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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 4 page discussion of the factors that led to the
Revolution of 1848. The author contends that the European people were slowly moving away from the high respect they had previously paid to monarchical and religious authority, they were quickly developing strong nationalistic identities and they were looking for constitutional, liberal, and socialistic changes. Bibliography lists 2 sources.
Page Count:
4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: AM2_PPrevEur.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
Numerous political, economic, and social developments took place on the European continent between the years of 1815 and 1848 that would ultimately lead to the outbreak of revolution.
The European people were slowly moving away from the high respect they had previously paid to monarchical and religious authority, they were quickly developing strong nationalistic identities and they
were looking for constitutional, liberal, and socialistic changes. With the end of the French Revolution and the Napoleonic Wars, wars that spanned between 1789 and 1815, Europe was left
with a number of recent political modifications, modifications with which many were unhappy. Italy and Germany, in particular, were in a transitional state. Those countries would reach another
level of their organization with the European Revolution of 1848. The political unification of Italy and Germany can be contended to
have been achieved largely as a result of a strong sense of nationalism which persisted in the two countries. This sense of nationalism had been strongly developing during the
early part of the century. Italian opposition to Austrian dominion, the National uprising of 1848, and the restoration of Austrian control were all closely related. Prior to the uprising
the Italian peninsula was subdivided into a number of states that were under dynastic and church rule (The European Revolution of 1848, 2005). The Church in particular was responsible
for this division since it perceived larger and more powerful states as potential competitors against Church control and influence and thus worked to keep such states subdued (The European Revolution
of 1848, 2005). Prior to 1848 Germany had a similar organization. It too had been decentralized into a number of
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