Chapter 24 The Building of European Supremacy

Download Report

Transcript Chapter 24 The Building of European Supremacy

Chapter 24
The Building of
European Supremacy
General information you should
know
Population Trends &
Migration
•
•
•
•
20% of world’s populationEurope
1850—266 million
1900—401 million
1910—447 million
• Birth/Death rates declined or stabilized
Worldview
• Stable or slowly growing populations in
developed countries vs. large & rapidly
growing populations in undeveloped
regionsfood & resource crises
(Malthus)
Migration & Mobility
• People are on the MOVE
–Serf emancipation
–Cheap land & better wages
–Transportation
• 1846-1932
• 50 million Europeans 
–North America
–South America
–Australia
–Africa
BIG picture
• Relieved social & population pressures
• Europeanization of the world
• European technology & economic
superiority
2nd Industrial Revolution
• Heavy industries— Germany,
Belgium, France
– Steel—Bessemer Process
– Internal combustion engines
• 1887—Daimler invented automobile
•  demand for OIL
Middle Class
•
•
•
•
•
•
Always rising
Increased social distinctions
Suburbs
Housing reform
Women’s issues— more of the same
Political feminism (see poster p.832)
Jewish Emancipation
• BIG QUESTION
• Where does anti-Semitism come from?
First International
• Gathering of socially/economically
discontent
• Anarchists—those who rebel against any
authority, established order, ruling power
• Socialists
• Polish nationals (why?)
Karl Marx
• Main voice of International
• Great scientific appeal
• Ideas became main brand
of socialism
• Reform—work
WITHIN existing
political structures
Paris Commune
• Background: Napoleon III (r.1851-1870)
• Picked a fight w/ Prussia (sort of)
Franco-Prussian War
– Disastrous to France
• Parisians create own govt “Commune”
– Attracted all kinds of radicals—violent
• Marx praised as “genuinely proletarian
government, suppressed by bourgeoisie”
Okay for the rest of Europe,
what about Great Britain?
Great Britain…
•
•
•
•
•
Most advanced industrial society
Growing trade unions support Liberal Party
Independent Labour Party—socialist
Growing militancy
Labor strikes—higher wages
…Great Britain…
• The Fabian Society
– Gradual approach to major social reform
– Civil servants
– Problems could be solved democratically
• “rational wisdom of socialism”
(Enlightenment?)
…Great Britain
• David Lloyd George —Chancellor of the
Exchequer
• Broad program of social/labor reform
– Labor exchanges
– Trade regulation
• Textiles
• National Insurance Act 1911
– Unemployment & health care
France…
• Jaures & Guesde—led 2 main socialist
factions
• Saw “opportunity” to infiltrate existing
political structures (parties & cabinet
{advisors})
• Howevercan’t support a government
that they will eventually overthrow—main
goal
…France…
• Unity? PM Waldeck-Rousseau
– Appointed Millerand (socialist) to cabinet
• 2nd International (1889-Amsterdam)
– Ordered French socialists to form own party
• Socialist Party—2nd largest group in Chamber of
Deputies
• However: French labor movement anarchists
– Little interest in politics or socialism
– Less talk-more action labor strikes to generate unity
– Militarily suppressed
Germany…
• German Social Democratic Party (SDP)—
1875
• Marxist socialism
• ÷ reform v. revolution
…Germany…
• Bismarck—socialism undermines politics &
society
• “Gute Deutsche sind nicht Sozialist”
• Counterproductive legislation thru’
Reichstag
• Bismarck—smart enough to fix a problem
…Germany…
• Health insurance
• Accident insurance
• Old/age disability
pensions
• Paternalistic
alternative
…Germany…
• 1st major industrial nation to introduce
welfare system—we take care of our
own….
…Germany…
• Bismarck outlive socialist repression
• Erfurt Program 1891
– Declared doom of capitalism
– Push socialist ownership of means of
production
– Not revolutionary but work withIN system
• SDP—hostile to German Empire, but will
work with it
…Germany
• Fabian influence— Eduard Bernstein
• “social reform through democratic
institutions replaced revolution [towards]
human socialist society
• August 1914—unify to support war effort
Russia…
• Russian socialism
reflects political
discontent & economic
development
• Nicholas II 1894-1917
– Stubborn supporter of
the right of the emperor
…Russia…
• Sergei Witte —finance minister
– Planned economic development
– Protective tariffs
– Gold standard
– General efficiency
– HEAVY INDUSTRIES
• Railroads—iron—steel
• Industrialism led to disgruntled peasants
Socialism in Russia…
• No representative institutions//small
working class
• Czar banned political parties
•  exiled Russian Social Democratic
Party
…Socialism in Russia…
• George Plekhanov—Chief Russian
Marxist
– Chief disciple— Vladimir Ilyich Ulyanov
• Russia must become
industrialized to develop
large proletariat revolution
…Socialism in Russia…
Lenin
• Criticized trade unions
• Rejected mass
democratic party
composed of workers
• Infiltration by
“professionals” in
revolutionary movements
& government
…Socialism in Russia
• 1903—Russian Social Democratic Party
(London)
• Lenin forced split
– Bolsheviks—majority (organized 1912)
• Elite party
• Dual social revolution
– Mensheviks—minority
• Bolsheviks—odd man out in European
Socialism
Russo-Japanese War 19041905
• Expensive & deadly
• Fueled fires of revolution 1905
• Sidebar: Japan emerged as world
power
Revolt @ home
• January 1905 workers of St. Petersburg
carrying banners, icons, and portraits of the
czar solemnly marched on the capital with
a petition stating their unbearably difficult
life. 140,000 people, including women &
children, took part in the march. Upon the
order of the czar, the marchers were fired
upon—over 1,000 were killed, 5,000
injured.
• Considered the First Revolution
October Manifesto
• Granted certain freedoms to Russian
people
• Later annulled
• Meaningless
• Witte out – Stolypin in
• Little sympathy for parliamentary govt
• Convinced Nicholas to dissolve Duma
Russia
• Stolypin
• Repress rebellion—execute 700 peasants
• Cancel peasants’ redemptive debt
– increase individual ownership of lands
– Farmers more productive working for selves
• Rally property owners to support czar
Russia
• Grigory Efimovich
Rasputin
– Much influence on czar
& family (Alexandra)
• Widespread distrust of
czar’s policies after
1911