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La Belle Époque , ( “ The Beautiful Era ” ) 1871-1914 Background and France

La Belle Époque , ( “ The Beautiful Era ” ) 1871-1914 Background and France. La Belle Epoque -- Political. Political stability in western and central Europe Tension, but cooperation : France and Germany Congress of Berlin in 1878, 1884 New Alliances, Old Differences

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La Belle Époque , ( “ The Beautiful Era ” ) 1871-1914 Background and France

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  1. La Belle Époque, (“The Beautiful Era” ) 1871-1914Background and France

  2. La Belle Epoque -- Political • Political stability in western and central Europe • Tension, but cooperation: France and Germany • Congress of Berlin in 1878, 1884 • New Alliances, Old Differences • Workers find similarities • Tension between working-class socialists, bourgeois liberals, and aristocrats

  3. La Belle Epoque -- Social Post-Impressionism Moulin Rouge

  4. Characteristics of La Belle Époque • Materialism • Higher standard of living • Development “zones” • Inner Zone Britain, France, Germany, Belgium, Northern Italy, Western Austria • Outer Zone Ireland, Iberian Peninsula, most of Italy, Europe east of Germany • Underdeveloped Zone Afro-Asia

  5. Characteristics of La Belle Époque • Increased European Population • 1 in 5 people worldwide lived in Europe in 1900 (about 400 million people) • Growth of Cities & Urban Life • Migration from Europe • 1850-1940  60 million left Europe • Went to  US, Argentina, Brazil, Canada, Australia/N. Zeal. • “Second” Industrial Revolution • Steam  electricity • Internal combustion & diesel engines. • Cars, planes, submarines.

  6. Glenbow Archives, Calgary, CanadaP-4346C-4

  7. Characteristics of La Belle Époque • “Second” Industrial Revolution Britain  “The World’s Industrial Workshop” • Corporations  limited liability of investments. • Mass production. • Free Trade [esp. in England] • World Markets [Global Economy, Part II] • Advance of Democracy • Extension of the vote to the working class. • Creating a “welfare state.”

  8. Characteristics of La Belle Époque • The Appeal of Socialism • By the 1880s, most socialist parties were Marxist [esp. Ger. & Fr.] • Not very successful in England. • Faith in Science Alone • Science at the core of industrialization. • “New Wonders” of daily life. • Charles Darwin • Origin of Species [1859] • “survival of the fittest”

  9. Characteristics of La Belle Époque • Faith in Science Alone [con’t.] • “Social Darwinism” Herbert Spenser • Eugenics • Newtonian Science turned on its head • Einstein  “Theory of Relativity”  nature & energy were separate & distinct. • Max Planck  Quantum Physics • Professionalization of “new” sciences [anthropology, archeaology,etc.] • Psychology • Ivan Pavlov  conditioned responses • Sigmund Freud  psychoanalysis • The Interpretation of Dreams [1900] • The role of the unconscious [the id, ego, super ego

  10. Characteristics of La Belle Époque • New Trends in Philosophy • Agnosticism • Nihilism • Friedrich Nietzsche • Übermensch  “Super Man” • Irrationalism • Existentialism • Sören Kierkegaard  existence proceeds essence • Internal Religious Struggles • modernists vs. fundamentalists

  11. Characteristics of La Belle Époque • 14. Anti-Semitism • Dreyfus Affair • Theodore Herzl  Der Judenstaat [The Jewish State], 1896 • “Father of Modern Zionism” • 15 Women’s Movement • Emmeline Pankhurst • 16 The “New” Imperialism • 17. Militarism  glorification of war

  12. Great Exhibition (1851) • Show off to the world the wealth and power of the British Empire • Crystal Palace was the centerpiece • Designed by gardener and greenhouse designer Joseph Paxton • Attended by lots of the rich and famous as well as those who hoped to be… • Including Charles Darwin, Samuel Colt, Charles Dickens, Lewis Carroll, George Eliot and Alfred, Lord Tennyson • Karl Marx hated it

  13. Opening of the Great Exhibition by Queen Victoria

  14. From plans to completion in 9 months…

  15. Exposition Universelle (1889) • A world’s fair to show off France and celebrate the centennial of the French Revolution

  16. 1889 Paris Exposition If London is the commerce capital, Paris is the cultural capital. • In honor of the French Revolution Centennial. • Eiffel Tower is entrance to fair

  17. Central Dome of the Gallery des Machines, Louis Beroud

  18. The Exposition Universelle of 1900 was a world's fair held in Paris, France, from 15 April to 12 November 1900, to celebrate the achievements of the past century and to accelerate development into the next

  19. Entrance to the 1900 Paris World Fair

  20. Interior, 1900 Paris World Fair

  21. France

  22. Third French Republic Declared! • September, 1870 after France’s defeat at the Battle of Sedan during Franco Prussian War Napoleon III abdicated the throne. • New government headed by Adolphe Thiers. • This new government continued the fight against the Germans who laid siege to Paris. • To defend Paris, a National Guard was raised numbering over 350,000. • France surrendered in February, 1871 after 40,000 Parisians died.

  23. Declaring the3rd French Republic

  24. The Third French Republic • Thiers’ government was seen as: • Too conservative. • Too royalist. • Too ready to accept a humiliating peace with Prussia. • Prussian troops marched into Paris in March, 1871. • The French government established itself at Versailles, NOT in Paris. • Parisians were angered by this. • They opposed the policies of this new government. • It attempted to restore order in Paris.

  25. Paris in Revolt! • The Paris Commune [Communards]was elected on March 28 and established itself at the Hôtel de Ville.

  26. Paris in Revolt • Rejected a Gov. that made peace with Germany • Socialist • Controlled Paris for 2 months

  27. Attempted Communard Reforms ! • Allowed trade unions & workers cooperatives to take over factories not in use and start them up again. • Set up unemployment exchanges in town halls. • Provide basic elementary education for all  they were strongly against church-controlled schools. • Attempted to set up girls schools. • Day nurseries near factories for working mothers.

  28. Paris in Revolt

  29. Civil War! Troops from Versailles Communards • The Commune was suppressed by government troops led by Marshal Patrice MacMahonduring the last week of May, 1871. • Known as the “Bloody Week.”

  30. First Communist Revolution? It served as an inspiration to later revolutionaries like Vladimir Lenin. • 25,000 Communards killed. • 35,000 were arrested.

  31. Communard Casualties

  32. Paris City Hall Destroyed

  33. “Paris the Beautiful” “Paris the beautiful is Paris the ghastly, Paris the battered, Paris the burning, Paris the blood-spattered now. And this in the 19th century and Europe professes civilization, and France boasts of culture, and Frenchmen are braining one another with the end of muskets, and Paris is burning.” – an English visitor

  34. The Third Republic: Government Structure

  35. 3rd Republic • Conservative • Politically unstable • 50 govs. in 1st ten years! • Monarchists vs. republicans. • Scandals • Numerous factions -- all governments were coalitions • Ended 1940

  36. The Constitution • The President: • Can dissolve Chamber of Deputies with the support of the Senate • Can nominate the new head of government • The Senate (Upper House) • Elected by “department” representatives • 9 year term • Conservative

  37. The Constitution • The Chamber of Deputies (Lower House) • 4 year term • 600 members elected by universal male suffrage. • Many groups: • Socialists: many were Marxists. • Moderate Republicans: middle class. • Radicals: anti-clerical, anti church • Monarchists: Catholics, Bonapartists, Royalists = Conservative

  38. The Third Republic: Scandals

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