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AP World History Modern - Unit 5

The Enlightenment

“The Age of Reason” - 1600 and 1700s

THOMAS HOBBES: ENGLISH

  • Supported Divine Right

  • Believed that an Absolute Monarchy was the best form of government because people were violent and disorderly by nature

  • Wrote Leviathan to support his theories

JOHN LOCKE: ENGLISH

  • Believed that people were reasonable and moral, so they have the natural ability to govern themselves

  • All people are born free and equal with three natural rights

    • Life, liberty, and property

  • Believed that the purpose of a government was to protect those natural rights

    • If the government attempted to take those rights away, the citizens should overthrow the government

PHILOSOPHES

  • French word for Philosopher

  • Believed that people could apply reason to all aspects of life

SALONS

  • Upper class “get togethers” to discuss enlightened ideas

  • At the time books and pamphlets were censored due to the government of that time (probably a king or queen)

    • Didn’t want an enlightened idea about republics getting out so they would censor the books

VOLTAIRE

  • Used satire in his writing

    • Targeted the Clergy, Aristocracy and government

  • Candide: his most celebrated satire

  • Served time twice in the Bastille

  • Exiled to England and admired the English form of government

  • Fled France in 1734 rather than returning to prison

  • Defended freedom of speech

BARON DE MONTESQUIEU

  • Separation of Power

    • Executive, legislative, judicial

  • Checks and balances

  • Believed in the rights of people


DENIS DIDEROT

  • Compiled the Encyclopedia

MARY WOLLSTONECRAFT

  • A Vindication of the Rights of Woman

  • Supported equal education for both boys and girls

JEAN-JACQUES ROUSSEAU

  • A Philosophe who disagreed with many Enlightenment ideas

  • Believed that civilization corrupts people’s natural goodness

  • The Social Contract: an agreement among individuals to create a society and government

- LATIN AMERICAN - INDEPENDENCE MOVEMENTS

CAUSES

  • Economic:

    • Mercantilism

    • Cash Crops

      • A crop produced for its commercial value rather than for use by the grower

      • Can lead to food shortages - not enough food grown to feed popular

    • Unfair distribution of wealth

  • Social:

    • Rigid class structure

      • Difficult to move out of your social class; if you’re born into it, you stay there

  • Political:

    • Colonial rule

    • Unfair distribution of power




THE ENLIGHTENMENT

  • Government exists to protect the citizens’ natural rights of life, liberty, & property

  •  If the government violates the natural rights of the people, the citizens have a right to revolt

THE AMERICAN AND FRENCH REVOLUTIONS

  • The French and American Revolutions prove that Revolution is a legitimate means to bring about change

  • Political upheaval and new Enlightened ideas dominate France

  • Napoleonic Wars distract the European Powers attention away from their colonies



















THE HAITIAN REVOLUTION

HAITI

  • A French colony known as St. Dominique

  • The first Latin American Colony to win its independence

  • It started out as a slave rebellion because slaves outnumbered their masters by 500,000

TOUSSAINT L’OUVERTURE

  • An ex-slave who emerged as the leader of the revolution

  • 1802; French troops landed on St. Dominique and L’Ouverture promised to stop the fighting if the French would end slavery

  • Accused of plotting another rebellion and imprisoned

    • Died in prison in April 1803

  • January 1, 1804, Haiti was declared an independent country

WHY IS IT IMPORTANT?

The first to win independence

Started as a slave rebellion

French colony





MÉXICO

MIGUEL HIDALGO

  • Highly educated Creole priest

  • September 1810: El Grito de Dólares

    • Called upon his mestizo and indigenous parishioners to take up arms against the Spanish

    • Led an army toward Mexico City

    • Hidalgo never made it to the capital – He was captured and shot in 1811

JOSE MORELOS

  • Mestizo Priests who took up the fight after Hidalgo

  • Captured and executed in December 1815

AGUSTIN ITURBIDE

  • Creole who declared independence for Mexico in 1821

  • Proclaimed himself Emperor of Mexico

  • 1824: Iturbide toppled and the Republic of Mexico was established

THE LIBERATOR: SIMON BOLIVAR

  • Elite Creole planter -> Military General

  • Called the “George Washington” of South America

  • Known as the Liberator

    • Liberated territories of modern day Venezuela, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, and Bolivia

  • Wanted to create a powerful, unified Latin American State

JOSE DE SAN MARTIN

  • Creole officer who had trained in European armies

  • Liberated Argentina from Spanish control

  • Met with Bolivar in 1822

    • Turned over command of his armies to Bolivar

BRAZIL

DOM PEDRO

  • 1808: Napoleon’s troops invaded Portugal

    • The royal family fled to Brazil and ruled the Portuguese Empire from there

  • After Napoleon’s defeat, Brazilians wanted their independence

  • 1822: 8,000 Creoles signed a petition asking Dom Pedro to rue Brazil independently

  • He agreed and Brazil had a Bloodless Revolution


CONCLUSION

  • Most Latin American colonies won their independence by 1825

  • Most of the independence movements were led by the Creoles

  • Haiti was different because:

    • It was the first

    • It was the only French colony to revel

    • It was the only rebellion led by slaves

  • Brazil was different because:

    • It was a Portuguese colony

    • It was a bloodless revolution

    • It became a monarchy

-FRENCH REVOLUTION- -AND NAPOLEON-

1789 - 1815 ~ Liberty, Equality, and Fraternity

INFLUENCE OF THE ENLIGHTENMENT

  • The Philosophes: Voltaire, Diderot, Montesquieu, and Rousseau believed that knowledge should be converted into reform

  • Believed their task was to apply reason to society for the purpose of human improvement

CAUSES OF THE FRENCH REVOLUTION

  • The American Revolution: The concept of revolution was validated as a legitimate means to produce social and political change

  • The French involvement increased the economic plight of the country

  • The Aristocracy was trying to reassert the power they had lost under Louis XIV

  • Cumulative Dissent with the Ancient Regime

    • The poor and middle classes suffered from an increasing tax burden

  • 1786: the state was bankrupt

  • The Assembly of Notables refused a new tax, and the parlements insisted that Louis call together the Estates General

  • Louis agreed to allow each estate to choose its representative and to “Double the Third” (double the third estate’s number of representatives)

  • 1788: bad harvests, unemployment and inflation led to the uprisings in the summer of 1789

THE ESTATES GENERAL ***

  • The First Estate - The Clergy > 1% of the population

    • Dominated by Bishops and archbishops from the noble ranks

    • Generally wealthy and exempt from taxes

    • Owned 20% of the land

  • The Second Estate - The Nobility - >2% of the population

    • Exempt from direct taxes

    • Owned 25% of the land

  • The Third Estate - 98% of the population

    • Made up of peasants, the middle class, (Bourgeoisie), and urban workers (Sans Culottes)

    • Paid high taxes

    • Many owned the land they farmed

    • Not as concerned with political rights, but wanted relief from taxes

    • Owned 55% of the land

THE ROAD TO REVOLUTION

  • May 5: Estates General convened

  • June 17: The Third Estate declared themselves the National Assembly

  • June 20: Members of the Third Estate declared the Tennis Court Oath

  • June 27: Louis forced the First and Second Estates to join the National Assembly


REVOLUTION OF 1789

  • July 14: Storming of the Bastille

  • Summer: The Great Fear - Émigrés (emigrants - French nobility)

  • August 4: Decrees

  • August 26: The Declaration of the Rights of Man and the Citizen

  • October: Women’s March on Versailles

1790 - 1791

  • The Constituent Assembly

    • Write a new Constitution for France

    • Govern the nation in the process

      • Martial Law and censorship

  • Civil Constitution of the Clergy

    • Clergy became salaried, elected officials who had to pledge their allegiance to the State

Monasteries and Convents were abolished

  • The Church lands were sold

  • The Pope’s authority was not recognized

CONSTITUTION OF 1791

  • Limited Monarchy

    • The king's powers were restricted to a 3-year veto power over the Legislative Assembly

  • July 20

    • The royal family was caught trying to flee the country

1791 - 1792

  • Declaration of Pillnitz

    • Prussia and Austria seek to restore the French monarchy

  • The Legislative Assembly declares war on Austria in April 1792 with disastrous results

    • The mood of the nation soured and many blamed Louis

  • August 10

    • The royal family were driven from the Tuileries by an angry mob and imprisoned

  • The National Convention, elected by Universal male suffrage, was summoned to create a Republic

THE RADICAL PHASE

  • The National Convention abolished the monarchy and its calendar

    • Declared September 22, 1792, as Day one of Year I of the Republic

  • July: Thermidore, November: Brumaire, June: Prairial

  • January 21. 1793: After being tried for treason, Louis XVI was sent to the guillotine

  • The National Convention split into 2 factions

    • Jacobins (Montagnards) - Radicals

    • Girondins - Moderates

THE TERROR

  • Robespierre was elected to the Committee of Public Safety in July 1793

  • Levee En Masse - call to arms for all French citizens to support the war effort

  • 300,000 people were arrested and 40,000 executed in an attempted to eliminate all opposition and dissent

  • Republic of Virtue: dress and decorative objects became a means for displaying political commitment

    • Liberty trees, Marianne (Goddess of Liberty), government organized festivals

  • 9 Thermidor: On July 27th, Robespierre is denounced by the Committee of Public Safety and sent to the guillotine the next day

THE DIRECTORY

  • Thermidorian Reaction:

    • Swing to the right after the fall of Robespierre

    • White Terror

  • Constitution of 1795

    • Reinstated old system of electors

    • Electors chose the new Legislative Assembly

    • The Legislative Assembly chose a 5-member Directory

NAPOLEON BONAPARTE

  • Under the Directory the economy suffered

  • The war abroad was successful thanks to a brilliant young military general named Napoleon Bonaparte

    • He was a Corsican Noble

  • Coup of 18 Brumaire

    • 1799- Napoleon staged a Coup d’etat to overthrow the Directory

  • 1800: Consulate, Bank of France established

  • 1801: Concordat of 1801, Slave Rebellion in Haiti

  • 1802-03: Consul for Life, Peace of Amiens, Louisiana Purchase

  • 1804: Civil Code of 1804, Coronation as Emperor

  • 1805: Defeated at Trafalgar

    • British counter blockade prevented trade between the Americas and Europe 

      • Context for War of 1812

  • 1806: Continental System, Holy Roman Empire abolished

  • 1807: Treaty of Tilsit with Russia

NAPOLEON’S THREE (3) COSTLY MISTAKES

  1. Continental System

  • Naval blockade between Great Britain and Europe

  1. Peninsula War - 1808

  • Spanish Guerillas attacked French troops en route to Portugal

    • Guerilla - little war; sneak-attack type war

    • Not waged by people in the military

  1. Invasion of Russia - 1812

  • Lost half a million troops to the scorched-Earth policy and the Russian winter

    • Scorched-Earth Policy: Russians would burn land that the French were coming to, rather than fight them

    • Attempt to lure the French deeper into Russia, leaving them ill-prepared for the Russian winter - starving troops

NAPOLEON’S DOWNFALL

  • Weakened army could not defeat the Fourth Coalition (Russia, Prussia, Austria, and Britain)

  • October 1813: Battle of Nations (Leipzig)

  • April 4, 1814: Napoleon was forced to abdicate (step down from the throne) and was exiled to Elba

  • Bourbon Restoration: Louis XVIII takes 

    • Bourbon Dynasty returned to power; absolute monarchy restored

  • France returned to 1792 borders

THE HUNDRED DAYS

  • March 1815: Napoleon returned to France with much support

  • Battle of Waterloo: June 15th, 1815, Napoleon’s troops are defeated by the Duke of Wellington

  • Napoleon is exiled to the Island of St. Helena where he died in 1821

CONGRESS OF VIENNA, 1814 - 1815

  • Prussia, Russia Austria, Britain (the Fourth Coalition), and France

    • Fourth Coalition mainly 

  • Prince Klemens von Metternich of Austria presided

  • Attempt to restore Europe to what it was prior to Napoleon and the French Revolution; every country was independent, had their own power, balance of power

  • 3 principles:

    • Compensation

      • Fourth Coalition should be compensated by the French for defeating them

    • Legitimacy *

      • Restoring the legitimate rulers to power throughout Europe

    • Balance of Power

19TH CENTURY NATIONALISM

NATIONALISM

  • A desire for self-rule

  • A feeling and pride in and devotion to one’s country

    • Develops among people who may share a common language, history, set of traditions, or goals

  • Often causes people to join together to choose their own form of government without outside interference

    • Leads to breaking up of empires

  • Revolution and war in the 1790s created a strong sense of national unity in France

    • This feeling inspired French armies to success on the battlefield as they spread the ideals of their revolution

  • Can be either a unifying force (as seen in the unification of Italy and Germany) or a destructive force, leading to revolutions and the breakup of empires

REVOLUTIONS

GREECE

  • In 1821, nationalists in Greece revolted against the Ottoman Empire

  • Britain, France, and Russia (Quadruple Alliance + Prussia) gave support to Greece

    • Quadruple Alliance was Christian like the Greeks; Ottomans were Muslim

  • Greece won its independence from the Ottomans in 1829 under the Treaty of Adrianople

POLAND

  • Nationalists in Poland revolted in 1830

    • Their revolution was crushed by Russian forces under Tsar Nicholas I

BELGIUM

  • Nationalists in Belgium wanted to separate themselves from the Dutch

  • Won their independence in 1831

REVOLUTIONS OF 1848

  • Revolutions occurred in parts of the Austrian Empire, Italy, and Germany

  • Throughout the continent of Europe, people sought to develop unified, independent nation-states

UNIFICATION OF ITALY

  • Ever since the fall of the Roman Empire in the 400s, Italy had been divided into many small states

  • After Napoleon invaded Italy, he united some of the Italian states into the Kingdom of Italy

  • The Congress of Vienna re-divided Italy and put much of it under Austrian or Spanish control

THREE LEADERS OF ITALIAN UNIFICATION

GIUSEPPE MAZZINI: “THE SOUL”

  • Formed Young Italy - a nationalist movement

  • His writings and speeches provided the inspiration for the unification of Italy


COUNT CAMILLO DI CAVOUR: “THE BRAINS”

  • Prime Minister of Piedmont-Sardinia

  • Formed alliances with France and Prussia

  • Used war to drive Austrians from Italy

GIUSEPPE GARIBALDI: “THE SWORD”

  • Soldier who led the “Red Shirts” to win control of southern Italy and helped it unite with the north

A UNIFIED ITALY: 1861

  • Victor Emmanuel of Sardinia was crowned king of a united Italy

  • The Catholic Church resisted the new government

UNIFICATION OF GERMANY

  • In the early 1800s, most German speaking people lived in small states to which they felt loyalty

  • During Napoleon’s conquests, feelings of nationalism stirred in those Germans who wanted to be free of French rule

  • After Napoleon’s defeat in 1815, some nationalists called for a unified Germany

    • Metternich, however, blocked the idea at the Congress of Vienna

  • Zollverein: Prussia set up a trade union among German states in the 1830s

OTTO VON BISMARCK

  • 1862:  appointed Chancellor of Prussia 

  • Guided German unification

  • “Blood and Iron”

    • “Not by speeches and votes of the majority, are the great questions of the time decided — that was the error of 1848 and 1849 — but by iron and blood.”   

  • Bismarck believed that Germany would be united through war and industrialization

THREE WARS

  • Danish War (1864)

    • Prussia allied with Austria to gain more land from Denmark

  • Austro-Prussian War (1866)

    • Prussia turned against Austria to gain more land, winning in just seven weeks (Seven Weeks War)

    • United some Germanic states with Prussia into the North German Confederation

  • Franco-Prussian War (1868-1870)

    • Bismarck used Propaganda to begin a war with France (Ems Dispatch)

    • Prussia defeated France and the German states agreed to unite with Prussia

    • Germany annexed the disputed provinces of Alsace-Lorraine

A UNIFIED GERMANY: 1871

  • The German states united under the Prussian king William I

  • William took the title of Kaiser

    • Kaiser: Caesar or emperor



NAPOLEON III

  • In 1848, Louis Napoleon became the President of the Second Republic in France

  • As the nephew of Napoleon I, many thought he would bring stability to France

  • On December 2, 1851, Louis Napoleon seized power after an attempted Socialist Coup d‘etat

    • Staged a plebiscite to extend his term to 10 years

  • December 2, 1852, Louis Napoleon proclaimed the 2nd Empire in France and named himself Napoleon III

  • Napoleon III modernized water and sanitation systems, built wide, tree-lined avenues, monumental public buildings, parks and Railroad terminals

    • Supported the construction of the Suez Canal

  • Supported Italian Unification

  • Exiled after the French defeat in the Franco- Prussian War

ZIONISM

  • The rise of nationalism in Europe led to an intensification of anti-Semitism in the late 1800s

  • As anti-Semitism grew, some Jews moved to Palestine, the ancient Jewish homeland

THE DREYFUS AFFAIR

  • Alfred Dreyfus was a captain in the French army

  • In 1894 papers made it appear that a French military officer was providing secret information to the German government

    • Dreyfus came under suspicion

  • Despite his protestations of innocence he was found guilty of treason in a secret military court-martial

    • He was denied the right to examine the evidence against him during it

  • The army stripped him of his rank in a humiliating ceremony

    • Shipped him off to life imprisonment on Devil’s Island

      • A penal colony located off the coast of South America

  • “The Affair” might have ended then but for the determined intervention of the novelist Émile Zola, who published his denunciation (“J’accuse!”) of the army cover-up in a daily newspaper

THEODOR HERZL

  • A young journalist alarmed by the strong anti-Semitism he witnessed in France after the Dreyfus Affair

  • Herzl called for Jews to establish their own state

  • Herzl’s writings helped to build Zionism, the movement devoted to building a Jewish state in Palestine.

THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION

OVERVIEW

  • A long, slow process during which machines replaced hand tools and new sources of power replaced human and animal power in the production of goods

  • What were these new sources of power?

    • Water

    • Coal

    • Steam

    • Electricity

AGRICULTURAL REVOLUTION

  • New farming techniques led to an increase in the food supply which led to an increase in population

  • 1701 Seed Drill: Jethro Tull

  • Crop Rotation: Charles “Turnip” Townshend

ENCLOSURE MOVEMENT

  • 1760-1815: Parliament enclosed 6 million acres of communal land

    • The Commons

URBANIZATION

  • The Agricultural Revolution led to the need for less people to work on the farms

    • Therefore: they moved to the cities in search of work



WHY DID IT BEGIN IN GREAT BRITAIN?

NATURAL RESOURCES

  • Water: Provided power for the machines and transportation of goods and raw material

  • Coal:  Great Britain has a tremendous amount of coal to fuel the machines 

STABLE ECONOMY

  • Great Britain had an available supply of capital 

STABLE GOVERNMENT

  • The Glorious Revolution of 1688 brought peace and prosperity to Great Britain after 85 years of confusion

LABOR

  • The Enclosure Movement left millions with no way to earn a living

  • The Agricultural Revolution led to a population explosion which meant more available workers

THE SPREAD OF INDUSTRIALIZATION

  • Belgium:

    • Belgium had rich deposits of iron and coal, as well as water for transportation

    • In 1799, William Cockerill smuggled the plans for the Spinning Jenny into Belgium

  • Germany:

    • The political and economic division of Germany led to pockets of industrialization

    • These pockets were linked by a railroad line

IMPACT OF INDUSTRIALIZATION

  • Inequality:

    • Widened the gap between the Rich and Poor or the Have and Have Nots

  • Imperialism:

    • Exploitation of colonial resources and colonial peoples

FIRST PHASE

  • The First Phase of the Industrial Revolution culminated in 1820 with the steam engine being used in the locomotive

    • Brought the use of coal and steam together

TRANSFORMATION OF SOCIETY

Population, health and wealth rose dramatically

CLASSES

Middle Class:

  • Bankers, Lawyers, Merchants, Clerks, Managers and Teachers

  • Superrich:

    • Successful owners of RR’s, Mines and factories

  • Working Class:

    • 10-14 Hour Days

    • No ventilation (Lint, Dust, fumes)

    • Pneumonia and TB were rampant

    • Women and children were desirable because they could be paid less and were more nimble

    • No school

    • Children were often crippled from heavy and dangerous work

  • Lowell Girls: (Mill Girls)

    • Offered independence to young unmarried women

    • Lived in boarding houses

  • Luddites

    • Workers who raged against the machine

    • Called Luddites after the fictitious Ned Lud

  • The Deserted Village:  

    • Oliver Goldsmith poem about the popular sense of alienation and bitterness brought about by the Agricultural and Industrial Revolutions

CITIES

  • Human and industrial waste contaminated water supplies, spreading disease

  • Poor Laws 1834:

    • Made poverty a crime and a sin

    • Assumed that unemployment and destitution were the result not of low wages but of personal idleness and the unwillingness to work

    • Paupers were herded into workhouses and families were split up

    • Those who died paupers were denied a church burial

UNIONIZATION AND REFORM

  • Combination Acts 1799 and 1800: Forbade workers from organizing for any purpose

  • Unions:  Workers join together to push for reforms in the workplace

  • Collective Bargaining: Negotiations

  • Strike: The refusal to work; this is only an effective tool for skilled workers

REFORM LAWS

  • Factory Acts of 1833:

    • Illegal to hire children under the age of 9

    • Children 9-12: could not work more than 8 hours a day

    • 13-17: no more than 12 hours a day

  • Mines Act of 1842:

    • Women and children were prohibited from working in the mines 

    • This was more to protect jobs for the men than for the protection of women and children

  • Ten Hours Act:

    • Limited the workday for women and children to 10 hours a day

    • This was so that women could still attend to their domestic duties

  • Abolition of Slavery:

    • Great Britain became the first industrialized nation to abolish slavery  

    • This was because it was cheaper to hire workers than to take care of slaves












INDUSTRIAL REV INVENTIONS

SEED DRILL

  • Jethro Tull

  • 1701

  • England

  • Digs and plants seeds in a row

  • More Crops

CROP ROTATION

  • Charles “Turnip” Townshend

  • 1730’s

  • England

  • Rotated crops that grow above the ground with crops that grow below

  • More crops

FLYING SHUTTLE

  • John Kay

  • 1733

  • England

  • The shuttle could be mechanized

  • Doubled the capacity of the loom and led to the need for more thread

SPINNING JENNY

  • James Hargreaves

  • 1764

  • England

  • Wove several spindles of thread at once

  • Supply of thread could keep up with the Flying Shuttle


WATER FRAME

  • Richard Arkwright

  • 1769

  • England

  • Utilized the power of water to power the spinning jenny

  • Increased thread supply

MINER’S FRIEND

  • Thomas Newcomen

  • 1712

  • England

  • Steam Powered Pump

  • Pumped water out of the mines allowing for miners to go deeper

STEAM ENGINE CONDENSER

  • James Watt

  • 1760’s

  • Scotland (part of Great Britain)

  • Cooled the steam that wasn’t used

  • Made the steam engine more efficient by preventing explosions




POWER LOOM

  • Edmund Cartwright

  • 1780’s

  • England

  • Used steam to power the loom

  • Increased the supply of cloth

COKE BLAST FURNACE SMELTING

  • Abraham Darby

  • 1709

  • England

  • Used coke (a byproduct of coal) to separate iron from its ore

  • Stronger iron for heavy utensils and munitions

ECONOMIC SYSTEMS OF THE 19TH CENTURY

CAPITALISM

  • Laissez-Faire: French term meaning “let-do”

    • Supporters of Laissez-faire economics felt that people should be able to buy, sell, hire, and fire without government interference

    • A hands-off approach to economics

      • Leaders of the Industrial Revolution who believed in Laissez-faire were owners of the railroads, factories, and mines

  • Adam Smith:

    • Wrote An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of The Wealth of Nations (1776)


THOMAS MALTHUS AND ‘OVERPOPULATION’

  • For Malthus: there is no such thing as overpopulation

    • Population cannot exceed food supply

  • Malthus argued that population was always already checked, or limited, by food production

  • These ‘checks’ to population took the form of poverty, sickness, plagues, and even famine




SOCIALISM

  • The belief that the means of production (land, labor, capital, and factories) should be owned and operated by society

  • Wealth should be equally distributed among citizens

  • Karl Marx: German philosopher who set out to provide a scientific basis for socialism

  • History advanced through conflict and economics were a basis for this change

  • Classes:

    • Bourgeoisie: ruling class; controlled production

    • Proletariat: working class; the true productive class, according to Marx

      • Name has Latin origins; translates to “nothing but children”

        • They were so poor that they had nothing but their children

MARX’S BELIEFS

  • The only way to get the ruling class to give up their power was by revolution

    • This made conflict between the classes inevitable

  • The proletariat would build a society where people owned everything

    • Class distinctions would then disappear, making a “classless society”


SOCIALISM -> COMMUNISM

  • COMMUNISM: the last stage of socialism, where each individual would find true fulfillment

    • From each according to his ability, to each, according to his need.”

  • A true socialist society, where the need for government would “wither away”

THE COMMUNIST MANIFESTO 1848 - KARL MARX AND FRIEDRICH ENGELS

  • “Let the ruling classes tremble at a Communist Revolution.  The proletarians have nothing to lose but their chains.  They have a world to win.  Working Men of all countries, unite!”


AP World History Modern - Unit 5

The Enlightenment

“The Age of Reason” - 1600 and 1700s

THOMAS HOBBES: ENGLISH

  • Supported Divine Right

  • Believed that an Absolute Monarchy was the best form of government because people were violent and disorderly by nature

  • Wrote Leviathan to support his theories

JOHN LOCKE: ENGLISH

  • Believed that people were reasonable and moral, so they have the natural ability to govern themselves

  • All people are born free and equal with three natural rights

    • Life, liberty, and property

  • Believed that the purpose of a government was to protect those natural rights

    • If the government attempted to take those rights away, the citizens should overthrow the government

PHILOSOPHES

  • French word for Philosopher

  • Believed that people could apply reason to all aspects of life

SALONS

  • Upper class “get togethers” to discuss enlightened ideas

  • At the time books and pamphlets were censored due to the government of that time (probably a king or queen)

    • Didn’t want an enlightened idea about republics getting out so they would censor the books

VOLTAIRE

  • Used satire in his writing

    • Targeted the Clergy, Aristocracy and government

  • Candide: his most celebrated satire

  • Served time twice in the Bastille

  • Exiled to England and admired the English form of government

  • Fled France in 1734 rather than returning to prison

  • Defended freedom of speech

BARON DE MONTESQUIEU

  • Separation of Power

    • Executive, legislative, judicial

  • Checks and balances

  • Believed in the rights of people


DENIS DIDEROT

  • Compiled the Encyclopedia

MARY WOLLSTONECRAFT

  • A Vindication of the Rights of Woman

  • Supported equal education for both boys and girls

JEAN-JACQUES ROUSSEAU

  • A Philosophe who disagreed with many Enlightenment ideas

  • Believed that civilization corrupts people’s natural goodness

  • The Social Contract: an agreement among individuals to create a society and government

- LATIN AMERICAN - INDEPENDENCE MOVEMENTS

CAUSES

  • Economic:

    • Mercantilism

    • Cash Crops

      • A crop produced for its commercial value rather than for use by the grower

      • Can lead to food shortages - not enough food grown to feed popular

    • Unfair distribution of wealth

  • Social:

    • Rigid class structure

      • Difficult to move out of your social class; if you’re born into it, you stay there

  • Political:

    • Colonial rule

    • Unfair distribution of power




THE ENLIGHTENMENT

  • Government exists to protect the citizens’ natural rights of life, liberty, & property

  •  If the government violates the natural rights of the people, the citizens have a right to revolt

THE AMERICAN AND FRENCH REVOLUTIONS

  • The French and American Revolutions prove that Revolution is a legitimate means to bring about change

  • Political upheaval and new Enlightened ideas dominate France

  • Napoleonic Wars distract the European Powers attention away from their colonies



















THE HAITIAN REVOLUTION

HAITI

  • A French colony known as St. Dominique

  • The first Latin American Colony to win its independence

  • It started out as a slave rebellion because slaves outnumbered their masters by 500,000

TOUSSAINT L’OUVERTURE

  • An ex-slave who emerged as the leader of the revolution

  • 1802; French troops landed on St. Dominique and L’Ouverture promised to stop the fighting if the French would end slavery

  • Accused of plotting another rebellion and imprisoned

    • Died in prison in April 1803

  • January 1, 1804, Haiti was declared an independent country

WHY IS IT IMPORTANT?

The first to win independence

Started as a slave rebellion

French colony





MÉXICO

MIGUEL HIDALGO

  • Highly educated Creole priest

  • September 1810: El Grito de Dólares

    • Called upon his mestizo and indigenous parishioners to take up arms against the Spanish

    • Led an army toward Mexico City

    • Hidalgo never made it to the capital – He was captured and shot in 1811

JOSE MORELOS

  • Mestizo Priests who took up the fight after Hidalgo

  • Captured and executed in December 1815

AGUSTIN ITURBIDE

  • Creole who declared independence for Mexico in 1821

  • Proclaimed himself Emperor of Mexico

  • 1824: Iturbide toppled and the Republic of Mexico was established

THE LIBERATOR: SIMON BOLIVAR

  • Elite Creole planter -> Military General

  • Called the “George Washington” of South America

  • Known as the Liberator

    • Liberated territories of modern day Venezuela, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, and Bolivia

  • Wanted to create a powerful, unified Latin American State

JOSE DE SAN MARTIN

  • Creole officer who had trained in European armies

  • Liberated Argentina from Spanish control

  • Met with Bolivar in 1822

    • Turned over command of his armies to Bolivar

BRAZIL

DOM PEDRO

  • 1808: Napoleon’s troops invaded Portugal

    • The royal family fled to Brazil and ruled the Portuguese Empire from there

  • After Napoleon’s defeat, Brazilians wanted their independence

  • 1822: 8,000 Creoles signed a petition asking Dom Pedro to rue Brazil independently

  • He agreed and Brazil had a Bloodless Revolution


CONCLUSION

  • Most Latin American colonies won their independence by 1825

  • Most of the independence movements were led by the Creoles

  • Haiti was different because:

    • It was the first

    • It was the only French colony to revel

    • It was the only rebellion led by slaves

  • Brazil was different because:

    • It was a Portuguese colony

    • It was a bloodless revolution

    • It became a monarchy

-FRENCH REVOLUTION- -AND NAPOLEON-

1789 - 1815 ~ Liberty, Equality, and Fraternity

INFLUENCE OF THE ENLIGHTENMENT

  • The Philosophes: Voltaire, Diderot, Montesquieu, and Rousseau believed that knowledge should be converted into reform

  • Believed their task was to apply reason to society for the purpose of human improvement

CAUSES OF THE FRENCH REVOLUTION

  • The American Revolution: The concept of revolution was validated as a legitimate means to produce social and political change

  • The French involvement increased the economic plight of the country

  • The Aristocracy was trying to reassert the power they had lost under Louis XIV

  • Cumulative Dissent with the Ancient Regime

    • The poor and middle classes suffered from an increasing tax burden

  • 1786: the state was bankrupt

  • The Assembly of Notables refused a new tax, and the parlements insisted that Louis call together the Estates General

  • Louis agreed to allow each estate to choose its representative and to “Double the Third” (double the third estate’s number of representatives)

  • 1788: bad harvests, unemployment and inflation led to the uprisings in the summer of 1789

THE ESTATES GENERAL ***

  • The First Estate - The Clergy > 1% of the population

    • Dominated by Bishops and archbishops from the noble ranks

    • Generally wealthy and exempt from taxes

    • Owned 20% of the land

  • The Second Estate - The Nobility - >2% of the population

    • Exempt from direct taxes

    • Owned 25% of the land

  • The Third Estate - 98% of the population

    • Made up of peasants, the middle class, (Bourgeoisie), and urban workers (Sans Culottes)

    • Paid high taxes

    • Many owned the land they farmed

    • Not as concerned with political rights, but wanted relief from taxes

    • Owned 55% of the land

THE ROAD TO REVOLUTION

  • May 5: Estates General convened

  • June 17: The Third Estate declared themselves the National Assembly

  • June 20: Members of the Third Estate declared the Tennis Court Oath

  • June 27: Louis forced the First and Second Estates to join the National Assembly


REVOLUTION OF 1789

  • July 14: Storming of the Bastille

  • Summer: The Great Fear - Émigrés (emigrants - French nobility)

  • August 4: Decrees

  • August 26: The Declaration of the Rights of Man and the Citizen

  • October: Women’s March on Versailles

1790 - 1791

  • The Constituent Assembly

    • Write a new Constitution for France

    • Govern the nation in the process

      • Martial Law and censorship

  • Civil Constitution of the Clergy

    • Clergy became salaried, elected officials who had to pledge their allegiance to the State

Monasteries and Convents were abolished

  • The Church lands were sold

  • The Pope’s authority was not recognized

CONSTITUTION OF 1791

  • Limited Monarchy

    • The king's powers were restricted to a 3-year veto power over the Legislative Assembly

  • July 20

    • The royal family was caught trying to flee the country

1791 - 1792

  • Declaration of Pillnitz

    • Prussia and Austria seek to restore the French monarchy

  • The Legislative Assembly declares war on Austria in April 1792 with disastrous results

    • The mood of the nation soured and many blamed Louis

  • August 10

    • The royal family were driven from the Tuileries by an angry mob and imprisoned

  • The National Convention, elected by Universal male suffrage, was summoned to create a Republic

THE RADICAL PHASE

  • The National Convention abolished the monarchy and its calendar

    • Declared September 22, 1792, as Day one of Year I of the Republic

  • July: Thermidore, November: Brumaire, June: Prairial

  • January 21. 1793: After being tried for treason, Louis XVI was sent to the guillotine

  • The National Convention split into 2 factions

    • Jacobins (Montagnards) - Radicals

    • Girondins - Moderates

THE TERROR

  • Robespierre was elected to the Committee of Public Safety in July 1793

  • Levee En Masse - call to arms for all French citizens to support the war effort

  • 300,000 people were arrested and 40,000 executed in an attempted to eliminate all opposition and dissent

  • Republic of Virtue: dress and decorative objects became a means for displaying political commitment

    • Liberty trees, Marianne (Goddess of Liberty), government organized festivals

  • 9 Thermidor: On July 27th, Robespierre is denounced by the Committee of Public Safety and sent to the guillotine the next day

THE DIRECTORY

  • Thermidorian Reaction:

    • Swing to the right after the fall of Robespierre

    • White Terror

  • Constitution of 1795

    • Reinstated old system of electors

    • Electors chose the new Legislative Assembly

    • The Legislative Assembly chose a 5-member Directory

NAPOLEON BONAPARTE

  • Under the Directory the economy suffered

  • The war abroad was successful thanks to a brilliant young military general named Napoleon Bonaparte

    • He was a Corsican Noble

  • Coup of 18 Brumaire

    • 1799- Napoleon staged a Coup d’etat to overthrow the Directory

  • 1800: Consulate, Bank of France established

  • 1801: Concordat of 1801, Slave Rebellion in Haiti

  • 1802-03: Consul for Life, Peace of Amiens, Louisiana Purchase

  • 1804: Civil Code of 1804, Coronation as Emperor

  • 1805: Defeated at Trafalgar

    • British counter blockade prevented trade between the Americas and Europe 

      • Context for War of 1812

  • 1806: Continental System, Holy Roman Empire abolished

  • 1807: Treaty of Tilsit with Russia

NAPOLEON’S THREE (3) COSTLY MISTAKES

  1. Continental System

  • Naval blockade between Great Britain and Europe

  1. Peninsula War - 1808

  • Spanish Guerillas attacked French troops en route to Portugal

    • Guerilla - little war; sneak-attack type war

    • Not waged by people in the military

  1. Invasion of Russia - 1812

  • Lost half a million troops to the scorched-Earth policy and the Russian winter

    • Scorched-Earth Policy: Russians would burn land that the French were coming to, rather than fight them

    • Attempt to lure the French deeper into Russia, leaving them ill-prepared for the Russian winter - starving troops

NAPOLEON’S DOWNFALL

  • Weakened army could not defeat the Fourth Coalition (Russia, Prussia, Austria, and Britain)

  • October 1813: Battle of Nations (Leipzig)

  • April 4, 1814: Napoleon was forced to abdicate (step down from the throne) and was exiled to Elba

  • Bourbon Restoration: Louis XVIII takes 

    • Bourbon Dynasty returned to power; absolute monarchy restored

  • France returned to 1792 borders

THE HUNDRED DAYS

  • March 1815: Napoleon returned to France with much support

  • Battle of Waterloo: June 15th, 1815, Napoleon’s troops are defeated by the Duke of Wellington

  • Napoleon is exiled to the Island of St. Helena where he died in 1821

CONGRESS OF VIENNA, 1814 - 1815

  • Prussia, Russia Austria, Britain (the Fourth Coalition), and France

    • Fourth Coalition mainly 

  • Prince Klemens von Metternich of Austria presided

  • Attempt to restore Europe to what it was prior to Napoleon and the French Revolution; every country was independent, had their own power, balance of power

  • 3 principles:

    • Compensation

      • Fourth Coalition should be compensated by the French for defeating them

    • Legitimacy *

      • Restoring the legitimate rulers to power throughout Europe

    • Balance of Power

19TH CENTURY NATIONALISM

NATIONALISM

  • A desire for self-rule

  • A feeling and pride in and devotion to one’s country

    • Develops among people who may share a common language, history, set of traditions, or goals

  • Often causes people to join together to choose their own form of government without outside interference

    • Leads to breaking up of empires

  • Revolution and war in the 1790s created a strong sense of national unity in France

    • This feeling inspired French armies to success on the battlefield as they spread the ideals of their revolution

  • Can be either a unifying force (as seen in the unification of Italy and Germany) or a destructive force, leading to revolutions and the breakup of empires

REVOLUTIONS

GREECE

  • In 1821, nationalists in Greece revolted against the Ottoman Empire

  • Britain, France, and Russia (Quadruple Alliance + Prussia) gave support to Greece

    • Quadruple Alliance was Christian like the Greeks; Ottomans were Muslim

  • Greece won its independence from the Ottomans in 1829 under the Treaty of Adrianople

POLAND

  • Nationalists in Poland revolted in 1830

    • Their revolution was crushed by Russian forces under Tsar Nicholas I

BELGIUM

  • Nationalists in Belgium wanted to separate themselves from the Dutch

  • Won their independence in 1831

REVOLUTIONS OF 1848

  • Revolutions occurred in parts of the Austrian Empire, Italy, and Germany

  • Throughout the continent of Europe, people sought to develop unified, independent nation-states

UNIFICATION OF ITALY

  • Ever since the fall of the Roman Empire in the 400s, Italy had been divided into many small states

  • After Napoleon invaded Italy, he united some of the Italian states into the Kingdom of Italy

  • The Congress of Vienna re-divided Italy and put much of it under Austrian or Spanish control

THREE LEADERS OF ITALIAN UNIFICATION

GIUSEPPE MAZZINI: “THE SOUL”

  • Formed Young Italy - a nationalist movement

  • His writings and speeches provided the inspiration for the unification of Italy


COUNT CAMILLO DI CAVOUR: “THE BRAINS”

  • Prime Minister of Piedmont-Sardinia

  • Formed alliances with France and Prussia

  • Used war to drive Austrians from Italy

GIUSEPPE GARIBALDI: “THE SWORD”

  • Soldier who led the “Red Shirts” to win control of southern Italy and helped it unite with the north

A UNIFIED ITALY: 1861

  • Victor Emmanuel of Sardinia was crowned king of a united Italy

  • The Catholic Church resisted the new government

UNIFICATION OF GERMANY

  • In the early 1800s, most German speaking people lived in small states to which they felt loyalty

  • During Napoleon’s conquests, feelings of nationalism stirred in those Germans who wanted to be free of French rule

  • After Napoleon’s defeat in 1815, some nationalists called for a unified Germany

    • Metternich, however, blocked the idea at the Congress of Vienna

  • Zollverein: Prussia set up a trade union among German states in the 1830s

OTTO VON BISMARCK

  • 1862:  appointed Chancellor of Prussia 

  • Guided German unification

  • “Blood and Iron”

    • “Not by speeches and votes of the majority, are the great questions of the time decided — that was the error of 1848 and 1849 — but by iron and blood.”   

  • Bismarck believed that Germany would be united through war and industrialization

THREE WARS

  • Danish War (1864)

    • Prussia allied with Austria to gain more land from Denmark

  • Austro-Prussian War (1866)

    • Prussia turned against Austria to gain more land, winning in just seven weeks (Seven Weeks War)

    • United some Germanic states with Prussia into the North German Confederation

  • Franco-Prussian War (1868-1870)

    • Bismarck used Propaganda to begin a war with France (Ems Dispatch)

    • Prussia defeated France and the German states agreed to unite with Prussia

    • Germany annexed the disputed provinces of Alsace-Lorraine

A UNIFIED GERMANY: 1871

  • The German states united under the Prussian king William I

  • William took the title of Kaiser

    • Kaiser: Caesar or emperor



NAPOLEON III

  • In 1848, Louis Napoleon became the President of the Second Republic in France

  • As the nephew of Napoleon I, many thought he would bring stability to France

  • On December 2, 1851, Louis Napoleon seized power after an attempted Socialist Coup d‘etat

    • Staged a plebiscite to extend his term to 10 years

  • December 2, 1852, Louis Napoleon proclaimed the 2nd Empire in France and named himself Napoleon III

  • Napoleon III modernized water and sanitation systems, built wide, tree-lined avenues, monumental public buildings, parks and Railroad terminals

    • Supported the construction of the Suez Canal

  • Supported Italian Unification

  • Exiled after the French defeat in the Franco- Prussian War

ZIONISM

  • The rise of nationalism in Europe led to an intensification of anti-Semitism in the late 1800s

  • As anti-Semitism grew, some Jews moved to Palestine, the ancient Jewish homeland

THE DREYFUS AFFAIR

  • Alfred Dreyfus was a captain in the French army

  • In 1894 papers made it appear that a French military officer was providing secret information to the German government

    • Dreyfus came under suspicion

  • Despite his protestations of innocence he was found guilty of treason in a secret military court-martial

    • He was denied the right to examine the evidence against him during it

  • The army stripped him of his rank in a humiliating ceremony

    • Shipped him off to life imprisonment on Devil’s Island

      • A penal colony located off the coast of South America

  • “The Affair” might have ended then but for the determined intervention of the novelist Émile Zola, who published his denunciation (“J’accuse!”) of the army cover-up in a daily newspaper

THEODOR HERZL

  • A young journalist alarmed by the strong anti-Semitism he witnessed in France after the Dreyfus Affair

  • Herzl called for Jews to establish their own state

  • Herzl’s writings helped to build Zionism, the movement devoted to building a Jewish state in Palestine.

THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION

OVERVIEW

  • A long, slow process during which machines replaced hand tools and new sources of power replaced human and animal power in the production of goods

  • What were these new sources of power?

    • Water

    • Coal

    • Steam

    • Electricity

AGRICULTURAL REVOLUTION

  • New farming techniques led to an increase in the food supply which led to an increase in population

  • 1701 Seed Drill: Jethro Tull

  • Crop Rotation: Charles “Turnip” Townshend

ENCLOSURE MOVEMENT

  • 1760-1815: Parliament enclosed 6 million acres of communal land

    • The Commons

URBANIZATION

  • The Agricultural Revolution led to the need for less people to work on the farms

    • Therefore: they moved to the cities in search of work



WHY DID IT BEGIN IN GREAT BRITAIN?

NATURAL RESOURCES

  • Water: Provided power for the machines and transportation of goods and raw material

  • Coal:  Great Britain has a tremendous amount of coal to fuel the machines 

STABLE ECONOMY

  • Great Britain had an available supply of capital 

STABLE GOVERNMENT

  • The Glorious Revolution of 1688 brought peace and prosperity to Great Britain after 85 years of confusion

LABOR

  • The Enclosure Movement left millions with no way to earn a living

  • The Agricultural Revolution led to a population explosion which meant more available workers

THE SPREAD OF INDUSTRIALIZATION

  • Belgium:

    • Belgium had rich deposits of iron and coal, as well as water for transportation

    • In 1799, William Cockerill smuggled the plans for the Spinning Jenny into Belgium

  • Germany:

    • The political and economic division of Germany led to pockets of industrialization

    • These pockets were linked by a railroad line

IMPACT OF INDUSTRIALIZATION

  • Inequality:

    • Widened the gap between the Rich and Poor or the Have and Have Nots

  • Imperialism:

    • Exploitation of colonial resources and colonial peoples

FIRST PHASE

  • The First Phase of the Industrial Revolution culminated in 1820 with the steam engine being used in the locomotive

    • Brought the use of coal and steam together

TRANSFORMATION OF SOCIETY

Population, health and wealth rose dramatically

CLASSES

Middle Class:

  • Bankers, Lawyers, Merchants, Clerks, Managers and Teachers

  • Superrich:

    • Successful owners of RR’s, Mines and factories

  • Working Class:

    • 10-14 Hour Days

    • No ventilation (Lint, Dust, fumes)

    • Pneumonia and TB were rampant

    • Women and children were desirable because they could be paid less and were more nimble

    • No school

    • Children were often crippled from heavy and dangerous work

  • Lowell Girls: (Mill Girls)

    • Offered independence to young unmarried women

    • Lived in boarding houses

  • Luddites

    • Workers who raged against the machine

    • Called Luddites after the fictitious Ned Lud

  • The Deserted Village:  

    • Oliver Goldsmith poem about the popular sense of alienation and bitterness brought about by the Agricultural and Industrial Revolutions

CITIES

  • Human and industrial waste contaminated water supplies, spreading disease

  • Poor Laws 1834:

    • Made poverty a crime and a sin

    • Assumed that unemployment and destitution were the result not of low wages but of personal idleness and the unwillingness to work

    • Paupers were herded into workhouses and families were split up

    • Those who died paupers were denied a church burial

UNIONIZATION AND REFORM

  • Combination Acts 1799 and 1800: Forbade workers from organizing for any purpose

  • Unions:  Workers join together to push for reforms in the workplace

  • Collective Bargaining: Negotiations

  • Strike: The refusal to work; this is only an effective tool for skilled workers

REFORM LAWS

  • Factory Acts of 1833:

    • Illegal to hire children under the age of 9

    • Children 9-12: could not work more than 8 hours a day

    • 13-17: no more than 12 hours a day

  • Mines Act of 1842:

    • Women and children were prohibited from working in the mines 

    • This was more to protect jobs for the men than for the protection of women and children

  • Ten Hours Act:

    • Limited the workday for women and children to 10 hours a day

    • This was so that women could still attend to their domestic duties

  • Abolition of Slavery:

    • Great Britain became the first industrialized nation to abolish slavery  

    • This was because it was cheaper to hire workers than to take care of slaves












INDUSTRIAL REV INVENTIONS

SEED DRILL

  • Jethro Tull

  • 1701

  • England

  • Digs and plants seeds in a row

  • More Crops

CROP ROTATION

  • Charles “Turnip” Townshend

  • 1730’s

  • England

  • Rotated crops that grow above the ground with crops that grow below

  • More crops

FLYING SHUTTLE

  • John Kay

  • 1733

  • England

  • The shuttle could be mechanized

  • Doubled the capacity of the loom and led to the need for more thread

SPINNING JENNY

  • James Hargreaves

  • 1764

  • England

  • Wove several spindles of thread at once

  • Supply of thread could keep up with the Flying Shuttle


WATER FRAME

  • Richard Arkwright

  • 1769

  • England

  • Utilized the power of water to power the spinning jenny

  • Increased thread supply

MINER’S FRIEND

  • Thomas Newcomen

  • 1712

  • England

  • Steam Powered Pump

  • Pumped water out of the mines allowing for miners to go deeper

STEAM ENGINE CONDENSER

  • James Watt

  • 1760’s

  • Scotland (part of Great Britain)

  • Cooled the steam that wasn’t used

  • Made the steam engine more efficient by preventing explosions




POWER LOOM

  • Edmund Cartwright

  • 1780’s

  • England

  • Used steam to power the loom

  • Increased the supply of cloth

COKE BLAST FURNACE SMELTING

  • Abraham Darby

  • 1709

  • England

  • Used coke (a byproduct of coal) to separate iron from its ore

  • Stronger iron for heavy utensils and munitions

ECONOMIC SYSTEMS OF THE 19TH CENTURY

CAPITALISM

  • Laissez-Faire: French term meaning “let-do”

    • Supporters of Laissez-faire economics felt that people should be able to buy, sell, hire, and fire without government interference

    • A hands-off approach to economics

      • Leaders of the Industrial Revolution who believed in Laissez-faire were owners of the railroads, factories, and mines

  • Adam Smith:

    • Wrote An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of The Wealth of Nations (1776)


THOMAS MALTHUS AND ‘OVERPOPULATION’

  • For Malthus: there is no such thing as overpopulation

    • Population cannot exceed food supply

  • Malthus argued that population was always already checked, or limited, by food production

  • These ‘checks’ to population took the form of poverty, sickness, plagues, and even famine




SOCIALISM

  • The belief that the means of production (land, labor, capital, and factories) should be owned and operated by society

  • Wealth should be equally distributed among citizens

  • Karl Marx: German philosopher who set out to provide a scientific basis for socialism

  • History advanced through conflict and economics were a basis for this change

  • Classes:

    • Bourgeoisie: ruling class; controlled production

    • Proletariat: working class; the true productive class, according to Marx

      • Name has Latin origins; translates to “nothing but children”

        • They were so poor that they had nothing but their children

MARX’S BELIEFS

  • The only way to get the ruling class to give up their power was by revolution

    • This made conflict between the classes inevitable

  • The proletariat would build a society where people owned everything

    • Class distinctions would then disappear, making a “classless society”


SOCIALISM -> COMMUNISM

  • COMMUNISM: the last stage of socialism, where each individual would find true fulfillment

    • From each according to his ability, to each, according to his need.”

  • A true socialist society, where the need for government would “wither away”

THE COMMUNIST MANIFESTO 1848 - KARL MARX AND FRIEDRICH ENGELS

  • “Let the ruling classes tremble at a Communist Revolution.  The proletarians have nothing to lose but their chains.  They have a world to win.  Working Men of all countries, unite!”


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