The Rise of Nationalism in Europe
"When France sneezes, the rest of Europe catches a cold." — Metternich
1. Chapter Overview
This chapter traces how the modern IDEA OF THE NATION-STATE emerged in 19th-century Europe. Before the French Revolution (1789), people identified with their REGION, KING, or RELIGION — not a 'nation'. By 1914, nationalism had reshaped the map of Europe. This chapter covers that transformation.
Key Timeline
| Period | Event |
|---|---|
| 1789 | French Revolution — first expression of nationalism |
| 1799–1815 | Napoleon spreads revolutionary ideals across Europe |
| 1815 | Congress of Vienna — conservatives restore monarchies |
| 1830–1848 | Age of Revolutions — liberals and nationalists rise |
| 1848 | Frankfurt Parliament — failed liberal-nationalist attempt |
| 1859–1871 | Unification of Italy and Germany |
| 1871–1914 | Aggressive nationalism, imperialism → WWI |
2. Sorrieu's Vision — Imagining the Nation (1848)
Frédéric Sorrieu's Painting (1848)
French artist Frédéric Sorrieu created a series of prints in 1848 visualising his dream of a world made up of 'democratic and social republics.'
What the painting shows:
- Long processions of people from nations across the WORLD, each carrying their national flag, marching towards the Statue of Liberty (holding a torch in one hand, the Charter of Rights in the other)
- In the foreground: France leads, followed by other European and American nations
- God, Christ, angels watch from the clouds above
- Trampled underfoot: the symbols of ABSOLUTISM (monarchy, church power)
Why It Matters:
- The painting shows Europe IMAGINING the idea of the nation-state BEFORE it existed
- Each nation has its OWN flag and distinct identity → idea of the NATION-STATE
- Sorrieu's print captures the ROMANTIC-NATIONALIST dream of 1848 — the year of revolutions
- This image is used as a SOURCE in NCERT (source-based questions)
3. The French Revolution and the Idea of the Nation (1789)
First Clear Expression of Nationalism
- The French Revolution (1789) was the FIRST TIME people identified as a 'NATION' rather than subjects of a king
- La Patrie (the fatherland) and Le Citoyen (the citizen) — new concepts
- The nation was NOT the king — it was THE PEOPLE
- The Tricolour replaced the royal standard (flag)
Measures Taken by French Revolutionaries
- A centralised administrative system: uniform laws for all citizens
- Internal customs duties abolished: free trade within France
- Uniform system of weights and measures: metric system
- French language promoted: regional dialects discouraged
- Estates-General renamed National Assembly: power from king → people
Spread of Revolutionary Ideas
- French armies carried these ideas across Europe
- Students, professionals, educated middle class — became NATIONALISTS
- Jacobin clubs formed in French-controlled territories
- The Revolution was NOT just French — it was a MODEL
4. Napoleon Bonaparte (1799–1815)
Napoleon's Role
- 'Destroyer' AND 'Moderniser' — a COMPLEX figure
- Conquered much of Europe — spread French revolutionary ideals
Reforms Introduced by Napoleon
- Civil Code of 1804 (Napoleonic Code):
- Equality before law
- Right to property
- Abolished feudal system, serfdom
- Simplified administrative divisions
- Removed guild restrictions
- Transport and communication improved
- Uniform laws, standardised weights and measures
BUT: The Contradictions
- Napoleon's rule was IMPERIAL (he was an emperor)
- Censorship, taxation, forced conscription
- Political freedom was RESTRICTED
- The 'liberator' became an OPPRESSOR
- This created a MIXED REACTION: welcomed reforms, resented French domination
5. The Congress of Vienna (1815)
After Napoleon's Defeat
- Britain, Russia, Prussia, Austria met at Vienna
- Hosted by Austrian Chancellor Duke Metternich
- Goal: UNDO the changes brought by Napoleon and the Revolution
Key Decisions
- Restored monarchies overthrown by Napoleon (Bourbon dynasty in France)
- Territorial redistribution: redrew borders to contain France
- Kingdom of the Netherlands created (including Belgium)
- Prussia strengthened on France's eastern border
- German Confederation of 39 states (instead of old Holy Roman Empire)
- Austria given control of northern Italy
- Created a CONSERVATIVE ORDER — designed to suppress any future revolution
The Conservative Order
- Conservatives believed: monarchy, church, social hierarchy, family, property — must be PRESERVED
- Metternich: 'When France sneezes, the rest of Europe catches a cold'
- Liberals and nationalists were treated as ENEMIES of the state
- Censorship, secret police, repression
6. The Age of Revolutions (1830–1848)
Why Revolutions?
- The conservative order could NOT suppress the ideas of LIBERTY, EQUALITY, FRATERNITY
- The 1830s and 1840s saw waves of revolution across Europe
The July Revolution (France, 1830)
- Bourbon king Charles X overthrown
- Louis Philippe installed — a 'constitutional monarch'
- 'When France sneezes...' — triggered revolutions in Belgium, Poland, Italy
The Greek War of Independence (1821–1832)
- Greece under OTTOMAN EMPIRE for centuries
- Greek nationalists revolted in 1821
- Gained support from WESTERN EUROPEANS:
- Admired ANCIENT GREEK civilisation
- Lord Byron (English poet) — fought and died for Greece
- Treaty of Constantinople (1832): Greece recognised as independent
The Romantic Imagination and Nationalism
- ART and CULTURE played a HUGE role in building nationalism
- Romantic artists, poets, musicians — glorified the nation
- Johann Gottfried Herder (German philosopher): folk songs, folk tales, folk dances = the SPIRIT OF THE NATION (Volksgeist)
- Ernst Moritz Arndt (German nationalist writer): wrote the famous poem "What is the German's Fatherland?" — asked people to identify as GERMAN rather than Bavarian, Prussian, or Westphalian. Promoted the idea of a single GERMAN NATION united by language and culture.
- Language, literature, music became NATIONALIST tools
- Example: Polish nationalist Karol Kurpinski's operas, folk dances
1848: The Year of Revolutions
- French king Louis Philippe overthrown → Second Republic declared
- Revolutions in Germany, Italy, Austria, Hungary
- DEMANDS: constitutionalism, national unification, liberal freedoms
- BUT: the monarchies ultimately survived
The Frankfurt Parliament (1848)
- All-German National Assembly met at Frankfurt
- 831 elected representatives — mostly MIDDLE CLASS
- Drafted a constitution for a UNIFIED GERMANY
- Offered the crown to Prussian King Friedrich Wilhelm IV
- He REFUSED: 'a crown from the gutter' (he wanted divine right, not people's mandate)
- Parliament DISSOLVED — unification through liberal means FAILED
- Lesson learnt: unification would need ARMIES and STATES, not parliaments
7. The Unification of Germany (1866–1871)
Before Unification
- Germany was a CONFEDERATION of 39 states
- Prussia (largest, strongest) and Austria (traditionally dominant) competed for leadership
Zollverein — The Economic Foundation (1834)
- Zollverein (German Customs Union) formed in 1834 under Prussian leadership
- Abolished customs duties (tariffs) BETWEEN the 39 German states
- Created a single unified MARKET across German territories
- Impact: German merchants and manufacturers could now trade freely → created a sense of economic unity BEFORE political unification
- Issued a COMMON CURRENCY, standardised weights and measures
- Key idea: Economic integration PRECEDED political unification — the market united Germany before Bismarck's wars did
- This is a NCERT board exam favourite: "What was the significance of Zollverein?"
Otto von Bismarck — The Architect
- Prussia's Chief Minister (later Chancellor)
- 'Blood and Iron' policy — unification through WAR, not democracy
- Not a liberal — a CONSERVATIVE who used nationalism for Prussian dominance
The Three Wars
- Danish War (1864): Prussia + Austria defeated Denmark → gained Schleswig-Holstein
- Austro-Prussian War (1866): Prussia defeated Austria → Austria EXCLUDED from German affairs
- Franco-Prussian War (1870–71): Prussia defeated France → final push for unification
Proclamation of the German Empire (January 1871)
- At the Palace of Versailles (humiliating for France)
- Prussian King Wilhelm I proclaimed German Emperor
- Bismarck became Chancellor
- Germany unified — but through 'blood and iron', not liberal ideals
- Key features of unified Germany: powerful army, Prussian dominance, conservative
8. The Unification of Italy (1859–1871)
Before Unification
- Italy was divided into SEVEN states
- Sardinia-Piedmont (ruled by Italian king) was the ONLY Italian-ruled state
- North: under Austrian Habsburgs
- Centre: under the Pope
- South: Kingdom of Two Sicilies (Bourbon dynasty)
Key Figures
-
Giuseppe Mazzini: 'The Soul' — prophet of Italian unification
- Founded Young Italy (1831) — secret society
- Believed in a REPUBLICAN Italy
- Inspired generations but failed practically
-
Count Camillo di Cavour: 'The Brain' — Chief Minister of Sardinia-Piedmont
- DIPLOMAT: allied with France against Austria
- Used international politics to advance unification
- Wanted a MONARCHICAL Italy under Sardinia-Piedmont
-
Giuseppe Garibaldi: 'The Sword' — military leader
- Led the 'Red Shirts' — volunteer army
- Conquered Sicily and Naples (South Italy)
- Handed over his conquests to King Victor Emmanuel II — putting nation above personal ambition
Unification Process
- 1859: Sardinia-Piedmont + France defeated Austria → gained Lombardy
- 1860: Garibaldi conquered Sicily and Naples
- 1861: Victor Emmanuel II proclaimed KING OF ITALY
- 1866: Venetia added (after Austro-Prussian War)
- 1870: Rome added (French troops withdrawn during Franco-Prussian War)
9. Britain — The Strange Case
Britain Was DIFFERENT
- No SUDDEN revolution or unification — a GRADUAL process
- Nationalism in Britain was NOT about overthrowing monarchy or creating a new state
The Making of 'Great Britain'
- 1688: English Parliament seized power from the monarchy (Glorious Revolution)
- 1707: Act of Union — England + Scotland = 'United Kingdom of Great Britain'
- Scotland's distinct identity SUPPRESSED
- Scottish Highlanders forbidden Gaelic language, culture
- 1801: Ireland incorporated into the UK
- Ireland was deeply DIVIDED (Catholics vs Protestants)
- Wolfe Tone's United Irishmen revolt (1798) — suppressed
- British nationalism: imposed through DOMINANCE of English culture, language, institutions
- A 'nation' built on suppressing OTHER nations' identities
10. Visualising the Nation — Allegories
How Was the Idea of the Nation Communicated?
- Most people were ILLITERATE in the 19th century
- VISUAL IMAGES became crucial for spreading nationalism
- ALLEGORY: an abstract idea represented as a person
Marianne (France)
- Female figure — symbol of the FRENCH REPUBLIC
- Red cap (liberty), tricolour, cockade
- Statues, coins, public squares — everywhere
- 'Marianne' = the PEOPLE, not the king
Germania (Germany)
- Female figure — symbol of the GERMAN NATION
- Crown of oak leaves (heroism)
- Sword (readiness to fight)
- Breastplate with eagle (strength)
- Black, red, gold banner (liberal-nationalist colours)
11. Nationalism and Imperialism (After 1871)
The Shift
- Before 1871: nationalism was about UNIFICATION and FREEDOM
- After 1871: nationalism became AGGRESSIVE, EXCLUSIONARY, and IMPERIALIST
Balkan Nationalism
- Ottoman Empire weakening — 'the sick man of Europe'
- Balkan peoples (Greeks, Serbs, Bulgarians, Romanians, Albanians) demanded independence
- Each Slavic group wanted its OWN nation-state
- COMPETING CLAIMS on same territories
Great Power Rivalry
- Russia, Austria-Hungary, Germany, Britain — each had interests in the Balkans
- Rivalry over trade, colonies, naval power
- Nationalism became a TOOL for imperial expansion
- This chain of nationalist tensions → WORLD WAR I (1914)
12. Key Concepts
Liberalism
- Freedom of the individual, equality before law, consent of the governed
- In economics: free trade, free markets, end of state restrictions
Conservatism
- Preserve traditional institutions: monarchy, church, social hierarchy
- After 1815: believed change must be GRADUAL, not revolutionary
Nation-State
- A state where the VAST MAJORITY of citizens share a common identity (language, culture, history)
- NOT the same as a kingdom or empire
Imperialism
- Extending a country's power through colonisation or military force
- Late 19th century: nationalism fuelled imperialism
13. Exam Focus
High-Weightage Topics
- Sorrieu's 1848 painting — source-based questions on the visual and what it represents
- French Revolution as the first expression of nationalism
- Napoleonic Code — reforms and contradictions
- Congress of Vienna — conservative reaction
- Zollverein (1834) — economic foundation of German unification; common exam 3-mark question
- Greek War of Independence — role of culture/romanticism
- Ernst Moritz Arndt — cultural nationalist; "What is the German's Fatherland?"
- Unification of Germany (Bismarck, 'blood and iron')
- Unification of Italy (Mazzini, Cavour, Garibaldi)
- Comparison: Germany/Italy unification vs Britain's gradual nationalism
- Allegories (Marianne and Germania)
- Shift from liberal nationalism → aggressive imperialist nationalism
14. Common Mistakes
-
Napoleon spread ONLY good ideas — He also imposed CENSORSHIP, TAXATION, and CONSCRIPTION. His rule was IMPERIAL.
-
The 1848 revolutions failed completely — They FAILED in immediate goals, but SUCCEEDED in spreading ideas. Serfdom was abolished. Liberals learnt that parliaments alone won't unite nations.
-
Bismarck was a German nationalist — He was a PRUSSIAN conservative first. German unification was a TOOL for Prussian power, not a liberal-nationalist dream.
-
Italy was unified by ONE leader — It took ALL three: Mazzini (inspiration), Cavour (diplomacy), Garibaldi (military).
-
All European nations unified the same way — Britain's path was ENTIRELY different (gradual, through Parliament and cultural dominance, not revolution/war).
15. Conclusion
The rise of nationalism in Europe was NOT a single story — it was MANY stories:
- FRANCE: Revolution gave birth to the 'nation' idea
- NAPOLEON: Spread it (and contradicted it)
- VIENNA: Conservatives tried to bury it
- 1830–1848: Liberals and nationalists revived it
- GERMANY & ITALY: Unified through war and statecraft
- BALKANS: Nationalism fragmented into conflict
- BY 1914: Nationalism had reshaped Europe — and was about to plunge it into WAR
For CBSE:
- Know the CHRONOLOGY — it's a story, not a list of facts
- The comparisons (Germany/Italy, Napoleon as liberator/oppressor, early/late nationalism) get marks
- Visual sources (Marianne, Germania) are common picture-based questions
Nationalism: the idea that remade Europe — for better and for worse.
