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The Age of Mass Politics 1871-1914 France, Germany, England, Russia, Austro-Hungarian Empire.

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Presentation on theme: "The Age of Mass Politics 1871-1914 France, Germany, England, Russia, Austro-Hungarian Empire."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Age of Mass Politics 1871-1914 France, Germany, England, Russia, Austro-Hungarian Empire

2 Austro-Hungarian Empire Ausgleich (Compromise) Hungarians had own government – 25% wealthiest had right to vote Austria assimilated Magyars – Language a sticky issue (German or Czech) – 1907 universal male suffrage (Austria) – Anti-Semitism

3 France Third Republic Paris Commune Adolphe Thiers Weak president Chamber of Deputies had most power (elected) Trade Unions legalized Secular education & reform; tax supported schools, compulsory education Multiparty system Shifting coalitions

4 Problems for the Third Republic Boulanger Crisis – Leader gained support of military – Attempted coup, failed – Fled, killed himself Panama scandal – De Lesseps – Corrupt, millions of dollars

5 Dreyfus Affair 1894 Jewish Captain Emile Zola: J’accuse Alliance between moderate republicans and socialists Conservatives and Catholic Church discredited Socialists gain seats Anti-Catholic movement

6 Anti Semitism Dreyfus Affair Pogroms Zionist Movement – Theodore Hertzel – The Jewish State – Father of Zionism

7 Victorian England Tory Party=Conservative Party=Benjamin Disraeli Whig Party=Liberal Party=William Gladstone

8 Conservative Party=Benjamin Disraeli Aggressive foreign policy Expansion of the British Empire Sympathy for the working class Reform Bill of 1867 – House of Commons, redistributed seats, more representation – Rotten boroughs lost seats – Almost all men over 21 right to vote – Doubled the number of men

9 Liberal Party=William Gladstone Liberal Supported Irish Home Rule, fiscal policy, free trade, extension of democracy and against Imperialism Abolished taxes to support Church of England Secret ballot Civil service reform, competitive examinations

10 Liberal Party=William Gladstone Reform Act of 1884 – Suffrage to adult males in the counties on the same basis as in the boroughs – 2 million agricultural voters added – Close to universal male suffrage

11 New Groups Emerge Women’s suffrage Fabian Society – Advanced a form of revisionist Marxism – Political democracy and economic socialism Independent Labor Party – Keir Hardie – Third political party – Trade unionists, socialists

12 Liberal Party 1905-1920’s Aggressive social & economic programs Foundations of social welfare state – Guaranteed standard of living – Unions right to strike – Workers compensation – Unemployment insurance & old age pensions – Mandatory school – Taxes increased on wealthy

13 Liberal Party Parliament Act 1911 – Eliminated power of House of Lords – 5 year Parliament term Representation of the People Act 1918 – Women of 30 vote – All men, no property qualifications

14 Women’s Rights & Suffrage Started with divorce, marriage, and property laws Needed suffrage to change anything Suffragettes came from the middle class – Had time, education – Working class & socialists worked separately

15 Women’s Rights & Suffrage Millicent Garrett Fawcett – National Union of Women’s Suffrage Societies (NUWSS) – Demanded Parliament give vote Emmeline Pankhurst – Militant – Finland 1906, Norway 1913 – Women’s Social and Political Union (WSPU)

16 Emmeline Pankhurst Destroyed: – RR stations – Art works – Store windows – Chained themselves to Parliament building – Hunger strikes Hunger strikes – Emily Davison

17 Women’s Rights & Suffrage Representation of the People Act 1918 Reform Act of 1928 – Women over 21

18 The Irish Question Young Ireland (Nationalism 1848) Gladstone: in favor of home rule Ulster – Protestant counties in Northern Ireland Irish Home Rule Act: didn’t pass House of Lords Easter Rebellion (1916) 1922, Ireland gained independence, N.Ireland remained part of British Empire

19 The Eastern Question Ottoman Empire – “The Sick Man of Europe” – Russia and A-H wanted territory Pan-Slavism – Unite all Slavs under Russia – Russo-Turkish War – jingoism Congress of Berlin (1878) – Russia gained little – Romania, Serbia, Montenegro independent

20 Socialist Movements Advance the proletariat Nationalism as a tool by ruling class Opposed war Marxism lead the way Socialist united=First International Huge growth: Germany, France, Belgium,A-H 1883, exiled from Russia (Lennin), Switzerland

21 Revisionism Elections instead of Revolutions Standard of living up Labor unions grew Bread and butter issues: wages, hours, working conditions Collective bargaining EDUARD BERNSTEIN – Evolutionary Socialism – Proved Marx false

22 Germany: Social Democratic Party (S.P.D) Marxist Sweeping social change Demilitarization of Germany Bismarck gives in to demands – Protective tariff – Modern social security – National sickness & accident insurance – Old age pensions, retirement benefits – Regulated child labor – Improved working conditions

23 Socialists Elsewhere Jean Jaures-France, gained seats in Chamber of Deputies England- Fabian Society, political democrarcy & economic socialism, Labor Party, foundations of social welfare state

24 Anarchy Spun off from mainstream socialists Destroy the centralized state Mikhail Bakunin Strongest in Spain & Italy Political assassinations: 6 leaders in 20 years – Alexander II – King Umbro (Italy) – President William McKinley

25 Russia Crimean War defeat turning point Lacked middle class to push for reform

26 Alexander II (1855-1881) Emancipation Act 1861: freed the serfs Mirs: most Russians lived in Communes, collective ownership, hard to leave Zemstvos: assemblies that adminstered local areas, popular participation, lords controlled them Censorship relaxed Education liberalized

27 Alexander II (1855-1881) Industrialization – Railroads – Industrial suburbs – Factory working class – Strengthened military Critics – Realism replaced Romanticism – Intelligensia – Nihilism: believed in only science, had to rebuild society 1881 Assassinated

28 Count S.Y. Witte Industrialization of Russia Western capital Trans Siberian Railway Gold standard 4 th in steel production Spread of Marxist thought

29 Russia Problems 1/3 of farmland not used Population explosion Depression 1899 Russo-Japanese War 1905

30 Alexander III (1881-1894) Reactionary Autocracy, Orthodoxy, and Russification Anti Semitism, pogroms Theodore Herzel: Zionism, Jewish homeland

31 Nicholas II (1894-1917) Russo-Japanese War – Russia had Manchuria wanted Korea – Russia lost

32 1905 Revolution Peasants and middle class demand change “Bloody Sunday”: Jan.1905 General strike, peasant revolt, troop mutinies October Manifesto – Duma created – Freedom of speech, assembly, press – Czar had absolute veto – Revolutionaries divided in Duma Mild economic recovery Peter Stolypin: agrarian reform, encouraged free enterprise Gregorii Rasputin: doubt about the Czar increased


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