vocabulary chapter 10 section 2 kyle ditsche

13
Vocabulary Chapter 10 section 2 Kyle Ditsche • Kulturkampf - Bismarck’s “battle for civilazation” in which his goal was to make Catholics put loyalty to the state above their allgianence to the Church William II - Succeeded his grandfather as Kaiser. He tried to put a stamp on Germany. Socail Welfare - Program to help certain groups of people

Upload: phila

Post on 22-Feb-2016

44 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Vocabulary Chapter 10 section 2 Kyle Ditsche. Kulturkampf - Bismarck’s “battle for civilazation ” in which his goal was to make Catholics put loyalty to the state above their allgianence to the Church William II - Succeeded his grandfather as Kaiser. He tried to put a stamp on Germany. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Vocabulary Chapter 10 section 2 Kyle  Ditsche

VocabularyChapter 10 section 2

Kyle Ditsche• Kulturkampf- Bismarck’s “battle for civilazation” in

which his goal was to make Catholics put loyalty to the state above their allgianence to the Church

• William II- Succeeded his grandfather as Kaiser. He tried to put a stamp on Germany.

• Socail Welfare- Program to help certain groups of people

Page 2: Vocabulary Chapter 10 section 2 Kyle  Ditsche

Outline• A. Germany Becomes an Industrial Giant• 1. Making Economic• a) Germany’s spectacular growth was due in part to ample iron and coal resources• b) a disciplined and educated workforce also helped the economy too• c) Germany’s population grew from 41 million in 1871 to 67 million in 1914• 2. Promoting Scientific and Economic Devlopment• a) German industrialists were the first to see the value of applied science in

developing new products such as synthetic chamicals and dyes• b) industrialists supported research and development in universities•

Page 3: Vocabulary Chapter 10 section 2 Kyle  Ditsche

Outline• B. The Iron Chancellor• 1. Campaign Against the Church• a) Catholics made up about one third of the population • b) Bismarck launched Kulturkampf which lasted from 1871 to 1878, his

goal was to make Catholics put loyalty to the state above allegiance to the Church

• c) his moves against the church backfired• 2. Campaign Against the Socialists • a) By the late 1870s, German Marxists had organized the Social

Democratic party, which called for parliamentary democracy and laws to improve conditions of the working class.

Page 5: Vocabulary Chapter 10 section 2 Kyle  Ditsche
Page 7: Vocabulary Chapter 10 section 2 Kyle  Ditsche

1.Obstacles to Italian Unity A. Mazzini's Establishes Young Italy

a.1830’s Giuseppe founded young Italyb.1849 he helped set up a revolutionary republic in Rome.

B.Nationalist Takes Roota. Revolution have failedb. Nationalist reminded Italians of the glories of the ancient Rome and medieval papacy.

2. Struggle for Italy C. Cavuor becomes Prime Minister

a. 1848 leadership of the Risorgimento or Italian nationalist movement, passed to the Kingdom of Sardinia.b. 1852 Victor Emmanuel made Camillo Cauvor his prime minister.

Page 8: Vocabulary Chapter 10 section 2 Kyle  Ditsche

D. Intrigue with Francea. 1855 Sardinia led by Cavuor, joined Britain France against Russia in Crimeanb.1858 Covuor negotiated a secret deal with Napoleon who promised to aid Sardinia in case it faced war

E. Garibindi’s “Red Shirts”a. Garbindi wanted to create a Italian republic.b.1860, Garbindi had recruited a force of 1,00 red shirt volunteers, he provided weapons

F. Unity at Lasta. Cavuor died in 1861, but his successors completed dreamb. 1870, France was forced to withdraw its troop from Rome.

Page 9: Vocabulary Chapter 10 section 2 Kyle  Ditsche

Russia: Reform and ReactionBrian Keen

Page 10: Vocabulary Chapter 10 section 2 Kyle  Ditsche

Vocabulary• colossus-giant• Alexander-came to the throne in 1855• Crimean war-war fought mainly on the Crimean peninsula between the Russian’s and the

British, French, and Turks• Emancipation-grant of freedom of serfs and slaves• Zemstvo- local elected assembly set up in Russia under Alexander • Pogrom- violent attack on a Jewish community• Refugees-people who flee their homeland to seek safety• Duma-elected national legislature in Russia• Peter Stolypin-Russian prime minister

Page 11: Vocabulary Chapter 10 section 2 Kyle  Ditsche

Reform and Reaction• 1.Conditions in Russia• A. By 1815 Russia was the largest most populous nation in Europe and also a great

world power• 2. Russia’s social structure• A. landowning Nobles dominated society and rejected any change• B. Many enlightened Russians knew that serfdom was inefficient• C. Most serfs were peasants, others were servants, artisans, or soldiers forced into

the Tsars army.• 3. Emancipations and stirrings of Revolution• A. Alexander came to the throne• B. his reign represents the power of reform

Page 12: Vocabulary Chapter 10 section 2 Kyle  Ditsche

• 1.The drive to industrialize• A. Russia finally entered the industrial age under Alexander III and his son Nicholas II.• B. political problems and social problems increased as a result of industrialization• C. In the slums around the factories poverty, disease and discontent multiplied• 2. Turning point: crisis and revolution • A. When the war broke out between Russia and Japan in 1904, Nicholas II called on his

people to fight for the faith

Page 13: Vocabulary Chapter 10 section 2 Kyle  Ditsche

– The revolution of 1905• A. In the months that followed Bloody Sunday, discontent exploded• B. In some cities workers took over the government• Results of the revolution• A. The manifesto won over the moderates, leaving Socialists isolated. These

divisions helped the Tsar who had no intentions letting strikers, revolutionaries, and rebellious peasants challenge him.