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Imperial Germany and its Discontents Chapter 1
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Compare the two maps to see how Europe changed between 1850 and 1871. Europe in the mid to late 1800s
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Prussian wars with Denmark (1864), Austria (1866) (Habsburgs) and France (1870-71). German unification - 1871 What caused these changes?
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Union of 25 states Four kingdoms (Prussia, Bavaria, Saxony and Württemberg) Six grand duchies Five duchies Seven principalities Three free cities (Hamburg, Bremen, Lübeck) However, it was not an equal division of power. Prussia forced the other states to join the Prussian- led empire, and had most of the power. German unification
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Prussia had two-thirds of the population The Kings of Prussia (members of the Hohenzollern dynasty), became German Kaisers Berlin (Prussia’s capital city) became the capital city of Germany The Junkers, the Prussian landed aristocracy, were the most powerful group in Imperial Germany This led to resentment. Many smaller (less powerful) states wanted to regain pre-1871 independence and separate from Prussia Prussian dominance
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DemocraticUndemocratic -All men over the age of 25 could vote -Secret ballot -New laws had to be approved by the Reichstag -The Reichstag could accept or reject the budget -The Reichstag had limited power over government – the Kaiser could appoint and fire ministers -The Kaiser had complete control over foreign relations -The Kaiser had total control of the army -The Kaiser could dissolve the Reichstag at any time Was Imperial Germany democratic?
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Between 1871 and 1914, the German economy was the fastest growing in Europe Industrial production grew at twice of France’s Industrial production grew at three times the rate of Britain’s By 1914 – industrial production had overtaken Britain Economic Growth
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Look at these pictures and imagine what life was like for working class Germans between 1871 and 1914 http://www.stadtentwicklung.berlin.de/denkmal/denkmale_in_berlin/en/weltkulturerbe/siedlungen/hintergrund.shtml Working Class
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http://germanhistorydocs.ghi-dc.org/sub_imglist.cfm?sub_id=97§ion_id=11
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Bad living conditions Low wages Harsh discipline in factories Housing was bad (‘rental barracks’ in Berlin) Working Class
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Social Political Democrats Formed in 1875 (Socialist Workers Party of Germany) By 1914 it was the biggest and best organised socialist party in Europe More seats in the Reichstag than any other party Very popular among the working classes because offered more than just politics – Way of life, not just a political party Trade unions, newspapers, cultural organisations, sports clubs SPD
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Prussia was overwhelmingly protestant Bavaria (quite large), Rhineland and Silesia (important industrial areas) were more catholic Protestants feared catholics in case they were closer Allies to the pope than Germany Kulturkampf (‘cultural struggle’) 1870s – German gorvernment introduced measures to undermine the political influence of the Catholic church (ended in late 1870s) Protestants and Catholics
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Second-class citizens to some degree Low proportion of Catholics in university Few top civil servants were Catholics Almost no Catholics in high levels of business and finance Catholics were not enthusiastic supporters of political system in Germany Catholics in Germany 1870s - 1914
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