0% found this document useful (0 votes)
307 views14 pages

Revolutions of 1848

The 1848 revolutions spread across Europe influenced by nationalism, liberalism, and economic instability. Revolutions occurred in France, Italy, the German states, and the Austrian Empire seeking liberal reforms and national independence. However, the revolutions ultimately failed as conservatives regained power and moderate liberals feared radicalism. The revolutions established some reforms but did not achieve their ultimate goals of liberal governments and national unification.

Uploaded by

BW
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
307 views14 pages

Revolutions of 1848

The 1848 revolutions spread across Europe influenced by nationalism, liberalism, and economic instability. Revolutions occurred in France, Italy, the German states, and the Austrian Empire seeking liberal reforms and national independence. However, the revolutions ultimately failed as conservatives regained power and moderate liberals feared radicalism. The revolutions established some reforms but did not achieve their ultimate goals of liberal governments and national unification.

Uploaded by

BW
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 14

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

You might also like