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European Revolutions and Nationalism

Intermediate

The period from the French Revolution in 1789 through the unification of Germany in 1871 represents one of the most turbulent and transformative eras in European history. The French Revolution, inspired by Enlightenment ideals of liberty, equality, and popular sovereignty, overthrew the ancien regime of absolute monarchy and feudal privilege, establishing a republic and producing the Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen. However, the Revolution also descended into the Terror, mass executions, and ultimately the rise of Napoleon Bonaparte, whose military conquests spread revolutionary ideals, redrew the map of Europe, and provoked nationalist reactions across the continent.

Napoleon's defeat at Waterloo in 1815 led to the Congress of Vienna, where conservative European powers attempted to restore the pre-revolutionary order through the principle of legitimacy, the balance of power, and the Concert of Europe. Yet the revolutionary genie could not be put back in the bottle. The ideals of liberalism (constitutional government, individual rights, free markets) and nationalism (the belief that each nation, defined by shared language, culture, and history, deserved its own sovereign state) continued to ferment. The revolutions of 1830 in France, Belgium, and Poland, and the massive wave of revolutions across Europe in 1848 (the 'Springtime of Peoples'), demonstrated the persistent power of these ideas, even as most of the 1848 revolutions ultimately failed in their immediate objectives.

Nationalism's most dramatic successes came in the unification of Italy (1859-1870) under Piedmont-Sardinia, led by Cavour, Garibaldi, and Victor Emmanuel II, and the unification of Germany (1864-1871) under Prussian leadership, engineered by Otto von Bismarck through a strategy of 'blood and iron' involving three calculated wars. The Industrial Revolution provided the economic and technological backdrop to these political transformations, creating new social classes (industrial bourgeoisie and urban proletariat), urbanization, and economic growth that reshaped the power dynamics of European society. Together, revolution, nationalism, and industrialization dismantled the old order and created the modern nation-state system.

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Curriculum alignment— Standards-aligned

Grade level

Grades 9-12College+

Learning objectives

  • Analyze the causes, phases, and consequences of the French Revolution
  • Evaluate Napoleon's legacy as both a spreader of revolutionary ideals and an authoritarian ruler
  • Explain the Congress of Vienna's conservative principles and their limitations
  • Compare the processes of Italian and German unification, including the roles of Cavour, Garibaldi, and Bismarck
  • Assess the relationship between liberalism and nationalism in 19th-century Europe
  • Analyze how the Industrial Revolution reshaped European political and social structures
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