Unit 6 - 7 APEH

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What did the Agricultural Revolution lead to?

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What did the Agricultural Revolution lead to?

Improved transportation, Population Explosion, The Improvement Ethos, Ready Supply of Capital, and Imperial Markets

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How did the transportation improve?

Canals and Turnpikes

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What is the Improvement Ethos?

Nobles thought that they were God appointed and they should improve things within England

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The Cottage Industry

Common people working out of their homes to supplement their income

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What caused the end of the Cottage Industry?

The demand was too high for it to keep up

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Important new inventions

The Spinning Jenny and the Power Loom

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What replaced the need for wind, water, and muscle for energy?

The steam engine

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Industrial Revolution Time Period

1750 - 1850

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What were the social problems that occurred after Industrialization?

Urbanization

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Urbanization

Enclosure movement, Population growth, Easier transport, and Jobs

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What did Urbanization lead to?

The formation of Shock Cities

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THUP

Disease, Moral Degradation, and Political Threat

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Prominent diseases during the Indy Rev

Cholera; Bloody Flux, Dysentery, and Typhus

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Moral Breakdown

Disease → Death → Family Structure → Desperation → Moral Breakdown

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Political Threat

Many Protests, Riots, Strikes, and Urban Revolutions, but none of them are successful

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What was the purpose of the Congress of Vienna?

To address the chaos created by the Napoleonic wars and provide a long-term peace plan for Europe

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What does the Congress of Vienna result in?

Between 1815 and 1914 there were no “major” wars

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The Quadruple Alliance

An alliance between Britain, Austria, Prussia, and Russia committed to maintaining the Balance of Power

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What was the defining moment of conservatism

The Congress of Vienna

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What were the two branches of conservatism?

Paternalists and Progressives

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Paternalists

Must address problems to the “father”

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Progressives

Must make social concessions to the lower classes in order to save the authority of the ruling classes

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Two groups in Russia

Slavophiles - Tsar as Autocrat and Westernizers - Liberalism and Socialism (eventually)

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Nicolas’ Reactionary Policies

Russia’s first reactionary monarch

Russia becomes a police state

No representative assemblies

He pushed the intelligentsia away from the Slavophile perspective

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Liberalism Characteristics

Individual Self-sufficiency, Classical Liberalism, Liberal Economics, Utilitarianism

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Classical Liberalism

Reform not Revolution

Press for a written constitution

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Utilitarianism

The greatest good for the greatest number of people with the least harm done to the minority

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What is a nation?

When a group of people have common similarities

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What is nationalism moving towards?

Nation-states

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Where did nationalist movements occur?

Spain, Naples, Piedmont, and Greece

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Who were the Intelligentsia?

Group of intellectuals who played a key role in shaping the political and cultural landscape of a nation

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What happened with the 1848 Revolutions

They failed

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Attributes of the 1848 Revolutions?

Liberal, Nationalist, and Romantic

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Who were the people running the 1848 Revolutions?

Students and Intellectuals

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What did the 1848 Revolutions lead to?

Realpolitik

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What is Realpolitik?

A system of politics based on practical considerations rather than moral

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What did Giuseppe Mazzini do?

Started Italian nationalism and was an activist for the unification of Italy

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Count Camillo de Cavour

Prime minister of Italy and starts a newspaper called the Risorgimento

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What is the Syllabus of Errors?

A list of errors that attacks modernism written by Pope Pius IX

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What is modernism?

The attitude towards religion during the French revolution

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What was Cavour’s Plan for Italian Unification?

Modernize Piedmont, marginalize Austrian power in the region, gain powerful allies, and eventual war to remove Austria

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The Crimean War

A useless war

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What was the Plombières Agreement?

An agreement between France and Piedmont outlining their plan to remove and exclude Austrian influence from the Italian peninsula.

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Austro-Piedmontese War

Piedmont forces Austrian officials out of the Northern Italian states. Austria tries to turn the tides of the war and that's when France intervenes and Austria backs down.

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Outcome of the Italian Unification

Politically unified, but economically divided. The north was Industrial while the South was Rural

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The two German Unification plans

Kleindeutschland - small and Großdeutschland - greater

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Humiliation of Ölmutz

The king almost accepts the offer of being a king of a small Germany but Austria intervenes

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Otto von Bismarck

One of the most important German chancellors

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What did Bismarck do to the military?

Increased the size and funding for the military

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What was Germany’s main strategy towards unification?

Pick a fight but look like the victim

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Step 1: German-Danish War, 1863

Prussia, German states, and Austria vs. Denmark

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Step 2: Austro-Prussian War, 1866

Bismarck signs treaties with Russia, France, and Italy so they would stay out of the war and defeated Austria

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What is the Austro-Prussian War also known as?

The 7 weeks war

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What were the new pieces of technology created during the Austro-Prussian War?

Railroads, Needle Gun, and Krupp

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The North German Confederation, 1867

Prussia gains more control over the North German states and forms a confederation

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Reichstag

German Parliament

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Step 3: The Franco-Prussian War, 7/1870 - 1/1871

War over the Spanish throne. Napoleon III blocks the Nephew of Wilhelm from becoming king and declares war on Prussia but gets destroyed

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Declaration of the German Empire

All the notable rulers are brought into Versailles to declare the German empire in France

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Treaty of Frankfurt, 5/1871

Germany takes land from France and is made to pay for the damages caused by the war

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Imperialism Theory

Relationship of Dominance between the Metropol and the Periphery that is evidenced by exploitation

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What are the different types of Imperialism

Formal imperialism, Informal imperialism, and Gun-Boat Diplomacy

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Formal Imperialism

Raise the Flag. Physically taking control of the periphery

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Informal Imperialism

Show me the money. The periphery is economically dependent on the Metropol

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Gun-Boat Diplomacy

Open up or I’ll shoot. Using the military to threaten the periphery

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Economic Drives

Industrial

Demand for raw materials, new markets, and more efficient transportation

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Economic Drives

Production

Industrial production and agricultural boom

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Religious Fervor

Mixing of cultures

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New Racial Theories

Classifying different races

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