Revolutions of 1848
APEURO: Lecture 6C
Overview
• Watershed political event of the 19th century
• 1848 revolutions influenced by nationalism, liberalism, and romanticism as well as
economic dislocation and instability
• Only Britain and Russia avoided significant upheaval
• Liberal reforms in Britain prevented serious popular discontent
• Conservative oppression in Russia prevented liberal revolution from taking hold
• Neither liberal or conservatives could gain permanent upper hand
• Resulted in end of serfdom in Austria and Germany, universal male suffrage in France,
parliaments established in German states (although controlled by princes & aristocrats),
stimulated unification impulse in Prussia and Piedmont-Sardinia
• Last of the liberal revolutions dating back to the French Revolution
France: “February Revolution”
• Working class and liberals were unhappy with King Louis Philippe,
especially his minister Francois Guizot (who opposed electoral reform)
• King was forced to abdicate in February 1848
• Second French Republic
• Led by liberal Alphonse Lamartine (allied with bourgeoisie)
• Louis Blanc: socialist thinker who led working classes, demanded work for the
unemployed
• National Workshops: created to provide work for the unemployed
• Reforms:
• Abolished slavery in the empire
• 10 hr. workday in Paris
• Abolished the death penalty
• April elections for a new Constituent Assembly saw conflict between
Caricature of Louis Philippe liberals capitalists and socialists
“The Pear” • Workers sought a revolutionary republic after Blanc dropped from the
assembly
“To the Barricades…again!!!”
France: “June Days” Revolution
• Cause: the government closed the national workshops
• Marked beginning of class warfare in France between
bourgeoisie and the working class
• Workers sought war against poverty and redistribution of
income
• Barricades put up in the streets to oppose government forces
(Hugo’s Les Miserables based on this)
• General Cavaignac: assumed dictatorial powers and crushed
the revolt (10,000 dead)
• Temporary victory for conservatives
• Election of 1848: Louis Napoleon defeated Cavaignac and
became president of the Republic
• 1852: Louis Napoleon consolidated power and became
Emperor Napoleon III of the Second French Empire
Revolution Sweeps Italy
• Italian nationalists and liberals sought to
end foreign domination of Italy
• 1848: Lombardy and Venetia expelled Austrian
rulers
• Bourbon rulers in Sicily and Naples were
defeated (Kingdom of the Two Sicilies)
• Sardinia-Piedmont declared war on Austria
• Giuseppe Mazzini established the Roman
Republic in 1849
• He was protected by Giuseppe Garibaldi and his
forces
• Pope Pius IX was forced to flee Rome
Revolution Fails in Italy
• Failure of revolutions in Italy resulted in
conservative victory
• Austrian General Radetsky crushed Sardinia-
Piedmont; regained Lombardy and Venetia
• French troops took back the Papal States
• Causes for failure
• Rural people did not support the revolutions
• Revolutionaries were not united (as was also
the case in Germany)
• Fear of radicals among moderates
• Lack of leadership and administrative
experience among revolutionaries
Revolutions in the Austria Empire
• Habsburg empire was vulnerable to the
revolutionary challenges of nationalists
• Ethnic minorities sought nationalistic goals:
Hungarians, Slavs, Czechs, Italians, Serbs, Croats,
and others
• More non-Germans than Germans lived in the
empire
• Germans only 25% of the population Ferdinand I
of Austria
• Austrian government was reactionary; liberal
institutions were non-existent
• Social reliance on serfdom doomed the masses of
people to a life without hope
• “February Revolution” in France sparked
rebellion for liberal reforms
Austrian Empire in Hungarians Defeated
Revolt
• Hungarian demanded independence
• The Czechs in Bohemia as well as three northern
Italian provinces declared autonomy
• The Austrian Empire collapsed
• Students and workers staged mass demonstrations
• Metternich fled the country
• Hungarian armies drove within sight of Vienna
Louis
• Hungarians were ultimately defeated
• The Austrian army regrouped and gained aid of Slavic
Kossuth,
minorities who resisted Magyar Invasion Hungarian
• Austrian and Russian armies defeated the Hungarian (Magyar)
army
leader
• The revolution failed
• Revolutionary government failed to govern effectively
(as was the case in Italy)
• Habsburgs restored royal absolutism
Revolution in Austria Empire:
Bohemia & Northern Italy
• Prague Conference, 1848
• Developed notion of Austroslavism –
constitution and autonomy within
Habsburg Empire
• Pan-Slav Congress failed to unit Slavic
people in the empire
• Austrian military ultimately occupied
Bohemia and crushed the rebellion
• Italian Revolution against Austrian
rule
• Austrian General Radetsky crushed Sardinia-
Piedmont; regained Lombardy and Venetia
Revolution in the German States:
Frankfurt Parliament, 1848
• Revolutions in the German states inspired by
1848 revolutions in France
• Liberals demanded constitutional government and a
union or federation of German states
• Frankfurt Parliament
• Liberal, nationalist/romantic leaders called for
elections to a constituent assembly, from all states in
the German Confederation (Bund) for the purpose of
unifying the German states
• Sought war with Denmark to annex Schleswig &
Holstein
• In response, Prussia declared war on Denmark
• Frankfurt Parliament then presented constitution for
a united German federation
• Selected Prussian King Frederick William IV as emperor
Germania by Philip Veit
Revolution in the German States:
King Frederick William IV of Prussia Responds
• Prussian King Frederick William IV rejected the liberal
constitution
• Claimed “divine right” of kings
• Allegedly stated he would not “accept the crown from the gutter”
• He imposed a conservative constitution that guaranteed royal
control of the government (last until 1918)
• Failure of Prussia and Austria to support unification
movement resulted in its collapse
• Frederick William’s attempt to subsequently unify Germany
ended in failure
• Austria demanded Prussian allegiance to the Bund (that Austria
dominated)
• In effect, this would have compromised Prussian sovereignty
• Humiliation of Olmutz
• Prussia dropped the plan to unify Germany, leaving Austria as the
dominant German state in the Bund
• Prussia would seek revenge in 1866 (Austro-Prussian War)
Evaluation of the Revolutions of 1848
• Neither liberal or nationalist revolutionaries • Conservative landowners and
nor those of conservatism were able to peasants essentially thwarted the
maintain their dominance between 1789 revolutions
and 1848
• The middle classes, who led the
• Liberalism, nationalism, socialism, and revolutions, came to fear the
democracy made some gains but were radicalism of their working class allies
largely kept in check by conservatives (e.g. Louis Blanc in France)
• Many of the revolutions were spontaneous • Divisions among nationalist ethnic
movements that could not effectively groups in the Austrian Empire helped
maintain popular support destroy the revolutionary movements
• . against the Empire
• Revolutions were largely urban movements
Positive Aspects
of the Revolutions of 1848
• Universal male suffrage introduced in • The Revolutions of 1848 brought to a
France close the era of liberal revolutions that
had begun in France in 1789
• Serfdom remained abolished in Austria
and the German states • Reformers and revolutionaries learned
that planning and organization was
necessary for success
• Parliaments were established in Prussia
and other German states although
dominated by princes and aristocrats • Rational argument and revolution would
not always assure success
• Prussia and Piedmont-Sardinia emerged
with new energy to achieve unification • Age of Romanticism gave way to Age of
within the next two decades Realism