Revolutions of 1848
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The European Revolutions of 1848, known in some countries as the Spring of Nations or the Year of Revolution, appeared to be a revolutionary wave which erupted in Sicily and then, further triggered by the French Revolution of 1848, soon spread to the rest of Europe.
In Brazil, the rhetoric surrounding the Praieira revolt took cues from European events, as did its thorough repression.
Although the revolutions were put down quickly, in their span there was horrific violence on all sides, with tens of thousands tortured and killed. Most obvious, immediate political effects of the revolutions were quickly reversed; nonetheless the long-term reverberations were far-reaching.
Alexis de Tocqueville remarked in his Recollections that "society was cut in two: those who had nothing united in common envy, and those who had anything united in common terror."
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[edit] Exceptions
The United Kingdom, the Kingdom of the Netherlands, the Russian, and Ottoman Empires were the only major European states to go without a national revolution over this period. Russia's ability to remain generally stable was because of its revolutionary groups' inability to communicate between each other. An exception to this were the Kingdom of Poland and the Province of Lithuania (annexed lands of Grand Duchy of Lithuania), where uprisings took place in 1830-31 (November Uprising), 1846 (Kraków Uprising) and in 1863-65 (January Uprising). Similarly, while there were no uprisings in the Ottoman Empire as such, there were in some of its vassal states.
In the United Kingdom, the middle classes had been pacified by general enfranchisement in the Reform Act 1832, with the consequent agitations, violence, and petitions of the Chartist movement that came to a head with the petition to Parliament of 1848. The repeal of the protectionist agricultural tariffs - called the "Corn Laws" - in 1846, had defused some proletarian fervor. Elsewhere in the United Kingdom, revolution was far from the minds of those in Ireland, struggling and dying through the Potato Famine (the exception being William Smith O'Brien's debacle in County Tipperary). The United States saw the Seneca Falls Convention and the birth of feminism, as well as the election of President Zachary Taylor, whose death in 1850 likely postponed the country's civil war.
Switzerland was also spared, having been through a civil war the previous year. However, the introduction of the Swiss Federal Constitution in 1848 was a revolution in itself, laying the foundation of Swiss society as it is today.
[edit] Origins
These European revolutions were the violent consequences of such a wide variety of causes that it is difficult to view them as resulting from any kind of movement or coherent social phenomenon. Changes had been taking place in Europe in the first half of the 19th century. In politics, both liberal reformers and radical politicians were seeking change in their nations' governments. In society, technological change was creating new ways of life for the working classes, a popular press extended political awareness, and new values and ideas such as popular liberalism, nationalism and socialism began to spring up. The straw that broke the camel's back was a series of economic downturns and crop failures that left the peasants and the poor working classes starving.
Large swathes of the nobility were discontented with royal absolutism or near-absolutism. In 1846 there had been an uprising of Polish nobility in Austrian Galicia, which was only countered when peasants, in turn, rose up against the nobles.[1] Alongside of this, in Greater Poland breakout uprising against Russia prepared by democrats.
Next the middle classes began to get agitated. Whatever aspirations Karl Marx and his followers may have had as laid out in The Communist Manifesto (published in German February 1, 1848), the workers had little solidarity, and practically no organization.[citation needed] Both the lower middle classes and the working classes wanted liberal reform, and finally a group with some organization pushed for it. While much of the impetus was from the middle classes, much of the cannon fodder came from the lower. The revolts first erupted in the cities.
[edit] Urban poor
French rural areas had grown fast, spilling population into the cities. The "respectable" classes feared the working poor, who had shown their muscle in 1789, and the uneducated, teeming masses seemed a fertile breeding ground of vice. Workers toiled from 13 to 15 hours per day, living in squalid, disease-ridden slums. Traditional artisans felt the pressure of industrialization, having lost their guilds. Subversive writers such as Marx became popular. Secret societies sprang up.
The situation in the German states was similar. Prussia had quickly industrialized. Worker living standards had dropped; alcohol consumption had gone up in the 1840s. Feudalism was inarguably horrible for the poor[citation needed], but the worker saw little immediate gain from the new socio-economic system of capitalism and the accompanying social change.[citation needed]
[edit] Rural areas
Rural growth had of course led to food shortages, land pressure, and migration, both within Europe and out from Europe (for example, to the United States). Population concentration led to disease, specifically, cholera, which at the time had not been tied to water supplies. In 1845—7, a potato blight, originating in Belgium, caused a subsistence crisis in Northern Europe, exploding into the Great Irish Famine, but also causing famine-like conditions in the Scottish Highlands and Continental Europe. But some lived relatively well.
Aristocratic wealth (and corresponding power) was synonymous with the ownership of land. Owning land at this time was practically synonymous with having peasants under one's control, often duty-bound to labor for their masters. In a problem mirroring that of slavery in the United States, a principal aristocratic problem was controlling one's sometimes-dangerous source of wealth. Their grievances exploded in 1848.
[edit] Early rumblings
Until 1789 (the French Revolution), no one had earnestly contested the rule of kings on the Continent. In 1815, after Napoleon, a close semblance of the Ancien Régime was restored at the Congress of Vienna. This was no sooner established when the monarchies, the church, and the aristocracy were again threatened. There had been revolutions or civil wars in England (1640s-1650s), France (1789 and after), Ireland (1798), and the born-of-revolution United States, which seceded in 1776 from Great Britain, as well as Mexico, having split from Spain. A revolution against the Netherlands produced the seceding country of Belgium in 1830, a year that also saw another revolution in France. Unrest was in the air.
Disruptive ideas gained popularity, despite forceful and often violent efforts of established powers to keep them down: democracy, liberalism, nationalism, and socialism.
In short, democracy meant universal male suffrage. Liberalism fundamentally meant consent of the governed and the restriction of church and state power, republican government, freedom of the press and the individual. Nationalism believed in uniting people bound by (some mix of) common languages, culture, religion, shared history, and of course immediate geography; there were also irredentist movements. At this time, what are now Germany and Italy were collections of small states. Socialism was a then-fuzzy term with no solid definition, meaning different things to different people, but it roughly meant more power for workers in a typically collectivist system.
[edit] The revolutions
[edit] Italian states
[edit] France
The "February Revolution" in France were sparked by the suppression of the campagne des banquets. It ended the constitutional monarchy of King Louis-Philippe, and led to the creation of the French Second Republic.
[edit] German states
The "March Revolution" in the German states took place in the south and the west of Germany, with large popular assemblies and mass demonstrations. They primarily demanded freedom of the press, freedom of assembly, arming of the people and a national German parliament.
[edit] Hapsburg Empire
[edit] Hungary
On March 15, 1848, mass demonstrations in Pest and Buda forced the imperial governor to accept all demands). This unrest was followed by various insurrections throughout the kingdom, which enabled Hungarian reformists to declare Hungary's autonomy within the Habsburg Empire. The revolution in Hungary grew into a war for independence, suppressed in August, 1849.
[edit] Greater Poland
Polish people mounted a military insurrection in the Grand Duchy of Poznań (or the Greater Poland region) against the occupying Prussian forces.
[edit] Wallachia
A Romanian liberal and Romantic nationalist uprising began in June in the principality of Wallachia. Closely connected with the 1848 unsuccessful revolution in Moldavia, it sought to overturn the administration imposed by Imperial Russian authorities under the Regulamentul Organic regime, and, through many of its leaders, demanded the abolition of boyar privilege. Led by a group of young intellectuals and officers in the Wallachian military forces, the movement succeeded in toppling the ruling Prince Gheorghe Bibescu, whom it replaced with a Provisional Government and a Regency, and in passing a series of major progressive reforms, first announced in the Proclamation of Islaz.
[edit] Brazil
In Brazil, the "Praieira revolt" was a movement in Pernambuco that lasted from November 1848 to 1852. Unresolved conflicts left over from the period of the Regency and local resistance to the consolidation of the Brazilian Empire that had been proclaimed in 1822 helped to plant the seeds of the revolution.
[edit] Legacy
- . . . We have been beaten and humiliated . . . scattered, imprisoned, disarmed and gagged. The fate of European democracy has slipped from our hands. Pierre Joseph Proudhon[2]
Ten years after the 1848 Revolutions, little had visibly changed, and many historians consider the revolutions a failure.[citation needed]
On the other hand, both Germany and Italy were unified in somewhat over 20 years, and there were a few immediate successes for some revolutionary movements, notably in the Habsburg lands. Austria and Prussia eliminated feudalism by 1850, improving the lot of the peasants. European middle classes made political and economic gains over the next twenty years; France retained universal male suffrage. Russia would later free the serfs on February 19, 1861. The Habsburgs finally had to give the Hungarians more self-determination in the Ausgleich of 1867, although this in itself resulted only in the rule of autocratic Magyars in Hungary instead of autocratic Germans.
But in 1848, the revolutionaries were idealistic and divided by the multiplicity of aims for which they fought -- social, economic, liberal, and national. Conservative forces exploited these divisions, and revolutionaries suffered from mediocre leadership. Middle-class revolutionaries feared the lower classes, evidencing different ideas; counter-revolutions exploited the gaps. As some reforms were enacted and the economy improved, some revolutionaries were mollified. When the Habsburgs lightened the burden of feudalism, many peasants were satisfied by the reforms and lost interest in further revolt; revolutions elsewhere met similar resolutions. International support likewise waned.
Autocratic Russia did not support such revolutions at home, but actively helped the Austro-Hungarian Empire in her war with a restive Hungarian splinter group. Both Britain and Russia opposed Prussia's plans on Schleswig-Holstein, tarnishing their view among Germany's liberal nationalists.
The net result in the German states and France was more autocratic systems, despite reforms such as universal male suffrage in France, and strong social class systems remained in both. What reforms were enacted seemed like sops thrown to quell dissent, while privilege remained untouched. Nationalistic dreams also failed in 1848.
The Italian and German movements did provide an important impetus. Germany was unified under the iron hand of Bismarck in 1871 after Germany's 1870 war with France; Italy was unified in 1861.
Some disaffected German bourgeois liberals (the Forty-Eighters, many atheists and freethinkers) migrated to the United States after 1848, taking their money, intellectual talents, and skills out of Germany. 1848 was a watershed year for Europe, after which things were never again the same.
[edit] See also
- May Uprising in Dresden
- Roman Republic (19th century)
- The Communist Manifesto, published in 1848
- History of Baden
- Revolutions of 1989 ("Autumn of Nations")
[edit] Notes
- ^ Robert Bideleux and Ian Jeffries, A History of Eastern Europe: Crisis and Change, Routledge, 1998. ISBN 0-415-1611-8. p. 295 – 296.
- ^ Breunig, Charles (1977), The Age of Revolution and Reaction, 1789 - 1850 (ISBN 0-393-09143-0)
[edit] References
- Breunig, Charles (1977), The Age of Revolution and Reaction, 1789 - 1850 (ISBN 0-393-09143-0)
- Jones, Peter (1981), The 1848 Revolutions (Seminar Studies in History) (ISBN 0-582-06106-7)
- Robertson, Priscilla (1952), Revolutions of 1848: A Social History (ISBN 0-691-00756-X)
- Encyclopedia of 1848 Revolutions
- Civil Liberties gained by the revolutions
[edit] External links
| International Revolutions of 1848 | |
|---|---|
| Brazil | France | German states| Greater Poland | Wallachia Habsburg Empire and Hungary | Italian states and Sicily | |
ca:Revolucions de 1848 da:Revolutionerne i 1848 de:Revolution von 1848/49 es:Revoluciones de 1848 fr:Printemps des peuples it:Primavera dei popoli he:אביב העמים nl:Revolutiejaar 1848 ja:1848年革命 no:Revolusjonene av 1848 pl:Wiosna Ludów pt:Revoluções de 1848 ro:Revoluţia de la 1848 sl:Revolucije leta 1848 uk:Революції 1848 zh:1848年革命

