The Rise of Nationalism in Europe
In 1848, Frederic Sorrieu, a French artist, prepared a
series of four prints visualising his dream of a world made up of democratic
and social Republics, as he called them. The first print of the series, shows
the peoples of Europe and America Men and Women of al ages and social classes
marching in a long train, and offering homage to the statue of Liberty as
they pass by it. As you would recall, artists of the time of the French
Revolution personified Liberty as a female figure here you can recognise the
torch of Enlightenment she bears in one hand and the Chapter of the Rights of
Man in the other. On the earth in the foreground of the image lie the
shattered remains of the symbols of absolutist institutions. In Sorrieus
utopian vision, the peoples of the world are grouped as distinct nations,
identified through their flags and national costume. Leading the procession,
way past the statue of Liberty, are the United States and Switzerland, which
by this time were already nation-states. France, identifiable by the
revolutionary tricolour, has just leached the statue. She is followed by the
peoples of Germany, bearing the black, red and gold flag. Interestingly, at
the time when Sorrieu created this image, the German peoples did not yet
exist as a united nation- the flag they carry is an expression of liberal
hopes in 1848 to unify the numerous German-speaking principalities into a
nation-state under a democratic constitution. Following the German peoples
are the peoples of Austria, the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies, Lombardy,
Poland, England, Ireland, Hungary and Russia. From me heavens above, Christ,
saints and angels gaze upon the scene. They have been used by the artist to
symbolise fraternity among the nations or the world.
This section will deal with many of the issues visualised
by Sorrieu. During the nineteenth century, nationalism emerged as a force
which brought about sweeping changes in the political and mental world of
Europe. The end result of these changes was the emergence of the nation-state
in place of the multi-national dynastic empires of Europe. The concept
and practices of a modern state, in which a centralised power
exercised sovereign control over a clearly defined territory, had been
developing over a long period of time in Europe. But a nation-state was
one in which the majority of its citizens, and not only its rulers, came to
develop a sense of common identify and shared history or descent. This
commonness did not exist from time immemorial; it was forged through
struggles, through the actions of leaders and the common people. This chapter
will look at the diverse processes through which nation-states and
nationalism came into being in nineteenth-century Europe.
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The French Revolution and the Idea of the Nation
The first clear expression of nationalism came with the
French Revolution in 1789. France, as you would remember, was a full-fledged
territorial state in 1789 under the rule of an absolute monarch. The
political and constitutional changes that came in the wake of the French
Revolution led to the transfer of sovereignty from the monarchy to a body of
French citizens. The revolution proclaimed that it was the people who would
henceforth constitute the nation and shape its destiny.
From the very beginning, the French revolutionaries
introduced various measures and practices that could create a sense of
collective identity amongst the French people. The ideas of la patrie
(the fatherland) and Ie citoyen (the citizen) emphasised the notion of
a united community enjoying equal rights under a constitution. A new French
flag, the tricolour, was chosen to replace the former royal standard. The
Estates General was elected by the body of active citizens and renamed the
National Assembly. New hymns were composed, oaths taken and martyrs
commemorated, all in the name of the nation. A centralised administrative
system was put in place and it formulated uniform laws for all citizens
within its territory. Internal customs duties and dues were abolished and a
uniform system of weights and measures was adopted. Regional dialects were
discouraged and French, as it was spoken and written in Paris, became the
common language of the nation.
The revolutionaries further declared that it was the
mission and the destiny of the French nation ro liberate the peoples of
Europe from despotism, in other words to help other peoples of Europe to
become nations.
When the news of the events in France reached the
different cities of Europe, students and other members of educated middle
classes began setting up Jacobin clubs. Their activities and campaigns
prepared the way for the French armies which moved into Holland, Belgium,
Switzerland and much of Italy in the 1790s. With the outbreak of the
revolutionary wars, the French armies began to carry the idea of nationalism
abroad.
Within the wide swathe of territory that came under his
control, Napoleon set about introducing many of the reforms that he had
already introduced in France. Through a return to monarchy Napoleon had, no
doubt, destroyed democracy in France, but in the administrative field he had
incorporated revolutionary principles in order to make the whole system more
rational and efficient. The Civil Code of 1804- usually known as the
Napoleonic code did away with all privileges based on birth, established
equality before the law and secured the right to property. This Code was
exported to the regions under French, control. In the Dutch Republic, in
Switzerland, in Italy and Germany, Napoleon simplified administrative
divisions, abolished the feudal system and freed peasants from serfdom and
manorial dues. 1n the towns too_ guild restrictions were removed. Transport
and communication systems were improved. Peasants, artisans, workers and new
businessmen enjoyed a new-found freedom. Businessmen and small-scale
producers of goods, in particular, began to realise that uniform laws,
standardised weights and measures, and a common national currency would
facilitate the movement and exchange of goods and capital from one region to
another.
However, in the areas conquered, the reactions of the
local populations to French rule were mixed. Initially, in many places such
as Holland and Switzerland, as well as in certain cities like Brussels,
Mainz, Milan and Warsaw, the French armies were welcomed as harbingers of
liberty. y. But the initial enthusiasm soon turned to hostility, as it became
clear that the new administrative arrangements did not go hand in hand with
political freedom. Increased taxation, censorship, forced conscription into
the French armies required to conquer the rest of Europe, all seemed to
outweigh the advantages of the administrative changes.
The Making of Nationalism in Europe
If
you look at the map of mid-eighteenth-century Europe you will find that there
were no 'nation-states' as we know them today.
What we know today as Germany, Italy and Switzerland were
divided into kingdoms, duchies and cantons whose rulers had their autonomous
territories. Eastern and Central Europe were under autocratic monarchies
within the territories of which lived diverse peoples. They did not see
themselves as sharing a collective identity or a common culture. Often, they
even spoke different languages and belonged to different ethnic groups. The
Habsburg Empire that ruled over Austria-Hungary, for example, was a patchwork
of many different regions and peoples. It included the Alpine regions - the
Tyrol, Austria and the Sudetenland - as well as Bohemia, where the
aristocracy was predominantly German-speaking. It also included the
Italian-speaking provinces of Lombardy and Venetia. In Hungary, half of the
population spoke Magyar while the other half spoke a variety of dialects. In
Galicia, the aristocracy spoke Polish. Besides these three dominant groups,
there also lived within the boundaries of the empire, a mass of subject
peasant peoples Bohemians and Slovaks to the north, Slovenes in Carniola,
Croats to the south, and Roumans to the east in Transylvania. Such
differences did not easily promote a sense of political unity. The only tie
binding these diverse groups together was a common allegiance to the emperor.
How did nationalism and the idea of the nation-state
emerge?
The Aristocracy and the New Middle Class
Socially and politically, a landed aristocracy was the
dominant class on the continent. The members of this class were united by a
common way of life that cut across regional divisions. They owned estates in
the countryside and also town-houses. They spoke French for purposes of
diplomacy and in high society. Their families were often connected by ties of
marriage. This powerful aristocracy was, however, numerically a small group.
The majority of the population was made up of the peasantry. To the west, the
bulk of the land was farmed by tenants and small owners, while in Eastern and
Central Europe the pattern of landholding was characterized by vast estates
which were cultivated by serfs.
In Western and parts of Central Europe the growth of
industrial production and trade meant the growth of towns and the emergence
of commercial classes whose existence was based on production for the market.
Industrialisation began in England in the second half of the eighteenth
century, but in France and parts of the German states it occurred only during
the nineteenth century. In its wake, new social groups came into being: a
working-class population, and middle classes made up of industrialists,
businessmen, professionals. In Central and Eastern Europe these groups were
smaller in number till late nineteenth century. It was among the educated,
liberal middle classes that ideas of national unity following the abolition
of aristocratic privileges gained popularity.
What did liberal Nationalism stand for?
Ideas of national unity in early-nineteenth-century Europe
were closely allied to the ideology of liberalism. The term 'liberalism'
derives from the Latin root fiber, meaning free. For the new middle classes
liberalism stood for freedom for the individual and equality of all before
the law: Politically, it emphasized the concept of government by consent.
Since the French Revolution, liberalism had stood for the end of autocracy
and clerical privileges, a constitution and representative government through
parliament. Nineteenth-century liberals also stressed the inviolability of
private property.
Yet, equality before the law did not necessarily stand for
universal suffrage. You will recall that in revolutionary France, which
marked the first political experiment in liberal democracy, the right to vote
and to get elected was granted exclusively to property-owning men. Men
without property and all women were excluded from political rights. Only for
a brief period under the Jacobins did all adult males enjoy suffrage.
However, the Napoleonic Code went back to limited suffrage and reduced women
to the status of a minor, subject to the authority of fathers and husbands.
Throughout the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries women and
non-propertied men organised opposition movements demanding equal political
rights.
In the economic sphere, liberalism stood for the freedom
of markets and the abolition of state-imposed restrictions on the movement of
goods and capital. During the nineteenth century this was a strong demand of
the emerging middle classes. Let us take the example of the German-speaking
regions in the first half of the nineteenth century. Napoleon's
administrative measures had created out of countless small principalities a
confederation of 39 states. Each of these possessed its own currency, and
weights arid measures. A merchant travelling in 1833 from Hamburg to
Nuremberg to sell his goods would have had to pass through 11 customs
barriers and pay a customs duty of about 5 per cent at each one of them.
Duties were often levied according to the weight or measurement of the goods.
As each region had its own system of weights and measures, this involved
time-consuming calculation. The measure of cloth, for example, was the elle
which in each region stood for a different length. An elle of textile
material bought in Frankfurt would get you 54.7 cm of cloth, in Maim 55.1 cm,
in Nuremberg 65.6 cm, in Freiburg 53.5 cm.
Such conditions were viewed as obstacles to economic
exchange and growth by the new commercial classes, who argued for the
creation of a unified economic territory allowing the unhindered movement of
goods, people and capital. In 1834, a customs union or zollverein was
formed at the initiative of Prussia and joined by most of the German states.
The union abolished tariff barriers and reduced the number of currencies from
over thirty to two. The creation of a network of railways further stimulated
mobility, harnessing economic interests to national unification. A wave of
economic nationalism strengthened the wider nationalist sentiments growing at
the time.
A New Conservatism after 1815
Following the defeat of Napoleon in 1815, European
governments were driven by a sp 'it of conservatism. Conservatives believed
that established, traditi lnal institutions of state and society - like the
monarchy, the Church, social hierarchies, property and the family should be
preserved. Most conservatives, however, did not propose a return to the
society of pre-revolutionary days. Rather, they realised, from the changes
initiated by Napoleon, that modernisation could in fact strengthen
traditional institutions like the monarchy. It could make state power more
effective and strong. A modern 'army, an efficient bureaucracy, a dynamic
economy, the abolition of feudalism and serfdom could strengthen the
autocratic monarchies of Europe.
In 1815, representatives of the European powers - Britain,
Russia, Prussia and Austria - who had collectively defeated Napoleon, met at
Vienna to draw up a settlement for Europe. The Congress was hosted by the
Austrian Chancellor Duke Metternich. The delegates drew up the Treaty of
Vienna of 1815 with the object of undoing most of the changes that had come
about in Europe during the Napoleonic wars. The Bourbon dynasty, which had
been deposed during the French Revolution, was restored to power, and France
lost the territories it had annexed under Napoleon. A series of states were
set up on the boundaries of France to prevent French expansion in future.
Thus the kingdom of the Netherlands, which included Belgium, was set up in
the north and Genoa was added to Piedmont in the south. Prussia was given
important new territories on its western frontiers, while Austria was given
control of northern Italy. But the German confederation of 39 states that had
been set up by Napoleon was left untouched. In the east, Russia was given
part of Poland while Prussia was given a portion of Saxony. The main
intention was to restore the monarchies that had been overthrown by Napoleon,
and create a new conservative order in Europe.
Conservative regimes set up in 1815 were autocratic. They
did not tolerate criticism and dissent, and sought to curb activities that
questioned the legitimacy of autocratic governments. Most of them imposed
censorship laws to control what was said in newspapers, books, plays and
songs and reflected the ideas of liberty and freedom associated with the
French Revolution. The memory of the French Revolution nonetheless continued
to inspire liberals. One of the major issues taken up by the
liberal-nationalists, who criticised the new conservative order, was freedom
of the press.
The Revolutionaries
During the years following 1815, the fear of repression
drove many liberal-nationalists underground. Secret societies sprang up in
many European states to train revolutionaries and spread their ideas. To be
revolutionary at this time meant a commitment to oppose monarchical forms
that had been established after the Vienna Congress, and to fight for liberty
and freedom. Most of these revolutionaries also saw the creation of
nation-states as a necessary part of this struggle for freedom.
One such individual was the Italian revolutionary Giuseppe
Mazzini. Born in Genoa in 1807, he became a member of the secret society of
the Carbonari. As a young man of 24, he was sent into exile in 1831 for
attempting a revolution in Liguria. He subsequently founded two more
underground societies, first, Young Italy in Marseilles, and then, Young
Europe in Berne, whose members were like-minded young men from Poland,
France, Italy and the German states. Mazzini believed that God had intended
nations to be the natural units of mankind. So Italy could not continue to be
a patchwork of small states and kingdoms. It had to be forged into a single unified
republic within a wider alliance of nations. This unification alone could be
the basis of Italian liberty. Following his model, secret societies were set
up in Germany, France, Switzerland and Poland. Mazzini's relentless
opposition to monarchy and his vision of democratic republics frightened the
conservatives. Metternich described him as 'the most dangerous enemy of our
social order'.
The Age of Revolutions: 1830-1848
As conservative regimes tried to consolidate their power,
liberalism and nationalism came to be increasingly associated with revolution
in many regions of Europe such as the Italian and German states, the
provinces of the Ottoman Empire, Ireland and Poland. These revolutions were
led by the liberal-nationalists belonging to the educated middle-class elite,
among whom were professors, schoolteachers, clerks and members of the
commercial middle classes.
The first upheaval took place in France in July 1830. The
Bourbon kings who had been restored to power during the conservative reaction
after 1815, were now overthrown by liberal revolutionaries who installed a
constitutional monarchy with Louis Philippe at its head. 'When France
sneezes,' Metternich once remarked, 'the rest of Europe catches cold.' The
July Revolution sparked an uprising in Brussels which led to Belgium breaking
away from the United Kingdom of the Netherlands.
An event that mobilised nationalist feelings among the
educated elite across Europe was the Greek war of independence. Greece had
been part of the Ottoman Empire since the fifteenth century. The growth of
revolutionary nationalism in Europe sparked off a struggle for independence
amongst the Greeks which began in 1821. Nationalists in Greece got support
from other Greeks living in exile and also from many West Europeans who had
sympathies for ancient Greek culture. Poets and artists lauded Greece as the
cradle of European civilisation and mobilised public opinion to support its
struggle against a Muslim empire. The English poet Lord Byron organised funds
and later went to fight in the war, where he died of fever in 1824. Finally,
the Treaty of Constantinople of 1832 recognised Greece as an independent
nation.
The Romantic Imagination and National Feeling
The development of nationalism did not come about only
through wars and territorial expansion. Culture played an important role in
creating the idea of the nation: art and poetry, stories and music helped
express and shape nationalist feelings.
Let us look at Romanticism, a cultural movement which
sought to develop a particular form of nationalist sentiment. Romantic
artists and poets generally criticised the glorification of reason and
science and focused instead on emotions, intuition and mystical feelings.
Their effort was to create a sense of a shared collective heritage, a common
cultural past, as the basis of a nation.
Other Romantics such as the German philosopher Johann
Gottfried Herder (1744-1803) claimed that true German culture was to be
discovered among the common people - das volk. It was through folk
songs, folk poetry and folk dances that the true spirit of the nation (volksgeist)
was popularised. So collecting and recording these forms of folk culture was
essential to the project of nation-building.
The emphasis on vernacular language and the collection of
local folklore was not just to recover an ancient national spirit, but -also
to carry the modern nationalist message to large audiences who were mostly
illiterate. This was especially so in the case of Poland, which had been
partitioned at the end of the eighteenth century by the Great Powers -
Russia, Prussia and Austria. Even though Poland no longer existed as an
independent territory, national feelings were kept alive through music and
language. Karol Kurpinski, for example, celebrated the national struggle
through his operas and music, turning folk dances like the polonaise and
mazurka into nationalist symbols.
Language too played an important role in developing
nationalist sentiments. After Russian occupation, the Polish language was
forced out of schools and the Russian language was imposed everywhere. In
1831, an armed rebellion against Russian rule took place which was ultimately
crushed. Following this, many members of the clergy in Poland began to use
language as a weapon of national resistance. Polish was used for Church
gatherings and all religious instruction. As a result, a large number of
priests and bishops were put in jail or sent to Siberia by the Russian
authorities as punishment for their refusal to preach in Russian. The use of
Polish came to be seen as a symbol of the struggle against Russian dominance.
Hunger, Hardship and Popular Revolt
The 1830s were years of great economic hardship in Europe.
The first half of the nineteenth century saw an enormous increase in
population all over Europe. Inmost countries there were more seekers of jobs
than employment. Population from rural areas migrated to the cities to live
in overcrowded slums. Small producers in towns were often faced with stiff
competition from imports of cheap machine-made goods from England, where
industrialisation was more advanced than on the continent. This was
especially so in textile production, which was carried out mainly in homes or
small workshops and was only partly mechanised. In those regions of Europe
where the aristocracy still enjoyed power, peasants struggled under the
burden of feudal dues and obligations. The rise of food prices or a year of
bad harvest led to widespread pauperism in town and country.
The year 1848 was one such year. Food shortages and
widespread unemployment brought the population of Paris out on the roads.
Barricades were erected and Lows Philippe was forced to flee. A national
Assembly proclaimed a Republic, granted suffrage to all adult males above 21,
and guaranteed the right work. National workshops to provide employment were
secure.
Earlier, in 1845, weavers in Silesia had led a revolt
against contractors who supplied them raw material and gave them orders for
finished textiles but drastically reduced their payments. The journalist
Wilhelm Wolff described the events in a Silesian village as follows:
In these villages (with 18,000 inhabitants) cotton weaving
is the most widespread occupation ... The misery of the workers is extreme.
The desperate need for jobs has been taken advantage of by the contractors to
reduce the prices of the goods they order..
On 4 June at 2 p.m. a large crowd of weavers emerged from
their homes and marched in pairs up to the mansion of their contractor
demanding higher wages. They were treated with scorn and threats alternately.
Following this, a group of them forced their way into the house, smashed its
elegant windowpanes, furniture, porcelain ... another group broke into the
storehouse and plundered it of supplies of cloth which they tore to shreds
... The contractor fled with his family to a neighbouring village which,
however, refused to shelter such a person. He returned 24 hours later having
requisitioned the army. In the exchange that followed, eleven weavers were
shot.
1848: The Revolution of the liberals
Parallel to the revolts of the poor, unemployed and
starving peasants and workers in many European countries in the year 1848, a
revolution led by the educated middle classes was underway. Events of
February 1848.in France had brought about the abdication of the monarch and a
republic based on universal male suffrage had been proclaimed. In other parts
of Europe where .independent nation-states did not yet exist - such as
Germany, Italy, Poland, the Austro-Hungarian Empire - men and women of the
liberal middle classes combined their demands for constitutionalism. with
national unification. They took advantage of the growing popular unrest to
push their demands for the creation of a nation-state on parliamentary
principles - a constitution, freedom of the press and freedom of association.
In the German regions a large number of political
associations whose members were middle-class professionals, businessmen and
prosperous artisans came together in the city of Frankfurt and decided to
vote for an all-German National Assembly. On 18 May 1848, 831 elected
representatives marched in a festive procession to take their places .in the
Frankfurt parliament convened .in the Church of St Paul. They drafted a
constitution for a German nation to be headed by a monarchy subject to a
parliament. When the deputies offered the crown on these terms to Friedrich
Wilhelm IV, King of Prussia, he rejected it and joined other monarchs to
oppose the elected assembly. While the opposition of the aristocracy and
military became stronger, the social basis of parliament eroded. The
parliament was dominated by the middle classes who resisted the demands of
workers and artisans and consequently lost their support. In the end troops
were called .in and the assembly was forced to disband.
The issue of extending political rights to women was a
controversial one within the liberal movement in which large numbers of women
had participated actively over the years. Women had formed their own
political associations, founded newspapers and taken part .in political
meetings and demonstrations. Despite this they were denied suffrage rights
during the election of the Assembly. When the Frankfurt parliament convened
in the Church of St Paul, women were admitted only as observers to stand in
the visitors' gallery.
Though conservative forces were able to suppress liberal
movements in 1848, they could not restore the old order. Monarchs were
beginning to realize that the cycles of revolution and repression could only
be granting concessions to the liberal-nationalist revolutionaries. Hence, in
the years after 1848, the autocratic monarchies of Central and Eastern Europe
began to introduce the changes that had already taken place in Western Europe
before 1815. Thus serfdom and bonded labour were abolished both in the
Habsburg dominions and in Russia. The Habsburg rulers granted more autonomy
to the Hungarians in 1867.
The Making of Germany and Italy
After 1848, nationalism in Europe moved away from its
association with democracy and revolution. Nationalist sentiments were often
mobilized by conservatives for promoting state power and achieving political
domination over Europe.
This can be observed in the process by which Germany and
Italy came to be unified as nation-states. As you have seen, nationalist
feelings were widespread among middle-class Germans, who in 1848 tried to
unite the different regions of the German confederation into a nation-state
governed by an elected parliament This liberal initiative to nation-building
was, however, repressed by the combined forces of the monarchy and the
military, supported by the large landowners (called Junkers) of Prussia. From
then on, Prussia took on the leadership of the movement for national
unification. Its chief minister, Otto von Bismarck, was the architect of this
process carried out with the help of the Prussian army and bureaucracy. 1bree
wars over seven years - with Austria, Denmark and France - ended in Prussian
victory and completed the process of unification. In January 1871, the
Prussian king, William I, was proclaimed German Emperor in a ceremony held at
Versailles
On the bitterly cold morning of 18 January 1871, an
assembly comprising the princes of the German states, representatives of the
army, important Prussian ministers including the chief minister Otto von
Bismarck gathered in the unheated Hall of Mirrors in the Palace of Versailles
to proclaim the new German Empire headed by Kaiser William I of
Prussia.
The nation-building process in Germany had demonstrated
the dominance of Prussian state power. The new state placed a strong emphasis
on modernising the currency, banking, legal and judicial systems in Germany.
Prussian measures and practices often became a model for the rest of
Germany
Italy Unified
Like Germany, Italy too had a long history of political
fragmentation. Italians were scattered over several dynastic states as well
as the multi-national Habsburg Empire. During the middle of the nineteenth
century, Italy was divided into seven states, of which only one,
Sardinia-Piedmont, was ruled by an Italian princely house. The north was
under Austrian Habsburgs, the centre was ruled by the Pope and the southern
regions were under the domination of the Bourbon kings of Spain. Even the
Italian language had not acquired one common form and still had many regional
and local variations.
During the 1830s, Giuseppe Mazzini had sought to put
together a coherent programme for a unitary Italian Republic. He had also
formed a secret society called Young Italy for the dissemination of his
goals. The failure of revolutionary uprisings both in 1831 and 1848 meant
that the mantle now fell on Sardinia-Piedmont under its ruler King Victor
Emmanuel II to unify the Italian states through war. In the eyes of the
ruling elites of this region, a unified Italy offered them the possibility of
economic development and political dominance.
Chief Minister Cavour who led the movement to unify the
regions of Italy was neither a revolutionary nor a democrat. Like many other
wealthy and educated members of the Italian elite, he spoke French much
better than he did Italian. Through a tactful diplomatic alliance with France
engineered by Cavour, Sardinia-Piedmont succeeded in defeating the Austrian
forces in 1859. Apart from regular troops, a large number of armed volunteers
under the leadership of Giuseppe Garibaldi joined the fray. In 1860, they
marched into South Italy and the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies and succeeded in
winning the support of the local peasants in order to drive out the Spanish
rulers. In 1861 Victor Emmanuel II was proclaimed king of united Italy.
However, much of the Italian population, among whom rates of illiteracy were
very high, remained blissfully unaware of liberal-nationalist ideology. The
peasant masses who had supported Garibaldi in southern Italy had never heard
of Italia, and believed that 'La Talia' was Victor Emmanuel's
wife!
The Strange Case of Britain
The model of the nation or the nation-state, some scholars
have argued, is Great Britain. In Britain the formation of the nation-state
was not the result of a sudden upheaval or revolution. It was the result of a
long-drawn-out process. There was no British nation prior to the eighteenth
century. The primary identities of the people who inhabited the British Isles
were ethnic ones - such as English, Welsh, Scot or Irish. All of these ethnic
groups had their own cultural and political traditions. But as the English
nation steadily grew in wealth, importance and power, it was able to extend
its influence over the other nations of the islands. The English parliament,
which had seized power from the monarchy in 1688 at the end of a protracted
conflict, was the instrument through which a nation-state, with England at
its centre, came to be forged. The Act of Union (1707) between England and
Scodand that resulted in the formation of the 'United Kingdom of Great
Britain' meant, in effect, that England was able to impose its influence on
Scodand. The British parliament was henceforth dominated by its English
members. The growth of a British identity meant that Scodand's distinctive
culture and political institutions were systematically suppressed. The
Catholic clans that inhabited the Scottish Highlands suffered terrible
repression whenever they attempted to assert their independence. The Scottish
Highlanders were forbidden to speak their Gaelic language or wear their
national dress, and large numbers were forcibly driven out of their homeland.
Ireland suffered a similar fate. It was a country deeply
divided between Catholics and Protestants. The English helped the Protestants
of Ireland to establish their dominance over a largely Catholic country.
Catholic revolts against British dominance were suppressed. After a failed
revolt led by Wolfe Tone and his United Irishmen (1798), Ireland was forcibly
incorporated into the United Kingdom in 1801. A new 'British nation' was
forged through the propagation of a dominant English culture. The symbols of
the new Britain - the British flag (Union Jack), the national anthem (God
Save Our Noble King), the English language - were actively promoted and the
older nations survived only as subordinate partners in this union.
Visualizing the Nation
While it is easy enough to represent a ruler through a
portrait or a statue, how does one go about giving a face to a nation?
Artists in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries found a way out by
personifying a nation. In other words they represented a country as if it
were a person. Nations were then portrayed as female figures. The female form
that was chosen to personify the nation did not stand for any particular
woman in real life; rather it sought to give the abstract idea of the nation
a concrete form. That is, the female figure became an allegory of the nation.
You will recall that during the French Revolution artists
used the female allegory to portray ideas such as Liberty, Justice and the
Republic. These ideals were represented through specific objects or symbols.
As you would remember, the attributes of Liberty are the red cap, or the
broken chain, while Justice is generally a blindfolded woman carrying a pair
of weighing scales.
Similar female allegories were invented by artists in the
nineteenth century to represent the nation. In France she was christened
Marianne, a popular Christian name, which underlined the idea of a people's
nation. Her characteristics were drawn from those of Liberty and the Republic
- the red cap, the tricolor, the cockade. Statues of Marianne were erected in
public squares to remind the public of the national symbol of unity and to
persuade them to identify with it. Marianne images were marked on coins and
stamps.
Similarly, Germania became the allegory of the German
nation. In visual representations, Germania wears a crown of oak leaves, as
the German oak stands for heroism.
Nationalism and Imperialism
By the last quarter of the nineteenth century nationalism
no longer retained its idealistic liberal-democratic sentiment of the first
half of the century, but became a narrow creed with limited ends. During this
period nationalist groups became increasingly intolerant of each other and
ever ready to go to war. The major European powers, in turn, manipulated the
nationalist aspirations of the subject peoples in Europe to further their own
imperialist aims.
The most serious source of nationalist tension in Europe
after 1871 was the area called the Balkans. The Balkans was a region of
geographical and ethnic variation comprising modern-day Romania, Bulgaria,
Albania, Greece, Macedonia, Croatia, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Slovenia, Serbia and
Montenegro whose inhabitants were broadly known as the Slavs. A large part of
the Balkans was under the control of the Ottoman Empire. The spread of the
ideas of romantic nationalism in the Balkans together with the disintegration
of the Ottoman Empire made this region very explosive. All through the
nineteenth century the Ottoman Empire had sought to strengthen itself through
modernization and internal reforms but with very little success. One by one,
its European subject nationalities broke away from its control and declared
independence. The Balkan peoples based their claims for independence or
political rights on nationality and used history to prove that they had once
been independent but had subsequently been subjugated by foreign powers.
Hence the rebellious nationalities in the Balkans thought of their struggles
as attempts to win back their long-lost independence.
As the different Slavic nationalities struggled to define
their identity and independence, the Balkan area became an area of intense
conflict. The Balkan states were fiercely jealous of each other and each
hoped to gain more territory at the expense of the others. Matters were
further complicated because the Balkans also became the scene of big power
rivalry. During this period, there was intense rivalry among the European
powers over trade and colonies as well as naval and military might. These
rivalries were very evident in the way the Balkan problem unfolded. Each
power - Russia, Germany, England, Austro-Hungary - was keen on countering the
hold of other powers over the Balkans, and extending its own control over the
area. This led to a series of wars in the region and finally the First World
War.
Nationalism, aligned with imperialism, led Europe to
disaster in 1914. But meanwhile, many countries in the world which had been
colonized by the European powers in the nineteenth century began to oppose
imperial domination. The anti-imperial movements that developed everywhere
were nationalist, in the sense that they all struggled to form independent
nation-states, and were inspired by a sense of collective national unity,
forged in confrontation with imperialism. European ideas of nationalism were
nowhere replicated, for people everywhere developed their own specific
variety of nationalism. But the idea that societies should be organized into
'nation-states' came to be accepted as natural and universal.
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