reforms and revolutions

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Reforms and Revolutions By: TJ Hartnett, Kathleen Falcon, JP Seebode

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Reforms and Revolutions. By: TJ Hartnett, Kathleen Falcon, JP Seebode. National Liberation in Greece. National, liberal revolution succeeded first in Greece. The Greeks revolted against the Islamic Turks in 1821. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Reforms and Revolutions

Reforms and Revolutions

By: TJ Hartnett, Kathleen Falcon, JP Seebode

Page 2: Reforms and Revolutions

National Liberation in Greece

National, liberal revolution succeeded first in Greece.

The Greeks revolted against the Islamic Turks in 1821.

They were led by Alexander Ypsilanti, a Greek patriot and a general in the Russian army.

In 1827, Great Britain, France, and Russia tried to force Turkey to accept an armistice with the Greeks.

Turkish refusal led to armed conflict, the navies of the three armies trapped the Turkish fleet and destroyed it

the declaration of Greece’s independence by the Great Powers in 1830.

A German prince was installed as the new king

Page 3: Reforms and Revolutions

Liberal Reform in Great Britain

18th century British society was dominated by the landowning aristocracy

Parliament was manipulated by the king and was thoroughly undemocratic

Only 8% of population could vote for representatives

1780 – Growing interest in political reform

French Revolution threw British aristocracy into a panic for a generation

Tory party, controlled by aristocracy, was fearful of radical movements

Page 4: Reforms and Revolutions

Liberal Reform in Great Britain

• 1817 - The Tory government responded to protests by temporarily suspending the traditional rights of peaceable assembly and habeas corpus

• 1819 – Parliament passed infamous Six Acts which placed controls on heavily taxed press and eliminated all mass meetings

• The resulting protests were named the Battle of Peterloo in reference to the British victory at Waterloo, which was the incident demonstrated by the government’s determination to repress and stand fast

Page 5: Reforms and Revolutions

Liberal Reform in Great Britain

o 1815 – aristocracy defended its ruling position by repressing all popular protests

o First step was the revision of Corn Laws in 1815

o Corn Laws regulated foreign grain trade

o Revision of the Corn Laws protected English landowners by prohibiting the importation of foreign grain unless the price at home rose to improbable levels

o The change in the Corn Laws led to protests by urban laborers, supported by radical intellectuals

Page 6: Reforms and Revolutions

Liberal Reform

Reform of town government Organization of a new police

force More rights for Catholics &

dissenters Reform of Poor Laws Tory government moved

towards a better urban administration, greater economic liberalism, and civil unity for Catholics

Went for a reform of Parliament Last reform of the Corn Laws

Page 7: Reforms and Revolutions

Whig Party and Reform Bill Led an act to amend the

representation of the people of England and Wales

Reform Bill was rejected by the House of Lords

1832 – Whigs got king to enact new laws

Reform Bill of 1832 Profound significance New industrial areas of the country

gained representation in the Commons

Rotten boroughs were eliminated Number of voters increased 50% 12% more of British and Irish men

allowed to vote More radical reform without a war Legislation was proven to show it

can solve problems and social conditions

Page 8: Reforms and Revolutions

Liberal Reform in Great Britain

• The Chartists pushed for universal male suffrage, but not female

• Parliament rejected all three petitions for universal suffrage

• Many working class people joined the Anti-Corn Law League which made possible a popular crusade which argued that lower food prices and more jobs depended on the repeal of the Corn Laws.

• Tories competed for working-class support with Whigs by passing factory reform bills. These included The Ten Hours Act of 1847.

Page 9: Reforms and Revolutions

Prelude to The Revolution of 1830 in France

Constitutional Charter of 1814

Liberal constitution, but it was not democratic

Intellectual and artistic freedom was protected

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Upper and Lower houses of the Parliament created

Economic and social gains were made by the middle class

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100,000 people out of a 30 million population were allowed to vote under the law

People they voted for created the laws of the nation

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Page 10: Reforms and Revolutions

Charles X – The Revolution

- Charles was a true reactionary - Wished to reestablish the order of

the former Revolution in France- Issued decrees stripping the

wealthy middle class of their voting rights and censored the press

- Charles fled as the Revolution sparked

- Mini Revolution compared to the French Revolution

- Louis Philippe took the throne- Adopted the Red, White, and Blue

Flag

Page 11: Reforms and Revolutions

Ireland and The Great Famine

Ireland did not benefit from political competition in BritainPopulation consisted of Irish CatholicsLandlords were content in using power to grab as much land as possibleTerrible conditions of 1800 Irish peasantryLived in wretched cottagesCan’t afford shoes or stockingsHopeless poverty

Page 12: Reforms and Revolutions

Ireland and The Great Famine

Population growth increased 1725 – 3 million 1780 – 4 million 1840 – 8 million

Three reasons for population growth 1. Extensive cultivation of the potato Late 16th century Response to the pressure of

numbers 2. Early marriage Needing only a big potato patch to

survive, Irish men and women married early

3. Exploitation of peasants by landlords

No incentive for peasants to make improvements to land because landlords would seize it

Page 13: Reforms and Revolutions

Ireland and The Great Famine

As population and potato dependency grew, conditions became more dangerous

1820 onward - Potato crop failure These crop failures resulted in

The Great Famine Blight attacked plants Widespread starvation Mass fever epidemics Tenants who could not pay were

evicted and their homes were destroyed

Page 14: Reforms and Revolutions

Ireland and The Great Famine British government was slow to

respond – laissez faire ideology Great Famine devastated population 1 million emigrants fled between 1845

and 1851 1.5 million died or went unborn Population of 8 million in 1845 dropped

to 4.4 million in 1911 Resulting out-migration, late marriage,

and widespread celibacy Results of the Great Famine Intensified anti-British feelings Promoted Irish nationalism Bitter Irish memory of starvation, exile,

and British inaction Campaigns for reform, home rule, and

eventually, Irish independence