Book contents
- Frontmatter
- CHAPTER I INTRODUCTORY SUMMARY
- CHAPTER II ECONOMIC CHANGE AND GROWTH
- CHAPTER III THE SCIENTIFIC MOVEMENT AND ITS INFLUENCE ON THOUGHT AND MATERIAL DEVELOPMENT
- CHAPTER IV RELIGION AND THE RELATIONS OF CHURCHES AND STATES
- CHAPTER V EDUCATION AND THE PRESS
- CHAPTER VI ART AND ARCHITECTURE
- CHAPTER VII IMAGINATIVE LITERATURE
- CHAPTER VIII LIBERALISM AND CONSTITUTIONAL DEVELOPMENTS
- CHAPTER IX NATIONALITIES AND NATIONALISM
- CHAPTER X THE SYSTEM OF ALLIANCES AND THE BALANCE OF POWER
- CHAPTER XI ARMED FORCES AND THE ART OF WAR: NAVIES
- CHAPTER XII ARMED FORCES AND THE ART OF WAR: ARMIES
- CHAPTER XIII THE UNITED KINGDOM AND ITS WORLD-WIDE INTERESTS
- CHAPTER XIV RUSSIA IN EUROPE AND ASIA
- CHAPTER XV THE REVOLUTIONS OF 1848
- CHAPTER XVI THE MEDITERRANEAN
- CHAPTER XVII THE SECOND EMPIRE IN FRANCE
- CHAPTER XVIII THE CRIMEAN WAR
- CHAPTER XIX PRUSSIA AND THE GERMAN PROBLEM, 1830–66
- CHAPTER XX THE AUSTRIAN EMPIRE AND ITS PROBLEMS, 1848–67
- CHAPTER XXI ITALY
- CHAPTER XXII THE ORIGINS OF THE FRANCO-PRUSSIAN WAR AND THE REMAKING OF GERMANY
- CHAPTER XXIII NATIONAL AND SECTIONAL FORCES IN THE UNITED STATES
- CHAPTER XXIV THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR
- CHAPTER XXV THE STATES OF LATIN AMERICA
- CHAPTER XXVI THE FAR EAST
- References
CHAPTER VIII - LIBERALISM AND CONSTITUTIONAL DEVELOPMENTS
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 March 2008
- Frontmatter
- CHAPTER I INTRODUCTORY SUMMARY
- CHAPTER II ECONOMIC CHANGE AND GROWTH
- CHAPTER III THE SCIENTIFIC MOVEMENT AND ITS INFLUENCE ON THOUGHT AND MATERIAL DEVELOPMENT
- CHAPTER IV RELIGION AND THE RELATIONS OF CHURCHES AND STATES
- CHAPTER V EDUCATION AND THE PRESS
- CHAPTER VI ART AND ARCHITECTURE
- CHAPTER VII IMAGINATIVE LITERATURE
- CHAPTER VIII LIBERALISM AND CONSTITUTIONAL DEVELOPMENTS
- CHAPTER IX NATIONALITIES AND NATIONALISM
- CHAPTER X THE SYSTEM OF ALLIANCES AND THE BALANCE OF POWER
- CHAPTER XI ARMED FORCES AND THE ART OF WAR: NAVIES
- CHAPTER XII ARMED FORCES AND THE ART OF WAR: ARMIES
- CHAPTER XIII THE UNITED KINGDOM AND ITS WORLD-WIDE INTERESTS
- CHAPTER XIV RUSSIA IN EUROPE AND ASIA
- CHAPTER XV THE REVOLUTIONS OF 1848
- CHAPTER XVI THE MEDITERRANEAN
- CHAPTER XVII THE SECOND EMPIRE IN FRANCE
- CHAPTER XVIII THE CRIMEAN WAR
- CHAPTER XIX PRUSSIA AND THE GERMAN PROBLEM, 1830–66
- CHAPTER XX THE AUSTRIAN EMPIRE AND ITS PROBLEMS, 1848–67
- CHAPTER XXI ITALY
- CHAPTER XXII THE ORIGINS OF THE FRANCO-PRUSSIAN WAR AND THE REMAKING OF GERMANY
- CHAPTER XXIII NATIONAL AND SECTIONAL FORCES IN THE UNITED STATES
- CHAPTER XXIV THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR
- CHAPTER XXV THE STATES OF LATIN AMERICA
- CHAPTER XXVI THE FAR EAST
- References
Summary
Eighteen-thirty, the ‘revolution stopped half-way’, and eighteen-forty-eight, the ‘turning point at which modern history failed to turn’, are the principal landmarks of this period during which the forms of government of states changed perhaps more sharply and in more interesting and varied ways than at any other time between the revolutionary decade of the 1790's and the ten years that shook the world between 1910 and 1920.
In a brief period of some forty years between 1830 and 1871 France experimented with a semi-liberal ‘bourgeois monarchy’, a radical Second Republic, a semi-authoritarian prince-presidency, an authoritarian Second Empire (see ch. XVII), a so-called ‘liberal empire’, an ultra-radical Paris Commune and an (at first) ill-defined Third Republic. Great Britain passed two parliamentary reform acts (cf. ch. XIII, pp. 335 and 336), abandoning the 400-year-old forty-shilling franchise in the counties and sweeping away the rotten and pocket boroughs, and in 1870 was on the eve of adopting that secret ballot which the dreaded Chartists had demanded as one of their ‘Six Points’ in 1839. Prussia, after a false dawn of liberalism when Frederick William IV became king in 1840 (like that in Italy when Pius IX was elected pope in 1846), saw a united Diet called for the first time in 1847, initiated a constitutional regime in 1848 and, after briefly adopting universal manhood suffrage, settled down at last as a mildly limited monarchy (though with a distinctly undemocratic class franchise) under the constitution of 1850—which was to last until the year 1918 (see ch. xix passim).
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- The New Cambridge Modern History , pp. 185 - 212Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1960
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