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A LEVEL History M. Nichols, SCIE 2011 NAPOLEON BONAPARTE (1769-1821) 1 A LEVEL History M. Nichols, SCIE 2011 NAPOLEON I (1769-1821) 2 Napoleon Bonaparte’s Legacy Bonaparte is often seen in black or white terms as tyrant or emancipator. He certainly has more features of the former than the latter. Despite the many hagiographies that abound about the great man (Cronin’s being especially uncritical and nauseating) it is difficult to see him as other than a diminutive megalomaniac bent on the domination of Europe. But then, I’m not French. His legacy to Europe and France was, arguably, largely negative. His decade and a half of wars had cost millions of lives, resulted in numerous destroyed homes and villages, and had disastrous long-term, politicoeconomic consequences for the whole of Europe. His actions, arguably, aided the forces of reaction and he himself showed many reactionary and arch-conservative tendencies. He did introduce a number of positive and welcome changes to French society, but the Corsican also undermined and destroyed many of the improvements introduced by the French Revolution of 1789. Admittedly, successive Revolutionary governments had themselves undermined the more radical and foresighted reforms, but Napoleon would go on to eliminate even the few freedoms that had survived. In 1815, he had been welcomed back from exile in Elba, ironically because the Bourbons (Louis XVIII) who had replaced him, had behaved too much like him, including retaining conscription and his most recent tax increases. However, Napoleon did have some important socio-economic achievements. The best of Napoleon’s actions included: His introduction of the ‘Code Napoleon’ which brought in a more clearly defined series of laws which granted equality in the law; religious freedoms and trail by jury; it would be the system used for the basis of laws in many parts of the world (30 countries), including Spain and South America; Napoleon certainly regarded this as the most lasting achievement of his life; He always maintained the support of the main beneficiaries of the Revolution, the middle class, and confirmed the peasantry in possession of their new lands; his 1977 biographer, Jean Tulard, has pointed out that Napoleon was the first in a line of saviours supported by the bourgeoisie when it felt its interests vitally threatened; His religious toleration, which saw freedom of worship reestablished and a Concordat with the papacy, in 1801; Lee says he saw religion as useful “social cement”, but wished to avoid religious controversy; he used the Concordat to confirm government appointment of the clergy and minimised papal interference in France; his Organic Laws guaranteed freedom of worship for Protestants and others, but perhaps again only pragmatically: to minimise the power of the RC Church; A LEVEL History M. Nichols, SCIE 2011 3 He dismantled the discriminatory Jewish ghettoes in Rome and Venice, but arguably only to gain Jewish support for the Empire, than out of any genuine humanitarianism; His bringing in (1802) of a meritous award known as the Legion d’Honneur, which was available to be won by all classes of French society, was a genuinely popular move; it also usefully continued to create the impression that France was a meritocratic society; He set up more universities, schools and colleges and introduced the lycee, to be run on military lines; science and maths would become more prominent elements of the curriculum; George Rude has commented that by 1813 France probably had the best and most advanced education system, in Europe; Architectural changes were made that improved the appearance of Paris and the quality of life of Parisians (the Rue de Rivoli being one of the new streets that were built); elsewhere in France new roads, canals and bridges were constructed; For strictly pragmatic reasons, in order to keep the population quelled, Napoleon also ensured that bread prices were kept low; He reformed the currency and re-introduced a metallic base after the disastrous earlier experiments of the Revolution with paper money like assignats: between 1799 and 1814 some 75 million francs in gold and silver returned into circulation; he established the Bank of France in 1800 and re-introduced the decimal system; he encouraged industry by means of fairs and exhibitions and was determined to avoid the fiscal problems that had brought down the Bourbons. However, on the whole it is difficult to see Napoleon as other than a proto-fascist dictator in many ways and as such a model perhaps for those who came after him; certainly he had the pessimistic, essentially contemptuous (according to Chateaubriand) view of humanity, and says Lee, had much in common with the enlightened despots of Russia, Austria and Prussia; his methods had both elements similar to those of the ancien regime and even the 20th century, including a personality cult. Lee terms his rule one of “plebiscitary dictatorship”. Trotsky always associated Bonapartism with the capture of revolution by military reactionaries. Corelli Barnett sees him as an unprincipled adventurer whose ‘genius’ owes more to propaganda than to deeds. When one looks at Napoleon’s actions the reactionary element is certainly very obvious: He may have kept the departments system introduced in 1790, but he also continued the centralising policies begun by the Directory (1795-1799), which provided him with more effective power than the Bourbons had, stresses Lee; like the Roman Emperor, Augustus, he maintained the illusion of the republic, while having established a dictatorship. He discarded the ideas of liberty, equality and fraternity and preferred the aura of royal power and was even a believer in divine right! He adopted the title Le Grand in 1807; like later dictators he was fond of what Hitler called ‘the Big Lie’, and utilised the artistic skills of Ingres, Gericault, Gros and David, as well as the plebiscite, to give people the mirage of their involvement in politics; He neglected the urban proletariat favouring employers, though Lee points out that the Revolution itself had hardly favoured the poor very much either (having also banned unions, for example, in the A LEVEL History M. Nichols, SCIE 2011 4 Le Chapelier Law of 1791); in addition workers were now required to carry a pass-book stamped by their employers; In many ways, his economic thinking remained anachronistic, with a stress on agriculture rather than industry; he re-established the emphasis on regressive indirect taxes, reversing the Revolution’s emphasis on fairer, direct forms of taxation; Lee is adamant that Napoleon’s policies established precedents for later rulers like the German Chancellor Bethmann-Hollweg and Mussolini; Education at primary level remained neglected as it had been under the ancien regime prior to 1789; The number of lycees built ensured places at the 36 for only 9000 pupils, hardly ensuring a great influx of scientists and engineers; Parents were given almost biblical powers over their children, even being allowed to imprison them for up to a month; illegitimate children had few rights; Equally, husbands had enormous powers over their wives who were no longer allowed to sell, give away or mortgage property, and who Napoleon wanted to stay at home and, literally, stick to knitting; divorce became virtually impossible; Trials may have been public and jury-led and enshrined rights in the Code Napoleon, but Napoleon’s secret police under the arch political survivor, Joseph Fouche, ensured many opponents of the regime never came to trial and in 1810 the law was changed to allow people to be arrested without trial and even to be branded, as under the ancien regime; M. Latey says the absolute monarchs who re-established themselves after Napoleon’s fall learned from his methods how to keep their populations repressed; Free speech was not allowed, critics disappeared and newspapers were censored; Richard Cobb has even characterised his rule as: “France’s most appalling regime”; Feudal privileges and titles may have been abolished, but Napoleon then created a new aristocracy many of whom were from his own family and successful army marshals; he even made his mediocre brother, Joseph, King of Spain, precipitating the disastrous war in that country, in 1808 (Spain had been an ally previous to that); Napoleon even frequently behaved like the kings of old even reintroducing letters de cachet and of course crowning himself emperor in 1804; Noun Verb Adjective N A P O L E O N Bonaparte In A Typical Bombastic Pose A LEVEL History M. Nichols, SCIE 2011 Foreign Policy 5 Napoleon once said that “every treaty of peace means no more to me than a brief armistice”. He was intent on the expansion of the French empire already begun by the Revolutionary Wars (1792-1799). At its height the empire would consist of: 44 million subjects, 130 departments and half a million square miles. As with his domestic policy, the dominant leitmotif of his imperial policy was pragmatism. Napoleon was prepared to concede certain rights and privileges to his foreign vassals and allies, if they remained loyal. Exploited for taxes, customs duties, conscripts and prestige, there were basically three types of territory within the Empire. There were vassal states under direct French control, with a puppet ruler like Louis and Joseph Bonaparte (kings of Holland and Spain respectively); there were allied states genuinely sympathetic to France, like the Napoleonic creation of the Grand Duchy of Warsaw; and then there were the states who were nominal, uneasy allies: Austria, Denmark and Prussia. Napoleon promised the Poles national restoration in return for their military support. He effectively divided the continent of Europe into two spheres of influence, with his 1807 agreement at Tilsit with Alexander I of Russia, which allowed the latter to concentrate on his more traditional foes: Turkey and Sweden. As with his domestic policies, a strong element of authoritarianism was always apparent in Napoleon’s thinking. He wrote to his brother Jerome: “if you listen to popular opinion you will achieve nothing”. He allowed the Code Napoleon to be taken up in the empire not from any sense of enlightened thinking, but to fortify his power and control. Eventually though people began to realise how Napoleon was exploiting them. How he played with their national aspirations, creating the basis for a united Italy (Cisalpine Republic) and Germany (Confederation of the Rhine), but never intending them to develop into nation-states. The Grand Duchy of Warsaw was a useful buffer state between the French and Russian empires, and so on. Many of France’s vassals and allies of course realised quite quickly what was going on. In Italy, anti-Napoleonic, nationalist societies like the Carbonari and Federati were formed, especially in Francophobe Naples. Attitudes to the Jewish people really show what Napoleon was about. In areas where it suited him (Rome, Venice, Germany), ghettoes were dismantled and discrimination outlawed. However, in Poland discrimination continued, because he did not want to alienate the rabidly anti-Semitic and influential Polish Church. However, he cannot, at least, be blamed solely for his wars with GB, a nation traditionally hostile to France and whose colonial and mercantile ambitions, and worries about the balance of power in Europe, were always likely to make it an enemy of whatever regime happened to be ruling France. A LEVEL History M. Nichols, SCIE 2011 After his dazzling successes of 1805-7(the pinnacle of his power), he had introduced the Continental System, a form of economic warfare designed to cripple GB, by denying it trade. The Berlin Decree of 1806 declared GB to be ‘in a state of blockade’, ordering all goods coming to and from GB and her colonies (including the Turks and Caicos!) to be seized. Austria and Russia after Tilsit were forced to agree. 6 Though the system was haphazard, there were successes: From 1808 British trade did slump heavily; British desperation (the draconian Orders in Council) led to her seizure of neutral vessels and in turn a disastrous war with the US (the War of 1812); From 1810-1812, the blockade was fairly rigorously enforced, effecting British trade and commerce, and pushing up bread prices in GB; in 1811, massive riots in England led to fears of revolution; However, the Blockade was never anything but erratic and even illogical: For a man so obsessed with keeping bread prices down in his own country, Napoleon failed to see the importance of depriving GB of wheat. Incredibly, in 1810 over 80% of GB’s imports of wheat had come from France and her allies! Napoleon had missed a very real chance of starving his arch-enemy into submission; Napoleon did not uniformly enforce the blockade, selling licenses to enable French (and occasionally US) ships to trade with the enemy; GB with its unbeaten navy managed to find new markets for its goods anyway outside the continent: in Argentina, Brazil, Turkey; The blockade hurt France’s allies, as much as the British, if not more. Finding their trade declining and their ports stagnating they began to slip from Napoleon’s side; some like Portugal had always refuse to join the system anyway; George Rude is convinced that the Continental System began the chain of events that led to Napoleon’s downfall. By 1813, many of his former allies (Russia, Austria and Prussia) had joined together to fight against him. Yet for all its contradictions and hypocrisies, the Grand Empire had, according to Rude: “shaken the old social order and laid the foundations of the modern bourgeois state. For all his despotism, his arrogant unconcern for popular and national sovereignty, his dynastic ambitions and his increasing devotion to hierarchic order, the Emperor in his dealings with Europe still saw himself as the heir and soldier of the Revolution. And hesitantly and imperfectly as it might be, Europe continued to be revolutionised under the empire, as it had been under the Consulate and Directory”. But then, like the Consulate and the Directory, the Grand Empire had also betrayed the very principles of the original Revolution. Emperor Napoleon I A LEVEL History M. Nichols, SCIE 2011 Military Assessment 7 Napoleon’s military successes (he fought 40 battles in all) were equally erratic. He has a reputation as a great strategist and tactician who could defeat opponents from the Austrians and Russians to the Prussians. Certainly, he created a huge French empire on the continent of Europe. He was the famous victor of Marengo (1800), Austerlitz (1805) and Jena (1806). He also defeated the Russians at Friedland in 1807 and the Austrians at Wagram, in 1809. However, closer inspection of even ‘his’ victories suggests that the story of Napoleon’s military genius is a little more complicated. At Marengo, Michael Glover call’s his own share in the victory “dubious” and claims that it was Generals Desaix and Kellerman who really won the victory against the Austrians. His crossing of the Alps into Italy for the battle was says J.C. Herold, a triumph of the soldiers, the mules and General Berthier - not Napoleon. The Spanish, with British help, drove him out of the Iberian peninsula. Napoleon was never able to invade Britain nor did he ever beat the British in a major battle: on land or at sea. The French navy had never recovered from the Revolution, which had decimated its officer corps. Never able to defeat the Royal Navy or guarantee control of the English Channel for an invasion attempt, it could not enforce the Continental System (designed to destroy GB’s trade) either. His infamous Russian campaign of 1812 was an unmitigated disaster and saw the loss of the vast majority of the Grand Armee. Napoleon put the losses of the retreat down to bad weather and snow, but the reality was that poor planning, over-confidence and incompetence killed most of the troops, as Adam Zamoyski in his excellent recent book on 1812, has stressed. In the campaign of 1812, and others, Napoleon had no qualms about committing what today would be described as war crimes. He had slaughtered 2000 disarmed, Turkish prisoners in Syria, for example. Personal rivals and critics like the royal Duc D’Enghien were abducted and shot. The military historian, David Chandler, has called him perfectly, in my opinion: “a great bad man”. He was defeated at Waterloo after a number of crucial mistakes. He began the battle too late in the morning, allowing the Prussians to come nearer to helping Wellington; he placed the impetuous Marshall Ney in charge - and his tactics consisted of disastrously throwing infantry against fortified farms like Hougoumont and, even more catastrophically, attacking British and allied squares with massed cavalry charges. Napoleon was ill on the morning of the battle (18th June, 1815); Berthier, his most able general, was no longer at his side having died some years before; even the famous and normally steadfast Old Guard had fled, perhaps sick of dying for one man’s ambitions. Wright comments that at Waterloo he “lacked the energy and decisiveness he had revealed in 1814”. A LEVEL History M. Nichols, SCIE 2011 His wars had certainly been very costly to the French people. 5.5% of the French population (equivalent to 23% of the men of military age) became casualties, compared with 3.4% for the admittedly shorter WWI. 8 A LEVEL History M. Nichols, SCIE 2011 Key Words Navy Taxes Constitutional Russians England France Wellington Vindictive Cancer Continental Corsican 9 Napoleon was never regarded as an equal by the old dynasties of Europe – he was the _______ upstart of no breeding and dangerous ideas, associated too closely with the Revolution; the Queen of Prussia called him “the scum from hell” and the King of Sweden the really galling, “Monsieur Napoleon Bonaparte”! Napoleon was especially despised by the British who always refused any lasting peace with him; Napoleon in return resorted to the _______ System to try and destroy the ‘nation of shopkeepers’; though Lee points out how inconsistent he was in its enforcement, even trading with Britain! His attempts to invade GB never came to fruition and they remained his bete noire He was hated as a tyrant by the peoples of Europe, especially the ________ and the Spanish whose countries he invaded and pillaged; in the latter nation, the peasantry and nobility co-operated together against the French; while in Russia, he failed to free the serfs and reaped the bitter harvest of guerrilla war there as well. Napoleon himself always believed it was the ‘Spanish ulcer’ that had destroyed him WHY DID NAPOLEON FALL FROM POWER? By 1814, Napoleon had lost the goodwill of not only most of Europe, but of a lot of _______ itself Napoleon’s increasing arrogance and over-confidence caused him to make mistakes like the invasions of Spain and Russia; his victories saw not a spirit of reconciliation, but a ________ humiliation of vanquished foes; Lee says “he was not prepared to confer partnership” and so had to fight Austria five times, three of them caused by insupportable treaties he had imposed on the defeated Habsburgs; Talleyrand had urged caution, but been ignored; he imposed the harsh treaty of Tilsit on Prussia in 1807, which Lee says, had “exceptionally severe terms” Militarily, Napoleon made huge mistakes; the Peninsular War, e.g.; Lee refers to his “catastrophic blunder” in 1812 of invading Russia; he forced too many unwilling foreigners into the French army, thus in 1814 only 40% were Frenchmen! The allies were always going to be able to bring greater nos. to bear when they too adopted conscription; the allies also produced better commanders, e.g. Duke of ________ The coalition of 1813 between powers who hated each other shows just how much Napoleon was feared even more by them. Autocracies joined with ______________ monarchies to defeat their common enemy Napoleon was physically worn out by 1815. No longer young and dynamic, he was ill and soon to die in exile, of stomach ________ The Continental System failed and further alienated potential support for Napoleon, especially amongst the mercantile classes, and from 1810, Russia; Napoleon’s _____ was also inadequate to the task of blockade, having only 71 ships of the line in 1813 compared to GB’s 235. Lee stresses the importance of this disparity in his ultimate defeat Napoleon was a man without humility or perspective. On his defeat at Waterloo, he expected the British to allow him to live a comfortable existence in __________, as a country gentleman! Napoleon had betrayed the principles of the Revolution. Many in Europe might have supported him otherwise. At home, royalist & Jacobin opponents were active, sick of his ________ & wars A LEVEL History M. Nichols, SCIE 2011 NAPOLEON – EMANCIPATOR OR TYRANT? 10 Was I a reactionary or a revolutionary? GROUP/AREA 1. Bonaparte Family 2. Parisians 3. Ordinary male citizens 4. Opponents 5. Journalists 6. Husbands 7. Wives 8. Children 9. Conscripts 10. The Nobility 11. Christians 12. The Spanish ACTION A. Made them learn more maths, science and do military training; discriminated against, if they were illegitimate offspring; B. Newspapers were censored and they were not allowed to print what they wanted to say C. Forced to join the army, often when still boys; many were killed in Napoleon’s numerous wars D. Told to do as they were told; had few rights, and ordered to stick to knitting by a misogynistic Napoleon E. Saw their city improved and modernised, and become the centre of a continental empire F. Were now allowed to vote, but there were never any free and fair elections G. Were rounded up by Fouquet’s secret police, and often tortured and executed without trial H. Allowed to practise their beliefs unhindered I. Had total control in their household, where their word was law J. Given responsibility, titles and wealth, little of which was deserved or for which they were competent K. Invaded, treated harshly, but eventually won their freedom through a ruthless guerrilla warfare L. Titles were restored, and France now had again what the Revolution had previously abolished Questions: 1. What groups in society did well out of Napoleon’s changes? …………………………………………………………………………………... 2. Which groups did not do so well? ………………………………………………………………………………….. 3. In what ways was Napoleon revolutionary? ………………………………………………………………………………….. 4. In what ways was Napoleon reactionary? ………………………………………………………………………………….. 5. What is your overall opinion of Napoleon’s reforms? ………………………………………………………………………………… A LEVEL History M. Nichols, SCIE 2011 1769 11 Key Events: Napoleon Born in Ajaccio, Corsica (a French island only since 1768). Son of a petty-noble, a Genoese lawyer. 1785 Graduates from the École Militaire in Paris. Without the right blood never would have gained entry. 1793 Fights as an artillery lieutenant against the British at Toulon, where he makes his name. 1795 Saves Paris from a royalist mob determined to bring down the National Convention and the Republic, and becomes a general. 1796 Marries the politically-connected Joséphine de Beauharnais, formerly the mistress of the Directory’s Barras. Barras makes him commander of the French army in Italy, which he conquers. 1798 Conquers Egypt. 1799 Fails to conquer Syria, and the British reverse his gains in Egypt. Returns to France (leaving his troops to die of disease and neglect in the deserts) . November 9-10. He and his colleagues seize power in a coup d’état and establish the Consulate. Napoleon is First Consul, and shares power with two others, but in reality he is master of France. 1800 Battle of Marengo. Austrians defeated, in one of Napoleon’s greatest victories. Consolidates territorial gains in northern Italy, and establishes France’s borders. Internal reforms codify rights gained during the French Revolution (the Code Napoléon). 1802 Made himself Consul for life. 1804 Crowned himself Emperor. 1805 Battle of Austerlitz. Napoleon decisively defeats an alliance of Austrian and Russian forces. 1806 Makes his brothers kings of Holland and Naples, establishes the Confederation of the Rhine (most of modern Germany), of which he is Protector, and enters Warsaw, effectively controlling Poland. Imposes the Continental blockade, closing Europe to British trade, in an attempt to bankrupt Great Britain. 1807 Seizes Portugal. 1808 Makes his brother Joseph King of Spain. The Peninsular War begins and lasts five years, with British troops allied with the Spanish against Napoleon. 1809 Defeats Austria again at the Battle of Wagram, and annexes the Illyrian provinces. 1810 The Empire reaches its greatest extent. Napoleon divorces Josephine, in favour of MarieLouise, the daughter of the Austrian Emperor who gives him a son. 1812 Napoleon begins his unsuccessful invasion of Russia. After the disastrous retreat from Moscow all Europe unites against him. 1813 Battle of the Nations at Leipzig further weakens the French army 1814 Napoleon abdicates unconditionally and goes into exile on the island of Elba, in the Mediterranean. 1815 Escapes from Elba, and marches on Paris. The French rally to him, and the allies, Britain and Prussia, join to crush him. He is defeated at the Battle of Waterloo on June 18, and later exiled to St. Helena where he writes his memoirs and places a positive spin on his actions. 1821 Dies, on May 5. His body is taken to Paris and buried in state a number of years later (1840). His admirer, Hitler, later places his son, Napoleon II, next to him. A LEVEL History M. Nichols, SCIE 2011 THE CONGRESS SYSTEM (1814-1815) 12 A LEVEL History M. Nichols, SCIE 2011 Europe in 1815 13 The Europe Napoleon left for his rat-infested island exile of St. Helena had 200 million people (today c.730 million) in 1815, and was, in many ways, essentially still a medieval society. The vast majority of Europeans worked on the land; in Russia up until 1861 they were even still serfs! What is a serf? Industrialisation was growing, but even in GB, most people still earned a living from the land (as opposed to about 2% today). The dominant institutions then were: monarchies; aristocracies & the Church and they wished to maintain the status quo. Napoleon Bonaparte was the prime villain, because he seemed to threaten such institutions (in reality Napoleon, the man who crowned himself emperor in 1804, was himself a fan of the status quo in many ways). The ruling class was, therefore, essentially conservative and reactionary. Plutocracy still dominated societies and democracy was a long way off. What does ‘plutocracy’, ‘conservative’, ‘reactionary’ and ‘democracy’ mean? However, things were changing; nationalism was growing and the peoples of Europe were starting to think of their rights, as much as their duties. Liberalism was growing. Romanticism, with its expression of feeling and emotion, was replacing the staid rationalism of the 18th century. Ludwig van Beethoven symbolising the new age and its political/social ambitions, with his powerful, free-spirited and original scores. The Peace settlements of 1814 –1815 (The Congress of Vienna) When Bonaparte was first defeated in May 1814, the First Treaty of Paris treated the French leniently: no army of occupation; no indemnity; no seizure of French colonies. The unpopular Bourbon monarchy of the obese Louis XVIII was, however, re-imposed on the French people. Russia and Prussia were more interested in grabbing territory (the former, Poland, the latter, Saxony). However, Napoleon’s return (the so-called ‘Hundred Days’) and the widespread support he accrued from the French people, meant the second settlement, decided by the Congress of Vienna, would be far harsher. The Second Treaty of Paris (November 1815) stated that: French frontiers would go back to 1790, i.e., they were not to keep any of their conquests; An indemnity of 700 million francs was imposed; An army of occupation was imposed for a period of at least 3 years; Those in attendance from the four major powers were: Tsar Alexander I of Russia; Prince Metternich of Austria; Viscount Castlereagh & Duke of Wellington of GB; Prince Hardenberg of Prussia; A LEVEL History M. Nichols, SCIE 2011 14 They all basically wanted a conservative settlement and a lasting peace, and were in general agreement with each other. Poland was an area of contention, with some parts going to Prussia and Austria, and a large eastern slice to Russia. The Poles retained some independence only in the free city of Kracow. Prussia received large parts of Saxony, the Rhineland and even parts of Swedish territory. At this stage Prussia was still pro-Russian. The Russians, besides the kingdom of Poland, were also confirmed in possession of Finland. The Austrians, under the arch-conservative Prince Metternich, were opposed to any concessions to Liberalism and Nationalism and wished to re-assert their control over the Italian states. The British retained their imperialistic conquests from the French and Dutch, scattered all over the globe. In continental terms, they were interested in keeping a strong Austria and Prussia in Central Europe to counterbalance Russia in the east and France in the west. Austria, Prussia and Russia formed a Holy Alliance, basically to safeguard the status quo. Even the conservative British found this too reactionary a step, however, and refused to join. Problems in areas like the Balkans, where the interest of various empires came into conflict, also remained unresolved. The peoples of all these territories were, of course, not consulted. The major powers were more interested in maintaining a balance of power in Europe than anything else. As Watson comments: “liberal and nationalist aspirations had little influence on the statesmen at Vienna”. Instead their aims can be summarised as: 1. Retaining the balance of power, with no single power able to dominate others, but as Dakin has commented, this concept paradoxically and dangerously meant different things to different nations; 2. A lasting peace after the 20 years of conflict that had just occurred; 3. Compensation was of interest to the avaricious states: Holland would get Belgium; Austria parts of Italy, etc. 4. Legitimacy, as proposed by Talleyrand, in reality meant it was applied, as Seaman stresses, only really in the interest of the French Bourbons and was ignored elsewhere like Poland, Norway et al; 5. Containment involved the principle of buffer states along the French border; it is one of the reasons the Grand Duchy of Luxemburg, along with Andorra, Liechtenstein, etc. survive today, of course; What is historiography? How should we use it? Is it important? A LEVEL History M. Nichols, SCIE 2011 15 The Congress did have a no. of positive outcomes though: + The French were represented at the Congress by Talleyrand. He proposed the principle of legitimacy that all rightful rulers should be restored to their thrones, and was keen to check the ambitions of Russia in Poland, and those of Prussia generally; + Italy’s chaotic political system was rationalised - to an extent; + Germany’s many states were reduced to 39 and tied together in a loose confederation (compare this to the 365 in 1500); + minority peoples, like the Genoese, were protected - to a degree; + free navigation of Europe’s waterways was allowed; + the slave trade was condemned; Watson believes the statesmen of the Congress could “justifiably have claimed that they had brought to Europe the peace at which they aimed”, but admits that the overall terms were “fundamentally conservative”, and helped to lead to decades of future conflict. Seaman is equally scathing of Vienna, while Nicolson is more positive, saying it helped to preserve peace for 40 years. I tend to agree with Webster and see it as an expedient product of its time, with very little foresight involved. Assignment Compare and Contrast the terms of the Congress of Vienna 1815 with those of the Paris Treaties in 1919. Theme Economics Territorial Military Political Vienna Versailles A LEVEL History M. Nichols, SCIE 2011 16 Empathy Exercise What do you think each of these men, representing some of the major powers, would have thought about the terms of the Congress of Vienna? “As GB’s representative I feel… “France says… “As autocrat of Russia… A LEVEL History M. Nichols, SCIE 2011 17 1848 –YEAR OF REVOLUTIONS A LEVEL History M. Nichols, SCIE 2011 The Revolutions of 1848 18 The famous revolts of 1848 (‘The Year of Revolutions’) were largely a miserable failure. However, they had important longer term consequences. The Habsburg Empire against which they were largely, but not solely, directed would survive for another 70 years. Only GB and Russia would be largely unaffected by the revolts of that momentous year. Why do you think this was so? The Long Term Causes These resulted from the events of 1815-1846 and included: Population growth, which a still agrarian Europe couldn’t sustain, especially in times of acute poor harvests; Industrialisation resulted in urban over-crowding. Towns like Lille in France saw an average age of death of 32; epidemics of cholera ravaged France in the 1830s and 1847-9; strikes, riots, increased crime, alcoholism were all serious problems; mechanisation of industry displaced skilled artisans who were often replaced by unskilled migrants from the countryside; of course, conditions were just as bad in England and Russia, but no revolutions would result there; The Congress system was being increasingly challenged as reactionary and out-moded; liberalism was developing throughout Europe as the middle class became more numerous and tired of the restrictions placed on their lives; on top of this, many of these people were also nationalists tired of being ruled by foreign and detached dynasties, especially that in Vienna; The Short Term Causes The food crisis. After 1845, a severe crisis developed which helped to plunge Europe into revolt. Cereal and potato harvests failed in the mid 1840s, so in Hamburg grain prices rose by 60% and potato prices in parts of Germany by 135%. These were not prices a man with a large family on a subsistence wage could absorb, given they already had to spent 70% of their income on food. In 1845-7 bread riots resulted, the crisis compounding the long-term problems; The financial crisis which began after 1845 forced many businesses into bankruptcy after the rise in food prices saw other manufacturers hit. The withdrawal of credit by British capital severely cut borrowing. Overproduction was also a problem as it was to be in the US in the late 1920s. Food hikes may have largely affected the working classes, but business problems affected the middle class who now made common ground with the ‘lower classes’. Events in France Opposition in France to the rule of the conservative King Louis-Philippe was sharpened by the economic crisis of 1845 onwards. Scandals and financial corruption had besmirched the reputation of the ruling class, especially as the majority of the middle class were excluded from being A LEVEL History M. Nichols, SCIE 2011 19 allowed to vote by a stringent 200 franc tax qualification. The incorrigible French King refused to compromise with the demands of the disenfranchised who became increasingly desperate and radical. Demonstrators were shot by royal troops and the always volatile Parisian population, who also happened to be starving, created barricades, aided by the militia. In late February, the King abdicated. The 2nd French Republic would last only 4 years and like the 1st be replaced by a Bonapartist dictatorship. The aspirations of the working and middle classes were too disparate to be hopeful for a prolonged co-operation. The consequent Provisional Government has been described by Anthony Wood as “an indigestible amalgam of two utterly different political groups”. Stop-gap social measures by the PG were designed to temporarily placate the working class. The peasants were increasingly taxed to try and solve the state’s continuing fiscal difficulties. Universal male suffrage, however, was a genuinely radical move and the electorate jumped from a pathetic 250 000 to 9 000 000! Subsequent elections saw the disaffected, but essentially ignorant and easily influenced peasantry voting for conservative and moderate, Church-advocated candidates. The Constituent Assembly was thus highly biased in favour of the right and this would create a potential for further conflict between them and the urban masses. Barricades were once again erected in Paris, but this time the government proved competent and General Cavaignac cleared the streets during the June Days. 3000 rioters were killed; 12 000 arrested, of whom 4000 were deported. Wilmot states that “the June Days signalled the triumph of reaction over reform”. In December, the nephew of the Corsican tyrant, Louis Napoleon Bonaparte, was elected President of a republic he would then set about dismantling. What are the similarities between the events of 1848 and those of 1789? The Habsburg Empire The events of the French February Revolution were inspiration to the radicals within the boundaries of the Habsburg Empire. In the latter, the situation was made even more volatile by the added dimension of racial tension between the disparate members of the Empire. In Hungary, the Magyar nationalist Lajos Kossuth helped to pass the ‘March Laws’, a demand for Hungarian independence from Vienna, but also containing radical social provisions and examples of Magyar chauvinism and territorial ambition. Crisis in the imperial capital, which culminated in the fall of that arch-reactionary Metternich from power, saw Hungary gain its independence and a constitution, with Kossuth its virtual dictator. In Austria itself, Metternich had been got rid of by a radical mob demanding social and political change. The Emperor Ferdinand was forced to accept a constitution and to hold elections, before being driven out of Vienna, in May. In Czech Bohemia, similar nationalist and liberal demands to those of Hungary resulted in the desperate Emperor accepting the liberal demands and agreeing to set up a parliament for the Czechs in Prague. A LEVEL History M. Nichols, SCIE 2011 20 Northern Italy saw the Austrians being driven out by Milanese protesters demanding liberal reforms and improved economic conditions, for which the absence of Austrian troops was thought essential. In Venice, Daniel Manin helped create an independent Venetian republic. Piedmont, Lombardy and Venetia all declared war on Austria, in March. However, ultimately the revolutions of 1848 were a failure, as the Habsburg monarchy was able to re-establish itself by 1849. How? Nationalities turned on each other. In Bohemia, Czechs and Germans clashed; in Hungary, pro –Imperial Croats and Transylvanians fought with nationalist Magyars. The Slavic Czechs even came to admit that they needed the protection of the Habsburg monarchy against the designs of the Germans for a Greater German Reich; in Italy, the Pope refused to support Piedmont against Austria and was aided by the pro-Catholic French; As in France, there were antagonisms between those who wanted moderate constitutional reform and those who wanted social changes and a republic established. This happened in Austria and Northern Italy, where hopes for further change withered away and Marshall Radetsky’s troops pounced; in Italy, local insularity and parochialism had complicated matters; The revolutionaries had made mistakes like allowing the Emperor to leave Vienna for Innsbruck where he set about planning the counter-revolution; they had also abolished serfdom, one of their most lasting achievements, but paradoxically also a cause of their defeat as the conservative peasantry, now they were free, were no longer so interested in supporting radical revolts; Military might was used indiscriminately and ruthlessly against the rebels; in Prague a mere 1200 rioters (out of a population of 100 000) were the excuse needed for General Windischgratz to bombard the city for 5 days; Radetsky’s Austrians defeated the Italians at pitched battles like Custozza and Novara, in Italy; in Vienna, General Windischgratz again bombarded a city to clear its streets during the ‘October Rising’; thousands were killed, but not before they had lynched a government minister (hardly likely to endear revolution to the essentially law-abiding middle classes!); Governor Jellacic in Hungary, as a Croat, could be guaranteed to be ruthless with his Magyar foes; the army in fact, officered by the nobility were, says Wilmot, “solid and experienced” and like their later 20th century compatriots, always obeyed orders; the Hungarians fought longest and hardest, but were eventually defeated by the ruthless General Haynau, in August 1849; Russia’s autocratic and reactionary Tsar, Nicholas I, had offered help to his fellow emperor worried that upstarts like the Hungarians might give ideas to his own subject peoples, like the Poles; the Russians intervened on the side of the Austrians, but says Wilmot not decisively so; Nicholas I A LEVEL History M. Nichols, SCIE 2011 21 NATIONALISM IN ITALY – THE RISORGIMENTO Guiseppe Garibaldi A LEVEL History M. Nichols, SCIE 2011 Italy Before and During the Risorgimento 22 A LEVEL History M. Nichols, SCIE 2011 The Creation of Italy and Germany 23 A. The Risorgimento (1859-61 & 1866 & 1870) Italy, as a country, was nothing more than a ‘geographical expression’ in Metternich’s cynical phrase, prior to the 1860s. Admittedly, there was an Italian language and a shared culture stemming from the writings of Dante, Petrarch and Boccaccio to the operas of Rossini, Donizetti and Verdi (himself something of an arch Italian nationalist). However, Italy was divided into a no. of states, including kingdoms ruled over by foreign dynasties, like the Bourbons who controlled Naples and the Habsburgs who controlled Venetia. The Papacy did not help matters, as they were opposed to unification and resented any infringement on their secular powers. Pius IX was especially hostile. While foreign powers, like the Austrians and the French, carved off large slices for their empires, the Congress system had largely confirmed the status quo in Italy, assigning the idea of a united Italy to the realms of “political fantasy” according to Wilmot and allotting its provinces (Parma, Modena, Tuscany, the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies) to various scions of the House of Habsburg. There were radical nationalist groups like the Neapolitan Carbonari, but they were largely still too insular and ineffective to achieve independence for the whole of Italy. Between 1820 and 1831 there were a number of ineffectual, regionalised uprisings. Italians demonstrated they were still too disorganised and too parochial to obtain independence for their peninsula from the ruthless and imperialistic Austrians. In fact, Italy was not created by some popular nationalist up-rising of its people, but as Watson says, by “rather narrow interest groups”. He even claims that basically “Piedmont-Sardinia took over the rest of Italy” and that Italy (and even more so Germany) was the creation of power politics. However, even the cynical Watson admits there was some role to be played by men like Mazzini and the voice of the people - and by Garibaldi’s famous 1100 red-shirts (‘The Thousand’) who were to conquer the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies. The university educated, quiet and gentle middle class Giuseppe Mazzini, according to Wilmot, was “probably the most dedicated Italian revolutionary of his time”. (He was also not unique and came in along line of other nationalist thinkers like the pro-papal Vincenzo Gioberti and the pro-Piedmontese democrat Cesare Balbo). Mazzini had joined the nationalist Carbonari, but abandoned them as being too ineffectual. He appealed to all Italians, not just to the middle class, but was no class warrior, and refused to support social reforms, being quite prepared to ignore the working class and peasantry if it gained him the support of the rich and powerful for a unified Italy. He did though want a republican, secular, democratic, free Italy and even envisaged a United States of Europe. His methods involved violent insurrection and propaganda, and in 1831 he founded Young Italy (GI) to promote his goals. He had established the short-lived Roman Republic in 1849, but on its collapse he fled abroad, the rest of his life somewhat of an anti-climax. He ultimately failed to see his hopes for an Italian republic founded and died a disappointed man in 1872. Andrina Stiles A LEVEL History M. Nichols, SCIE 2011 24 has commented that Mazzini ideas were “too intellectual, too idealistic and too impractical to be the real basis for revolution”. He was always appreciated more by foreigners than by his fellow Italians in life - and even after his death. Giuseppe Garibaldi was also a genuine radical and revolutionary, “whose charisma was overwhelming” (Stiles). An auto-didact and man of action (he had even tried piracy for a while), from a humble background, he had helped Uruguay gain its independence from Argentina, fought in Brazil and joined Mazzini’s Young Italy (GI) movement. He took part in the 1848 campaigns against the Austrians, becoming a royalist. In 1849, he held Mazzini’s Roman Republic against the French for 30 days, but being defeated barely escaped from Italy with his life, having lost his wife on the retreat, the Austrians hot on his tail. After a period of exile in the USA, he returned to Italy in 1854, split with the ardently republican Mazzini and pragmatically threw in his lot with Cavour and Victor Emmanuel II. His support for the monarchy helped to increase its prestige. During 1859-61 he and his Red Shirts would defeat the Austrians and Neapolitans in battle and add Sicily, Naples and the rest of il mezzogiorno to the fledgling state. He was also prepared to ignore, like Mazzini, the desires of the poor, in favour of national ambitions. His determination to add Rome to the new nation-state brought him into conflict with his King who defeated and wounded him in battle, in 1862. In 1867, he tried again to annexe Rome, but was defeated by a combined Franco-Papal force. He also fought for the French against the Prussians in 1870-71 and became attracted to socialism in his later years, dying in 1882. The real driving force behind the movement to full independence, however, was not the romantic and dynamic Garibaldi, but a Turin politician and journalist, Count Camillo de Cavour. Cavour was liberal, ambitious, energetic and able. He was a pragmatic moderniser, who admired GB’s methods and had helped turn Piedmont into Italy’s most sophisticated state. As a secularist, Cavour believed the RC Church should stay out of politics and the law. In all this, Cavour was supported by his rather reactionary, but politically astute king, Victor Emmanuel II. Piedmont-Sardinia’s involvement in the Crimean War (1854-56) had given the state increased credibility (showing to GB and France that, unlike Austria, it could be trusted to support them), and also increased further its ambitions. Piedmont had further credibility because it had a constitution (in reality this meant little as prior to Cavour the kingdom was backward, absolutist and highly Cathoilic); because it had fought two wars against the Austrians (1848-9 under its king, the revered Charles Albert)) and because it seemed to the middle classes to a respecter of property. The canny Cavour had also introduced a number of moderate political and economic reforms making it even more attractive to liberals and nationalists. Watson suggests that Cavour’s ambitions resulted from his naked opportunism and that the unification of Italy was not so much his goal, but rather what was good for himself and his state, a view shared by S. J. Lee. To this end, he allied with the French, under that archconspirator Napoleon III, against their common Austrian enemy. Their A LEVEL History M. Nichols, SCIE 2011 25 aim, at this stage, seemed merely to carve up northern Italy between them, Napoleon envisaging a Northern Italian kingdom which would be both a buffer and an ally in the struggle between France and Austria. Two awful battles (Magenta and Solferino) in June 1859, helped to free part of northern Italy from the Austrians. Then Austria and France came to an agreement (at the peace of Villafranca) to basically ensure the status quo in Italy continued. However, Piedmont-Sardinia continued to grow, helped by a series of plebiscites, and Cavour seemed placated by this. However in return for these new additions to Piedmont, Savoy and Nice were given to France (and still are French today), suggesting Italian unification was not Cavour’s over-riding priority (he was never particularly bothered by the French betrayal at Villafranca either). Meanwhile in the south of Italy (il mezzogiorno) Giuseppe Garibaldi, a true radical patriot (and whom Stiles says: “represented the nonintellectual active approach to Italian unity”), was helping the Sicilians in their struggle against a cruel Bourbon king. The Sicilians were fighting, however, as much against poverty and oppression as for a united homeland. Garibaldi’s Thousand (using both the regular and guerrilla tactics at which he excelled) were successful in Sicily and then crossed to Naples, winning the battle of Calatafimi against the Neapolitan forces in 1859. Cavour though was alarmed by his success, as it did not promise to do much for Piedmont or its king. In the end though, he manoeuvred an agreement, which created an alliance between Piedmont and Garibaldi’s forces, and avoiding a civil war. Much of Italy was, therefore, united by 1860, under Victor Emmanuel as its king. One of the king’s first acts was to dismiss Garibaldi. However, the Pope was still opposed to unification, and Venetia remained outside the kingdom of Italy (until Prussia’s defeat of France, in 1870). Cavour’s premature and unfortunate death in 1861, increased the difficulties. Rome was safe, because it was protected by Napoleon III, who was worried about domestic, French Roman Catholic opinion. Venetia became Italian when Prussia went to war with Austria (the occupying power) and in return for Italian troops, agreed to help them drive the Austrians out of La Serenissima. In this way, the Prussian chancellor, Otto von Bismarck, helped to create a more united Italy by the Treaty of Prague in 1866. The outbreak of the Franco-Prussian War in 1870, forced Napoleon III to withdraw his troops from Rome, which left it open to seizure by the nationalists (the fact that Cavour had not threatened Roman independence suggests, as Wood points out, the triumph of realpolitik over romanticism). The reactionary Pope, Pius IX, retreated into the Vatican. Sore losers to the end, the Popes banned Catholics from voting in Italian elections until 1904, and didn’t officially recognise the Italian state until the Lateran Treaties of 1929. Wood emphasises that the “key to [Cavour’s] success had been careful diplomatic preparation based on the realisation of the need for military assistance from France, rather than reliance upon a general A LEVEL History M. Nichols, SCIE 2011 revolutionary situation”. He also says Cavour was aided by “extraordinary good luck”. 26 The more radical Garibaldi and Mazzini, however, were not happy with the new Italy and remained in exile. Mazzini had wanted a republic (which was not established until 1946). Instead, Italy had a rather conservative monarchy united on Piedmontese terms. Some of the more radical nationalists were also annoyed that not all Italian speaking areas had been included (Fiume, South Tyrol, Trieste, Istria, etc.), a bone of contention that would crop up again in the 20th century, especially under Mussolini. The Role of Napoleon III Napoleon had helped drive the Austrians out of Northern Italy in 1859, which Piedmont could not have done alone. L.C. B. Seaman is convinced of Napoleon’s crucial role, commenting that: “he made Italian freedom possible. Without him neither Cavour nor Garibaldi could have united Italy”. The reality is more complex. Napoleon had crushed the nascent Roman Republic in 1849; he had at the famous Plombieres meeting of 1858, tried to keep Italy weak and disunited. At the peace of Villafranca in 1859, he had quite cheerfully allowed Austria to retain Venetia, and in 1860 had taken possession of Nice (where Garibaldi had been born) and Savoy. In 1866, he did manage to hand over Venetia to Italy (under Prussian pressure), but was still distrusted for keeping French troops in Rome until 1870. GB’s role in the Risorgimento GB played a less important role in helping to achieve Italian unification than say France or even Prussia. However, a number of British actions were designed to help Italy achieve independence and unity, if only out of British self-interest. GB was delighted with Piedmont’s entry into the Crimean War (1854-56), because it promised to placate a much more powerful Austria, the argument being that with the greatest thorn in her side involved in the Crimea, Austria would also be able to send troops to support the FrancoBritish and Turkish efforts against the Russians. In the event, Austria remained neutral and this rather peeved the French and British; while the fact that Austria even considered intervention in the first place deepened Russian mistrust, so further weakening Austria’s position in Italy. Britain hoped a united Italy or at least a united northern Italy would counterbalance French influence in the region; while an ejection of Austria would allow the latter to concentrate its defences against Russia, a country GB was increasingly suspicious of. Such Machiavellian schemes were typical of the period, with the British Royal Navy, for instance, safeguarding Garibaldi’s invasion of Sicily, in order to try and guarantee his success and so weaken Austria. A LEVEL History M. Nichols, SCIE 2011 GB also pressured Napoleon III to allow a stronger and more unified Italy than he really envisaged. 27 Ultimately, of course, GB did not create Italy, but its passive and active support was one of the factors which helped. Pope Pius IX – Reactionary who bitterly opposed the Risorgimento A LEVEL History M. Nichols, SCIE 2011 28 Empathy Exercise What do you think each of these major figures really thought about the risorgimento? “As King of Italy… “Io sono… “Mein Gott… A LEVEL History M. Nichols, SCIE 2011 COMPARE AND CONTRAST THE THREE GREAT ITALIAN PATRIOTS MAZZINI Background Character Motivation & Aims Methods Successes Failures CAVOUR 29 GARIBALDI A LEVEL History M. Nichols, SCIE 2011 THE UNIFICATION OF GERMANY 30 A LEVEL History M. Nichols, SCIE 2011 B.The Unification of Germany (1870) 31 Demands for German unification had been growing for decades before the mid-19th century. Many Germans even looked as far back to Charlemagne and other Holy Roman Emperors, like Frederick Barbarossa, for inspiration. In fact, many Germans argued that German myths and German culture and language made them a uniquely privileged race. Others, rather more practically, saw the business opportunities a united Germany could bring. The current loose confederation of 39 states and 23 million people, established by Napoleon and then the Congress of Vienna, hardly aided the free flow of trade given the diversity of customs barriers and tariffs in force. German Protestants also wanted a German state to counterbalance Catholic, Habsburg Austria; while German liberals envisioned a modern, centralised state and a representative government similar to that of the USA’s or even GB’s. Edward Crankshaw has commented that the real motivation for unification was related to the “needs of industry and trade which turned out to be the critical factor”. The creation of the Zollverein or Customs Union by Prussia had already created conditions for free trade and close economic co-operation between the German states. Northern states especially saw fiscal benefits, therefore, in being linked in closer ties with Prussia. Crankshaw, of course, emphasises it was industry and the industrial revolution that was the driving force behind unification. Equally, however, many Germans (perhaps the majority) opposed or were, at best, indifferent to unification. Kingdoms like Hanover and Bavaria wished to retain their independence; as did proud centres of commerce like Frankfurt (it is perhaps indicative that its mayor hanged himself when the city was eventually taken over, in effect, by Prussia in 1866). People were used to their own state’s ways of doing things, and as to who conscripted your son or demanded your taxes did it really make any difference whether it was Germany or BadenWurttemburg? Besides these domestic opponents there were also foreign barriers. Conservatives thought the destruction of the states system might open the door to revolution or antagonise the great powers of Europe and so lead to outside intervention. Austria was determined that Germany would stay dis-united, and France was equally determined to ensure there would be no disruption of the balance of power in Europe. (GB welcomed a counter-balance to France). The foundations for a united Germany lay in the militaristic state of Prussia. The King of Prussia, Wilhelm I, relied upon the advice of a Count Otto von Bismarck to achieve his goals – and he would be fundamental. The young Otto von Bismarck A LEVEL History M. Nichols, SCIE 2011 32 Bismarck, born in 1815, was of the junker class, a Protestant and a staunch royalist, Prussian nationalist. A sensualist, he was a ruthless, unscrupulous and vindictive individual, though not without wit and charm. An able linguist (in English, French and Russian), university educated, he married in his early thirties and became a devoted (if faithless) husband and father. He was at a loss what to do in life until he entered Prussian politics, being elected to the Prussian Diet in 1847. He would be a politician for the next 43 years and in Stiles and Farmer’s phrase: “an unconventional and unpredictable maverick” and a flexible pragmatist. Much more conservative than his contemporary Cavour, he nevertheless had similarities with the ambitious Piedmontese politician. Showalter, in fact, says he was “not a German nationalist, but a Prussian patriot” (views echoed by Stiles and Farmer); while Wood emphasises his contradictions and says he was a conservative, with a revolutionary foreign policy agenda. He had learnt of the power of nationalism from the 1848 revolutions. His posting as Prussian ambassador to Russia in 1859, convinced him of the need to keep that giant of an empire at arms length. When the king had trouble with the National Assembly (landtag), it was the able politician Bismarck who managed to over-awe them into accepting higher taxes to pay for a bigger army and a longer conscription period. He censored critical newspapers, and ignored criticism from the National Assembly. His loyalty was to his king and no-one else. Bismarck had a highly pragmatic, but also opportunistic approach to politics. This realpolitik, based on a ruthless principle of ‘blood and iron’, saw the Russians as allies, given their common interests in subjugating Poland; and the Austrians and French as enemies, because they opposed Prussian expansion. The Poles under Prussian rule did as they were told, and if they stepped out of line were ruthlessly persecuted. The British (more concerned with their empire than Europe anyway) were potential allies against Napoleon III, but otherwise were largely ignored. War to Bismarck, was also a means of unifying the Prussian people and distracting from internal problems, a method also used later, perhaps, by Wilhelm II in 1914. Was Bismarck an opportunist or did he plan unification from the beginning of his career? IT WAS A PLAN! Bismarck claimed in his self-aggrandising memoirs, written in the 1890s, and to politicians like the British PM, Disraeli, to have always had definite goals of unification Bismarck probably had broad outlines of what he planned, but not specific plans IT WAS PURE OPPORTUNISM! To A.J.P. Taylor Bismarck was merely an opportunist reacting to events as they happened, taking calculated risks and benefiting from his opponents mistakes Bismarck was not primarily a German patriot or nationalist. His loyalty was to the Prussian monarchy and not to the German people A LEVEL History M. Nichols, SCIE 2011 How Bismarck Created Germany 33 Three wars were effectively used by Bismarck to create a German state: 1864 against Denmark; resulted in the seizure of Holstein for Austria and Schleswig for Prussia. At this stage, Austria was still an ally (Bismarck was lulling them into a false sense of security and was always immensely proud of this diplomatic subterfuge in his acquisition of the duchies); eventually, Prussia would control the whole of the Schleswig-Holstein peninsula. The area would help Prussia dominate the Baltic and the North Sea and bring with it the excellently situated naval base of Kiel. 1866 against Austria (the Seven Week’s War); France was neutralised with vague promises of land; the Habsburg empire weakened by a cynical encouragement of Italian, Romanian and Hungarian nationalism (a Magyar legion fought with the Prussians in 1866, and Austria ended up fighting a two front war against both Prussia and Italy); Prussia then seized Holstein, and kicked Austria out of the German confederation, more perhaps because Austria was an obstacle to Prussian ambitions in Germany than anything else; the Austrian armies were smashed at Sadowa (Koniggratz); Prussia dissolved the old confederation, seized Hanover, Hesse and Frankfurt and set up a North German Confederation with Wilhelm I as its president. A veneer of liberalism was applied to its constitution, but Bismarck’s real aim as Watson points out was: “the aggrandisement of Prussia”. Bismarck displayed this in the way he refused to impose humiliating peace terms on Austria, because he did not want an antagonistic Austria at his back, when he eventually attacked France. The Treaty of Prague saw Austria withdraw from German affairs and Italy rewarded with Venetia. Crankshaw says Austria’s defeat was the result of:“Bismarck’s diplomacy, Krupps’ steel, Roon’s military machine, Moltke’s strategic genius…” Helmut von Moltke was a master strategist, knew how to transport troops, and arm them with the most modern weapons (a breech-loading rifle the Austrians had ironically rejected as too expensive!). His contribution to Bismarck’s success should not be underestimated, though Craig is adamant that ultimate glory should still go to Bismarck. Bismarck, left, with Roon (centre) and Moltke (right). The three leaders of Prussia in the 1860s A LEVEL History M. Nichols, SCIE 2011 34 Consequences of the German victory included the fact that: Austria now turned her attention more towards the Balkans, and had to form a dual monarchy with Hungary in 1867; Southern, Catholic, liberal states remained outside the North German Confederation, but under obligation to Prussia in the event of war; William Carr emphasises how France had suffered from Austria’s defeat as well, because the balance of power had been upset, and was determined to obtain territorial compensation; France was now the main obstacle to Bismarck’s and Prussia’s ambitions. Bismarck was determined to goad Napoleon III of France into a conflict that would neutralise this final stumbling block. France’s attempts to takeover the pro-German Luxemburg and later Belgium were ideal means of discrediting France. The French’s successful blocking of a Hohenzollern’s attempt to assume the Spanish throne was the excuse needed. Bismarck then engineered the Ems Telegram affair to further goad the French into war, relying on the pride of Napoleon and the Duc de Gramont. To Carr, Bismarck had war in mind from the very beginning. SUMMARY OF THE RELATIVE IMPORTANCE OF COMBINED FACTORS FOR GERMAN UNIFICATION War War Bismarck Prussian Army Zollverein French Neutrality German Nat. Prussian Economy Austrian Weakness Bismarck’s Diplomacy Prussian Army Zollverein French Neut. German Nat. Prussian Econ. Aust. Weak. X X X X X X X X KEY = V for Vital; S for Significant; P for Peripheral German Snyder rifle – a vital technological innovation A LEVEL History M. Nichols, SCIE 2011 35 1870-71 against France (the Franco-Prussian War); saw the defeat of the French armies, most notably at Sedan, but also at Saint-Privat and Gravelotte. Bismarck had provoked the war through the device of the infamous Ems Telegram and by stoking German francophobia. The south German states were brought into the Confederation and a German Reich proclaimed at Versailles in 1871, with Wilhelm I now as Kaiser (or emperor) and Bismarck, his Imperial Chancellor. The French, like the Austrians, had been an obstacle to German unification, fearing an upsetting of the balance of power. France was humiliated by the defeat and by the reparations and land confiscations, which followed (she lost Alsace-Lorraine and a million of her citizens with it, along with 5 billion francs). France had also slipped into civil war and the infamous and anarchic events of the 1871 Paris Commune. Germany had won because they had the leadership of von Roon, von Moltke and Bismarck, whereas the French had only mediocrities like Napoleon, Bazaine and MacMahon. The Germans had concentrated their troops efficiently and far more quickly than the chaotic French. The Germans had better small arms (the Snyder) and the excellent Krupps’ artillery. The French had paradoxically not been as united as the people who were fighting them for their very nationhood. The Treaty of Frankfurt in May 1871 saw the wealthy AlsaceLorraine annexed by Germany; a German army occupy France until the indemnity of 5 000 000 000 francs was paid; the Germans were also entitled to a victory march through Paris; Carr is very critical of Bismarck’s short-sighted vindictiveness and says it would create massive problems for the future. The terms of the Congress of Vienna were now truly dead. Germany in 1871 had one of the most liberal constitutions in Europe, paired with a conservative Kaiser and a ruthless Chancellor who would guide it with an iron hand until 1890, when he would be dismissed by the equally autocratic Wilhelm II. The Germany created by Bismarck, was largely German speaking and an economic powerhouse of 41 million people. In both ways it had surpassed France. But as a new power, it had, arguably, fatally upset the balance of power in Europe and its belated imperial ambitions would also go on to cause severe problems, helping to lead to WWI. Also, Bismarck’s Germany was only kleindeutschland it was not grossdeutschland: many German speakers (from Bohemia, the Sudetenland, Austria, etc.) were not in it. The ambition to create a truly German Reich would fall to one Adolf Hitler to complete, albeit briefly, in the late 1930s and early 40s. A LEVEL History M. Nichols, SCIE 2011 36 King Wilhelm I of Prussia is proclaimed Kaiser Wilhelm of Germany. The Hall of Mirrors, Versailles, January, 1871. The painting emphasises the military and aristocratic aspects of Wilhelm I’s accession to the Imperial crown. He was offered the crown by his fellow German monarchs, not by the people nor by the landtag. Such autocratic beginnings were to be obvious in his successor, Wilhelm II’s attitude towards the crown. SUMMARISING ACROSTIC OF BISMARCK Noun B I S M A R C K Conclusion: Verb Adjective A LEVEL History M. Nichols, SCIE 2011 Compare and Contrast Cavour and Bismarck Introduction 37 Say What You Are Going To Say! State Your Theme! Challenge the Question! Grab the Examiner’s Attention! Both Cavour and Bismarck frequently seen as father’s of their respective countries of Italy and Germany. However, this is, arguably, too simplistic a view. There were also arguably more obvious similarities between the two, while the differences tend to be more subtle. Main Points Similarities Break Down/ Structure Essay Use Concepts: Political, Economic, Social, etc. Use Structure of Question to Help 1. Background/Personal Aspects: Both were aristocrats and titled members of the plutocracy. This may account for their faith in monarchies and their loyal service to their (unremarkable) kings: Bismarck’s Wilhelm I and Cavour’s Vittorio Emmanuele II; 2. Religion: Both were essentially anti-Roman Catholic, though less for doctrinal than political reasons. They were both determined that the RC states in S. Germany and the Pope in Italy would not obstruct their political ambitions; Write Analytically, Using Facts to Back Up Your Ideas It is Not A Story! 3. Economics: Both had an interest in their state’s economies and believed that a strong economy would help create a strong state. Under Bismarck, Germany’s coal and steel production would outstrip France and GB’s respectively; both, of course, were helped in their ambitions by the favourable economic climate and technological advances of the time. The Prussians so-called ‘needle gun’ certainly helped their troops triumph at Sadowa (Koniggratz) in 1866. 4. Politics: Both men were notorious opportunists and pragmatists., Always Include Historiography – It Suggests Wider Reading and Awareness of Different Points of View able to benefit from dangerous lack of cohesion amongst their foreign opponents. Bismarck was the proponent of realpolitik, but Cavour was also clever enough to manipulate men like Napoleon III. Both, as Wood points out, were prepared to use war as a means to achieve an end, especially against the Austrians when they posed an obstacle to their ambitions. Both, more controversially, were also concerned with their own states more than the unification of their nations. Watson emphasises how Bismarck’s primary motive was the “aggrandisement of Prussia”, something he also accords to the ambitious Cavour, whom he sees as first and foremost a Piedmontese, a view concurred in by Lee. Showalter even goes as far as to say that Bismarck was not a German nationalist, but essentially a Prussian patriot. Equally, we should not see them as men acting in isolation. They should not take all the credit (or blame). Bismarck was assisted by von Roon and von Moltke; Cavour famously by Garibaldi, and had also built on the foundations laid by Mazzini and others. Bismarck and Cavour also, of course, had their failures, not least Bismarck’s inability to create a grossdeutschland and Cavour’s inability to appease the Papacy (which did not join Italy until nearly a decade A LEVEL History M. Nichols, SCIE 2011 after Cavour’s death); both certainly had their opponents and domestic enemies; 38 Differences 5. Political: Bismarck was a Protestant conservative, whose policies were a means of isolating liberals and uniting a divided nation. In contrast, the Catholic Cavour was more of a liberal, though ironically it was Bismarck who ended up creating the most liberal constitution in Europe. Cavour was certainly less ruthless than Bismarck, and preferred plebiscites, at times, to war. He also sought foreign allies in his ventures, notably Napoleon III. Bismarck was arguably the more successful, though he did have the excellent Prussian army, and ultimately his creation of a new nation did have more disastrous longterm consequences than the creation of Italy. Conclusion Both Bismarck and Cavour were significant, perhaps vital, elements in the formation of their nation states. Certainly, however, they cannot be studied in isolation nor should they be regarded as sole architects of Germany and Italy. What stands out, ultimately, was that they were both more similar products of their plutocratic age, than complete contrasts. Say What You’ve Said i.e. A Summary of Your Argument A LEVEL History M. Nichols, SCIE 2011 Bismarck’s Foreign Policy (1871-1890) 39 Germany’s creation had not so much upset the balance of power, as more like thoroughly destroyed the whole concept. Now there was a huge, economic and military powerhouse dominating Central Europe. The noses of the British, French and Russians were seriously put out of joint. Arguably, the creation of Germany itself was one of the long-term factors for WWI. Bismarck knew he had to tread a careful path. Avoid a war on two ______, given Germany’s vulnerable geographical position Key words Europe France Two Fronts Russia Maintain peace in _______ – essential for the security of the Empire and its commercial prosperity BISMARCK’S FOREIGN POLICY OBJECTIVES FOR THE GERMAN EMPIRE (1871-1890) Avoid having to make a choice between Austro-Hungary and ________ in their disputes Prevent _____________ from mounting a serious challenge to the new Empire Ensure that in any grouping of the five great European powers Germany is on the side of _______ of them SUCCESSES AND FAILURES OF BISMARCK’S FOREIGN POLICY A LEVEL History M. Nichols, SCIE 2011 BISMARCK’S ACTIONS 40 ACTION The Three Emperors’ League DATE 1873 DETAILS Russia feeling isolated reverted back to an agreement with Austria and Germany; Bismarck was delighted and felt confident France itself could be isolated; however, disputes in the Balkans would again drive a wedge between Austria and Russia; An anti-French Italy formed a means of reassuring Bismarck that he had now a three power alliance against either France or Russia; however, Italy and Austria were not close and a Franco-Russian alliance remained a major fear; A short-term security measure designed to strengthen Germany against a possible Franco-Russian entente, was made with Austria; an initially temporary alliance it was renewed until 1918; meant to be secret, the Russians soon found out about it; Wilmot says that the alliance was not Bismarck’s final choice between Austria and Russia; The Near-Eastern Crisis 187778 The Congress of Berlin 1878 The Dual Alliance 1879 The Three Emperors’ Alliance 1881 The Triple Alliance 1882 Isolated France; established common anti-republic and antisocialist views between the German, Austrian and Russia emperors; however, there was no formal alliance The Reinsurance Treaty 1887 Bismarck sponsored a deal to keep the peace and status quo in the Mediterranean and Near East; The Second Mediterranean Agreement 1887 War between Austria and Russia became a possibility when they clashed over the shrinking Ottoman Turkish empire in the Balkans; Bismarck acted as mediator between Russia and Austria, in the revision of the San Stefano treaty Russia had imposed on Turkey in 1878; however, Russia was unhappy at this and blamed Germany and the Three Emperor’s League was dissolved immediately; Bismarck had helped to stop a damaging European war, but had alienated Russia which increasingly saw Germany as pro-Austrian; Bismarck got an assurance out of Russia that in the event of war with a third power, each would maintain its neutrality; In 1890, Bismarck was forced to resign by Wilhelm II. A much more aggressive, imperialistic foreign policy would be the result – and ultimately so would a war on two fronts that Bismarck had been so keen to avoid. ‘ Dropping the Pilot’, 1890, a fatal error? A LEVEL History M. Nichols, SCIE 2011 BISMARCK’S ACTIONS – THE ANSWERS ACTION The Three Emperors’ League DATE 1873 The Near-Eastern Crisis 187778 The Congress of Berlin 1878 The Dual Alliance 1879 The Three Emperors’ Alliance 1881 The Triple Alliance 1882 The Reinsurance Treaty 1887 The Second Mediterranean Agreement 1887 DETAILS 41 A LEVEL History M. Nichols, SCIE 2011 LONG TERM REASONS FOR THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION (1855-1894) 42 A LEVEL History M. Nichols, SCIE 2011 The Russian Empire (1855-1894) – The Long Term causes of the 1917 Revolutions 43 In 1897 Russia had: 129 m. people (55m Russians, 22m Ukrainians, 11m Turks, 8m Poles & 5m Jews, plus nearly a hundred other nationalities); and 8.5 m. sq. miles of territory; it was a poverty-stricken, primarily agricultural and rural state: a land of peasants and bad harvests. By 1914, the population had risen to 175m (it had only been 45m in 1800), with 26m in urban areas and 5m employed in industry, but Russia was still an essentially backward, anachronistic state. Even agriculture was less advanced than in the rest of the Europe, especially given that the Russian growing season was up to three months shorter than in the rest of the continent. Thus the peasants frequently starved, not only because of the inefficiency of the system and the climate, but because the government callously exported grain. 50% 0f peasant children died before the age of 5. Only the peasants paid the poll tax. Echoes with pre-Revolutionary France are very apparent. S.L. Hoch describes a typical peasant dwelling during the winter, as: ”…fetid from animal and fowl excreta. The ceilings were covered with soot and ash. …The dirt floor was always damp and in the spring and autumn it was muddy. It was impossible to keep cockroaches out of the food...” Industry was financed by foreign money, especially French loans, and Russia was constantly short of capital. Social divisions were rigid; the middle class miniscule; the peasantry downtrodden and exploited; in fact only 1 in 5 Russians could read in 1897; only 4% of the population had received an education, by 1914. While Russian universities were excellent, there were far too few and the student population, as a percentage of the whole population, was tiny (c.10 000). Women were rarely allowed a higher education and Jews were discriminated against in most of the professions. The intelligentsia were a dissatisfied, dangerously articulate and under-employed, growing threat to the status quo. Watson describes the Imperial Russian system as, in short, full of “inequalities, injustices and incompetence”. He describes how even its tyranny was inefficient, as censorship was erratic, the Okhrana (secret police) ineffectual and riots and uprisings frequent. Watson goes on to emphasise the very important point that “when the tsarist state collapsed in February 1917, it did so because of its own paralysis and because of universal disaffection and disgust, not because of planned revolution”. Of course, we should also not forget that repressive states often produce a great cultural flowering. Tchaikovsky, Rimsky-Khorsakov, Borodin, Mussorgsky, Dostoyevsky, Chekhov and Tolstoy, being some of the illustrious names we should remember too about the Tsarist period. Alexander II – Tsar Liberator? A LEVEL History M. Nichols, SCIE 2011 Alexander II (1855-81): ‘The Tsar Liberator’, Reformer or Reactionary? 44 Alexander succeeded his arch-reactionary father, Nicholas I, and though he was to do some interesting things, he was essentially still his father’s son, intent first and foremost at preserving his dynasty’s (the Romanov’s) interests. Alexander was unusually well-educated and well-prepared for the throne, which he inherited at the age of 36. He was well-travelled and had even made the effort to visit Siberia. However, though essentially a decent man, Alexander lacked real reforming passion and was an innate conservative. Serfdom, a medieval system of pseudo-slavery, still existed in Russia when Alexander succeeded to his throne. Alexander was prepared to change this iniquity, but he was determined any reforms would not lead to fundamental political changes. The freeing of the serfs in 1861 was, in reality, no such thing. The Tsar lost a chance to bind the people to the monarchy. The greedy and intransigent nobility were the ones who really benefited, as they gained generous financial compensation and a slightly more fluid labour market. The peasants, in contrast, were hardly more free than they had been before 1861. They were crippled by 49 year compensation payments and remained impoverished and angry. They still needed passes to move outside their villages; could still be flogged and their sons were still conscripted into the appalling conditions of the Russian army. Watson says that the so-called freedom of 1861 was in actuality, “hollow”. The peasants felt cheated and remained hungry for land. Alexander did, in the first years of his reign, enact other reforms: He introduced trial by jury; reduced the number of secret trials; judges were adequately paid and better educated to reduce bribery; punishments were made less severe, and torture (technically) banned; Tax-collecting was taken away from private individuals and devolved to the state; Liberals like Nicholas Milyutin were given government posts, helping to prepare the way for emancipation; Censorship was relaxed from 1865; More schools were built; 8000 primary schools in 1856 leapt to 23 000 by 1880; Local administration was improved by the setting up of the zemstva (elected rural local councils) and duma (elected town councils) system, which allowed a limited role for the people, though these institutions were always skewed in favour of the nobility; Industry was expanded, with more railways built due to the reforms of Reutern; A Russian State Bank was founded in 1860 to provide credit for Russian industry; The army saw reforms and the length of service reduced from 25 to 15 years and eventually to a mere 6 years; the army was no longer used as a dumping ground for criminals and military discipline was made less barbarous; though given Russia’s thrashing by Japan in the 1904-5 war, it is debateable whether any of these reforms A LEVEL History M. Nichols, SCIE 2011 45 made much difference to an institution which relied on quantity over quality; Grain production increased massively after reforms from 76 to 257 million poods (1 pood = 36Ib or 16.36kg); However, when it came down to it, ‘the reformer’ was still a Romanov autocrat first and foremost, especially after 1865-66: In 1861, the Tsar had sacked Milyutin for his liberalism, pressured by conservative aristocrats; Reactionaries like Peter Shuvalov were put in charge of the secret police (the Third section) and Education (a Count Tolstoy); The Tsar was quick to stamp on all nationalist societies: the Poles, especially (they had rebelled in 1863), though the Finns, etc were not excluded; Russification was applied strenuously, and when it came down to it, Alexander was very much a Russian bigot; The Jews were frequently persecuted in horrible pogroms; Show trails of opponents like the ‘trial of the 50’ and ‘the trail of the 193’ were held; Press freedoms were eroded and mass round-ups took place, after assassination attempts on his life in 1866; Political detainees lost their right to trial by jury; Universities were closely monitored and in 1861 many were closed down; in the 1870s, state supervision was reintroduced; Liberal members of the Imperial family like Grand Duke Constantine and Grand Duchess Helen lost their earlier influence and found it hard to even get an audience with the Tsar; Alexander expanded the Russian empire into Central Asia, bringing Russia into potential conflict with GB; In foreign policy, he sympathised with militarist Prussia, ignored liberal France, reconciled Russia with autocratic Austro-Hungary, and fought a successful war against the Ottoman empire, gaining territory and creating the state of Bulgaria; The zemstvas were deprived of their (limited) authority; In many ways, as Watson emphasises, what freedoms there were in Russia were due to the inefficiencies of the system, as much as to any sense of liberalism; Watson comments that Alexander’s “main anxiety now was to preserve Romanov autocracy and to stabilize Russian society” – and nothing more profound or altruistic than that; Under Alexander, terrorism increased, and the activities of the Narodnya Volya eventually resulted in his own assassination in March 1881; Alexander’s legs were blown off and his son and grandson watched him bleed to death on his bed; this only increased their own determination to resist further reforms; Watson sums Alexander up as a mild reformer, who ultimately showed he had a stronger attachment to the Romanov tradition of government by repression. His concern was to make Russia strong, not its people free. A Russian Icon – The Religious Alexander II Would Have Fully Appreciated Its Spiritual Value A LEVEL History M. Nichols, SCIE 2011 To What Extent Did Alexander II Succeed in Reforming Russian Life and Institutions? [Model Essay] 46 Alexander II has traditionally been seen as a reformer. In reality, though he did enact some changes to Russian life and institutions, he was defeated both by the enormity of the task he faced and by his own, later inclination to apply the brakes to even those few areas he had improved. Alexander’s successes in reforming the life of the Russian peoples, revolve around his changes to the oppressive and deeply plutocratic nature of the Russian state. He officially abolished the use of torture (though, in reality it continued in use) and punishments were made less severe. His changes to the length of military service (reducing it from 25 years to eventually 6 and abolishing the hated military colonies), also had a beneficial effect on the quality of life of the Russian people. Censorship was relaxed and allowed a greater degree of freedom of expression for artists, writers and musicians. In terms of his reforms of traditional Russian institutions, Alexander went further. He is best known, of course, for abolishing, in 1861, what had become almost synonymous with Russia: serfdom. His reforms of the judiciary, including more jury trials, better paid and educated judges (to reduce corruption) and fewer secret hearings were all positive steps. Alexander was also the first Romanov autocrat to introduce an element of local and regional representation in his setting up of the zemstva and duma assemblies, respectively. He built more schools; introduced a Russian State Bank to help industry, and built more railways to improve communications in his huge empire. However, ultimately it would be wrong to see Alexander as a particularly successful or even consistent reformer. Alexander was, above all, still an autocrat. Many of his reforms were designed to strengthen Russia and the autocracy, not to benefit its people. Thus the reduction in military service had the benefit of massively reducing the military budget. His changes to the army hardly made a dent, as Russia would be defeated by a third-rate power like Japan, in 1905. Alexander was still very much an imperialist. He stamped on all opposition within his empire, especially form nationalist groups like the Finns and the Poles. He was a ruthless persecutor of the Jews, as his predecessors and successors, before and after him. Charques has pointed out that anti-Semitism was a useful means of diverting attention from the failings of the government. Poverty and illiteracy remained rampant in his domains. As late as 1897, 16 years after his assassination, only one in five Russians could read and write, and most never even saw a school. As his reign matured and especially after 1865-66, Alexander in fact grew more reactionary and conservative in nature. Once again, press freedoms were eroded; political trials increased in number and the zemstvas were deprived of their (limited) authority. Serfdom may have been abolished, but the 49 year indemnity payments had merely replaced one form of slavery with another. The mir system ensured the peasants continued to enjoy only a subsistence level existence. In Watson’s words, the Imperial A LEVEL History M. Nichols, SCIE 2011 Russian system remained one of “inequalities, injustices and incompetence”. Alexander was at best, only a mild reformer. Ultimately, as Watson emphasises, he showed a stronger attachment to the Romanov tradition of government - than he did to the needs of his people or even his country. It may even be argued that his actions (or rather inaction) helped to lay the foundations for the disasters that were to strike Russia in the early twentieth century. Assignment Dissect the above essay, pointing out its important constituent aspects. 47 A LEVEL History M. Nichols, SCIE 2011 48 Alexander III (1881-94): Arch-Reactionary A large man (1.90m) of enormous physical strength, but limited foresight, the badly educated and none too bright Alexander was hugely influenced by the bigoted Konstantin Pobedonostsev, who reinforced his policy of autocracy and Russification (Lynch points out, alienating his subjects when he should have been trying to cohese them), and a reversal of many of his father’s reforms. He crushed freedom of thought, nationalist aspirations and his Jewish subjects (like nearly all the Tsars, Alexander was a rabid anti-Semite). The universities, the press and the law courts were strictly supervised (women were banned from receiving a higher education). In 1889, Land Captains, with enormous powers, were imposed on the peasantry to keep a close eye on them. Understandably, they were resented and hated. In response, radicalism grew. The first Marxist group was formed in 1883. Industrialisation added an embittered urban proletariat to a disgruntled peasantry. Alex responded by creating a ruthless secret police (the Okhrana). Political prisoners were made to walk the 1660 km (1040miles) to exile in Siberia. It took them three months to get there. Alexander had set up a Peasant’s Bank in 1882, but it made few loans; he also reduced land redemption payments and abolished the poll tax. However, he continued to deny workers the right to strike, and so conditions in the factories remained appalling, despite his curtailment of child labour. To his credit, Alexander did at least appoint the able (if highly egotistical) Sergei Witte to the Ministry of Finance, where he did much to improve the economy, eventually completing the Trans-Siberian Railway in 1904. However, it can also be said that Witte’s skills only delayed the inevitable reforms, which the government should have made. As Watson says “his financial skill and the loans he raised in France, merely made the monarchy solvent enough to ignore liberal demands for parliamentary control of taxation”. Plus Witte could hardly be described as a political liberal, given his dedication to Alexander III a man he highly admired. With a father and grandfather like these, it was not surprising that Nicholas II (himself tutored by Pobedonostsev) turned out the way he did – and became the last Romanov emperor of all the Russias. A LEVEL History M. Nichols, SCIE 2011 49 Nicholas II (1894-1917): The Last Romanov Tsar Nice moustache, Nicky… Weak, vacillating, but committed to the autocracy and his dynasty, Nicholas was in many ways typical of the rest of his Romanov relatives, except perhaps in his height (1.68m). Even with all these limitations, however, he might still have survived to die in his bed, if WWI had not broken out. However, given his role in helping to bring about the war and his own disastrous handling of it, he perhaps brought on his own doom, especially given his incorrigibility. Demands for reform were dismissed as “senseless dreams”. He ditched the able Witte (a favourite of his father); appointed reactionaries like Meshersky, and showed himself an incompetent ruler. His unpopular, pushy, charmless German wife, Alexandra, did not help with people’s perceptions of him. Political groups like the Socialist Revolutionaries grew in strength, despite heavy persecution and liberal use of Siberian exile (1 in 9 of Siberia’s population were exiles). Constitutional parties like the Cadets were also set up. Assassination though, remained very common in Tsarist Russia as a means of protest – often because it was the only option open to a discontented people. The Marxist Social Democrats under Lenin and Menshikov were also beginning to become a thorn in the government’s side. Nicholas’ disastrous and vindictive handling of the disturbances of 1905 (wrongly described as a revolution), only increased the opposition to him. His setting up of a national parliament in 1906 (the duma) was initially a promising step, but Nicholas, being Nicholas, quickly emasculated its powers, and stifled further reforms. Financial and economic developments did take place, especially under the able, if ruthless Pyotr Stolypin. However, the Tsar never gave him his complete support and seemed almost relieved when Stolypin was assassinated in 1911 (probably by an agent of his rightist, conservative enemies, than by the left). Nicholas was always perhaps his own worst enemy, as the unimaginative frequently are. Nicholas II & His Four Daughters and Son and Heir A LEVEL History M. Nichols, SCIE 2011 19th Century Figure a. Napoleon Bonaparte 50 REVISION HEADS N’ TAILS EXERCISE Action 1. French ruler and loser of Franco-Prussian War; he both supported and opposed the Risorgimento. An inveterate plotter, he was easily suckered into declaring war on Prussia, in 1870. Ended up dying in exile, in England. b. Wellington 2. Radical Italian patriot who led his Red Shirts to victory in the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies, and helped unify Italy. c. Metternich 3. Prussian War Minister who helped achieved German unification with his policies. d. Hardenberg 4. Hungarian nationalist of 1848 Revolutions and thorn in the side of the Austrians, who was ultimately a failure in his aim of achieving an independent republic. e. Alexander I 5. French tyrant who laid foundations for many of Europe’s post-1815 problems. f. Mazzini 6. Reactionary and Catholic Piedmontese monarch who became first King of a united Italy. g. Garibaldi 7. Prussian Minister who represented its interests at the Vienna Congress and was determined to gain territory. h. Cavour 8. Russian bigot, reactionary adviser of Alexander III and tutor of Nicholas II. His policies and championing of Russification antagonised the Russian empire’s many minorities. i. Victor Emmanuel II 9. Liberal Piedmontese politician and (unwitting) architect of Italy’s unification. j. Otto von Bismarck 10. Prussian Chief of Staff and able organiser who helped win the Franco-Prussian War, especially through his innovative use of the railways. k. Von Roon 11. Italian nationalist who wanted a democratic and republican Italyand so died a disappointed man. A LEVEL History M. Nichols, SCIE 2011 51 l. Von Moltke 12. Arch-reactionary Austrian Chancellor and opponent of ideas of Nationalism and Liberalism. m. Napoleon III 13. Reactionary Russian Tsar who represented an anti-Polish stance at Vienna. n. Lajos Kossuth 14. Prussian Chancellor and architect of German unification. o. K. P. Pobedonostsev 15. Conservative British representative at Vienna who wanted to reinstate the status quo and maintain the balance of power on the continent, which would become a British foreign policy object for the next 100 years. A LEVEL History M. Nichols, SCIE 2011 REVISION HEADS N’ TAILS EXERCISE –THE ANSWERS 19th Century Figure Action a. Napoleon Bonaparte b. Wellington c. Metternich d. Hardenberg e. Alexander I f. Mazzini g. Garibaldi h. Cavour i. Victor Emmanuel II j. Otto von Bismarck k. Von Roon 52 A LEVEL History M. Nichols, SCIE 2011 l. Von Moltke m. Napoleon III n. Lajos Kossuth o. K. P. Pobedonostsev 53 A LEVEL History M. Nichols, SCIE 2011 HISTORIOGRAPHY REVISION HEADS ‘N TAILS Historians Watson, Lee Showalter, Watson Seaman, Watson, Webster Crankshaw Historians Watson, Lee Showalter, Watson Seaman, Watson, Webster Crankshaw 54 Arguments Bismarck was first and foremost a Prussian patriot, rather than a German nationalist The motives behind German unification were economic and industrial Cavour was an unwilling architect of a united Italy being first and foremost a Piedmontese politician Bismarck’s attitude to Vienna saw an essentially an expedient policy after the 1866 War Arguments