History, asked by riya3456, 9 months ago

History ch.1 explain or give notes?? class 10th !! dont spam​

Answers

Answered by jmtindian
2

French Revolution of 1789 was the first clear expression of nationalism.

• Steps taken by French Revolutionaries to create a sense of collective identity amongst the French people:

→ Ideas of La patrie and Le citoyen

→ New French Flag

→ Estates General was elected and renamed National Assembly

→ New hymns composed and oaths taken

→ Centralized administration system

→ Internal customs duties and dues were abolished

→ Uniform system of weights and measures were introduced

→ French became the common language

Napolean

• Ruled France from 1799 to 1815.

• Gained absolute powers in 1799 by becoming the First Consul.

Civil Code of 1804 / Napoleonic Code

• Equality before the law was established

• Secured the right to property

• Simplified administrative measures

• Freed peasants from serfdom and manorial dues

Transport and communication systems were improved.

Napoleon took away political freedom, increased taxes, imposed censorship and forced people to join French army.No Nation states were in Europe because of not common identity or culture.People residing in different areas spoke different languages.

The Aristocracy and the New Middle Class

• Aristocracy

→ The land owning class.

→ Spoke French connected by ties of marriages.

→ Numerically a small group.

• Peasantry

• Middle class

→ New Social class emerged with the growth of towns and emergence of commercial classes.

→ Educated class where ideas of nationality gained popularity.

What did Liberal Nationalism Stand for?

• Liberalism stood for freedom for the individual and equality for all before the law

→ A constitution and representative government through parliament.

• In the economic sphere liberalism stood for the freedom of markets and the abolition of state-imposed restrictions on the movement of goods and capital.

• Zollverein abolished tariff barriers, reduced the number of currencies to two, and promoted a network of railways to stimulate mobility.

A New Conservatism after 1815

• Believed that established institutions of state and society should be preserved, with the changes initiated by Napoleon.

Treaty of Vienna (1815

• A series of states created on the French boundary for preventing French expansion in future.

• German confederation was left untouched.

• Main intentions was to restore the monarchies that had been overthrown by Napoleon.

The Revolutionaries

Acommitment to oppose monarchical forms that had been established after the Vienna Congress, and to fight for liberty and freedom.

Giuseppe Mazzini

• Born in Genoa in 1807

• A member of the secret society of Carbonari

• Founded Young Italy in Marseellies, Young Europe in Berne. Belgium broke away from the United kingdoms of the Netherlands.

• Greece which had been a part of the Ottomon Empire since the fifteenth century, struggled for independence.

→ Treaty of Constantinople of 1832 recognised Greece as an independent nation.The Romantic Imagination and National Feeling

• A cultural movement which sought to develop a particular form of nationalist sentiment, criticized the glorification of reason and science and focused instead on emotions, intuition and mystical feelings

Hunger, Hardship and Popular Revolt

• In most countries there were more seekers of jobs than employment.

• Population from rural areas migrated to the cities to live in overcrowded slums.

• The rise of food prices or a year of bad harvest led to widespread pauperism in town and country.

• In 1848, the Population of Paris came out on the roads and Louis Philippe was forced to flee and National Assembly proclaimed a Republic.

• In 1845, weavers in Silesia led a revolt against contractors.

1848: The Revolution of the Liberals

• The revolution was led by educated middle classes who combined their demands for constitutionalism with national unification.

Frankfurt Parliament

• On 18 May 1848, members of political association’s elected 831 representatives who took their places in the Frankfurt Parliament convened in the Church of St. Paul and drafted a Constitution for the German nation.

• It was opposed by King of Prussia and also lost its social basis as no rights were given to workers and women.

The Making of Germany and Italy

Germany

• Otto Van Bismarck with the help of Prussian army and bureaucracy took on the leadership of the movement for national unification.

• Three war over seven years ended in Prussian victory and completed the process of unification.

• Kaiser William I of Prussia headed the new German Empire.

Italy

• Italy was divided into seven states of which only Sardinia Piedmont was ruled by an Italian Princely state.

• Initially a unification programme was initiated by Giuseppe Mazzini, but it failed.

• Chief Miniser Cavour led the movement, with the help of Giuseppe Garibaldi.

• In 1861, Victor Emmanuel II was proclaimed king of united Italy

• English parliament seized power from the monarchy.

• The Act of Union 1707 resulted in the formation of the ‘United Kingdom of Great Britain’.

Visualising the Nation

• Nations were portrayed as female

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