1 / 13

Europe Faces Revolution

Europe Faces Revolution. Nationalism Challenges Conservative Power. Greece. Greeks- 1 st to win self-rule Former part of Ottoman Empire (which was crumbling at this time, but not fully until 1918) Cause of Greek independence was popular throughout Europe

yuki
Download Presentation

Europe Faces Revolution

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Europe Faces Revolution Nationalism Challenges Conservative Power

  2. Greece • Greeks- 1st to win self-rule • Former part of Ottoman Empire (which was crumbling at this time, but not fully until 1918) • Cause of Greek independence was popular throughout Europe • Major powers such as Britain/Russia/France recognize an independent Greece in 1830.

  3. 1848 Revolutions • There were ethnic uprisings in: • France • Prussia (Germany, Austria) • Italy • Greece • Poland • Hungary • But revolutionaries failed to unite the nations, so they actually took a step backwards.

  4. Russia 1800’s still under feudalism- no industrialization Due to old ways, Russia was falling behind other European countries Alexander II- freed serfs, 1861 Nationalism encouraged industrialism, and also ethic groups wanting their own nations.

  5. Old Empires Fall Austria-lost the Austro-Prussian war in 1866; split Austria and Hungary into independent states= Austro-Hungarian Empire Russia- Russification- forced culture on all ethic groups Ottoman- Turks felt superior to other ethnic groups; genocide against Armenians 1894-1896; 1915

  6. France • 1830- King wants absolute power • Revolt of people • Liberal King replaces old one • A Paris mob overthrows gov’t replaces it with a representative government- it falls apart • Call for a president • Louis-Napoleon III elected president- Nephew of Napoleon Bonaparte. • Four years later- becomes emperor • Good leader

  7. Italy • Camillo Cavour – Prime minister of Sardinia • Allied with Napoleon III, brought revolution and unity in N. Italy • Giuseppe Garibaldi – unified S. Italy • Cavour invaded Papal states, so S. voted to unite w/Cavour and N. Italy • National unification of Italy, but still culturally, economically divided • Capital = Rome

  8. Germany • German Confederation – loose union of German states; Prussia – largest; Austria – head of confederation • Otto von Bismarck- Prussia’s Prime Minister • Realpolitik – seek advantage for nation-state by any means, including war and breaking treaties • Wanted to go to war to unify • Germany under Prussian rule

  9. Wars of Unification • 7 Weeks War – Bismarck & Prussia against Austria. • Treaty ending the war set up a united Germany under Prussian control

  10. Wars of Unification (cont.) • Franco-Prussian War – Napoleon III declared war on Prussia. • Southern German states (not yet united w/the rest of Germany) sided w/Prussia because disliked France. Defeated France and all German states now unified • Following Franco-Prussian War all German States unified. • Germany now an Empire w/Kaiser William I emperor

  11. Bismarck Made laws against Catholics, only served to strengthen Catholic influence in Germany Strengthened Industry Tried to crush opposition parties Bismarck’s policies left Germany strong, but w/o parliamentary democracy. When William I died, his son succeeded him (William II) and dismissed Bismarck (1890)

  12. Results • Balance of Power- Undone • Britain, France, Austria, Prussia and Russia no longer equal • Britain and Prussia = strongest • France = middle • Austria and Russia = weak

  13. Exit Slip 1. Which aging empires suffered from the forces of nationalism? 2. What advantages did Prussia have in leading the German states to unity? 3. How can nationalism be both a unifying and a disunifying force?

More Related