History Class X Chapter 1
History Class X Chapter 1
History Class X Chapter 1
EuropeNationalism in Europe
Fig. 1 — The Dream of Worldwide Democratic and Social Republics – The Pact Between Nations, a print prepared by
Frédéric Sorrieu, 1848.
she bears in one hand and the Charter of the Rights of Man in the Utopian – A vision of a society that is so
other. On the earth in the foreground of the image lie the shattered ideal that it is unlikely to actually exist
remains of the symbols of absolutist institutions. In Sorrieu’s
utopian vision, the peoples of the world are grouped as distinct Activity
nations, identified through their flags and national costume. Leading
In what way do you think this print (Fig. 1)
the procession, way past the statue of Liberty, are the United States
depicts a utopian vision?
and Switzerland, which by this time were already nation-states. France,
3
identifiable by the revolutionary tricolour, has just reached the statue. Source A
She is followed by the peoples of Germany, bearing the black, red
Ernst Renan, ‘What is a Nation?’
and gold flag. Interestingly, at the time when Sorrieu created this
In a lecture delivered at the University of
image, the German peoples did not yet exist as a united nation – the
Sorbonne in 1882, the French philosopher Ernst
flag they carry is an expression of liberal hopes in 1848 to unify the Renan (1823-92) outlined his understanding of
numerous German-speaking principalities into a nation-state under what makes a nation. The lecture was
subsequently published as a famous essay entitled
a democratic constitution. Following the German peoples are the
‘Qu’est-ce qu’une nation?’ (‘What is a Nation?’).
peoples of Austria, the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies, Lombardy, In this essay Renan criticises the notion suggested
Poland, England, Ireland, Hungary and Russia. From the heavens by others that a nation is formed by a common
language, race, religion, or territory:
above, Christ, saints and angels gaze upon the scene. They have
‘A nation is the culmination of a long past of
been used by the artist to symbolise fraternity among the nations of endeavours, sacrifice and devotion. A heroic past,
the world. great men, glory, that is the social capital upon
which one bases a national idea. To have
This chapter will deal with many of the issues visualised by Sorrieu common glories in the past, to have a common
in Fig. 1. During the nineteenth century, nationalism emerged as a will in the present, to have performed great deeds
together, to wish to perform still more, these
force which brought about sweeping changes in the political and
are the essential conditions of being a people. A
mental world of Europe. The end result of these changes was the nation is therefore a large-scale solidarity … Its
emergence of the nation-state in place of the multi-national dynastic existence is a daily plebiscite … A province is its
inhabitants; if anyone has the right to be
empires of Europe. The concept and practices of a modern state, in
consulted, it is the inhabitant. A nation never
which a centralised power exercised sovereign control over a clearly has any real interest in annexing or holding on to
defined territory, had been developing over a long period of time a country against its will. The existence of nations
is a good thing, a necessity even. Their existence
in Europe. But a nation-state was one in which the majority of its
is a guarantee of liberty, which would be lost if
citizens, and not only its rulers, came to develop a sense of common the world had only one law and only one master.’
identity and shared history or descent. This commonness did not
exist from time immemorial; it was forged through struggles, through Source
the actions of leaders and the common people. This chapter will
look at the diverse processes through which nation-states and
New words
nationalism came into being in nineteenth-century Europe.
Plebiscite – A direct vote by which all the
people of a region are asked to accept or reject
India and the Contemporary World
a proposal
Discuss
Summarise the attributes of a nation, as Renan
understands them. Why, in his view, are nations
important?
4
1 The French Revolution and the Idea of the Nation
The revolutionaries further declared that it was the mission and the
destiny of the French nation to liberate the peoples of Europe Nationalism in Europe
from despotism, in other words to help other peoples of Europe
to become nations.
When the news of the events in France reached the different cities
of Europe, students and other members of educated middle classes
began setting up Jacobin clubs. Their activities and campaigns
prepared the way for the French armies which moved into Holland,
Belgium, Switzerland and much of Italy in the 1790s. With the
outbreak of the revolutionary wars, the French armies began to
carry the idea of nationalism abroad.
5
ICELAND
(DENMARK)
ATLANTIC SEA
NORWAY
(SWEDEN)
SWEDEN
SCOTLAND
IRELAND GREAT
BRITAIN DENMARK
RUSSIAN EMPIRE
WALES HABOVER
ENGLAND (G.B.)
PRUSSIA
NETHERLANDS POLAND
GALICIA
BAVARIA
AUSTRIAN EMPIRE
FRANCE
SWITZERLAND AUSTRIA
HUNGARY
SMALL ROMANIA
AL
ARMENIA
OTTOMAN EMPIRE
PER
KINGDOM
SARDINIA OF THE
SIA
TWO
SICILIES
GREECE MESOPOTAMIA
TUNIS
ALGERIA CRETE SYRIA
MOROCCO CYPRUS
MEDITERRANEAN SEA
PALESTINE
Within the wide swathe of territory that came under his control,
Napoleon set about introducing many of the reforms that he had
already introduced in France. Through a return to monarchy
India and the Contemporary World
6
Fig. 4 — The Planting of Tree of Liberty in Zweibrücken, Germany.
The subject of this colour print by the German painter Karl Kaspar Fritz is the occupation of the town of Zweibrücken
by the French armies. French soldiers, recognisable by their blue, white and red uniforms, have been portrayed as
oppressors as they seize a peasant’s cart (left), harass some young women (centre foreground) and force a peasant
down to his knees. The plaque being affixed to the Tree of Liberty carries a German inscription which in translation
reads: ‘Take freedom and equality from us, the model of humanity.’ This is a sarcastic reference to the claim of the
French as being liberators who opposed monarchy in the territories they entered.
7
2 The Making of Nationalism in Europe
8
In Western and parts of Central Europe the growth of industrial
production and trade meant the growth of towns and the emergence
of commercial classes whose existence was based on production
for the market. Industrialisation began in England in the second
half of the eighteenth century, but in France and parts of the German
states it occurred only during the nineteenth century. In its wake,
new social groups came into being: a working-class population, and
middle classes made up of industrialists, businessmen, professionals.
In Central and Eastern Europe these groups were smaller in number
till late nineteenth century. It was among the educated, liberal middle
classes that ideas of national unity following the abolition of
aristocratic privileges gained popularity.
Yet, equality before the law did not necessarily stand for universal
New words
suffrage. You will recall that in revolutionary France, which marked
the first political experiment in liberal democracy, the right to vote Suffrage – The right to vote
and to get elected was granted exclusively to property-owning men.
Men without property and all women were excluded from political
rights. Only for a brief period under the Jacobins did all adult males
enjoy suffrage. However, the Napoleonic Code went back to limited
Nationalism in Europe
suffrage and reduced women to the status of a minor, subject to
the authority of fathers and husbands. Throughout the nineteenth
and early twentieth centuries women and non-propertied men
organised opposition movements demanding equal political rights.
9
countless small principalities a confederation of 39 states. Each of Source B
these possessed its own currency, and weights and measures. A
Economists began to think in terms of the national
merchant travelling in 1833 from Hamburg to Nuremberg to sell economy. They talked of how the nation could
his goods would have had to pass through 11 customs barriers and develop and what economic measures could help
pay a customs duty of about 5 per cent at each one of them. Duties forge this nation together.
were often levied according to the weight or measurement of the Friedrich List, Professor of Economics at the
University of Tübingen in Germany, wrote in 1834:
goods. As each region had its own system of weights and measures,
‘The aim of the zollverein is to bind the Germans
this involved time-consuming calculation. The measure of cloth, economically into a nation. It will strengthen the
for example, was the elle which in each region stood for a different nation materially as much by protecting its
length. An elle of textile material bought in Frankfurt would get you interests externally as by stimulating its internal
productivity. It ought to awaken and raise
54.7 cm of cloth, in Mainz 55.1 cm, in Nuremberg 65.6 cm, in national sentiment through a fusion of individual
Freiburg 53.5 cm. and provincial interests. The German people have
realised that a free economic system is the only
Such conditions were viewed as obstacles to economic exchange means to engender national feeling.’
and growth by the new commercial classes, who argued for the
creation of a unified economic territory allowing the unhindered
Source
movement of goods, people and capital. In 1834, a customs union
or zollverein was formed at the initiative of Prussia and joined by Discuss
most of the German states. The union abolished tariff barriers and
Describe the political ends that List hopes to
reduced the number of currencies from over thirty to two. The
achieve through economic measures.
creation of a network of railways further stimulated mobility,
harnessing economic interests to national unification. A wave of
economic nationalism strengthened the wider nationalist sentiments
growing at the time.
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drew up the Treaty of Vienna of 1815 with the object of undoing
most of the changes that had come about in Europe during the
Napoleonic wars. The Bourbon dynasty, which had been deposed
during the French Revolution, was restored to power, and France
lost the territories it had annexed under Napoleon. A series of states
were set up on the boundaries of France to prevent French expansion
in future. Thus the kingdom of the Netherlands, which included
Belgium, was set up in the north and Genoa was added to Piedmont
in the south. Prussia was given important new territories on its western
frontiers, while Austria was given control of northern Italy. But the Activity
German confederation of 39 states that had been set up by Napoleon
Plot on a map of Europe the changes drawn
was left untouched. In the east, Russia was given part of Poland
up by the Vienna Congress.
while Prussia was given a portion of Saxony. The main intention
was to restore the monarchies that had been overthrown by
Napoleon, and create a new conservative order in Europe.
Nationalism in Europe
11
associated with the French Revolution. The memory of the French
Revolution nonetheless continued to inspire liberals. One of the major
issues taken up by the liberal-nationalists, who criticised the new
conservative order, was freedom of the press.
12
3 The Age of Revolutions: 1830-1848
The first upheaval took place in France in July 1830. The Bourbon
kings who had been restored to power during the conservative
reaction after 1815, were now overthrown by liberal revolutionaries
who installed a constitutional monarchy with Louis Philippe at its
head. ‘When France sneezes,’ Metternich once remarked, ‘the rest of
Europe catches cold.’ The July Revolution sparked an uprising in
Brussels which led to Belgium breaking away from the United
Kingdom of the Netherlands.
13
Fig. 8 — The Massacre at Chios, Eugene Delacroix, 1824.
The French painter Delacroix was one of the most important French Romantic
painters. This huge painting (4.19m x 3.54m) depicts an incident in which
20,000 Greeks were said to have been killed by Turks on the island of Chios. By
dramatising the incident, focusing on the suffering of women and children, and
India and the Contemporary World
using vivid colours, Delacroix sought to appeal to the emotions of the spectators,
and create sympathy for the Greeks.
14
The emphasis on vernacular language and the collection of local Box 1
folklore was not just to recover an ancient national spirit, but also to
carry the modern nationalist message to large audiences who were The Grimm Brothers: Folktales and
Nation-building
mostly illiterate. This was especially so in the case of Poland, which
Grimms’ Fairy Tales is a familiar name. The brothers
had been partitioned at the end of the eighteenth century by the Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm were born in the
Great Powers – Russia, Prussia and Austria. Even though Poland no German city of Hanau in 1785 and 1786
longer existed as an independent territory, national feelings were kept respectively. While both of them studied law,
they soon developed an interest in collecting old
alive through music and language. Karol Kurpinski, for example, folktales. They spent six years travelling from
celebrated the national struggle through his operas and music, turning village to village, talking to people and writing
folk dances like the polonaise and mazurka into nationalist symbols. down fairy tales, which were handed down
through the generations. These were popular
Language too played an important role in developing nationalist both among children and adults. In 1812, they
published their first collection of tales.
sentiments. After Russian occupation, the Polish language was forced Subsequently, both the brothers became active
out of schools and the Russian language was imposed everywhere. in liberal politics, especially the movement
In 1831, an armed rebellion against Russian rule took place which for freedom of the press. In the meantime they
also published a 33-volume dictionary of the
was ultimately crushed. Following this, many members of the clergy German language.
in Poland began to use language as a weapon of national resistance. The Grimm brothers also saw French domination
Polish was used for Church gatherings and all religious instruction. as a threat to German culture, and believed that
As a result, a large number of priests and bishops were put in jail or the folktales they had collected were expressions
of a pure and authentic German spirit. They
sent to Siberia by the Russian authorities as punishment for their considered their projects of collecting folktales
refusal to preach in Russian. The use of Polish came to be seen as a and developing the German language as part of
symbol of the struggle against Russian dominance. the wider effort to oppose French domination
and create a German national identity.
The year 1848 was one such year. Food shortages and widespread
unemployment brought the population of Paris out on the roads.
Barricades were erected and Louis Philippe was forced to flee. A
15
Fig. 9 — Peasants’ uprising, 1848.
16
3.3 1848: The Revolution of the Liberals
Parallel to the revolts of the poor, unemployed and starving peasants Source C
and workers in many European countries in the year 1848, a revolution
How were liberty and equality for women
led by the educated middle classes was under way. Events of February
to be defined?
1848 in France had brought about the abdication of the monarch
The liberal politician Carl Welcker, an elected
and a republic based on universal male suffrage had been proclaimed. member of the Frankfurt Parliament, expressed
In other parts of Europe where independent nation-states did not the following views:
yet exist – such as Germany, Italy, Poland, the Austro-Hungarian ‘Nature has created men and women to carry
out different functions … Man, the stronger, the
Empire – men and women of the liberal middle classes combined
bolder and freer of the two, has been designated
their demands for constitutionalism with national unification. They as protector of the family, its provider, meant for
took advantage of the growing popular unrest to push their public tasks in the domain of law, production,
defence. Woman, the weaker, dependent and
demands for the creation of a nation-state on parliamentary
timid, requires the protection of man. Her sphere
principles – a constitution, freedom of the press and freedom is the home, the care of the children, the
of association. nurturing of the family … Do we require any
further proof that given such differences, equality
In the German regions a large number of political associations whose between the sexes would only endanger
harmony and destroy the dignity of the family?’
members were middle-class professionals, businessmen and
Louise Otto-Peters (1819-95) was a political
prosperous artisans came together in the city of Frankfurt and decided
activist who founded a women’s journal and
to vote for an all-German National Assembly. On 18 May 1848, subsequently a feminist political association. The
831 elected representatives marched in a festive procession to take first issue of her newspaper (21 April 1849) carried
the following editorial:
their places in the Frankfurt parliament convened in the Church of
‘Let us ask how many men, possessed by
St Paul. They drafted a constitution for a German nation to be
thoughts of living and dying for the sake of Liberty,
headed by a monarchy subject to a parliament. When the deputies would be prepared to fight for the freedom of
offered the crown on these terms to Friedrich Wilhelm IV, King of the entire people, of all human beings? When
asked this question, they would all too easily
Prussia, he rejected it and joined other monarchs to oppose the
respond with a “Yes!”, though their untiring
elected assembly. While the opposition of the aristocracy and military efforts are intended for the benefit of only one
became stronger, the social basis of parliament eroded. The half of humanity – men. But Liberty is indivisible!
Free men therefore must not tolerate to be
parliament was dominated by the middle classes who resisted the
surrounded by the unfree …’
demands of workers and artisans and consequently lost their support. An anonymous reader of the same newspaper
In the end troops were called in and the assembly was forced sent the following letter to the editor on 25 June
to disband. 1850:
Nationalism in Europe
‘It is indeed ridiculous and unreasonable to deny
The issue of extending political rights to women was a controversial women political rights even though they enjoy
one within the liberal movement, in which large numbers of women the right to property which they make use
of. They perform functions and assume
had participated actively over the years. Women had formed their
responsibilities without however getting the
own political associations, founded newspapers and taken part in benefits that accrue to men for the same … Why
political meetings and demonstrations. Despite this they were denied this injustice? Is it not a disgrace that even the
stupidest cattle-herder possesses the right
to vote, simply because he is a man, whereas
New words highly talented women owning considerable
property are excluded from this right, even
Feminist – Awareness of women’s rights and interests based on though they contribute so much to the
the belief of the social, economic and political equality of the genders maintenance of the state?’
Source
17
Fig. 10 — The Frankfurt parliament in the Church of St Paul.
Contemporary colour print. Notice the women in the upper left gallery.
18
4 The Making of Germany and Italy
This can be observed in the process by which Germany and Italy came
to be unified as nation-states. As you have seen, nationalist feelings were
widespread among middle-class Germans, who in 1848 tried to unite
the different regions of the German confederation into a nation-state
governed by an elected parliament. This liberal initiative to nation-building
was, however, repressed by the combined forces of the monarchy and
the military, supported by the large landowners (called Junkers) of Prussia.
From then on, Prussia took on the leadership of the movement for
national unification. Its chief minister, Otto von
Bismarck, was the architect of this process carried
out with the help of the Prussian army and
bureaucracy. Three wars over seven years – with
Austria, Denmark and France – ended in Prussian
victory and completed the process of unification.
In January 1871, the Prussian king, William I,
was proclaimed German Emperor in a ceremony
held at Versailles.
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BALTIC SEA
NORTH SEA
SCHLESWIG-
HOLSTEIN EAST PRUSSIA
MECKLENBURG- POMERANIA
SCHWERIN WEST PRUSSIA
HANOVER
IA
BRANDENBURG SS
U
BRUNSWICK PR
POSEN
WESTPHALIA
RUSSIAN
EMPIRE
A
SS
RHINELAND NA
EN THURINGIAN SILESIA
SS STATES
HE
Confederation, 1867
BA
BAVARIA
South German states joining with Prussia to
form German Empire, 1871
Won by Prussia in Franco-Prussia War, 1871
war. In the eyes of the ruling elites of this region, a unified artist trying to convey?
20
Chief Minister Cavour who led the movement to unify the regions
of Italy was neither a revolutionary nor a democrat. Like many Activity
other wealthy and educated members of the Italian elite, he spoke Look at Fig. 14(a). Do you think that the people
French much better than he did Italian. Through a tactful diplomatic living in any of these regions thought of
alliance with France engineered by Cavour, Sardinia-Piedmont themselves as Italians?
succeeded in defeating the Austrian forces in 1859. Apart from regular Examine Fig. 14(b). Which was the first region
troops, a large number of armed volunteers under the leadership of to become a part of unified Italy? Which was the
Giuseppe Garibaldi joined the fray. In 1860, they marched into South last region to join? In which year did the largest
Italy and the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies and succeeded in winning number of states join?
the support of the local peasants in order to drive out the Spanish
rulers. In 1861 Victor Emmanuel II was proclaimed king of united
Italy. However, much of the Italian population, among whom rates
of illiteracy were very high, remained blissfully unaware of liberal-
nationalist ideology. The peasant masses who had supported Garibaldi
in southern Italy had never heard of Italia, and believed that ‘La Talia’
was Victor Emmanuel’s wife!
SWITZERLAND
SWITZERLAND
LOMBARDY VENETIA
SAVOY 1866
SARDINIA PARMA AUSTRIA
MODENA 1858
SAN MARINO
MONACO 1858-60
TUSCANY
PAPAL
STATE
1870
1860
KINGDOM
OF BOTH 1858
SICILIES
Nationalism in Europe
TUNIS
21
was not the result of a sudden upheaval or revolution. It was the Box 2
result of a long-drawn-out process. There was no British nation
prior to the eighteenth century. The primary identities of the people Giuseppe Garibaldi (1807-82) is perhaps the
most celebrated of Italian freedom fighters. He
who inhabited the British Isles were ethnic ones – such as English, came from a family engaged in coastal trade and
Welsh, Scot or Irish. All of these ethnic groups had their own cultural was a sailor in the merchant navy. In 1833 he
and political traditions. But as the English nation steadily grew in met Mazzini, joined the Young Italy movement
and participated in a republican uprising in
wealth, importance and power, it was able to extend its influence Piedmont in 1834. The uprising was suppressed
over the other nations of the islands. The English parliament, which and Garibaldi had to flee to South America, where
had seized power from the monarchy in 1688 at the end of a he lived in exile till 1848. In 1854, he supported
Victor Emmanuel II in his efforts to unify the
protracted conflict, was the instrument through which a nation-state, Italian states. In 1860, Garibaldi led the famous
with England at its centre, came to be forged. The Act of Union Expedition of the Thousand to South Italy. Fresh
(1707) between England and Scotland that resulted in the formation volunteers kept joining through the course of
the campaign, till their numbers grew to about
of the ‘United Kingdom of Great Britain’ meant, in effect, that 30,000. They were popularly known as Red
England was able to impose its influence on Scotland. The British Shirts.
parliament was henceforth dominated by its English members. The In 1867, Garibaldi led an army of volunteers to
growth of a British identity meant that Scotland’s distinctive culture Rome to fight the last obstacle to the unification
of Italy, the Papal States where a French garrison
and political institutions were systematically suppressed. The Catholic was stationed. The Red Shirts proved to be no
clans that inhabited the Scottish Highlands suffered terrible repression match for the combined French and Papal troops.
whenever they attempted to assert their independence. The Scottish It was only in 1870 when, during the war with
Prussia, France withdrew its troops from Rome
Highlanders were forbidden to speak their Gaelic language or that the Papal States were finally joined
wear their national dress, and large numbers were forcibly driven to Italy.
out of their homeland.
22
5 Visualising the Nation
You will recall that during the French Revolution artists used the
female allegory to portray ideas such as Liberty, Justice and the Fig. 16 — Postage stamps of 1850 with the
figure of Marianne representing the Republic of
Republic. These ideals were represented through specific objects or France.
symbols. As you would remember, the attributes of Liberty are the
red cap, or the broken chain, while Justice is generally a blindfolded
woman carrying a pair of weighing scales.
Nationalism in Europe
New words
23
Box 3
Attribute Significance
Broken chains Being freed
Breastplate with eagle Symbol of the German empire – strength
Crown of oak leaves Heroism
Sword Readiness to fight
Olive branch around the sword Willingness to make peace
Black, red and gold tricolour Flag of the liberal-nationalists in 1848, banned by the Dukes of the
German states
Rays of the rising sun Beginning of a new era
Activity
With the help of the chart in Box 3, identify the attributes of Veit’s
Germania and interpret the symbolic meaning of the painting.
In an earlier allegorical rendering of 1836, Veit had portrayed the
Kaiser’s crown at the place where he has now located the
broken chain. Explain the significance of this change.
India and the Contemporary World
Activity
Describe what you see in Fig. 17. What historical events could Hübner be
referring to in this allegorical vision of the nation?
24
Fig. 19 — Germania guarding the Rhine.
In 1860, the artist Lorenz Clasen was commissioned to paint this image. The inscription
on Germania’s sword reads: ‘The German sword protects the German Rhine.’
25
6 Nationalism and Imperialism
26
Fig. 20 — A map celebrating the British Empire.
At the top, angels are shown carrying the banner of freedom. In the foreground, Britannia — the
symbol of the British nation — is triumphantly sitting over the globe. The colonies are represented
through images of tigers, elephants, forests and primitive people. The domination of the world is
shown as the basis of Britain’s national pride.
27
Write in brief
Write in brief
d) Frankfurt parliament
e) The role of women in nationalist struggles
2. What steps did the French revolutionaries take to create a sense of collective
identity among the French people?
3. Who were Marianne and Germania? What was the importance of the way in
which they were portrayed?
4. Briefly trace the process of German unification.
5. What changes did Napoleon introduce to make the administrative system more
efficient in the territories ruled by him?
Discuss
1. Explain what is meant by the 1848 revolution of the liberals. What were the political, social
and economic ideas supported by the liberals?
2. Choose three examples to show the contribution of culture to the growth of nationalism
in Europe.
3. Through a focus on any two countries, explain how nations developed over the nineteenth
century.
Discuss
India and the Contemporary World
4. How was the history of nationalism in Britain unlike the rest of Europe?
5. Why did nationalist tensions emerge in the Balkans?
Project
Project
Find out more about nationalist symbols in countries outside Europe. For one or two countries,
collect examples of pictures, posters or music that are symbols of nationalism. How are these
different from European examples?
28