 
Traditions and Encounters, 4th Edition (Bentley)Chapter 29:
REVOLUTIONS AND NATIONAL STATES IN THE ATLANTIC WORLDChapter Outline- Popular sovereignty and political upheaval
- Enlightened and revolutionary ideas
- Popular sovereignty: relocating sovereignty in the people
- Traditionally monarchs claimed a "divine right" to rule
- The Enlightenment challenged this right, made the monarch responsible to the people
- John Locke's theory of contractual government: authority comes from the consent of the governed
- Freedom and equality: important values of the Enlightenment
- Demands for freedom of worship and freedom of expression
- Demands for political and legal equality
(a) Condemned legal and social privileges of aristocrats
(b) Jean-Jacques Rousseau, The Social Contract - Equality not extended to women, peasants, laborers, slaves, or people of color
- Ideals of Enlightenment were significant global influence
- The American Revolution
- Tension between Britain and the North American colonies
- Legacy of Seven Years' War: British debt, North American tax burden
- Mounting colonial protest over taxes, trade policies, Parliamentary rule
(a) Colonial boycott of British goods
(b) Attacks on British officials; Boston Tea Party, 1773 - Political protest over representation in Parliament: Continental Congress, 1774
- British troops and colonial militia skirmished at the village of Lexington, 1775
- The Declaration of Independence, 4 July 1776
- Thirteen united States of America severed ties with Britain
- Declaration inspired by Enlightenment and Locke's theory of government
- The American Revolution, 1775-1781
- British advantages: strong government, navy, army, plus loyalists in colonies
- American advantages: European allies, George Washington's leadership
- Weary of a costly conflict, British forces surrendered in 1781
- Building an independent state: Constitutional Convention, 1787
- Constitution guaranteed freedom of press, of speech, and of religion
- American republic based on principles of freedom, equality, popular sovereignty
- Full legal and political rights were granted only to men of property
- The French Revolution
- Summoning the Estates General
- Financial crisis: half of government revenue went to national debt
- King Louis XVI forced to summon Estates General to raise new taxes
- Many representatives wanted sweeping political and social reform
- First and Second Estates (nobles, clergy) tried to limit Third Estate (commoners)
- The National Assembly formed by representative of Third Estate, 17 June 1789
- Demanded a written constitution and popular sovereignty
- Angry mob seized the Bastille on 14 July, sparked insurrections in many cities
- National Assembly wrote the "Declaration of the Rights of Man and the Citizen"
- "Liberty, equality, and fraternity" was the slogan and values of the National Assembly
- The Assembly abolished the feudal system, altered the role of church
- France became a constitutional monarchy, 1791
- The Convention replaced National Assembly under new constitution, 1791
- Austrian and Prussian armies invaded France to restore ancien régime
- Convention abolished the monarchy and proclaimed France a republic
- King Louis XVI and Queen Marie Antoinette executed, 1793
- Radical Jacobins dominated the Convention in 1793-94 in a "reign of terror"
- Revolutionary changes: in religion, dress, calendar, women's rights
- The Directory, 1795-1799
- A conservative reaction against the excesses of the Convention
- Executed the Jacobin leader Robespierre, July 1794
- New constitution
- The reign of Napoleon, 1799-1815
- Napoleon Bonaparte (1769-1821)
- Brilliant military leader; became a general in the royal army at age twenty-four
- Supported the revolution; defended the Directory
- His invasion of Egypt was defeated by British army
- Overthrew the Directory and named himself consul for life
- Napoleonic France brought stability after years of chaos
- Made peace with the Roman Catholic church and pope
- Extended freedom of religion to Protestants and Jews
- Civil Code of 1804: political and legal equality for all adult men
- Restricted individual freedom, especially speech and press
- Napoleon's empire: 1804, proclaimed himself emperor
- Dominated the European continent: Iberia, Italy, Netherlands
- Defeated Austria and Prussia; fought British on high seas
- Disastrous invasion of Russia in 1812 destroyed Grand Army
- The fall of Napoleon
- Forced by coalition of enemies to abdicate in 1814, exiled on Elba
- Escaped, returned to France, raised army, but was defeated by British in 1815
- The influence of revolution
- The Haitian Revolution: the only successful slave revolt in history
- Saint-Domingue, rich French colony on western Hispaniola
- Society dominated by small white planter class
- 90 percent of population were slaves working under brutal conditions
- Large communities of escaped slaves, or maroons
- Free blacks fought in American war, brought back revolutionary ideas
- Widespread discontent: white settlers sought self-governance, gens de couleur sought political rights, slaves wanted freedom
- Slave revolt began in 1791
- Factions of white settlers, gens de couleur, and slaves battled each other
- French troops arrived in 1792; British and Spanish forces intervened in 1793
- Toussaint Louverture (1744-1803)
- Son of slaves, literate, skilled organizer, built a strong and disciplined army
- Controlled most of Saint-Domingue by 1797, created a constitution in 1801
- Arrested by French troops; died in jail, 1803
- The Republic of Haiti
- Yellow fever ravaged French troops; defeated and driven out by slave armies
- Declared independence in 1803; established the Republic of Haiti in 1804
- Wars of independence in Latin America
- Latin American society rigidly hierarchical
- Social classes: peninsulares, creoles, slaves, and indigenous peoples
- Creoles sought to displace the peninsulares but retain their privileged position
- Mexican independence
- Napoleon's invasion of Spain in 1807 weakened royal control of colonies
- 1810: peasant revolt in Mexico led by Hidalgo, defeated by conservative creoles
- 1821: Mexico briefly a military dictatorship, then in 1822 a republic
- South part of Mexico was split into several independent states in 1830s
- Simon Bolivar (1783-1830) led independence movement in South America
- Inspired by George Washington, took arms against Spanish rule in 1811
- Creole forces overcame Spanish armies throughout South America, 1824
- Bolivar's effort of creating the Gran Colombia failed in 1830s
- Brazilian independence
- Portuguese royal court fled to Rio de Janeiro, 1807
- The king's son, Pedro, agreed to Brazilian independence, 1821
- Became Emperor Pedro I in the independent Brazil (reigned 1822-1834)
- Creole dominance in Latin America
- Independence brought little social change in Latin America
- Principal beneficiaries were creole elites
- The emergence of ideologies: conservatism and liberalism
- Conservatism: resistance to change
- Importance of continuity, tradition
- Edmund Burke viewed society as an organism that changed slowly over time
(a) American Revolution: a natural and logical outcome of history
(b) French Revolution: violent and irresponsible
- Liberalism: welcomed change as an agent of progress
- Championed freedom, equality, democracy, written constitutions
- John Stuart Mill championed individual freedom and minority rights
- Testing the limits of revolutionary ideals: slavery
- Movements to end slave trade: began in 1700s, gained momentum during revolutions
- In 1807 British Parliament outlawed slave trade
- Other states followed suit, though illegal slave trade continued from some time
- Movements to abolish slavery: more difficult because of property rights
- In Haiti and much of South America, end of slavery came with independence
- In Europe and North America, campaign against slave trade became campaign to abolish slavery
- Abolition in Britain in 1833, France in 1848, the United States in 1865, Brazil in 1888
- Abolition brought legal freedom for slaves but not political equality
- Testing the limits of revolutionary ideals: women's rights
- Enlightenment ideals and women
- Enlightenment call for equality not generally extended to women
- Women used logic of Locke to argue for women's rights
(a) Mary Astell attacked male dominance in the family
(b) Mary Wollstonecraft: women possessed same natural rights as men
- Women crucial to revolutionary activities
- French revolution granted women rights of education and property, not the vote
- Olympe de Gouges's declaration of full citizenship for women too radical
- Women made no significant gains in other revolutions
- Women's rights movements gained ground in the nineteenth century in United States and Europe
- The consolidation of national states in Europe
- Nations and nationalism
- Cultural nationalism: an expression of national identity
- Emphasized common historical experience
- Used folk culture and literature to illustrate national spirit (Volkgiest)
- Political nationalism more intense in the nineteenth century
- Demanded loyalty and solidarity from members of the national group
- Minorities sought independence as a national community
- Young Italy formed by Giuseppe Mazzini
- Zionism: Jewish nationalism as a response to widespread European anti-Semitism
- Movement founded by Theodor Herzl to create a Jewish state in Palestine
- Jewish state of Israel finally created in 1948
- The emergence of national communities
- Congress of Vienna, 1814-15
- Conservative leaders determined to restore old order after defeat of Napoleon
- Succeeded in maintaining balance of power in Europe for a century
- Failed in repressing nationalist and revolutionary ideas
- Nationalist rebellions against old order throughout nineteenth century
- Greek rebels overcame Ottoman rule in 1827
- 1830 and 1848, rebellions in France, Spain, Portugal, and German states
- Conservative government usually restored afterward but ideals persisted
- The unification of Italy and Germany
- Cavour and Garibaldi united Italy by 1870
- Mazzini's Young Italy inspired uprisings against foreign rule in Italy
- Cavour led nationalists and expelled Austrian authorities in northern Italy, 1859
- Garibaldi controlled southern Italy, returned it to King Vittore Emmanuele, 1860
- Prussian prime minister Otto von Bismarck (1815-1898) created a united Germany
- In Germany, nationalist rebellion was repressed in 1848
- Bismarck provoked three wars that swelled German pride
- 1871, Prussian king proclaimed emperor of the Second Reich
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