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CHAPTER XXII - THE ORIGINS OF THE FRANCO-PRUSSIAN WAR AND THE REMAKING OF GERMANY

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 March 2008

Michael Foot
Affiliation:
The University of Oxford
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Summary

For many years the legend flourished that Bismarck, by a masterly coup, tricked France into declaring war on Prussia in July 1870. No one was more assiduous in fostering this story than Bismarck himself, in moods of mischief or vainglory; many historians found evidence to support him, and carried the tale of his deceit of the French back several years before 1870. The truth is far more complicated. Bismarck certainly bears his share of responsibility for the outbreak of war, but cannot claim the whole of it; the question even of when he began to desire war remains obscure, as does the question of exactly what results he hoped would follow from it.

Among its other results one, the shift in Europe's diplomatic centre of gravity from Paris to Berlin, had been among his few long-term objectives from the start of his career in office in 1862. He had always meant, if he could, to turn Berlin into the directing centre of a Europe controlled by a Prussianised Germany. The events of the rest of the 'sixties were dominated by his determination to remake Germany on terms of his own choosing. This determination soon became evident, and the four powers strong enough to stand up to Prussia had to decide what to do about it. Great Britain and Russia were, for divers reasons, indifferent. The British deliberately pursued a policy of isolation. The Russians, emerging from the retirement in which they had been plunged by the Crimean War (ch, x, pp. 268-9), found themselves rivals with Austria in south-east Europe, and therefore looked more with favour than otherwise on any distraction to be provided for the Habsburgs in Germany.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1960

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References

Beust, to Metternich, 8 July 1870 (from English Historical Review, vol. XXXVIII).
Bonnin, G., Bismarck and the Hohenzollern candidature for the Spanish throne (London, 1957).
Eyck, E., Bismarck (Zurich, 1941), vol. II.
,French governmentOrigines diplomatiques de la guerre de 1870–1871 (Paris, 1931)
Lawley, F. C., Daily Telegraph, 25 July 1870.
Législatif, Corps, 6 July 1870; Journal Offciel de l'Empire Français, 7 July, c. 2.
Lord, R. H., The Origins of the War of 1870 (Harvard, 1924)
Oncken, H., Die Rheinpolitik Kaiser Napoleons III… (Stuttgart, 1926), vol. II.
Robertson, C. Grant, Bismarck (London, 1918).

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