Section #54
The Leaking Dam and the Flood: Domestic
Conservatism gripped Europe after the fall of Napoleon.
Metternich aimed to restore dynasties to maintain order and balance
Habsburgs, Bourbons, English governing classes
Tsar Alexander of Russia was a wildcard
He was a dreamer, self-chosen world savior
Jacobin and liberal, he also wanted to bring Christianity into politics
Influenced writing of constitutions in France, Russia
Some south German states allowed representative G
Prussia even promised a representative assembly
Leaders were fearful of revolution
Each sign of agitation was viewed as a revolution
Agitation driven underground, actually made worse by creating additional grievances
A vicious circle was set endlessly revolving
Reaction after 1815: France, Poland
France of 1814 an uncomfortable peace
Unofficial vengeance of counterrevolutionaries
Rallied to Napoleon on his return from Elba
Royalist exasperated
“White terror”- after Bourbon monarchy regains power in 1815, upperclass youths murdered Bonapartists and republicans
Catholic mobs seized and killed Protestants
Chamber of Deputies- tiny electorate of 100,000 well to do landowners
More reactionary than royalists
King could not maintain stability
1820 king’s nephew, the Duke de Berry, assassinated
Reaction deepened, until 1824 death of Louis XVIII
Charles X, brother of Louis XVIII, father of the Duke de Berry
First to emigrate in 1789 and form counterrevolution
After crowning, stamped out revolutionary republicanism, liberalism, and constitutionalism
Congress of Vienna creates a constitutional kingdom in Poland with Tsar Alexander as king
Polish constitution
Wide suffrage
An elected diet
Napoleonic civil code
Freedom of press, religion, and use of Polish language
Problems in Poland stemmed from the fact that Alexander hated to be disagreed with
Actual legislation did not allow for use of many of their freedoms
Elected diet feuded with Alexander’s viceroy
Russia serf-owning aristocracy did not want Polish freedom on their frontier
Poles pushed to return to their 1772 borders
Nationalist revolutionaries called for driving Alexander out of Poland
1823 Adam Mickiewicz arrested for nationalist plotting
Reaction and repression strike at Polish nationalist hopes
Reaction after 1815: The German States, Britain
German principalities purposely united only in a loose federation, or Bund
Nationalist ideas common in Germany
Doctrines of Volksgeist and a far-flung Deutshtum
Nationalist ideas that glorified the German common people
Burschenschaft- college clubs formed after 1815, centers of serious political discussion. Kind of a German youth movement
Nationwide congress at Wartburg 1817
Not an immediate threat to established states
Alarmed nervous governments
1819 German writer Kotzebue, an informer in service to the tsar, was assassinated
Metternich intervened in Germany
Carlsbad Decrees 1819 dissolved Burschenschaft and other nationalistic clubs
Provided G power to censor media
Decrees remained in effect for years, an effective check on growing nationalism
Britain, while devoted to old traditions, was afflicted by advanced social problems of rapid industrial development
Corn Law raised tariffs on grain to point where importation was impossible
Landlords and their farmers benefitted
Wage earners and industrial workers suffered
Postwar depression in industry
Wages fell, many were unemployed
Spread of radical political ideas
Riot in London December 1816, February 1817 Prince Regent attacked
G suspended habeas corpus
Spies hired to obtain evidence against agitators
Manchester pushed for Parliamentary representation
Soldiers fire upon protestors - 11 killed 400 wounded (Peterloo massacre)
Six Acts 1819 out-lawed seditious and blasphemous literature, heavy taxes on newspapers, search of private houses, restrictions on public meetings
Cato Street Conspiracy 1820- plot to kill all of the cabinet
Five are hanged
Publisher of Thomas Paines’ writings, jailed for seven years
Reaction to revolution impacted European nations individually, even where it was exaggerated.
Section 55
The Leaking Dam and the Flood: International
After the Congress of Vienna, a series of congresses of the Great Powers took place
Fledgling step toward international regulation of national affairs
A precursor to the League of Nations (1920s) and United Nations (1945- Present), or even the European Union of the late 20th century- Present
Holy Alliance becomes the popular term for the collaboration of European states in response to Napoleon’s conquests
Congress of Aix-la-Chapelle, 1818
1818 Congress of Aix-la-Chapelle (Aachen) involved the withdrawal of troops from France
Louis XVIII would never be popular with foreign armies occupying France
No disagreement from European coalitions
Private bankers take over French reparations debt (700 million francs imposed by Treaty of Paris)
Bankers paid allied governments
French, in due time, paid the bankers
Tsar Alexander called for a permanent European union
Safeguard states against violence
Without revolution threat, Gs more willing to grant constitutional and liberal reforms
Other nations refuse to follow Alexander’s lead
British agree to meet for specific threats, but wish to maintain independent judgment in foreign policy
Congress also addressed Atlantic slave trade
Barbary pirate attacks in the Mediterranean Sea
Unanimously agree that both should be suppressed
Britain abolished slave trade within their Empire in 1807
Naval captains authorized to stop and search vessels at sea
Continental states fear British sea dominance, refuse to allow this
British refused to put their own ships in an international pool of ships
Because they failed to agree on enforcement, nothing was done on slave trade
Demand for cotton and other slave produced commodities kept Atlantic slave trade strong
Barbary Pirates not removed from Mediterranean Sea until the early 1830s, when France begins colonizing Algeria
Revolution in Southern Europe: The Congress of Troppau, 1820
Southern Europe first to see revolutionary/liberal sentiment
Spain, Naples, and the Ottoman Empire were inefficient, flimsy, and corrupt
Napoleonic reforms were at work in Spanish revolutionary movements
1820 Gs of Spain and Naples collapse with demonstrations of revolutionaries
Metternich saw these agitations as a symptom of European revolution and moved to quarantine both
Revolutionary agitation was international
Leapt across borders due to secret societies and political exiles
Naples was worrisome to Metternich due to proximity to Austria
Called for meeting of Great Powers in Troppau
Troppau was in Austrian controlled Silesia
Great Britain and France send only observers
They did not like being led around by Austria
Alexander remains a problem for Metternich
They meet alone at an inn in Troppau
Alexander was distrustful of Constitution by extortion of a mob
Also disillusioned by Polish reaction against him
Alexander allowed himself to be persuaded by Metternich
Declared, Metternich had always been right, and he would follow Metternich’s political judgment
Protocol of Troppau, authored by Metternich
Attempt to organize European states against internal conflict inside a European nation
Collective security against revolution
France and Great Britain refuse to accept the protocol
British Tories rejected the principle of binding international collaboration
British foreign minister Castlereagh said Austria should go into Naples on their own
Only Russia and Prussia endorse the protocol
Acting as the Congress of Troppau, these three powers enter Naples
Ferdinand I restored as absolute King
Result of Troppau is a gap between the three European autocracies (Austria, Prussia, Russia) and the two Western powers
Spain and the MIddle East: The Congress of Verona, 1822
Revolutionaries fled Italy, ended up in Spain and Middle East
Alexander Ypsilanti, a Greek who had spent his entire life in Russian military service, led a band of armed followers from Russia to Romania in 1821
Romania still part of Ottoman Turkey in 1821
Hoped that all Greeks and pro-Greeks in Ottoman Empire would join him
Wanted to use Greek Christians in the campaign
Hoped for Russia support, as it would weaken its rival in the regions around the Black Sea
Metternich disliked the idea of a Greek Empire forming under Russia help
Convened an international congress at Verona 1822
Alexander refused to support Ypsilanti
Little enthusiasm from Greek culture in Romania and the Balkans
Ypsilanti defeated by Ottomans
Since Turks had handled Ypsilanti so quickly, the question of intervention by Europe was not addressed
Revolution in Spain question handled by foreign intervention
French G offered to squash Spanish revolutionaries and the Congress allowed them to set up an army
200,000 Frenchmen moved into Spain 1823
Majority of Spanish welcomed French troops
Satisfied with restoration of king and church
Ferdinand VII restored
Repudiated his constitutional oath
Let most reactionary of Spaniards have their way
Revolutionaries savagely persecuted, exiled, or jailed
Latin American Independence
Impact of Napoleonic Wars felt in the Americas
European powers maintained influence over long-held colonies
War of 1812 US vs. GB inconclusive
GB involved with Napoleon at the time
A few years later, after minor military operations, US takes Florida from Spain
New movements for national independence developed in Latin America
Portuguese royal family escapes Napoleon by taking refuge in Brazil
Brazil emerged as a new empire independent of Portugal
1889 imperial regime will give way to a Brazilian republic
Spanish America stretches from San Francisco to Buenos Aires
News of American and French Revolutions, and Napoleonic occupation of Spain spread to the Spanish Americas
King of Spain jailed by French, then restored by Congress of Vienna
Has an impact on nationalists in Spanish Americas
British commercially active in Spanish Americas
During Napoleonic Wars increased trade their by 20 times
Business wise made sense for Spanish Americans colonist to resist old Spanish imperial system of trade controls
Social stratification played huge role in resistance against Spain
Creoles vs. Peninsulares
Creoles were the white population of Spanish descent
Unable to hold highest offices in G, by Peninsulares (Spanish born people)
Most of the people were native, slaves, or of mixed race.
Majority involved in agriculture
Revolutionary ideas difficult to spread
Simon Bolivar and Jose de San Martin
Creole leaders who both spent time in Europe
Preferred new constitutional principles of republicanism
Obtained independence, but unable to realize political aspirations for their new countries
The dissensions that long continued to afflict Spanish America were all present within the independence movement itself
Spanish Americas were vast over 6,000 miles interrupted by mountain barriers
Less unity in liberation
No Continental Congress, like 1774 Philadelphia to provide a unified message
Revolts took place separately within vice-royalties
New Spain- Mexico
New Granada- Colombia & Venezuela
Peru (includes Ecuador, Bolivia and Chile)
La Plata- Argentina, Uruguay and Paraguay
First revolts 1808 against Joseph Bonaparte, whom Napoleon had made king of Spain
Revolutionaries actually begin by proclaiming loyalty to deposed Ferdinand VII
1814, when restored, he refuses to make any concessions to American demands
Revolutionaries turn against King Ferdinand VII
A series of disconnected struggles ensued
Simon Bolivar becomes liberator of Venezuela and Colombia
Jose de San Martin becomes liberator of Argentina and Chile
Combined for liberation of Peru
Mexico saw a true mass rising of Indians and mestizos
Put down by middle and upper class Creole leaders
Long period of turmoil in newly independent Mexican states
1829 Mexico becomes first postcolonial nation after Haiti to abolish slavery
Political map of South and Central America did not settle into present form until later in the nineteenth century
Transition from colonial systems to modern nation states complicated and sometimes violent
Similar to what would later emerge from the 20th century postcolonial movements in Africa and Asia
Emerging Latin American nations vulnerable to imperial interventions of outside powers
At Congress of Verona 1822, Tsar Alexander urged Europe to mediate between Spain and its colonies
Clear suggestion for military involvement
The British objected
Without British consent, armed forces could not sail into the Americas
Spanish Americas therefore maintained independence
New Republics received strong moral support from US
Monroe Doctrine 1823
Attempts by European powers to return parts of America to colonial status would be viewed as an unfriendly act by the US
British proposed a joint statement, but Monroe wished to make a pointed statement against British interest in Spanish America also
Monroe Doctrine a counterblast to the Metternich doctrine of the protocol of Troppau
Efficacy of Monroe Doctrine depended on tacit cooperation of the British fleet
European colonial power came to an end after Latin American liberation except for;
Canada, which voluntarily remains part of the British Empire
West Indies- smaller islands remain British, French, or Dutch
Cuba and Puerto Rico which remained Spanish until US takes them in the Spanish American War of 1898
The End of the Congress System
After the Congress of Verona no more such meetings were held
Once Alexander converted to Metternich’s conservatism, congress stood only for preservation of the status quo
No attempt to accommodate new forces shaping Europe
Could not evolve into a modern transnational system for managing conflicts or social change
Governments never forced to institute reform to avoid revolutions
Revolutions were simply repressed
The congresses propped up Gs that could not stand on their own
Great Britain showed a desire to stand aloof from permanent international commitments
Austria and France got involved in squashing revolutionary agitation (in Naples and Spain) only when it served their national interests
As France and Britain pulled away, the Holy Alliance became no more than a counterrevolutionary league of the three East European autocracies.
The cause of liberalism in Europe was advanced by the collapse of this highly conservative international system
Its collapse also opened the way to uncontrolled nationalism
George Canning wrote in 1822 “Every nation for itself and God for us all!”
Russia: The Decembrist Revolt, 1825
Tsar Alexander died in 1825
His death was a signal for revolution in Russia
Secret Societies formed in the Russian officer corps leapt into action
Some wanted a republic, some a constitutional serfdom, some even wanting emancipation of the serfs
Alexander had two brothers (Constantine and Nicholas) and no one was sure who should become the next tsar
The army wanted Constantine
December 1825 soldiers in St Petersburg urged “Constantine and Constitution”
But, Constantine had already renounced his claim to throne
Nicholas was the rightful heir
The outpouring of support for Constantine was known as the Decembrist revolt
Five officers were hung, others were condemned to forced labor or interned in Siberia
Decembrist revolt was the first manifestation of the modern revolutionary movement in Russia- a revolution inspired by ideology, as opposed to the elemental mass upheavals of Pugachev or Stephen Razin in earlier times.
Nicholas I 1825- 1855 maintained an unconditional and despotic autocracy
Ten years after the defeat of Napoleon the new forces issuing from the French Revolution seemed to be routed
Reaction, repression and political immobility were everywhere in Europe
A massive, conservative dam had sprung some political and social leaks, but during the 1820s it seemed to be containing the flood.
The Congress System, also known as the Concert of Europe, was established after Napoleon's defeat to maintain the balance of power and prevent the resurgence of revolutionary movements. It involved regular meetings among the great powers of Europe: Austria, France, Prussia, Russia, and the United Kingdom. It included the key meetings of Aix-la-Chapelle, which focused on the renegotiation of reparations and admission of France into the Concert of Europe; Troppau, which declared that states undergoing revolutionary changes threatening other states would be excluded from the European alliance until stability was restored; and Verona, which focused on the revolutions in Spain and Portugal and reaffirmed the principle of intervention to restore legitimate monarchies. Its ultimate collapse was the culmination of diverging interests throughout European states, growing nationalism, and the system's overall ineffectiveness in preventing major world conflicts such as the Crimean War and the wars of Italian and German unification.