a particular form of nationalist sentiment.
• Roman artists and poets
criticized the glorification of reason and science and focused on emotions,
intuition and mystical feelings.
• Aim: To create a sense of
shared collective heritage, a common cultural past as the basis of a nation.
• Eg: German philosopher Johann
Gottfried claimed that true German culture was to be discovered among common
people-Das Volk, and it was through folk songs, folk poetry and dance that
the spirit of the nation was popularized.
• Volksgeist-True spirit of the
nation
CASE
OF POLAND – NATIONALISM KEPT ALIVE
• Poland had been partitioned at
the end of the 18th century by the Great powers-Russia, Prussia and
Austria.
• Even though Poland no longer
existed as an independent territory, nationalist feelings were kept alive
through music and language.
• Karol Kurpinski promoted the
nationalist sentiment through his operas and music, turning dances like the
polonaise and mazurka into nationalist symbols.
• After Russian occupation in
Poland, Russian language was imposed everywhere.
• In 1831, Armed rebellion
against Russia – failure
• People began to use Polish as a
symbol of resistance against Russian dominance, and was used for Church
gatherings and all religious institution.
• As a result, a large no.of
bishops and priests were put in jail for speaking Polish.
• The use of Polish came to be
known as a symbol of struggle against Russian dominance.
HUNGER,
HARDSHIP & POPULAR REVOLT
• Increasing
economic hardship during the 1830s.
• Widespread
unemployment, urban congestion, competition from machine made goods from England,
feudal dues, rising food prices, failed crops.
• Popular
revolt in France in 1848 resulted in Louis Philippe fleeing, France declared a
republic with voting for all men above 21 and national workshops for more
employment.
• In
Selisia in 1845 weavers led a revolt against the contractor who was cheating
them.
• They
surrounded his house and demanded higher wages.
• Getting
only threats from him they attacked his house, destroyed his goods.
9.
Frankfurt Parliament
• In the German regions a large
number of political associations whose members were middle-class professionals,
businessmen and prosperous artisans came together in the city of Frankfurt and
decided to vote for an all-German National Assembly.
• On 18th May 1848, 831 elected
representatives marched in a festive procession to take their places in the
Frankfurt parliament convened in the Church of St Paul.
• They drafted a constitution for
a German nation to be headed by a monarchy subject to a parliament.
• When the deputies offered the
crown on these terms to Friedrich Wilhelm IV, King of Prussia, he rejected it
and joined other monarchs to oppose the elected assembly.
• While the opposition of the
aristocracy and military became stronger, the social basis of parliament eroded.
• The parliament was dominated by
the middle classes who resisted the demands of workers and artisans and
consequently lost their support.
• In the end troops were called
in and the assembly was forced to disband.
• Women were denied suffrage
rights during the election of the Assembly.
• When the Frankfurt parliament
convened in the Church of St Paul, women were admitted only as observers to
stand in the visitors’ gallery.
10.
Emergency of UK
• The model of the nation or the
nation-state, some scholars have argued, is Great Britain.
• In Britain the formation of the
nation-state was not the result of a sudden upheaval or revolution.
• The primary identities of the
people who inhabited the British Isles were ethnic ones – such as English,
Welsh, Scot or Irish. All of these ethnic groups had their own cultural and
political traditions.
• But as the English nation
steadily grew in wealth, importance and power, it was able to extend its
influence over the other nations of the islands.
• The English parliament, which
had seized power from the monarchy in 1688 at the end of a protracted conflict,
was the instrument through which a nation-state, the England at its centre,
came to be forged.
• The Act of Union (1707) between
England and Scotland that resulted in the formation of the United Kingdom of
Great Britain meant, in effect that England was able to impose its influence on
Scotland. The British parliament was
henceforth dominated by its English members.
• The growth of a British
identity meant that Scotland’s distinctive culture and political institutions
were systematically suppressed.
• The Catholic clans that
inhabited the Scottish Highlands suffered terrible repression whenever they
attempted to assert their independence.
• The Scottish Highlanders were
forbidden to speak their Gaelic language or wear their national dress, and
large numbers were forcibly driven out of their homeland.
• Ireland suffered a similar
fate. It was a country deeply divided between Catholics and Protestants.
• The English helped the
Protestants of Ireland to establish their dominance over a largely Catholic
country.
• Catholic revolts against
British dominance were suppressed.
• After a failed revolt led by
Wolfe Tone and his United Irishmen (1798) Ireland was forcibly incorporated
into the United Kingdom in (1801).
• A new ‘British nation’ was
forged through the propagation of a dominant English culture.
• The symbols of the new Britain
– the British flag (Union Jack), the national anthem (God Save Our Noble King),
the English language – were actively promoted and the older nations survived
only as subordinate partners in this union.
11.
The Unification of Germany
• Nationalist feelings were
widespread among middle-class Germans, who in 1849 tried to unite the different
regions of the German confederation into a nation-building was, however,
repressed by the large landowners (called Junkers) of Prussia.
• From then on, Prussia took on
the leadership of the movement for national unification.
• Its Chief Minister, Otto von Bismarch,
was the architect of this process carried out with the help of the Prussian
army and bureaucracy.
• Three wars over seven years –
with Austria, Denmark ad France – ended in Prussian victory and completed the
process of unification.
• In January 1871, the Prussian
king, William I, was proclaimed German emperor in a ceremony held at
Versailles.
• On the bitterly cold morning of
18 January 1871, an assembly comprising the princes of the German states,
representatives of the army, important Prussian ministers including the chief
minister Otto von Bismarch gathered in the unheated Hall of Mirrors in the
Palace of Versailles to proclaim the new German Empire headed by Kaiser William
I of Prussia.
• The nation building process in
Germany had demonstrated the dominance of Prussian state power. Prussian
measures and practices often became a model for the rest of Germany.
12.
The Unification of Italy
• Italy too had a long history of
political fragmentation.
• Italians were scattered over
several dynastic states as well as the multi-national Habsburg Empire.
• During the middle of the 19th
century, Italy was divided into seven states, of which only one,
Sardinia-Piedmont, was ruled by an Italian princely house.
• The north was under Austrian
Habsburgs, the centre was ruled by the Pope and the southern regions were under
the domination not acquired one common form and still had many regional and
local variations.
• During the 1830s, Giuseppe
Mazzini had sought to put together a coherent programme for a unitary Italian
Republic.
• He had also formed a secret
society called Young Italy for the dissemination of his goals.
• The failure of the
revolutionary uprisings both in 1831 and 1848 meant that the mantle now fell on
Sardinia-Piedmont under its ruler King Victor Emmanuel II to unify the Italian
states through war. In the eyes of the ruling elites of this region, a unified
Italy offered them the possibility of economic development and political
dominance.
• Chief Minister Cavour who led
the movement to unify the regions of Italy was neither a revolutionary nor a
democrat. He spoke French much better than he did Italian.
• Through a tactful diplomatic
alliance with France engineered by
Cavour, Sardinia-Piedmont succeeded in defeating the Austrian forces in 1859.
• A large number of armed volunteers
under the leadership of Giuseppe Garibaldi joined the fray.
• In 1860, they marched into
South Italy and the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies and succeeded in winning the
support of the local peasants in order to drive out the Spanish rulers.
• In 1861 Victor Emmanuel II was
proclaimed king of united Italy.
• However much of the Italian
population remained unaware of the liberal-nationalist ideology.
• The peasant masses who had
never heard of Italia, and believed the ‘La Talia’ was Victor Emmanuel’s wife
13.
Visualizing a Nation
• Artists in the 18th and 19th
centuries found a way of personifying a nation. In other words they represented
a country as if it were a person.
• Nations were then portrayed as
female figures. That is, the female figure became an allegory of the nation.
• During the French Revolution
artists used the female allegory to portray ideas such as liberty, Justice and
the red cap, or the broken chain, while Justice is generally a blindfolded
woman carrying a pair of weighing scales.
• Similar female allegories were
invented by artists in the 19th century to represent the nation.
• In France, she was christened
Marianne, a popular Christian name, which underlined the idea of a people’s
nation. Her characteristics were drawn from those of Liberty and the Republic –
the red cap, the tricolour, the cockade.
• Statues of Marianne were
erected in public squares to remind the public of the national symbol of unity
and to persuade them to identify with it.
• Marianne images were marked on
coins and stamps.
• Similarly, Germania became the
allegory of the German nation. Germania wears a crown of oak leaves, as the
German oak stands for heroism.
ALLEGORY
• When an abstract idea is
expressed through a person or thing. It has two meanings – literal and
symbolic.
• Nations were portrayed as
female figures, and they did not stand for any woman in real life, but sought
to give the abstract idea of the nation in concrete form.
• Liberty = red cap and broken
chain
• Justice = a blindfolded woman
carrying a pair of weighing scales.
MARIANNE
• Allegory of France
• Since Marianne was a popular
Christian name, this underlined the idea of a people’s nation.
• Wore red cap, tricolour and
cockade
• Statues of Marianne were
erected in public square to remind the public of the national symbol of unity
and do persuade them to identify with it.
• Marianne images were printed on
coins and stamps
Allegory
of Germany
• Wears a crown of oak
leaves = symbolism
• Some Important allegories and
their interpretations
• Red cap/Broken chains = Liberty
• Blindfolded woman with a pair
of weighing scales = Justice
• Marianne = Allegory of France
• Germania = allegory of Germany
• German Oak/Crown of Oak leaves
= Heroism
• Breastplate with eagle = German
empires stregnth
• Sword = Readiness to fight
• Olive branch around the word =
willing to make peace
• Rays of rising sun = beginning
of a new era
• Black, red and gold tricolour =
Flag of the liberal nationalists in 1848, banned by the Dukes of Germany
Nationalism
& Imperialism
• Nationalism – A sense of
feeling of pride and collectiveness for one’s own country.
• Imperialism – A system in which
rich and powerful countries control other countries or desire for control over
other countries.
14.
Nationalist Tensions in Balkans
• Balkans was a region of
geographic and ethnic variation comprising modern day Romania, Bulgaria,
Albania, Greece, Macedonia, Croatia, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Slovenia, Serbia and
Montenegro.
• Inhabitants were known as
slaves and were under the control of Ottoman Empire.
• Inspired by the nationalist
movements in Europe, the Balkan nationalities demanded independence and they
broke away from the control of Ottoman Empire.
• After different Slavic nations
were formed, they struggled to define their identity, leading to conflicts.
• The Balkans states were
fiercely jealous of each other and wanted to gain more territory.
• At the same time, the European
powers were also competing for trade and colonies as well as naval and military
might.
• Each Great Power – Russia,
Germany, England, Austro-Hungary wanted to gain power in Balkans, which led to
a series of wars in the region and finally the First World War in 1914.
Conclusion
• Nationalism stained with
Imperialism led Europe to disaster.
• Many colonized countries in the
world started to oppose imperial domination.
• The anti-imperialist movements
developed as nationalist movements
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