Explain the social composition of the mid-eighteenth century, europe
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32
Answer:
Europe in the mid-18th Century
- No nation states because Europeans never saw themselves as sharing a common identity or culture. E.g., The Habsburg Empire of Austria–Hungary comprised French, Italian and German-speaking people.
- Europe was broadly divided into two classes during this period namely:
Aristocracy
- The land owning class.
- Numerically small, but dominated Europe, both socially and politically.
- Spoke French which was considered the language of the high society.
- Families were connected through marriage.
Peasantry
- Tenants and small land owners who worked as serfs.
- Cultivated the lands of the aristocratic lords.
- The growth of trade and industrial production facilitated the growth of towns and rise of a commercial class of traders. Consequently, the new conscious, educated, liberal middle class emerged and popularized nationalism and stood for the abolition of aristocracy.
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Answered by
7
Answer:
In Europe there were 2 classes
1. aristrocats and second was peasants
Aristocrats were the rich people and they have every right ,they were less in number...
peasants were the poor people and they have no right ,they were more in number...
in mid of the 18th century one new class was introduced..
the new middle class.
they were educated people ,they want justice, there demand was every people should be treated equally and every one have the right to property , right to freedom and more..
PEASANTS SUPPORTED THE NEW MIDDLE CLASS...
Thank You, hope it helps you
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