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  • Hi I'm John Green and this is Crash Course European History.

  • So if you look at Europe today, you'll note that two of the European Union's largest

  • economies--Italy and Germany--have not existed as unified kingdoms or sovereign states during

  • our first 26 episodes.

  • We tend to think of Europe's nation states as static and longstanding, but one of my

  • great grandfathers was born before Italy became a unified country.

  • Now, I know that I'm old, but I'm not that old.

  • What's that?

  • Oh, our script supervisor Zulaiha informs me that I am that old.

  • At any rate, a ---ll the stereotypes we have of these national identities--that Italians

  • talk with their hands, that Germans have extremely punctual public transport--are quite new,

  • because in 1850, most Italians wouldn't have called themselvesItalians.”

  • They would've been Genoese, or Sicilian, or Veronese.

  • The post-revolutionary European world became one of dramatic nation-building that ultimately

  • set the stage for 20th century nationalistic fervor.

  • But before we can get nationalist passions riled up, we need to make some more nations.

  • INTRO The first of the disruptive nation-builders

  • was Napoleon III (Napoleon Bonaparte's nephew), who on December 2, 1851 declared himself emperor—48

  • years to the day after his uncle had done the same.

  • He set out to create a lavish court, boost the economy, create banks, build railroads,

  • and otherwise modernize France.

  • Politically, he set up a rubber-stamp legislature, meaning that mostly they just existed to agree

  • with him.

  • He also outlawed worker activism.

  • Napoleon III's modus operandi was war, as it would be for many of the nation-builders

  • of the mid 19th- century.

  • He helped provoke the Crimean War, a short, miserable, and especially deadly war.

  • In it, France, Britain, and the Ottoman Empire fought Russia, which had been challenging

  • Britain across Asia.

  • And the special genius of Napoleon III was to get Austria to not come to the aid of Russia

  • and instead to remain neutral.

  • This cracked the Holy Alliance of Russia, Prussia, and Austria that had been set up

  • to stabilize Europe.

  • And Russia's defeat in the war ensured that it would not help squash revolution as it

  • had in 1848.

  • Instead, Russia reeled from its military and other shortcomings.

  • By the 1860s, the tsar recognized the need to free the serfs, reform the military, and

  • set up modern judicial procedures in order to save its autocratic system.

  • Or to save it for another 50 years anyway.

  • Let's go to the Thought Bubble.

  • 1.

  • Napoleon III used the peace after the Crimean War to remake Paris into a modern world capital.

  • 2.

  • And to the south, Camillo di Cavour aimed to create a unified Italian state.

  • 3.

  • Like Napoleon, he was an economic modernizer who set up steamship companies, experimented

  • in agriculture, and traveled to see the latest in modernization projects.

  • 4.

  • Cavour became prime minister for the king of Piedmont-Sardinia, who allowed him to move

  • forward with his modernization plans.

  • 5.

  • Napoleon III saw advantages in supporting Cavour, so he signed on as an ally in defeating

  • Austria, which controlled northern Italy.

  • 6.

  • Napoleon's idea was that Piedmont would get Austria's territory in northern Italy,

  • Napoleon would get the center, and the pope would rule kind of an Italian confederation.

  • 7.

  • So, in accordance with this plan, in 1859, Piedmont provoked Austria into declaring war

  • and gained quick victories.

  • 8.

  • But Cavour and his army looked so good in victory that Italians rallied behind him,

  • 9. and were like, I think we want to be Italian and not French, thus thwarting Napoleon's

  • plans.

  • 10.

  • In 1860, the revolutionary and democrat Giuseppe Garibaldi gathered up a thousand volunteersmostly

  • teenagersclad them in red shirts,

  • 11. and headed by ship to Sicily, where revolts against aristocratic landlords were already

  • underway.

  • 12.

  • He planned to capture the south for a united Italy.

  • 13.

  • And in 1860, he and his forces succeeded in doing so,

  • 14. then they moved northward to unite with the forces of Piedmont.

  • 15.

  • And in 1861, the kingdom of Italy was declared.

  • Thanks Thought Bubble.

  • So a small pause is necessary here.

  • Why is Garibaldi, a pro-republic, romantic leader, working on behalf of a monarch like

  • the king of Piedmont?

  • Why is Cavour, the modernizer and prime minister of a monarchy, joining the likes of Garibaldi?

  • Well, by the 1850s, romantic dreams of national unification and the rule of the people gave

  • way to what is known as realpolitik or power politics or realism in politics.

  • Gone were the heartfelt assertions that political actions were the will of God or that they

  • achieved some divine or romantic destiny on behalf of the nation.

  • Better, it was argued, to be realistic and get things done.

  • German politician Otto von Bismarck expressed realpolitik best when he saidGermany looks

  • not to Prussia's liberalism.

  • . . . The great questions of the day will not be settled by speeches and majority decisions.

  • . . but by blood and iron.”

  • Bismarck became one of the most successful practitioners of realpolitik and in the process

  • created the modern German empire.

  • As a young adult, Bismarck's life had virtually no seriousness of purpose.

  • I had one of those young adulthoods as well.

  • Born a well-to-do landed aristocrat or Junker, he was a carouser, imbiber, and generally

  • a lout as a university student.

  • Boy, this is familiar.

  • He built up so many debts that he gave up a career in the civil service to return home

  • and help run the family farms.

  • All right.

  • Finally our lives are diverging.

  • And I guess they're about to diverge further, since he was arguably the most important European

  • politician of the second half of the nineteenth century, and I'm...you know.

  • On the other hand, I've never started a war!

  • Bismarck's life got more serious after he met and married Johanna Puttkammer, a devout

  • Lutheran, who gave him a more peaceful home life to balance the political turmoil that

  • he came to embrace.

  • His ultimate ambition was to leave estate management and become a major player in German

  • and international politics, but I've known a lot of drunkened heavily indebted partiers,

  • and they all have big dreams.

  • What makes Bismarck so astonishing is the extent to which he succeeded.

  • He made his return to the political scene as Prussia's delegate to assemblies of the

  • German states and then as ambassador to Russia.

  • And through these roles, the staunchly monarchist Bismarck learned lessons about diplomacy,

  • and international affairs, and about economic liberals and their constitutional values.

  • He came not to oppose a constitution per se nor to oppose economic progress.

  • What he did above all else was support Prussian King William I.

  • So we shouldn't see Bismarck so much as opposed to this or that kind of reform so

  • much as strongly in favor of a unified Germany under the leadership of a king.

  • In 1862 William I wanted army reform and modernization as did some liberals, but William refused

  • to budge on certain other provisions, especially a three-year term for recruits.

  • And Bismarck promised not to budge either and then he went ahead with the king's version

  • of reform, bypassing the parliament altogether by simply collecting taxes and dispensing

  • them as the king wanted.

  • This among many other actions made Bismarck enemies of all kinds, partly because of his

  • bullying manner, but he continued to be supported by the one person who countedthe Prussian

  • king.

  • So, for several decades, but most pressingly in the post-1848 atmosphere, a major question

  • was who would lead the GermansAustria or Prussia.

  • Serving King William I loyally was Bismarck's key to promoting Prussia as the dominant power

  • for Germans.

  • Sometimes people interpret Bismarck as like, an all-seeing visionary who carefully plotted

  • every step he took on behalf of Prussia..But historians have now mostly come to believe

  • that Bismarck's political moves were not part of some pre-planned game of 4D chess

  • to outmaneuver Austria; instead, he just had a wonderful gift for improvisation.

  • For example, in 1864, he made an alliance with Austria to settle the status of two contested

  • provincesSchleswig and Holstein.

  • So, Bismarck persuaded Austria to join Prussia in war against Denmark to resolve the contested

  • rule of Schleswig-Holstein.Their victory gave Prussia administration of Schleswig and Austria

  • got Holstein.

  • Two years later, Prussia and Austria went to war again, this time with each other over

  • the same two provinces.

  • The Austro-Prussian war lasted just over six weeks, thanks to Prussia's aforementioned

  • commitment to the professionalism and modernization of its army.

  • So this whole affair was masterfully handled by Bismarck; first, get your enemy Austria

  • to help you defeat your other enemy Denmark, then defeat Austria and boom, congratulations,

  • you've got Schleswig Holstein, which only sounds like a disease.

  • But it likely wasn't planned that way.

  • Did the center of the world just open?

  • Is there a magic 8 ball in there?

  • All right magic 8 ball, is the European Union going to hold up OK?

  • It is certain!

  • The thing about history is that it always feels certain because, you know, it already

  • happened.

  • So when we in the present look at Bismarck in the past and the unification of Germany,

  • it all feels, like, extraordinarily strategic.

  • But I would argue that, in the multiverse, there's a bunch of worlds where it doesn't

  • work out the way it worked out for us.

  • History is what happens to have happened, and we are all making that together, just

  • as Bismarck and everyone else in nineteenth century Europe was making it.

  • But back to Bismarck...So, following the big victory, Prussia's King William wanted to

  • keep going, to capture Vienna and maybe even Hungary, but Bismarck, with his usual astuteness

  • in international affairs, encouraged the king to pull back and consolidate, as Prussia was

  • now the leading German nation.

  • Bismarck had drawn the northern German kingdoms and states into the North German Confederation,

  • while also aiming to draw in the German states that were still resisting joining Prussia.

  • And how he did this was kind of brilliant in a dark artsy sort of way.

  • Bismarck deeply understood the growing power of mass market media like newspapers, and

  • he knew how to feed rumors to them.

  • For instance, there was a battle over who would take the throne of tiny Luxembourg--someone

  • allied with Prussia, or someone allied with Napoleon III.

  • As the contest heated up, Bismarck got a personal quote in the papers to the effect that the

  • French werenot the fine people they are usually considered to be,” and were in fact

  • loudmouthedpeople given over tobold, violent behavior.”

  • Meanwhile, he also doctored a telegram sent from the Prussian king to make it appear insulting

  • to the French.

  • And then in August 1870, the French National Assembly, outraged at these characterizations,

  • declared war.

  • The French were handily defeated, with Napoleon III and an army of 150,000 people captured

  • on September 2.

  • The Bavarians along with smaller states had had to join Prussia.

  • And in January 1871, the German Empire was declared in the Hall of Mirrors of the Versailles

  • palace, and all because of Luxembourg Although much of the earlier opposition to

  • Bismarck died down at this point, he still had to forge a nation from these disparate

  • statesone with its own institutions and its own culture.

  • This was a fraught task, which he did in his signature style: more experimentally than

  • surefootedly.

  • Bismarck's specific moves to unite the many German states into a consolidated entity are

  • now callednegative integration”—that is building a community or nation by finding

  • enemies or targeting certain categories of individuals to be outcasts.

  • Negative integration is opposed to positive integration based on acts like sharing values

  • and building consensus among citizens.

  • In the 1870s, Bismarck chose to harass, disadvantage and insult Catholics, with the idea of turning

  • citizens against them and uniting Germany in opposition to Catholicism.

  • The cluster of policies against Catholics was called the Kulturkampf and eventually

  • Bismarck abandoned it because of the outrage among all Germans, including Protestants,

  • at the idea of upending religious toleration and making fellow citizens outcasts.

  • Next Bismarck targeted workers, especially Social Democrats AKA socialists.

  • Social Democrats were increasing their numbers in elections; and also there were two assassination

  • attempts on William I's life which Bismarck used an excuse for outlawing the Social Democratic

  • party.

  • Obviously, it's very important to understand how negative integration works, and how the

  • systematic dehumanization of an other to unite a country can become not just problematic,

  • but indeed catastrophic.

  • And I want to be clear that Bismarck didn't invent negative integration or anything, but

  • he did use it.

  • He also put into effect the first social welfare program in the West, which included accident

  • and sickness protection for workers and also unemployment benefits, which were crucial,

  • because beginning in 1873, Europe (and the world) experienced an economic downturn that

  • started in industry, not in agriculture as had been the case in the past.

  • In a letter to his wife, Bismarck had called Prussia's defeat of France “a great event

  • in world history.”

  • And so it was.

  • As in Italy (and some would say the United States), victories of professional armies

  • had created unified nations.

  • And its important to understand that nations were not inevitable or natural forms.

  • Some were built on creating shared beliefs in constitutions, or a common culture or having

  • the sameblood.”

  • In others, negative integration was key to nation-building, as countries identified themselves

  • in opposition to others or by clearly defining what they weren't.

  • In Germany the aristocratic, landowning officer corps becamedemi-godsto the citizenry

  • that believed in them and in military might, while industrialists and economic innovators

  • fell behind in political influence.

  • And when you think about your own communities, whether that's a nation-state or a fandom,

  • I think it's interesting to consider primarily by what you share or by what you are, or are

  • defined primarily by what you are not, or what you are opposed to.

  • We'll see how the many ingredients of nation building evolved, in ways both promising and

  • terrifying, as Crash Course heads toward the twentieth century.

  • Thanks for watching.

  • I'll see you next time.

Hi I'm John Green and this is Crash Course European History.

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