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Revision: History (India and the Contemporary World-II) >> The Rise of Nationalism in Europe Social Science English Medium Class 10 CBSE

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Definitions [5]

Definition: Plebiscite

A plebiscite is a direct vote by which all the people of a region are asked to accept or reject a proposal.

Definition: Feminist

 Feminist is awareness of women’s rights and interests based on the belief of the social, economic and political equality of the genders.

Definition: Conservatism

Conservatism is a political philosophy that stressed the importance of tradition, established institutions and customs, and preferred gradual development to quick change.

Definition: Utopian

Utopian is a vision of a society that is so ideal that it is unlikely to actually exist.

Definition: Ideology

Ideology is a system of ideas reflecting a particular social and political vision.

Key Points

Key Points: The Aristocracy and the New Middle Class
  • The landed aristocracy was the dominant social and political class in Europe.
  • Most of the population consisted of peasants, including tenants and serfs.
  • Western Europe had small landowners, while Central and Eastern Europe had large estates.
  • Industrialisation created new working and middle classes.
  • The educated middle class promoted ideas of nationalism and unity.
Key Points: The Making of Nationalism in Europe
  • In the mid-eighteenth century, Europe did not have modern nation-states as we know them today.
  • In the eighteenth century, Germany and Italy were divided into many small kingdoms and states.
  • During the eighteenth century, Central and Eastern Europe were ruled by autocratic, multi-national empires.
  • The Habsburg Empire in the eighteenth century included people of different languages, cultures, and ethnic groups.
  • In the nineteenth century, nationalism grew and led to nation-states such as Italy (1859–1870) and Germany (1866–1871).
Key Points: The Rise of Nationalism in Europe
  • In 1848, Frederic Sorrieu’s painting represented his dream of a world made up of democratic and free nations.
  • During the French Revolution (1789), Liberty was personified as a female figure symbolising freedom and equal rights.
  • In the nineteenth century, nationalism emerged as a powerful force in Europe.
  • In the nineteenth century, nation-states were formed when people developed a common identity, history, and sense of belonging.
  • In 1882, Ernst Renan explained that a nation is based on shared memories, sacrifices, and a common will.
Key Points: The Age of Revolutions: 1830-1848
  • After 1815, liberalism and nationalism were linked with revolutions in Europe.
  • The revolutions were led by the educated middle class.
  • In July 1830, the Bourbon monarchy in France was overthrown.
  • The 1830 Revolution led to Belgium becoming independent.
  • Greece became independent after the Treaty of Constantinople (1832).
Key Points: 1848: The Revolution of the Liberals
  • In 1848, the educated middle classes led liberal revolutions across Europe.
  • In France (1848), a republic with universal male suffrage was established.
  • Liberals demanded constitutions, civil rights, and national unification.
  • The Frankfurt Parliament (18 May 1848) tried but failed to unify Germany.
  • Women participated actively but were denied political rights.
  • After 1848, serfdom was abolished, and Hungary gained autonomy in 1867.
Key Points: The French Revolution and the Idea of the Nation
  • The French Revolution of 1789 marked the beginning of modern nationalism in France.
  • Power was transferred from the absolute monarch to the people, who came to form the nation.
  • National symbols like the tricolour flag and the National Assembly helped unite the people.
  • A centralised system introduced uniform laws and administration across France.
  • French was promoted as the common national language to strengthen unity.
  • Napoleon introduced reforms such as the Napoleonic Code of 1804, which ensured equality before the law.
  • French rule later faced opposition because of heavy taxation, censorship, and forced conscription.
Key Points: The Romantic Imagination and National Feeling
  • Culture, such as art, poetry, and music, played an important role in spreading nationalism.
  • Romanticism focused on emotions and a shared cultural past to create national feeling.
  • Thinkers like Herder believed true national culture existed among the common people.
  • Folk songs, dances, and folklore helped spread the spirit of the nation.
  • In Poland, language and music kept nationalism alive after the 1831 revolt.
  • The Grimm Brothers (1812) collected folktales to build German national identity.
Key Points: The Revolutionaries
  • After 1815, many liberal-nationalists formed secret societies to oppose the monarchy.
  • Revolutionaries believed that nation-states were necessary for freedom.
  • Giuseppe Mazzini (born 1805) founded Young Italy and Young Europe.
  • Mazzini supported democratic republics and opposed monarchy.
Key Points: A New Conservatism after 1815
  • After 1815, European governments followed conservatism and supported the monarchy and traditional institutions.
  • Conservatives believed that modernisation after 1815 could strengthen monarchies and state power.
  • In 1815, the Congress of Vienna was held under the Duke Metternich to restore the old order in Europe.
  • The Treaty of Vienna (1815) restored monarchies like the Bourbon dynasty in France.
  • Conservative governments after 1815 were autocratic and imposed strict censorship.
  • Even after 1815, liberals were inspired by the French Revolution and demanded freedom of the press.
Key Points: The Rise of Liberalism and Economic Unity
  • Liberal nationalism supported individual freedom and equality before the law.
  • Liberals demanded constitutions and representative governments.
  • Voting rights were limited to property-owning men, not all citizens.
  • Liberalism supported free markets and free trade.
  • The Zollverein of 1834 promoted economic unity and nationalism.
Key Points: German Unification by the Army
  • After 1848, nationalism in Europe became linked with conservatism and state power rather than democracy.
  • The liberal attempt to unify Germany in 1848 failed due to opposition from the monarchy, army, and Prussian landowners (Junkers).
  • Prussia took leadership of German unification under Otto von Bismarck.
  • German unification was achieved through three wars (1864–1871) with Denmark, Austria, and France.
  • In January 1871, William I was proclaimed German Emperor at Versailles, completing unification.
Key Points: Italy Unified
  • In the mid-nineteenth century, Italy was divided into several states ruled by different dynasties and foreign powers.
  • Giuseppe Mazzini tried to unify Italy through revolutionary movements in 1831 and 1848, but these attempts failed.
  • The task of unification was taken up by Sardinia-Piedmont under King Victor Emmanuel II.
  • Count Cavour used diplomacy and war to defeat Austria in 1859, with support from France.
  • In 1861, Victor Emmanuel II was proclaimed the king of a united Italy.
Key Points: The Strange Case of Britain
  • Britain became a nation-state through a long, gradual process, not through a sudden revolution.
  • Before the eighteenth century, people identified themselves as English, Welsh, Scottish, or Irish, not British.
  • The English Parliament gained power in 1688 and played a major role in building the British nation-state.
  • The Act of Union (1707) united England and Scotland to form the United Kingdom of Great Britain.
  • Scottish and Irish cultures were suppressed, and the English language and culture were promoted as national symbols.
  • After the failed Irish revolt of 1798, Ireland was merged with Britain in 1801, forming the United Kingdom.
Key Points: Hunger, Hardship and Popular Revolt
  • The 1830s were marked by severe economic hardship due to rapid population growth and unemployment in Europe.
  • Rural migrants moved to cities, where overcrowding and poor living conditions were common.
  • Small producers suffered because of competition from cheap machine-made goods from England.
  • In 1848, food shortages and unemployment led to popular revolts in Paris and the fall of Louis Philippe.
  • Worker protests like the Silesian weavers’ revolt of 1845 showed growing anger against exploitation.
Key Points: Visualising the Nation
  • In the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, nations were represented as female figures to give a human form to the idea of the nation.
  • These female figures were allegories, not real women, symbolising abstract ideas like unity and freedom.
  • During the French Revolution, female allegories were used to represent Liberty, Justice, and the Republic.
  • Marianne became the national allegory of France, symbolising the people’s nation and national unity.
  • Germania represented the German nation and wore a crown of oak leaves, symbolising heroism.
Key Points: Nationalism and Imperialism
  • By the late nineteenth century, nationalism lost its liberal and democratic character and became aggressive.
  • Nationalist groups became intolerant and war-oriented, often manipulated by powerful European states.
  • The Balkans became the most serious centre of nationalist tension after 1871.
  • Balkan peoples used nationalism and history to demand independence from the Ottoman Empire.
  • Rivalry among European powers like Russia, Germany, England, and Austro-Hungary increased conflicts in the Balkans.
  • Nationalism combined with imperialism led to the First World War in 1914 and inspired anti-imperial movements worldwide.
Key Points: Important Dates - Nationalism in Europe
Year Event
1797 Napoleon invades Italy; Napoleonic Wars begin
1814–1815 Fall of Napoleon; Vienna Peace Settlement
1821 Greek struggle for independence begins
1848 Revolutions in Europe; demand for constitutions and nation-states
1859–1870 Unification of Italy
1866–1871 Unification of Germany
1905 Slav nationalism grows in the Habsburg and Ottoman Empires
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