European Nationalism Mid to 19th Century NOTE: To change the image on this slide, select the picture and delete it. Then click the Pictures icon in the placeholder to insert your own image. Mid to 19th Century
What is Nationalism? the belief that a person’s greatest loyalty should not be to a king or an empire but to a nation of people who share a common culture and history. When a nation has its own independent government it becomes a nation-state.
Nationalism Pros: Cons: People within a nation come together for the common good Overthrow colonial rulers Leads to democratic nations Competition amongst nations spurs advancements Forced assimilation of minority groups Ethnic cleaning ex: Bosnia and Herzegovina in the 1990s The rise of extreme nationalism: Nazism Competition between nations leads to war
Italian Unification
Italian Unification: 19th Century Independent City – States subjected to foreign domination. Congress of Vienna Metternich Prevent Nationalism Risorgimento
Italian Nationalist Leaders Giuseppi Garibaldi [The “Sword”] Giuseppi Mazzini [The “Heart”] King Victor Emmanuel II Count Cavour [The “Head”]
Challenges of Unification Social and Economic Problems Regional differences Poverty and Emigration Serious problem Reforms Took too long
Garibaldi and His Red Shirts Unite with Cavour Followers known as Red Shirts because of colorful uniforms By July 1860, using guerilla warfare, Garibaldi, Red Shirts gained control of island of Sicily September, Garibaldi, Sardinian troops conquered Naples Red Shirts now controlled southern part Italian peninsula Garibaldi offered Kingdom of Two Sicilies to Sardinian king Victor Emmanuel
A Unified Peninsula! A contemporary British cartoon, entitled "Right Leg in the Boot at Last," shows Garibaldi helping Victor Emmanuel put on the Italian boot.
The Kingdom of Italy: 1871
German Unification
German Nationalism: German nationalism slowly began to show in the early 1800’s. Germany was divided into a number of small states and desired a unification within them. There goal was to become completely independent out of the control of all other nations as they had been in the past.
German Unification: 19th Century Congress of Vienna Factors of Unification Nationalism In Prussia Political Economic
1848 Revolution: Causes Frankfurt Parliament Rise of nationalism Economic hardships Frankfurt Parliament Democratic national assembly Decided on what was a unified Germany
Prussia: William I: (Wilhelm) Took the Prussian throne in 1861 Did not work well with Parliment Junker Land owning aristocracy
Chancellor Otto von Bismarck The “Iron Chancellor” Realpolitik- meaning the politics of reality “Blood & Iron”
Prussian Expansion: Step 1 – The Danish War 1864 Schleswig and Holstein Austria and Prussia Denmark Conflicts of jurisdiction Prussia Austria
Step #2: Austro-Prussian War [Seven Weeks’ War], 1866 Prussian Expansion: Step #2: Austro-Prussian War [Seven Weeks’ War], 1866 Strategic war Foreign negotiations German Confederation Northern States Reichstag Working class
Prussian Expansion: Step #3:Franco-Prussian War French Ambassador Southern German States Catholic
A United Germany The German Empire January 18, 1871 Kaiser Wilhem I Imperial Chancellor Otto Von Bismarck
A Growing Economy
Dreyfus Affair and Zionism Captain Alfred Dreyfus Anti – Semitism Pogroms, organized massacre of helpless people Zionism Homeland in Palestine
Eastern Europe in the Last Half of the 19c
Austria: Austro – Prussian war Dual – Monarchy Ethnic Group differences Compromise of 1867
Ottoman Empire: “sick man of Europe” Africa Internal Problems
Shift in Power: