1 / 9

Ch. 21-23 The Growth and Suppression of Democracy (1815-1900)

Ch. 21-23 The Growth and Suppression of Democracy (1815-1900). Overview. Age of Metternich (Austrian)—1815-1848 Wanted a balance of power in Europe and promoted conservatism Great Britain and France will develop constitutional democracies representing its populace

dava
Download Presentation

Ch. 21-23 The Growth and Suppression of Democracy (1815-1900)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Ch. 21-23 The Growth and Suppression of Democracy (1815-1900)

  2. Overview • Age of Metternich (Austrian)—1815-1848 • Wanted a balance of power in Europe and promoted conservatism • Great Britain and France will develop constitutional democracies representing its populace • Germany, Austria, and Russia suppressed democratic urges of their populations

  3. The Restoration Period (1815-1830) • The TASKrulers of Europe must restore stability between nations of Europe and ensure revolution did not reappear in their domains. • Rulers of Europe took one of Napoleon’s ideas and copied • France’s efficiency in controlling its population • In the period following the Napoleonic wars, states created • Larger , efficient bureaucracies • Secret police forces • Censorship offices

  4. The Concert of Europe (1815) • nations from the Congress of Vienna (Britain, Russia, Prussia, and Austria)agree that one nation cannot take major action in international affairs without working with the othersCongress system • 1818—Treaty of Aix-La-ChapelleFrance admitted based on “good behavior”; occupation army removed

  5. The Congress of Vienna (1814-1815) • Each country’s (5) aims and priorities. • Major compromises that occurred. • Political changes that resulted.

  6. Goals of Vienna • Austria—maintain a balance of power; opposed expansion of Prussia and Russia • France—wanted to be restored as a major power • England—maintain a balance of power and check the expansion of Russia • Prussia—sought more territories in eastern Germany • Russia—wanted Poland and collective security alliance

  7. Results of Vienna • France surrounded with three strong nations: Netherlands, Austria, Prussia • But was not severely punished • Prussia and Russia disappointed at amount of land gained • Metternich pleased that Prussia did not gain all of Saxony and Russia did not gain all of Poland • Austria became most powerful German state • Britain pleased with the limited Russian expansion

  8. The Age of Metternich (1815-1848) • Prince von Metternich has been nominated for the Hall of Fame: Leaders of Europe. You have been selected to provide a speech in support of him. Use the handout to guide your speech. • #1-3—Rise to prominence • #4-6—Role and impact at the Congress of Vienna • #7-8—Political forces at work in Europe • #9-10—Legacy of Metternich

More Related