HIST2086 Bismarck: The Iron Chancellor War with Austria 1866 Lecture 11 12 October 2010.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
FOCUS: German unification Mid-1800s
Advertisements

Unification of Germany
The Unification of Germany Click on this button to go forward to the interactive map. Some of the key locations are hotspots that will take you to different.
Chapter 10 Nationalism Triumphs in Europe
September 6—What do you think was the main cause of WWI? Why?
Germany. Germany before Bismarck The unsuccessful attempt of Frederick William IV of Prussia (r ) to unify Germany. The growing tension between.
Key Terms – Nationalism and Unification
The Surge of Nationalism. Nationalism… A strong feeling of devotion to one’s country This feeling often develops among people who share a common language.
The Creation of a State. In the late 1800s, Otto von Bismarck transformed Germany from a loose confederation of separate states into a powerful empire.
HIST2086 Bismarck: The Iron Chancellor War with Denmark 1864 Lecture 10 7 October 2010.
HIST2086 Bismarck: The Iron Chancellor Bismarck as diplomat: Anti-Austrian policy, Lecture 7 28 September 2010.
Section  In the early 1800s, German speaking people lived in a number of states as well as in Prussia and the Austrian Hapsburg empire.  Napoleon’s.
HIST2086 Bismarck: The Iron Chancellor Prussia and the German Confederation, Lecture 3 9 September 2010.
HIST2086 Bismarck: The Iron Chancellor War with France Lecture October 2010.
Global Connections Unit 8 part 4 Italian Unification German Unification.
Unification of Germany. Prussian Leadership The Congress of Vienna had created the German Confederation which consisted of 38 independent states. Prussia.
Unification of Germany Vereinheitlichung von Deutschland!!!!
World History/Cultures Chapter 15 - Reaction & Nationalism Section 2 Unification of Germany What do you know about it? Web it in groups!
HIST2128 Germany, : From Empire to Republic The Franco-German War of Lecture 4 2 February 2012.
UNIFICATION OF GERMANY BLOOD AND IRON FACTORS PROMOTING UNITY 1.Common Nationality 2.Napoleon & Congress of Vienna 3. Zollverein.
The Unification of Germany ( )
The Franco-Prussian War Background Four southern states remained independent and not part of the North German Confederation - Hesse-Darmstodt,
Chapter 23 Nationalism Triumphs in Europe Section 1 Building a German Nation.
Chapter 10 Nationalism Triumphs in Europe
Growth of German Nationalism
Unification of Germany & Italy. GERMANY 1849 Independent small German states (Prussia largest) **Similarities: German language & Protestant faith.
HIST2128 Germany, : From Empire to Republic The way to the German nation-state, Lecture 3 31 January 2012.
Napoleon's conquests destroyed the Holy Roman Empire and unified many German states in the Confederation of the Rhine.
The Unification of Italy and Germany 1850s-1870s.
Today’s Warm Up Turn in your homework & pick up the new warm up/exit ticket sheet by the turn-in tray. Answer the following question: What do you notice.
During the early 1800’s, Germans were scattered in Prussia and in the Austrian Hapsburg empire. Napoleon's invasions released new forces in the territories.
Germany pre Holy Roman Empire: ‘colourful mosaic of 314 states’ (from Austria [115,000 square miles] to Schwartzburg- Sonderhausen – 33 sq. miles]
Germany. Attempt at Unification After 1815, Prussia emerged as an alternative to a Habsburg-based Germany 1849 “Grossdeutsch Plan” – Unified Germany including.
The German Nation.
.  August Prussia: Schleswig, Austria: Holstein  Prussia, for the first time had taken the lead on political affairs- weakness of Austria  “Overnight.
Building A German Nation: Steps Towards Unity and Impact of Napoleon
Palmer 65 pt. 2 Essential Question: How did Bismarck use war to unify Germany?
GermanUNIFICATION A DIVIDED GERMANY A DIVIDED GERMANY  Loose federation of 39 States  Controlled by 2 Powers  Austria – Hapsburgs  Prussia Hohenzollern.
The Unification of Germany Key men in power 1861 King William 1 of Prussia 1859 von Roon, Prussian Minister of War von Moltke, Chief of Prussian.
 1846 – Economic Problems lead to hardships ◦ Lower-middle class, workers, peasants  Middle class wanted right to vote ◦ Gov’t refused to make changes.
Nationalism Element: Compare and contrast the rise of the nation state in Germany under Otto von Bismarck and Japan under Emperor Meiji. Vocabulary: nationalism,
Unification of Germany Congress of Vienna (1815): the 350+ German states were compacted down to 39 in the German Confederation. - Led by Austria. Zollverein.
I. Building a German Nation Chapter 22 Section 1.
Building a German State The Congress of Vienna (1815)  Created the German Confederation (Confederation of the Rhine)  This loosely tied together.
The Unification of Germany
Italian and German Unification
The Seven Weeks War Austria Vs Prussia.
NATIONALISM Nationalism was the most powerful idea of the 1800’s
Unification of italy & germany
Bismarck: Three Wars, One Germany
World History/Cultures
Nationalism Element: Compare and contrast the rise of the nation state in Germany under Otto von Bismarck and Japan under Emperor Meiji. Vocabulary: nationalism,
Unification of Germany
Nationalism Element: Compare and contrast the rise of the nation state in Germany under Otto von Bismarck and Japan under Emperor Meiji. Vocabulary: nationalism,
The Unification of Germany
Building a German Nation
German Unification.
German Unification
Chapter 10: Nationalism Triumphs Section 1 - Unification of Germany
A newspaper article from the Los Angeles Times written on 9/11/01 about the events of 9/11 – would this be a primary or secondary source?
Unification of Germany
Unification of Germany
5.3 Unification of Germany
Ch. 22 An Age of Nationalism and Realism,
Bellringer The King of Italy Victor Emmanuel II was: a)absolute monarch b)Regent c)constitutional monarch d)Italian Emperor.
Italian and German Unification
Unification of Germany
Nationalism: Unification of Germany
Unification of Germany
Unification of Germany
Presentation transcript:

HIST2086 Bismarck: The Iron Chancellor War with Austria 1866 Lecture October 2010

Austria’s foreign policy Anti-Prussian + pro-French orientation of new Austrian foreign minister Mensdorff-Pouilly + his adviser Biegeleben Promoted war with Prussia: → Seen as chance to win fresh financial means (war indemnity) for Austria’s declining economy + empty cash-boxes → Seen as instrument to stop Prussia’s advance in Germany = Provoked tensions with Prussia by supporting Duke of Augustenburg as ruler of independent S-H

Bismarck’s strategy (1) Overall goal: To exclude Austria from Germany + to create Prussia-dominated Germany Promoted annexation of Schleswig-Holstein by Prussia but searched for good opportunity + favourable international constellation Offered Austria acceptable solution for S-H: Further administrative division but joint rule → Strong disappointment of ‘Third Germany’ about Austria’s end of support for independent S-H

Bismarck’s strategy (2) Signed secret alliance with Italy, Apr 1866: Italy agreed to follow Prussia in war with Austria + received Venetia from Austria as reward Stoked up tensions with Austria over Holstein + launched proposals to reform German Confederation → unacceptable for Austria Prepared war with Austria despite stiff resistance of King William + German public

Bismarck’s strategy (3) Reform proposal for German Confederation, Jun 1866: Directly-elected national parliament Exclusion of Austria from German Confederation Division-of-power in Germany between Prussia + Bavaria

Austria’s reaction Rejected Bismarck’s reform proposal Applied to mobilise Confederation troops against Prussia Cancelled diplomatic relations to Prussia Triggered Confederation’s vote against Prussia at Frankfurt Diet = Clear break of Confederation Act = Provoked Prussia’s declaration that Confederation Act was terminated

War with Austria ‘German Civil War’ – ‘German War’ – ‘Seven Weeks’ War’ – Brothers’ War (Deutscher Krieg) Austria: 400,000 troops + support of most of ‘Third Germany’ ≠ Prussia 300,000 troops Italy’s entry into war: Two-front-war for Austria but Italy quickly defeated

Battle of Königgrätz (Sadowa) 3 July 1866 Prussia Technically & strategically superior troops with breech-loaders Led by King Wilhelm I. and chief-of-staff Moltke (‘a genius strategist’) 9,200 dead & wounded Austria + Saxony Superior artillery but strategically inferior As + 20,800 Ss with mainly muzzle- loaders Led by Benedek against his own will & skills 30,000 As + 1,500 Ss dead & wounded = Decisive Prussian victory

France’s intervention Strong pressure of King William + P’s military to occupy Austrian territory ≠ Bismarck’s strong interest in quick peace with Austria to refuse Napoleon III’s mediation offer + his territorial claims French mediation role accepted by Austria but not by Prussia + Italy: Occupation of Austrian province of Venetia by Italy, July 1866 French territorial claims on Germany east of Rhine River ‘as compensation for mediation’ strongly rejected by Bismarck with threat of all-German war on France = Napoleon III’s diplomatic defeat = Seed for next war!

Treaty of Prague (1) (Prussia-Austria, Aug 1866) Prussia’s annexation of S-H, Hesse-Cassel, Hanover, Nassau, Frankfurt North German states to join North German Confederation under Prussian leadership Independence of South German states guaranteed due to French intervention + Bismarck’s fear of too quick absorption but signing of secret military alliance between South Germany + Prussia in case of French attack

Treaty of Prague (2) (Prussia-Austria, Aug 1866) Usually seen as milestone on way to German unity Destroyed unity of German Confederation + secured Prussia’s dominance in Germany Separated Germans into 3 units: North German Confederation, 4 South German states, Austria = Prussia enlarged by 1/5 with coherent territory = German nation state now only blocked by France