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THE RESTORATION, 1815-1830

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Title: THE RESTORATION, 1815-1830


1
THE RESTORATION, 1815-1830
  • In France, marked by a bitter political struggle
    between
  • Ultraroyalists
  • Wanted to wipe out everything the French
    Revolution achieved
  • Various liberal groups
  • Wanted to preserve best reforms of 1789-1815
  • Louis XVIII stood in between two extremes
  • In sympathy with ultras but knew their goal would
    end in disaster
  • Hence his moderation

2
CHARTER OF 1814
  • Recognized major achievements of revolutionary
    years
  • Guaranteed equality before the law
  • Retained Napoleonic Code
  • Confirmed titles to owners of confiscated land
  • Preserved Concordat
  • But it did not determine where real political
    power resided
  • Especially ambiguous regarding precise powers of
    new bicameral legislature
  • Chamber of Peers (members appointed for life)
  • Chamber of Deputies (elected by 100,000 of the
    largest landowners

3
THE LEGISLATURE
  • Charter invested king with executive power but
    did not clearly invest legislature with
    legislative power
  • Only king could initiate legislation
  • Legislature could reject or approve a bill but
    could not change it without kings consent
  • Ministers were considered officers of the king
    and were not responsible to the legislature
  • But principle of ministerial responsibility did
    become established during Restoration
  • Although the king new formally conceded this right

4
SUMMARY
  • Monarchy and its supporters insisted that the
    source of all political power was the king
  • Others, to a limited degree, argued that the
    source of political power was the people and
    their elected representatives in the legislature
  • Never worked out a formal and explicit compromise
  • Instead, an uneasy, unspoken true developed
    between the two views
  • Neither side ever actually conceded anything to
    the other in a formal way but instead simply
    allowed things to develop in a certain way
    without formal resistance
  • Danger was that, in the future, one side might
    push too hard and force the other into a corner
    where it would have no other choice but to resist

5
FIRST PERIOD, 1815-1816
  • Ultras won majority in Chamber of Deputies
  • Proceeded to embarrass Louis XVIII by announcing
    their intention to abolish a number of
    institutions established between 1789-1815 and
    restore confiscated land to former owners
  • Louis dissolves Chamber and calls for new
    elections

Count dArtois Head of the Ultraroyalists
6
SECOND PERIOD 1816-1820
  • Period of general calm
  • Ended with assassination of Duc de Berry
  • Son of Count dArtois
  • Assassin motivated by desire to end Bourbon line
  • Didnt work Count de Chambord born nine months
    after event

7
THIRD PERIOD 1820-1830
  • Era of increasing tension and repression
  • Louis XVIII took less and less active role in
    government
  • Died in 1824
  • Count dArtois becomes new king
  • Charles X

8
THE VILLÈLE MINISTRY I
  • Berry assassination used as excuse for imposing
    restrictions on the press and revising electoral
    laws
  • Count de Villèle
  • Prime minister 1822-1828
  • Ultras control Chamber of Deputies
  • Passed Law of Indemnity
  • Compensated nobles for loss of their estates
    during French Revolution
  • Compensation was financed by reducing interest on
    government bonds

Count de Villèle
9
THE VILLÈLE MINISTRY II
  • Law of Sacrilege
  • 1823
  • Imposed death penalty for offenses of an
    allegedly sacreligious character and for the
    theft of religious objects
  • Appeared to put the state at the service of the
    Church
  • Villèle undermined state educational system
    established by Napoleon
  • Placed bishop at head of the system and fired
    liberal teachers
  • Encouraged growth of Catholic seminaries outside
    of the state system
  • Competed with state schools and undermined
    prestige and financial equilibrium of state system

10
FALL OF VILLÈLE
  • Opposition grew to Villèle ministry
  • Liberal newspapers contributed to this
  • Liberal political society founded in 1827
  • Aide-toi, et le ciel taidera formed to spread
    liberal propaganda
  • New elections in 1827 result in victory of
    moderate royalists over Ultras
  • King fires Villèle and replaces him with more
    moderate Viscount de Martignac

Charles X
11
PRINCE DE POLIGNAC
  • Martinac relaxed reststrictions on press and
    fired some notorious Ultras from civil service
  • But Ultras and liberal extremes harassed him
    mercilessly
  • Providing Charles X with excused to fire him and
    replace him with Prince de Polignac
  • One of the most diehard and fanatical Ultras in
    country
  • Did not represent majority in Chamber of Deputies
    in any way

Prince de Polignac
12
CHARLES SHOWS HIS TRUE COLORS
  • Charles clearly intended to move country back as
    close as possible to absolute monarchy
  • Dissolves Chamber of Deputies when they petition
    for removal of Polignac
  • New elections of 1830 return larger number of
    moderates to Chamber than in 1827
  • Indicates most French voters, even though they
    were wealthy and conservative, did not approve of
    Charles intentions nor his methods

Nice dress!
13
JULY REVOLUTION OF 1830
  • Charles issues July Ordinances before new
    Chamber even meets
  • Dissolves new Chamber
  • Established new electoral system that deprived
    all members of the bourgeoisie of the right to
    vote
  • Imposed rigid censorship of the press
  • Announcement of the July Ordinances provoked an
    insurrection in Paris
  • The July Revolution of 1830

14
THREE GLORIOUS DAYS
  • Revolution occurred with minimum of violence
  • Because government had not anticipated any
    trouble and made no preparations to resist
  • Three Glorious Days
  • Began in Paris on July 26
  • Workers, students and some republican agitators
    build barricades on July 27
  • By July 28, rebels took over city hall and raised
    tri-color flag
  • King offered to fire Polignac but it was too late
    for concessions

Liberty leading the People Eugene Delacroix
15
LOUIS PHILIPPE
  • Liberal leaders were afraid that events might get
    out of hand
  • Favored a constitutional monarchy
  • With Louis Philippe, Duc dOrleans, as king
  • Cousin of Charles X
  • Louis Philippe was ideal candidate for moderates
  • Remained in France and had been officer in
    revolutionary army until 1793
  • Believed to hold liberal political views

Louis Philippe, Duc dOrleans
16
KING OF THE FRENCH
  • Louis Philippe still viewed Charles X as
    legitimate ruler until he renounced all claims to
    the throne
  • Marquis de Lafayette intervened and convinced
    Louis Philippe to accept crown
  • Accepted revised version of Charter of 1814
  • Took title of King of the French
  • Implied that he owed his throne to the popular
    will
  • Revolution of 1830 was clear victory for the
    concept of popular sovereignty over the principle
    of absolute monarch

Marquis de Lafayette
King Louis Philippe
17
AUSTRIAN EMPIRE
  • Controlled by Habsburg Dynasty
  • Especially by prime minister, Prince Klemens von
    Metternich
  • Metternich had spies everywhere reporting on any
    sort of evidence of liberalism or subversion

18
BIG DEAL ABOUT NOTHING
  • In years after 1815 opposition was confined to
    tiny minority of students, a few army officers, a
    handful of liberal nobles, and a scattering of
    merchants
  • Peasants were not concerned with political issue
  • No numerically significant middle class yet
    existed

Prince Klemens von Metternich
19
NATIONALISM
  • Opposition was more nationalist than it was
    specifically liberal
  • In Austria, non-German groups demanded greater
    use of their language in schools and
    administration
  • In Italy and Germany, some wanted greater freedom
    from Habsburg domination and a greater measure of
    unity
  • Metternichs answer was always the same
  • He ruthlessly suppressed them as threats to the
    delicate equilibrium of the Habsburg Empire
  • Completely convinced that even the slightest
    attempt to tamper with the structure of the
    Habsburg government would bring everything
    crashing down
  • Merely postponed the inevitable explosion

20
Federal Diet Consisted of delegates appointed by
the rulers of each of the member states Met in
Frankfort-am-Main Function was undefined but it
was clear that it had been set up to be an
instrument for the exercise of Metternichs
influence throughout Germany
Germanic Confederation Loose confederation of 38
states (including Prussia and Austria)
21
REFORM IN GERMANY
  • Number of German states had granted constitutions
    to their subjects
  • Including Bavaria, Wurttemburg, and Baden
  • Similar to French Charter of 1814
  • Leadership for reform in Prussia came from Baron
    Heinrich von Stein (1807-1808) and Baron Karl von
    Hardenburg (1810-1817)
  • Both convinced that recovery from Napoleonic
    defeats could only take place as a result of a
    series of political and institutional reforms

Von Stein
Von Hardenburg
22
PRUSSIAN REFORMS
  • Abolition of serfdom
  • Reduction in class distinctions
  • Non-nobles allowed to buy land and nobles allowed
    to engage in trade and commerce
  • Introduction of a system of municipal
    self-government
  • Improvements in primary and secondary education
  • Establishment of the University of Berlin
  • Military reforms
  • Eliminated harsh physical punishments
  • Encouraged promotion by merit
  • Introduced conscription

23
NO CONSTITUTION
  • Frederick William III had promised during
    Napoleonic wars to create a legislature and a
    constitution which would establish representative
    government in Prussia
  • Never happened
  • Frederick William instead created Council of
    State made up of royal princes, ministers, and
    army commanders

Frederick William III
24
TURNVATER JAHN
  • German students organized Burschenschaften at
    several German universities
  • Student societies inspired by Friedrich Ludwig
    Jahn
  • Had organized gymnastic societies during the
    Napoleonic Wars to bring about the physical and
    moral regeneration of German youth
  • Nicknamed Turnvater Jahn
  • Aggressive nationalist
  • Preached hatred of things foreign
  • Encourgaed disruptive behavior
  • Anti-semitic

Friedrich Ludwig Jahn
25
BURSCHENSCHAFTEN ACTIVITY
  • Burschenschaften members gathered at Wartburg
    Castle in 1817 to celebrate 300th anniversary of
    Luthers break with Rome and 4th anniversary of
    Battle of the Nations
  • Speakers exhorted students to dedicate their
    lives to the holy cause of union and freedom
  • Burned books by conservative and antinationalist
    authors
  • In 1819, Karl Sand assassinated August von
    Kotzebue, a reactionary playwright
  • Mentally disturbed Burschenschaften member
  • Arrested and sentenced to death
  • Prompts Metternich to issue Carlsbad Decrees

Karl Sand
26
CARLSBAD DECREES
  • 1819
  • Dissolved Burschenschaften
  • Set up rigid censorship of the press
  • Created elaborate system for rooting out
    subversive individuals in schools and
    universities
  • Political opposition almost completely disappears
    after 1819 as a result
  • Never strong to begin with

27
MORE REPRESSION
  • News of July Revolution of 1830 in France
    inspired minor revolts in Baden, Saxony, and
    Hesse-Cassel
  • Metternich convinced that they were part of
    international radical conspiracy
  • Issues new series of decrees in 1832
  • Following German Festival at Hambach where 25,000
    people drank toasts to Lafayette and denounced
    Metternich
  • Prohibited public meetings and strengthened
    restrictions on universities

Festival at Hambach
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