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 IX - NATIONALITIES AND NATIONALISM
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
The years round about 1830 were momentous for the progress of a cause little regarded in 1815, the cause of nationality. About the same time the word ‘nationality’ was first used as a term with a special political significance. It was accepted by the Académie Française in 1835. In 1834 a Russian, Pletkov, spoke of it (Narodnost) as a new word of unclear meaning; it was rapidly becoming current in Czech and Italian and had for some time been known in Germany (Nationalität or Volkstum) and England. To define it was not easy. In the sixties the Frenchman Buchez commented that the word had had a prodigious success, although people did not know whence it came and perhaps because they did not know what it meant. And he added ‘It means not only the nation, but also the something in virtue of which a nation continues to exist even when it has lost its autonomy’. Political scientists have since essayed elaborate definitions, but it may well be that Buchez's vague formula is as good as any and that it was precisely because of its vagueness that the word had become so popular: ‘Each theorist, each party, each country was able to read into it what it wished, what justified its own aspirations.’ For liberals it implied liberty and a degree of popular sovereignty—thus Mazzini could speak of ‘the progressive principle which constitutes British nationality’; for conservatives the maintenance of native traditions and an established order of society; for others a community spiritually bound by a common heritage of language and culture or one linked by bonds of blood or a special relationship to a homeland.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The New Cambridge Modern History , pp. 213 - 245Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1960