How were the uprisings in france different from those in the german states?
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The French Revolution was transformative. Most obviously, it redrew the map of central Europe and destroyed the Holy Roman Empire. But it also turned Germany into a constitutional laboratory. That process began in 1806, with the Napoleonic puppet states and the new constitutions granted in Baden and elsewhere.
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Explanation:
- In contrast to the German states, France was able to create voting rights for French men as a result of its revolutions.
- In contrast to the German states, France was able to create voting rights for French men as a result of its revolutions. In the end, the German Revolution failed to establish a new republic headed by the Frankfurt Assembly.
- Unexpected economic problems in 1846, which Germany did not endure to the same extent, were the catalyst for France's revolution.
- The majority of the anti-Napoleonic nationalism was concentrated in the German states, the majority of which were part of the Confederation of the Rhine and some of which had been absorbed by France.
- In addition to revolting against French domination, the German nationalist movement also opposed the entirety of French intellectual culture.
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