Congress of Vienna
WHAT WERE THE GOALS OF THE MAJOR POWERS AT THE
CONGRESS OF
VIENNA?
HOW REALISTIC WERE THE GOALS?
HOW WELL DID THEY MEET THEM?
1. The Balance of Power
2. The Status quo
3. The Dual Revolutions
4. The Revolution
of 1830
The Congress of Vienna was convened in 1815 by the four European powers which had defeated Napoleon. The first goal was to establish a new balance of power in Europe which would prevent imperialism within Europe, such as the Napoleonic empire, and maintain the peace between the great powers. The second goal was to prevent political revolutions, such as the French Revolution, and maintain the status quo.
Disagreement between Russia
and Prussia on the one hand and Britain and Austria on the other about
boundary provisions in Eastern Europe led to a threat of renewed hostilities.
The new French government, under the restored Bourbon dynasty in the person
of King Louis XVIII, was enlisted as an ally by the British. France
was invited to send a representative to the Congress of Vienna and was,
thereafter, involved as the fifth great power of the Grand Alliance.
Agreement was reached avoiding war.
Prussian boundaries were expanded westward to confront the French with a greater power on their eastern border.
The Kingdom of the Netherlands,
which included both Holland and Belgium, was created for the same reason.
When that arrangement collapsed and an independent Belgium was recognized,
the great powers accomplished their objectives by signing a treaty among
themselves in 1837, which guaranteed the neutrality of Belgium and Holland.
This treaty remained in
effect until 1914.
There was not another European-wide
war for a century. When Germany marched into Belgium in 1914, thus violating
the neutrality of the Lowlands, the First World War began. There were,
however, other conflicts in the nineteenth century, such as the Crimean
War, the Franco-Austrian War, the Austro-Prussian War, and the Franco-Prussian
War. But these were limited by both time and geography, and did not involve
all of the great powers.
The second goal, to restore
"legitimate" or traditional governments to power and to prevent political
revolutions, or to maintain the status quo met with partial success
in the short term, but was bound to fail in the long term because it opposed
the irresistable forces of historical change resulting from modernization.
Those irresistable forces took the form of the dual revolutions of liberalism
and nationalism.
THE DUAL REVOLUTIONS:
The historian, Hobsbawm, writes of two revolutions
that were occurring
throughout the 19th century. They were:
1. The Industrial
Revolution, a fundamental change in economic circumstances which caused
profound political and social change.
2. Political
revolutions which involve one or a combination of both of
the following:
(1)
LIBERALISM, meaning the drive to achieve equality of opportunity which
motivated the revolutionary leadership in
the English, American, and French Revolutions.
and
(
2) NATIONALISM, meaning the drive to achieve national unity, replacing
systems of the old regime, based exclusively upon the aristocracy, with
systems of government based on mass support by people from all classes
of the society. The ruler/subject relationship was to be
replaced by the citizen relationship.
In
1821, revolutions in the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies and in Spain were
thrown back through intervention by Austrian and French armies respectively.
However, revolution in Greece against Ottoman rule was, after a difficult
8 year struggle, successful in achieving Greek
independence. The Europeans did not support
the Turks because they were of a different, non-Christian civilization,
while the Greeks were identified with the classical heritage of Europe..
Following a Turkish massacre of 100,000 Greeks, the great powers intervened
against Turkey.
Revolution
in South and Central America against Spanish rule also succeeded, because
of the oceanic separation and the refusal of the British to support European
intervention. Without the British navy, it would have been foolhardy to
attempt intervention. The British put their
national interests (trade with the newly independent
nations) before their adherence to the international principle of intervention.
Political autonomy in Polish areas of the Russian Empire was initially encouraged by the Tsar Alexander I. When, by 1830, the Polish moved farther in the exercise of local autonomy than the Tsar would permit, their independence movement was crushed by the Russian army.
Belgian people
in the Kingdom of the Netherlands resented Dutch discrimination against
them and rose up in a struggle for independence in 1829. The French refused
to intervene. In 1837, the great powers recognized the independence of
Belgium and accomplished a continuing
restraint of French expansion by agreeing to
a treaty guaranteeing the neutrality of the Netherlands and Belgium.
THE REVOLUTION OF 1830
. The overthrow of King Charles
X in France in 1830 was not opposed by the great powers. The king had adopted
a reactionary policy which sought to undermine fundamental changes wrought
by the French Revolution, to wit: to restore the aristocracy to exclusive
rule. This was unrealistic, and provoked unified opposition by the middle
and working classes. The king
fled into exile, and the Assembly invited a new
monarch to the throne: King Louis Phillippe of the Orleans family.
Though the workers had joined in the rebellion they gained nothing from it. The Assembly was dominated by middle class elements. There were high property qualifications for voting or holding elected office.
The Revolution of 1830 was
not truly a revolution. It was merely a coup d'etat, which preserved the
political power of the upper middle class, which they had achieved as a
result of the French Revolution.