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Picking Up the Pieces: The Congress of Vienna

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Page 1: Picking Up the Pieces: The Congress of Vienna. Objectives 1.Explain what the Congress of Vienna was. 2.Define and explain “balance of power.” 3.Define

Picking Up the Pieces: The Congress of

Vienna

Page 2: Picking Up the Pieces: The Congress of Vienna. Objectives 1.Explain what the Congress of Vienna was. 2.Define and explain “balance of power.” 3.Define

Objectives

1.Explain what the Congress of Vienna was.

2. Define and explain “balance of power.”

3. Define and explain “legitimacy.”

4. Define and explain “nationalism.”

Page 3: Picking Up the Pieces: The Congress of Vienna. Objectives 1.Explain what the Congress of Vienna was. 2.Define and explain “balance of power.” 3.Define

Europe in 1812Europe in 1812

Page 4: Picking Up the Pieces: The Congress of Vienna. Objectives 1.Explain what the Congress of Vienna was. 2.Define and explain “balance of power.” 3.Define

The Congress of Vienna(September 1, 1814 – June 9, 1815)The Congress of Vienna(September 1, 1814 – June 9, 1815)

Page 5: Picking Up the Pieces: The Congress of Vienna. Objectives 1.Explain what the Congress of Vienna was. 2.Define and explain “balance of power.” 3.Define

Main ObjectivesMain Objectives

• Undo everything that Napoléon had done:

• Reduce France to its old boundaries; French frontier were pushed back to 1790 level (to the beginning of the French Revolution).

• Restore as many of the old monarchies as possible that had lost their thrones during Napoleon’s reign.

• Supported the resolution: There is always an alternative to conflict.

• Undo everything that Napoléon had done:

• Reduce France to its old boundaries; French frontier were pushed back to 1790 level (to the beginning of the French Revolution).

• Restore as many of the old monarchies as possible that had lost their thrones during Napoleon’s reign.

• Supported the resolution: There is always an alternative to conflict.

Page 6: Picking Up the Pieces: The Congress of Vienna. Objectives 1.Explain what the Congress of Vienna was. 2.Define and explain “balance of power.” 3.Define

Key Players at Vienna

Key Players at Vienna

The “Host”Prince Klemens von Metternich

(Aus.)

Foreign Minister, Viscount Castlereagh

(Br.)

Tsar Alexander I (Rus.)

King Frederick William III (Prus.)

Foreign Minister, Charles Maurice de Tallyrand (Fr.)

Page 7: Picking Up the Pieces: The Congress of Vienna. Objectives 1.Explain what the Congress of Vienna was. 2.Define and explain “balance of power.” 3.Define

Prince Klemens von Metternich

• The host and most influential representative at Congress of Vienna.

• Metternich was a conservative; he was opposed to revolution and preferred gradual change.

• Sought stability, law, and order over the civil liberties and rights.

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/6/63/Metternich_(c._1835-40).jpg

Page 8: Picking Up the Pieces: The Congress of Vienna. Objectives 1.Explain what the Congress of Vienna was. 2.Define and explain “balance of power.” 3.Define

Two Key Principles Established

at Vienna

Two Key Principles Established

at Vienna• Balance of Power

• Legitimacy

• Balance of Power

• Legitimacy

• The leaders of the big five countries wanted a balance of power, which is a political situation in which no nation is strong enough to endanger another.

• They also wanted the stability and continuity of legitimate governments (governments with the hereditary right to rule); they did not want more revolutions.

• The leaders of the big five countries wanted a balance of power, which is a political situation in which no nation is strong enough to endanger another.

• They also wanted the stability and continuity of legitimate governments (governments with the hereditary right to rule); they did not want more revolutions.

Page 9: Picking Up the Pieces: The Congress of Vienna. Objectives 1.Explain what the Congress of Vienna was. 2.Define and explain “balance of power.” 3.Define

And One Major Effect

• The decisions made by the Congress of Vienna kicked off a wave of nationalism in a number of European Countries.

• Nationalism is the belief that peoples’ greatest loyalty should be to nation of people who share common culture or history, not to king or empire.

Page 10: Picking Up the Pieces: The Congress of Vienna. Objectives 1.Explain what the Congress of Vienna was. 2.Define and explain “balance of power.” 3.Define

Objectives

1. Explain what the Congress of Vienna was.

2.Define and explain “balance of power.”

3. Define and explain “legitimacy.”

4. Define and explain “nationalism.”

Page 11: Picking Up the Pieces: The Congress of Vienna. Objectives 1.Explain what the Congress of Vienna was. 2.Define and explain “balance of power.” 3.Define

Europe in 1812Europe in 1812

Page 12: Picking Up the Pieces: The Congress of Vienna. Objectives 1.Explain what the Congress of Vienna was. 2.Define and explain “balance of power.” 3.Define

Balance of Power in Europe Post-Congress

Balance of Power in Europe Post-Congress

Page 13: Picking Up the Pieces: The Congress of Vienna. Objectives 1.Explain what the Congress of Vienna was. 2.Define and explain “balance of power.” 3.Define

•Turn to pg. 674 in your textbooks and take a look at the two maps at the top of the page.

•With one or two shoulder partners, list some of the changes made because of the Congress of Vienna.

•Be prepared to discuss in three minutes!

Page 14: Picking Up the Pieces: The Congress of Vienna. Objectives 1.Explain what the Congress of Vienna was. 2.Define and explain “balance of power.” 3.Define

French Power Under Napoleon

Page 15: Picking Up the Pieces: The Congress of Vienna. Objectives 1.Explain what the Congress of Vienna was. 2.Define and explain “balance of power.” 3.Define

French Power After the Congress of Vienna

Page 16: Picking Up the Pieces: The Congress of Vienna. Objectives 1.Explain what the Congress of Vienna was. 2.Define and explain “balance of power.” 3.Define

• France was lost all territory conquered by Napoléon.

• Russia was given most of Duchy of Warsaw (Poland).

• Switzerland made an independent country.• Group of 39 German states loosely joined

together as a Germanic Confederation dominated by Austria and Prussia.

• Austria was given back territory it lost, plus more in Germany and Italy.

• Austrian Netherlands and Dutch Republic united to form Kingdom of the Netherlands.

Changes in the Balance of Power

Changes in the Balance of Power

Page 17: Picking Up the Pieces: The Congress of Vienna. Objectives 1.Explain what the Congress of Vienna was. 2.Define and explain “balance of power.” 3.Define

After the Congress, the Balance of Power was more like this…

Page 18: Picking Up the Pieces: The Congress of Vienna. Objectives 1.Explain what the Congress of Vienna was. 2.Define and explain “balance of power.” 3.Define

Than this.

Page 19: Picking Up the Pieces: The Congress of Vienna. Objectives 1.Explain what the Congress of Vienna was. 2.Define and explain “balance of power.” 3.Define

Objectives

1. Explain what the Congress of Vienna was.

2. Define and explain “balance of power.”

3.Define and explain “legitimacy.”

4. Define and explain “nationalism.”

Page 20: Picking Up the Pieces: The Congress of Vienna. Objectives 1.Explain what the Congress of Vienna was. 2.Define and explain “balance of power.” 3.Define

Monarchs Restored by the Congress of Vienna

Louis XVIII of France Ferdinand VII of Spain Ferdinand I of the Two Sicilies

Page 21: Picking Up the Pieces: The Congress of Vienna. Objectives 1.Explain what the Congress of Vienna was. 2.Define and explain “balance of power.” 3.Define

Establishing Legitimacy, Containing Revolution

• Monarchs in France, Spain, and in some Italian and Central European states restored. Powers affirmed principle of legitimacy; hoped monarchs would encourage stability.

• They believed that monarchs were the ones that had the right to rule.

Page 22: Picking Up the Pieces: The Congress of Vienna. Objectives 1.Explain what the Congress of Vienna was. 2.Define and explain “balance of power.” 3.Define

They Wanted Rulers Like This Guy…

Page 23: Picking Up the Pieces: The Congress of Vienna. Objectives 1.Explain what the Congress of Vienna was. 2.Define and explain “balance of power.” 3.Define

Not This Guy

Page 24: Picking Up the Pieces: The Congress of Vienna. Objectives 1.Explain what the Congress of Vienna was. 2.Define and explain “balance of power.” 3.Define

Objectives1. Explain what the Congress of

Vienna was.

2. Define and explain “balance of power.”

3. Define and explain “legitimacy.”

4.Define and explain “nationalism.”

Page 25: Picking Up the Pieces: The Congress of Vienna. Objectives 1.Explain what the Congress of Vienna was. 2.Define and explain “balance of power.” 3.Define

Map of the Germanic Confederation

Page 26: Picking Up the Pieces: The Congress of Vienna. Objectives 1.Explain what the Congress of Vienna was. 2.Define and explain “balance of power.” 3.Define

Nationalism, and the Long-Term Legacy of the Congress of

Vienna•Nationalism spread to Italy,

Germany, Greece, and other locations placed under foreign control.

• For all its flaws, the Congress of Vienna managed to create a stable Europe for the next 100 years (until World War I).