The Revolutions of 1848 swept away some of the foremost champions of international new statesmen with new aims replaced them and dominated Europe in the latter half of the nineteenth century.
The chief sponsor of national revolutions at the beginning of the period was Napoleon III, who hoped to re-establish French ascendancy in Europe, but he was defeated by the forces of a rising and newly unified power-Germany under Bismarck. As in the first edition, Norman Rich traces the spread of nationalism across the continent. He has, however, greatly amplified his treatment of the social and intellectual consequences of industrialization, with particular emphasis on the changing demography of Europe and cultural trends at all levels of society.
An internationally recognized scholar of European history, Norman Rich taught history at Bryn Mawr College, Michigan State University, and Brown University, retiring from the latter as Professor of History, Emeritus. After receiving his Ph.D. in history from the University of California, Berkeley, in 1949, Norman Rich served for five years on the Board of Editors of the captured German Foreign Office documents, a project sponsored by the U.S. Department of State, the British Foreign Office, and the French Foreign Ministry. He has been awarded research fellowships at the Center of International Studies, Princeton, and St. Antony's College, Oxford, and in addition has been awarded Guggenheim and Fulbright fellowships for research in England and Germany.
The technique he [Parnell:] recommended in dealing with tenant evictions was social ostracism rather than the barn burning, cattle mutilation, and murder adopted on a large scale by his countrymen. Anyone who assisted an unjust eviction or took over a farm made available by such an eviction was to be treated as a social leper. One of the first victims of this treatment was a land agent named Charles Boycott, whose ostracism added a new word to the English language.
Among the generally excellent surveys in the Norton History of Modern Europe – the exception being Leonard Krieger’s unenlightening book on the eighteenth century – Norman Rich’s contribution is outstanding.
In 250 smoothly written pages, he covers in detail the industrial revolution and its social impacts; major intellectual trends in science, social thought, and the arts; domestic developments in Britain, France, Prussia and Germany, the Austrian empire, Italy and Russia; and the complex international relations among them. He brings sharp insight to each of these subjects.
Even his brief intellectual portraits are well done. Writing about Karl Marx, for example, Rich identifies some of the flaws and fallacies in his theory of economic class struggle as the basis of history, but acknowledges the appeal and impact of this “political theology”. Rich’s perceptive summary of Nietzsche, though not complete, is far superior to the caricature popularized by Bertrand Russell and others. Nietzsche’s rejection of naïve optimism, and his theory of the will to power and creativity, were “more profound than the ideas of either Marx or Freud.” The other greatest dissenter and prophet of the era, Dostoyevsky, concluded that “’evil is buried more deeply in humanity than the cure-all socialists think.’”
Three themes are interwoven throughout Rich’s book. The first is the technological revolution that started in Britain, then spread to France, Germany, and elsewhere. Rich explains the innovations in mining and metallurgy, in distribution of electricity, in machines, manufacturing, and transportation that enabled tremendous increases in industrial production.
Agricultural innovations including new crops, improved equipment, and artificial fertilizers multiplied farm production, brought great improvements to the health and longevity of consumers, and accelerated population growth. This provided the abundant labor needed for industrialization. A side effect was widespread internal migration from farms to cities.
A second theme throughout the book is the growth of nationalism across Europe. This spirit helped achieve the unification of Italy (under the King of Sardinia) and Germany (under the King of Prussia and his forceful prime minister, Bismarck). Cultural nationalism put great strain on the sprawling Austrian empire, resulting in recognition of Hungary as a separate kingdom within the Hapsburg realm from 1867.
The book’s third theme is the competition for advantage among the major nations through diplomacy, and occasionally war. Rich’s explanation of these efforts and their results is exceptionally brilliant and worthy of study.
The supreme master of this game during the late nineteenth century was Otto von Bismarck, who governed Prussia and then Germany from 1862 until 1890. A meticulous pragmatist, Bismarck pursued his long term goals through intensive focus on the conditions of the moment. He always considered the motives and every possible action of the other players before making his own move.
“Bismarck possessed that most rare quality of men of political genius – moderation, the ability to recognize where to draw the line…. He did not wage war until he had ascertained that all other means had been exhausted and that all possible odds – military, diplomatic, and moral – were on his side. Each of his wars was fought with a clear, limited purpose. When he decided that the advantages to be gained by war no longer justified the risks involved, he became Europe’s staunchest defender of peace.”
With this method and discipline, Bismarck unified the dozens of independent states that constituted Germany; strengthened the nation’s government and military; enabled its rapid industrialization; won short wars against Austria and France with limited objectives and considered terms of settlement; and after 1871, maintained two decades of continental peace through a system of alliances and agreements with all the major powers except France, designed to respect the interests of each and deter aggressive behavior by any.
It was not Bismarck, but the new German emperor William II who replaced these prudent arrangements with an aggressive nationalism that polarized Europe into two hostile camps after 1890.
Rich concludes his book with words of tragic irony:
“… the prevailing mood in Europe as the nineteenth century drew to a close was one of optimism. Human reason seemed to have demonstrated its capacity to cope with human problems. After three quarters of a century without a general European war, people had begun to count on the future.”
In this hopeful mood, no one could foresee the horrors of Communism and Nazism, or the catastrophic devastation of two world wars.
A bit dated with some bias in presentation, but over all a good approach to explore the interdependent relationships between Europe's major powers between 1850-1890.
This volume is perhaps the most consisive explanation of political and social events leading up to the event of World War I that I've ever read. It doesn't shy away from the harsher aspects or more embarrassing situations of the European governments, and it covers the elite political movers and shakers with aplomb. If you want a straight up, short, and thorough look at the European events that happened in this era, then this is the book for you.
OK as history texts go. Lots of general information, not much fun reading. Competent writing, but why not write a textbook well? Is there some kind of rule I don't know about?