Revolutions in Europe and Latin America 1790-1848 Chapter 4 sections 1 and 2
Conservatives vs. Liberals Prefer the Old Order Restore royal families to throne Lower classes should respect and obey social superiors Established Church Natural rights and constitutional gov’t leads to chaos Promise freedom Mostly middle class, bourgeoisie Business leaders, bankers, lawyers, newspaper editors, writers Written constitution, separation of powers Universal manhood suffrage Free Market - capitalism
Old Order is Challenged in Central Europe Serbia- first Balkan people to revolt 1804-13 Karageorge vs, Ottomans, unsuccessful but fostered sense of Serbian identity 1815 – Milos Obrenovic led revolt and turned to Russia for help 1830 Serbs won autonomy (self-rule) Greece- 1821 revolt vs. Ottomans Years of wars helped shape a national identity Has support of Britain, France, Russia- forced Ottomans to grant independence to some Greek provinces European powers pressured Greeks to accept German king *Uprisings in Spain, Portugal and Italy were crushed by conservative rulers
French Rebels - 1830 Restored Louis XVIII to throne Issued Constitution- Charter of French Liberties 2 House legislature, limited freedom of the press, King retained most power
July Revolution Louis XVIII died 1824 Throne inherited by Charles X – absolute ruler July 1830 suspended legislature, limited vote, restricted the press Rebels revolted in Paris barricading streets Charles X fled to England and abdicated
Citizen King Moderate Liberals chose constitutional monarchy Louis Phillipe new king, cousin of Charles X, supported 1789 revolution Owed throne to the people, favored middle class Liberal bourgeoisie prospered Extended suffrage but only to wealthier citizens
Spread of Reform Belgium wins independence- 1830 inspired by Paris uprising, students threw up barricades in Brussels Britain and France assisted under the belief that a separation of Belgium and Holland (united under Congress of Vienna) would benefit them 1831 – independent with liberal constitution Poland – uprisings crushed by Russian forces
French Revolt of 1848 February 1848- Angry crowds to the streets protesting recession and government oppression Louis Phillipe abdicated, proclaimed Second Republic (1st from 1792-1804 before Napoleon) June Days: upper- and middle-class interests won control, workers took to the streets with violence 1500 people killed before government crushed violence
New Napoleon National Assembly issued constitution- created strong president, one-house legislature, vote to all adult males Louis Napoleon, elected president – presented himself as caring about social issues Used power as stepping stone, declaring himself emperor in 1852 People voted to set up Second Empire: rapid economic growth
Revolutions in Europe Austrian Empire: Louis Kossuth in Hungary demanded independent government, students protested in many cities – government gave in to demands temporarily Italy: Nationalists wanted to end Hapsburg power and revolutionaries set up republics. Austrian and French forces restored order and Pope in Rome German States: University students demanded national unity and liberal reforms. Republic or monarchy? Rebellion faded due to military force and lack of mass support