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Chapter 8 Nationalist Revolutions Sweep the West Pages 244 to 271

Chapter 8 Nationalist Revolutions Sweep the West Pages 244 to 271

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Page 1: Chapter 8 Nationalist Revolutions Sweep the West Pages 244 to 271

Chapter 8

Nationalist Revolutions Sweep the West

Pages 244 to 271

Page 2: Chapter 8 Nationalist Revolutions Sweep the West Pages 244 to 271

LATIN AMERICAN PEOPLESWIN INDEPENDENCE

Section 1 – Guided Reading

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1. Why did slaves in French colony of Saint Domingue revolt?

• Whites used brutal methods to terrorize and dehumanize them, trying to keep them powerless.

• Slaves outnumbered their masters.

2. What events led up to the General Dessaline’s declaration of Independence for Haiti?

• Toussaint L’Ouverture became the leader of the revolution, but the French imprisoned him.

• Then General Dessalines took over the rebellion

INDEPENDENCE FOR HAITI

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3. How did events in Europe lead to revolution in the Spanish colonies?

• Motivated by Enlightenment ideals, creoles finally revolted against Spanish colonial rule when Napoleon made his brother (who was not Spanish) King of Spain

4. What tactics did Jose de San Martin and Simon Bolivar use to defeat Spanish forces in South America?

• Bolivar used surprise tactics to defeat the Spanish in Bogota. San Martin with the help of Bernardo O’Higgins, drove the Spanish out of Chile.

• The two leaders then met in Ecuador and San Martin left his army for Bolivar to command – this unified revolutionary force

• Under Bolivar, won independence for Peru

SOUTH AMERICAN WARS OF INDEPENCED

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Simon Bolivar

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Jose de San Martin Bernardo O’Higgins

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END OF SPANISH RULE IN MEXICO

5. What is the significance of the grito de Dolores?

• With the cry of Dolores, Padre Miguel Hidalgo called upon peasants to rebel against Spanish rule

6. What role did Indians, Mestizos, and Creoles play in Mexico’s independence from Spain?

• Indians and Mestizos began the revolution • Later, Creoles fearing for the loss of privileges

under a new liberal regime in Spain supported independence.

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Padre Miguel Hidalgo

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EUROPE FACES REVOLUTIONS

Section 2 – Guided Reading

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CAUSE AND EFFECT

1. French citizens’ armies win their revolution for liberty and equality.

• Fueled nationalist movements and revolutions throughout Europe

2. Greeks revolt against the Ottoman Turks.

• A joint British, French, and Russian fleet defeated the Ottomans

• Greeks gain their independence

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3. Nationalist groups in Budapest, Prague, and Vienna demand independence and self-government.

• Forced resignation of Metternich triggered liberal uprisings throughout German states

• Revolutionaries failure to unite led to the return of conservatism

4. Charles X tries to set up an absolute monarchy in France.

• Led to riots that forced him to flee to Britain• He was replaced by Louis-Philippe, a supporter of

liberal reforms

CAUSE AND EFFECT

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King Charles X Louis-Philippe

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CAUSE AND EFFECT

5. Paris mobs overthrow monarchy of Louis-Philippe

• Republican government is set up• Factions turn to violence resulting in bloody battles

6. Louis-Napoleon Bonaparte is elected President of France and late assumes the title of Emperor Napoleon III.

* Under this strong leadership France restored prosperity, peace, & stability

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• Dec. 1848 – Louis Napoleon (nephew of Napoleon Bonaparte) won the presidential election

• 1852 – he took the title of Emperor Napoleon III• Built railroads• Encouraged industrialization• Promoted public works

programs• Unemployment decreased &

country prospered

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CAUSE AND EFFECT

7. In the Crimean War, Czar Nicholas I threatens to take over part of the Ottoman Empire.

• Russia was defeated by combined forces of France, Great Britain, Sardinia, and the Ottomans

• After war, Alexander II began to modernize Russia

8. Alexander II issues the Edict of Emancipation.

* Serfs were legally free but remained tied to the land through debts

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NATIONALISM :CASE STUDY: ITALY & GERMANY

Section 3 – Guided Reading

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HOW DID NATIONALISM LEAD TO THE BREAKUP OF THIESE EMPIRES?

1. Austro-Hungarian

• Nationalist disputes led to the division of the empire into 2 states – Austria and Hungary

• After WWI – the empire divided into separate nations

2. Russian

• Nationalist feeling of non-Russian peoples, fueled by the policy of Russification

• Weakened the empire which fell as a result of war & revolution

3. Ottomans

* Conservative Turks angered by policy of granting equal citizenship to nationalist groups caused tension – weakened empire and then broke up empire

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Austrian Empire

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Emperor Francis Joseph of Austria

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Czar Nicholas II

Last Russian Czar

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Expansion of the Ottoman Empire

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Decline of the Ottoman Empire

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HOW DID EACH OF THE FOLLOWING HELP UNIFY ITALY?

4. Camillo di Cavour

• Prime Minister for the Sardinian King• Worked to expand empire through war, alliances, & help of

nationalist rebels• Succeeded & unified Italy

5. Giuseppe Garibaldi – Leader of the “Red Shirts”

• Captured Sicily & united the southern areas of Italy • Conquered Kingdom of Piedmont-Sardinia

6. King Victor Emmanuel

• Brought northern & southern regions of Italy together• Took over the Papal States & unified Italy

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Victor Emmanuel II - King of Sardinia Count Camillo di Cavour 1st Prime Minister of Italy

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Giuseppe Garibaldi

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HOW DID EACH OF THE FOLLOWING LEAD TO GERMAN UNIFICATION?

7. Policy of Realpolitik

• Policy of tough politics allowed Otto Von Bismarck to expand Prussia and achieve dominance over Germany

8. Seven Weeks’ War

*Victory over Austria gave Prussia control over Northern Germany

9. Franco-Prussian War

• Victory over France motivated southern Germany to accept Prussian leadership

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Otto von Bismarck

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Wilhelm I

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B. Explain how Otto Von Bismarck brought about the crowing of King William I of Prussia as Kaiser of the Second Reich

- Through a policy of “blood and iron”, Otto eliminated Austria as a rival

- Provoked a war with France- Achieved Prussian dominance over northern &

southern Germany- Created the Second Reich ruled by Kaiser William I

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REVOLUTIONS IN THE ARTS

Section 4 – Guided Reading

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1. How did the ideas of romanticism contrast with Enlightenment ideas?

• Emphasized emotions over reason• Untamed nature over natural laws and order• Idealized the past

2. How were the ideas of romanticism reflected in literature?

• Romantic writers glorified & heroic actions • Passionate love• Revolutionary spirit • Nature • Supernatural

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EXAMPLES OF …Romanticism in Literature (not on

worksheet)• Poetry was the highest form of expression

• Johann Wolfgang von Goethe…• One of the earliest & greatest romantic writers ~ German• The Sorrows of Young Werther – 1774 novel• Sensitive man whose love for a married woman drives him to suicide

• Jakob & Wilhelm Grimm…• German brothers• Collected fairy tales • created a dictionary & grammar of the German language

• Victor Hugo…• French • Wrote Les Miserables & The Hunchback of Notre Dame

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Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

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Wilhelm & Jakob Grimm

Snow WhiteHansel & Gretel

RapunzelCinderella

Rumpelstiltskin

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Victor Hugo

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The Gothic Novel –(not on wk. sheet)

Often took place in medieval Gothic castles

Filled with fearful, violent, & sometimes supernatural events

Frankenstein by Mary Shelley Monster created by body

parts of dead humans

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3. How was romanticism reflected in art?

• Romantic painters focused on the beauty of nature, love, religion, and nationalism

4. How did romanticism affect the music of the time?

• Romantic themes helped to popularize music and celebrate heroism and nationalism

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The Lady of Shalott by painter John William Waterhouse

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Liberty Leading the People is a painting by Eugène Delacroix commemorating the July Revolution of 1830, which toppled King Charles X of France.

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Chalk Cliffs on Rügen Caspar By David Friedrich

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Christ on the Sea of Galilee

By French artist Eugene Delacroix

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Ludwig van BeethovenFelix Mendelssohn

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5. What trends or events led to a shift from romanticism to realism?

• Industrialization• Interest in scientific method• Invention of the camera

6. How did photography exemplify the art of the new industrial age?

* The camera made it possible start

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Jean-François MilletThe Sower

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Gustave Courbet Stone-Breakers

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Louis Daguerre

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1838 view of the Boulevard du Temple, a busy street in Paris.

Oldest well-documented daguerreotype featuring human subjects

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William Talbot

Window in the South Gallery of Lacock Abbey made from the oldest photographic negative in existence, 1835

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7. What were some themes common to realist novels?

• Struggle for wealth and power• Grim lives of the working class

8. What did realist novelists hope to accomplish with their exposes?

• They hoped to bring about social reform and improve working and living conditions

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Emile Zola Charles Dickens

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B. Define impressionism and describe the impressionist painting by Claude Monet on page 703 of your textbook.

- Impressionism – artistic style in which artists aim to capture their “impressions” or feelings about a subject. Rather than depict realistic details.

- Monet’s use of color and light- Mood he conveys

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Claude Monet

La Promenade, la femme à l'ombrelle - Woman with a

parasol

Haystacks ~ series

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The Waterlilies [triptych] Claude Monet [French, 1840-1926] 1914-26 / Oil on canvas Three panels, Each 6' 6 3/4" x 13' 11 1/4" Overall 6' 6 3/4" x 41' 10 3/8" Location: MOMA, New York City..

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Pierre-Auguste Renoir –Self portrait

Le Moulin de la Galette

Dance at Le Moulin de la Galettestill life with peaches

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Edgar Degas – Self Portrait

"New Orleans Cotton Exchange" (Portraits in an Office),

1873 Musee des Beaux-Arts, marked the beginning of the official recognition of Impressionism as a

significant art movement.

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Daily Tours:  10:30 am and 1:45 pm

Breakfast and Tour:  9:00 am breakfast, tour at 10:30 am (Reservations required)