The Rise of Nationalism in Europe
In 1848, French artist Frédéric Sorrieu prepared a series of four prints visualising his dream of a world made up of ‘democratic and social Republics’. The first print shows peoples of Europe and America — men and women of all ages and social classes — marching in a long train, offering homage to the statue of Liberty.
- Liberty personified as a female figure bearing the Torch of Enlightenment and the Charter of the Rights of Man
- Shattered remains of symbols of absolutist institutions lie on the ground (foreground)
- Peoples grouped as distinct nations identified by flags and national costumes
- Leading the procession: United States and Switzerland (already nation-states in 1848)
- France identifiable by revolutionary tricolour; followed by Germany bearing black, red and gold flag
- Further: Austria, Kingdom of Two Sicilies, Lombardy, Poland, England, Ireland, Hungary, Russia
- Christ, saints and angels in heaven — symbolising fraternity among nations
At the time Sorrieu created this image, Germany did not yet exist as a united nation. The black, red and gold flag was an expression of liberal hopes in 1848 to unify German-speaking principalities into a nation-state under a democratic constitution.
A nation-state is one in which the majority of its citizens (not only rulers) develop a sense of common identity and shared history or descent. This commonness is forged through struggles, through actions of leaders and common people — it did not exist from time immemorial.
French philosopher Ernst Renan (1823–92) in his essay ‘Qu’est-ce qu’une nation?’ criticised the notion that a nation is formed by common language, race, religion, or territory. He argued:
- A nation is the culmination of a long past of endeavours, sacrifice and devotion
- A heroic past, great men, glory = social capital for a national idea
- Nation = a large-scale solidarity; its existence is a daily plebiscite
- A nation never has real interest in annexing a country against its will
- Existence of nations is a guarantee of liberty
The first clear expression of nationalism came with the French Revolution in 1789. France was under an absolute monarch. The Revolution led to transfer of sovereignty from monarchy to a body of French citizens. The revolution proclaimed that it was the people who would henceforth constitute the nation and shape its destiny.
Measures Introduced by French Revolutionaries to Create Collective Identity
| La Patrie & Le Citoyen | Emphasized a united community enjoying equal rights under a constitution (the fatherland and the citizen) |
|---|---|
| New French Flag | Tricolour replaced the former royal standard |
| Estates General | Elected by active citizens; renamed National Assembly |
| New Hymns & Oaths | Composed and taken in name of the nation; martyrs commemorated |
| Centralised Administration | Uniform laws for all citizens within the territory |
| Abolished Internal Customs | Duties and dues abolished; uniform system of weights & measures adopted |
| Common Language | Regional dialects discouraged; French (as spoken in Paris) became common language of the nation |
Revolutionaries declared it their mission and destiny to liberate peoples of Europe from despotism. Students and educated middle classes set up Jacobin clubs. French armies moved into Holland, Belgium, Switzerland and much of Italy in the 1790s — carrying the idea of nationalism abroad.
Napoleon Bonaparte & the Napoleonic Code (Civil Code of 1804)
- Did away with all privileges based on birth
- Established equality before the law
- Secured the right to property
- Exported to: Dutch Republic, Switzerland, Italy, Germany
- Napoleon destroyed democracy in France through return to monarchy BUT incorporated revolutionary principles in administration
Reforms in Conquered Territories
| Administrative | Simplified administrative divisions |
|---|---|
| Feudal System | Abolished; peasants freed from serfdom and manorial dues |
| Guild Restrictions | Removed in towns |
| Transport | Communication systems improved |
| Economic | Uniform laws, standardised weights, common national currency facilitated movement of goods and capital |
Reactions to French Rule — Mixed Response
Initially welcomed as harbingers of liberty in Holland, Switzerland, Brussels, Mainz, Milan, Warsaw. Enthusiasm turned to hostility due to: increased taxation, censorship, forced conscription into French armies.
Congress of Vienna, 1815 — Conservative Reaction
- Hosted by Austrian Chancellor Duke Metternich
- Participants: Britain, Russia, Prussia, Austria
- Bourbon dynasty restored to power in France
- France lost territories annexed under Napoleon
- Kingdom of Netherlands (including Belgium) set up in north
- Genoa added to Piedmont in south
- Prussia given new territories on western frontiers
- Austria given control of northern Italy
- German confederation of 39 states left untouched
- Russia given part of Poland; Prussia given portion of Saxony
- Main aim: restore monarchies overthrown by Napoleon; create new conservative order in Europe
Conservative regimes set up in 1815 were autocratic — did not tolerate criticism and dissent, imposed censorship laws on newspapers, books, plays and songs. Freedom of the press became a major issue for liberal-nationalists.
In mid-eighteenth-century Europe there were no nation-states. Germany, Italy and Switzerland were divided into kingdoms, duchies and cantons. Eastern and Central Europe were under autocratic monarchies with diverse peoples who did not share a collective identity.
- Alpine regions: Tyrol, Austria, Sudetenland
- Bohemia: aristocracy predominantly German-speaking
- Lombardy and Venetia: Italian-speaking provinces
- Hungary: half spoke Magyar, half various dialects
- Galicia: aristocracy spoke Polish
- Subject peasant peoples: Bohemians, Slovaks (north), Slovenes in Carniola, Croats (south), Roumans in Transylvania (east)
- Only binding tie: common allegiance to the emperor
3.1 The Aristocracy and the New Middle Class
A landed aristocracy was the dominant class — owned estates in countryside and town-houses, spoke French for diplomacy, connected by ties of marriage. In Western Europe: tenants and small owners farmed land; Eastern/Central Europe: vast estates cultivated by serfs.
Industrialisation in England (2nd half of 18th century) and France/German states (19th century) created a new middle class — industrialists, businessmen, professionals. Ideas of national unity gained support among educated, liberal middle classes.
3.2 What did Liberal Nationalism Stand For?
| Political | Freedom for individual; equality before law; government by consent; end of autocracy and clerical privileges; constitution; representative government through parliament |
|---|---|
| Economic | Freedom of markets; abolition of state-imposed restrictions on movement of goods and capital |
| Property | Inviolability of private property |
| Limitation | Universal suffrage NOT guaranteed — only property-owning men could vote; women and non-propertied men excluded. Napoleonic Code reduced women to status of a minor. |
The Zollverein (Customs Union), 1834
Napoleon’s measures created out of countless principalities a confederation of 39 states, each with own currency, weights and measures. A merchant travelling in 1833 from Hamburg to Nuremberg had to pass through 11 customs barriers, paying ~5% duty at each.
The measure of cloth was the elle, which stood for different lengths in each region:
| Frankfurt | 54.7 cm |
|---|---|
| Mainz | 55.1 cm |
| Nuremberg | 65.6 cm |
| Freiburg | 53.5 cm |
In 1834, zollverein formed at initiative of Prussia, joined by most German states — abolished tariff barriers and reduced currencies from over thirty to two. Railway network further stimulated mobility and national unification.
Professor of Economics, University of Tübingen, 1834: “The aim of the zollverein is to bind the Germans economically into a nation… It ought to awaken and raise national sentiment through a fusion of individual and provincial interests. The German people have realised that a free economic system is the only means to engender national feeling.”
3.3 A New Conservatism after 1815
Conservatives believed in preserving established institutions: monarchy, Church, social hierarchies, property, family. They realised modernisation could strengthen traditional institutions. A modern army, efficient bureaucracy, dynamic economy, abolition of feudalism and serfdom could strengthen autocratic monarchies.
3.4 The Revolutionaries
After 1815, fear of repression drove liberal-nationalists underground. Secret societies sprang up across European states to train revolutionaries and spread ideas.
| Born | Genoa, 1805 |
|---|---|
| Early Life | Member of secret society of Carbonari |
| Exile | Sent into exile in 1831 at age 26 for attempting revolution in Liguria |
| Young Italy | Founded in Marseilles |
| Young Europe | Founded in Berne, 1833 — members from Poland, France, Italy, German states |
| Belief | God intended nations to be natural units of mankind; Italy must be a unified republic within a wider alliance of nations |
| Metternich on Mazzini | “The most dangerous enemy of our social order” |
Liberalism and nationalism became increasingly associated with revolution. Revolutions were led by liberal-nationalists of the educated middle-class elite — professors, school-teachers, clerks, commercial middle classes.
Key Revolutionary Events
| July 1830 — France | Bourbon kings overthrown by liberal revolutionaries; constitutional monarchy with Louis Philippe installed. Metternich: “When France sneezes, the rest of Europe catches cold.” |
|---|---|
| Belgian Revolution | July Revolution sparked uprising in Brussels; Belgium broke away from United Kingdom of Netherlands |
| Greek War of Independence (1821) | Greece part of Ottoman Empire since 15th century. Struggle began 1821. Support from Greeks in exile and West Europeans. Lord Byron organised funds, went to fight, died of fever in 1824. Treaty of Constantinople, 1832 recognised Greece as independent nation. |
4.1 The Romantic Imagination and National Feeling
Nationalism developed not only through wars but through culture — art, poetry, stories, music. Romanticism: criticised glorification of reason and science; focused on emotions, intuition, mystical feelings. Effort to create shared collective heritage as basis of a nation.
| Johann Gottfried Herder (1744–1803) | German philosopher. True German culture discoverable among common people — das volk. True spirit of nation = volksgeist, expressed through folk songs, folk poetry, folk dances |
|---|---|
| Grimm Brothers — Box 1 | Jacob (b.1785) & Wilhelm (b.1786), born Hanau. Collected folktales over 6 years; published first collection 1812. Also published 33-volume German language dictionary. Saw French domination as threat to German culture |
| Karol Kurpinski | Celebrated Polish national struggle through operas and music; turned folk dances polonaise and mazurka into nationalist symbols |
| Eugene Delacroix | ‘The Massacre at Chios’ (1824) — huge painting (4.19m x 3.54m) depicting 20,000 Greeks killed by Turks on island of Chios; used vivid colours to appeal to emotions and create sympathy for Greeks |
Poland partitioned at end of 18th century by Russia, Prussia and Austria. After Russian occupation, Polish forced out of schools; Russian imposed everywhere. 1831: armed rebellion crushed. Clergy used Polish for Church gatherings. Many priests and bishops jailed or sent to Siberia. Polish language became symbol of struggle against Russian dominance.
4.2 Hunger, Hardship and Popular Revolt
The 1830s were years of great economic hardship. First half of 19th century: enormous increase in population; more job-seekers than employment; rural-to-urban migration to overcrowded slums. Competition from cheap machine-made English goods, especially in textile production. Peasants struggled under feudal dues where aristocracy held power.
Weavers revolted against contractors who drastically reduced payments. Journalist Wilhelm Wolff described: weavers marched to contractor’s mansion demanding higher wages, smashed windowpanes, furniture, porcelain, plundered storehouse. Contractor fled, returned with army — eleven weavers were shot. The village had 18,000 inhabitants; cotton weaving was most widespread occupation.
1848: Food shortages and unemployment in Paris → barricades erected → Louis Philippe forced to flee. National Assembly proclaimed a Republic, granted suffrage to all adult males above 21, guaranteed right to work, set up National workshops.
4.3 The Revolution of the Liberals, 1848
Events of February 1848 in France: abdication of monarch; republic based on universal male suffrage proclaimed. In Germany, Italy, Poland, Austro-Hungarian Empire — liberal middle classes combined demands for constitutionalism with national unification.
- 831 elected representatives marched to Church of St Paul, Frankfurt
- Drafted constitution for German nation — monarchy subject to parliament
- Crown offered to Friedrich Wilhelm IV, King of Prussia
- He rejected it and joined other monarchs to oppose elected assembly
- Middle classes resisted demands of workers and artisans → lost their support
- Troops called in; assembly forced to disband
- Women admitted only as observers in visitors’ gallery — denied suffrage rights
Carl Welcker (liberal politician, Frankfurt Parliament): Nature created men and women for different functions — man for public life, woman for home and family; equality between sexes would “endanger harmony and destroy dignity of family.”
Louise Otto-Peters (1819–95): Founded women’s journal and feminist political association. Argued: “Liberty is indivisible! Free men therefore must not tolerate to be surrounded by the unfree.”
Anonymous reader, 1850: “Is it not a disgrace that even the stupidest cattle-herder possesses the right to vote, simply because he is a man, whereas highly talented women owning considerable property are excluded from this right?”
Though conservative forces suppressed liberal movements in 1848, they could not restore the old order. After 1848: serfdom and bonded labour abolished in Habsburg dominions and Russia; Habsburg rulers granted more autonomy to Hungarians in 1867.
5.1 Germany — Can the Army be the Architect of a Nation?
After 1848, nationalism moved away from democracy and revolution. Nationalist sentiments mobilised by conservatives for promoting state power. The 1848 liberal initiative repressed by combined forces of monarchy, military, and large landowners (Junkers) of Prussia.
| Role | Chief Minister of Prussia |
|---|---|
| Method | Prussian army and bureaucracy — “Blood and Iron” policy |
| Three Wars | With Austria, Denmark, and France — over seven years |
| Result | Prussian victory; process of unification completed |
| Proclamation | 18 January 1871 — Prussian King William I proclaimed German Emperor in Hall of Mirrors, Palace of Versailles (unheated hall) |
| Present at ceremony | Princes of German states, army representatives, Prussian ministers, Bismarck, General von Roon |
The new German state placed strong emphasis on modernising currency, banking, legal and judicial systems. Prussian measures often became model for rest of Germany.
5.2 Italy Unified
Like Germany, Italy had a long history of political fragmentation. In mid-19th century, Italy divided into seven states. Even the Italian language had not acquired one common form — many regional and local variations.
| North Italy | Under Austrian Habsburgs |
|---|---|
| Centre Italy | Ruled by the Pope |
| South Italy | Under the Bourbon kings of Spain |
| Sardinia-Piedmont | Only state ruled by an Italian princely house |
| Giuseppe Mazzini | Sought coherent programme for unitary Italian Republic in 1830s; formed Young Italy secret society; failed revolutionary uprisings of 1831 and 1848 |
|---|---|
| Count Camillo de Cavour | Chief Minister of Sardinia-Piedmont; neither revolutionary nor democrat; spoke French better than Italian; engineered diplomatic alliance with France; defeated Austrian forces in 1859 |
| Giuseppe Garibaldi (1807–82) — Box 2 | Most celebrated Italian freedom fighter; sailor in merchant navy; met Mazzini 1833; joined Young Italy; fled to South America after 1834 uprising; returned 1848; led famous Expedition of the Thousand (1860) to South Italy; volunteers grew to ~30,000 known as Red Shirts; in 1867 led army to Rome to fight Papal States (French garrison there until 1870) |
| Victor Emmanuel II | King of Sardinia-Piedmont; proclaimed king of united Italy in 1861 |
Much of the Italian population, among whom rates of illiteracy were very high, remained unaware of liberal-nationalist ideology. Peasant masses who supported Garibaldi in southern Italy had never heard of Italia, and believed that ‘La Talia’ was Victor Emmanuel’s wife!
5.3 The Strange Case of Britain
Britain is considered by some scholars as the model of the nation-state. But British nation-building was NOT the result of sudden upheaval or revolution — it was a long-drawn-out process. There was no British nation prior to the eighteenth century.
| Primary Identities | English, Welsh, Scot, Irish — each with own cultural and political traditions |
|---|---|
| English Parliament, 1688 | Seized power from monarchy; became instrument through which nation-state with England at centre was forged |
| Act of Union, 1707 | Between England and Scotland; formed ‘United Kingdom of Great Britain’; England imposed influence on Scotland |
| Scottish Suppression | Scottish Highlanders forbidden to speak Gaelic language or wear national dress; large numbers forcibly driven from homeland; Catholic clans suffered terrible repression |
| Ireland | Deeply divided between Catholics and Protestants; English helped Protestants establish dominance; failed revolt of Wolfe Tone and United Irishmen (1798); Ireland forcibly incorporated into UK in 1801 |
| British Symbols | British flag (Union Jack), national anthem (God Save Our Noble King), English language — actively promoted; older nations survived only as subordinate partners |
Artists in 18th and 19th centuries personified a nation as a female figure — an allegory of the nation. The female form did not stand for any particular woman; it gave the abstract idea of the nation a concrete form.
Female Allegories in the French Revolution
- Liberty: red cap, broken chain
- Justice: blindfolded woman with weighing scales
Marianne (France)
Christened Marianne — a popular Christian name underlining the idea of a people’s nation. Characteristics: red cap, tricolour, cockade (drawn from Liberty and the Republic). Statues erected in public squares; images marked on coins and stamps (Postage stamps of 1850).
Germania (Germany)
Allegory of the German nation. Wears a crown of oak leaves (German oak = heroism). Philip Veit painted Germania in 1848 on a cotton banner meant to hang from the ceiling of Church of St Paul where Frankfurt parliament was convened.
| Broken chains | Being freed |
|---|---|
| Breastplate with eagle | Symbol of the German empire — strength |
| Crown of oak leaves | Heroism |
| Sword | Readiness to fight |
| Olive branch around the sword | Willingness to make peace |
| Black, red and gold tricolour | Flag of the liberal-nationalists in 1848, banned by the Dukes of the German states |
| Rays of the rising sun | Beginning of a new era |
| Philip Veit’s Germania (1848) | Painted on a cotton banner for Frankfurt Parliament. In his 1836 version, Veit had portrayed the Kaiser’s crown where he later placed the broken chain — signifying shift from monarchical loyalty to aspirations for freedom. |
|---|---|
| Julius Hübner — The Fallen Germania (1850) | Depicts Germania in a fallen state — symbolising crushing of liberal-nationalist hopes after Frankfurt Parliament was disbanded and conservative order reasserted itself. |
| Lorenz Clasen — Germania guarding the Rhine (1860) | Commissioned in 1860. Inscription on Germania’s sword: “The German sword protects the German Rhine.” Represents fusion of nationalism with military strength and territorial assertion. |
By the last quarter of the 19th century, nationalism lost its idealistic liberal-democratic sentiment and became a narrow creed with limited ends. Nationalist groups became intolerant of each other and ever ready to go to war. Major European powers manipulated nationalist aspirations of subject peoples to further imperialist aims.
The Balkans — Most Serious Source of Tension after 1871
A region of geographical and ethnic variation comprising modern-day: Romania, Bulgaria, Albania, Greece, Macedonia, Croatia, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Slovenia, Serbia and Montenegro — inhabitants broadly known as the Slavs. A large part was under control of the Ottoman Empire.
- Ottoman Empire sought to strengthen itself through modernisation but had little success
- European subject nationalities broke away one by one and declared independence
- Balkan peoples used history to prove they had once been independent but subjugated by foreign powers
- Balkan states fiercely jealous of each other — each hoped to gain more territory
- Big power rivalry: Russia, Germany, England, Austro-Hungary all keen to counter each other’s hold over Balkans
- Intense rivalry over trade, colonies, naval and military might
- Led to a series of wars → finally First World War (1914)
Nationalism aligned with imperialism led Europe to disaster in 1914. Countries colonised by European powers in 19th century began to oppose imperial domination. Anti-imperial movements were nationalist — all struggled to form independent nation-states. European ideas of nationalism were nowhere replicated; people everywhere developed their own specific variety. But the idea that societies should be organised into ‘nation-states’ came to be accepted as natural and universal.
The map celebrating the British Empire (Fig. 20) showed Britannia triumphantly sitting over the globe, colonies represented through tigers, elephants, forests and primitive people — domination of the world shown as basis of Britain’s national pride.
1. It was formed at the initiative of Prussia
2. It abolished tariff barriers among German states
3. It reduced the number of currencies from over thirty to two
4. It included all European states
Which of the above are correct?
1. Led unification movement as Chief Minister — Count Camillo de Cavour
2. Famous ‘Expedition of the Thousand’ — Giuseppe Garibaldi
3. First king of united Italy — Victor Emmanuel II
4. Created programme for unitary Italian Republic — Giuseppe Mazzini
📚 Content sourced from NCERT Class 10 History — India and the Contemporary World II, Chapter 1 (Reprint 2026–27)
Compiled for academic preparation by Legacy IAS, Bangalore · UPSC & State PCS Coaching
© NCERT — Not to be republished commercially. For academic/study use only.


