23
HIST 2509 A History of Germany Lecture 5-1 The Rise of Prussia

HIST 2509 A History of Germany

  • Upload
    nibal

  • View
    35

  • Download
    1

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

HIST 2509 A History of Germany. Lecture 5-1 The Rise of Prussia. Announcements. in-class test on Tuesday - more in second half of lecture -format, how to study, possible questions 2) I’ve streamlined the lecture skeletons. Prussian coat of arms. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: HIST 2509  A History of Germany

HIST 2509 A History of Germany

Lecture 5-1

The Rise of Prussia

Page 2: HIST 2509  A History of Germany

Announcements

1) in-class test on Tuesday

- more in second half of lecture-format, how to study, possible questions

2) I’ve streamlined the lecture skeletons

Page 3: HIST 2509  A History of Germany

Prussian coat of arms

Page 4: HIST 2509  A History of Germany

“Heil Preussen!” by Karl Arnold in Simplicissimus, 1932

Page 5: HIST 2509  A History of Germany
Page 6: HIST 2509  A History of Germany

Prussian coat of arms

Page 7: HIST 2509  A History of Germany

Prussian coat of arms

Berlin Stadtschloss, 1950

Page 8: HIST 2509  A History of Germany

I. The Age of Crisis (1560-1700)

a) social, political, religious fragmentation

-religious division permanent

-political decentralization and power of local princes

-search for order and harmony

-new forms of allegiances -- absolutism

Page 9: HIST 2509  A History of Germany

From the House of Askanien to Hohenzollern

Page 10: HIST 2509  A History of Germany

-the Duchy of Prussia, surrounded by Poland-Cleve-Mark, subject to Dutch pressure-Mark Brandenburg, close to Swedish Pommerania

Page 11: HIST 2509  A History of Germany

II. The Emergence of Prussia

a) the Hohenzollern dynasty-Brandenburg, the Junkers=aristocratic land-holding

elites

b) territory-the Duchy of Prussia, surrounded by Poland-Cleve-Mark, subject to Dutch pressure-Mark Brandenburg, close to Swedish Pommerania*patchwork, artificial creation

Page 12: HIST 2509  A History of Germany

III. Friedrich Wilhelm, the Great Elector (r. 1640-1688)

a) sustained the state

1) no natural boundaries

2) surrounded by power hungry neighbours

3) scattered geography

Page 13: HIST 2509  A History of Germany

b) Consolidated power at home

-emasculated the nobles

-built infrastructure

-supported the economy

-imported middle class -- Hugenots in Potsdam

c) Created mystique of rule -- absolute monarchy

Page 14: HIST 2509  A History of Germany

IV. King Friedrich Wilhelm I (r. 1713-1740)

-pietism

-civil service and state bureaucracy, cameralism

-army

-rigid social order, letters between FWI and Prince Friedrich

Page 15: HIST 2509  A History of Germany

V. Der alte Fritz (Old Fritz)Frederick the Great(r. 1740-1786)

-mix of militarism, authoritarianism, and enlightenment

Page 16: HIST 2509  A History of Germany

Sanssouci PalacePotsdam

The Prussian Versailles

Page 17: HIST 2509  A History of Germany
Page 18: HIST 2509  A History of Germany
Page 19: HIST 2509  A History of Germany

Recap

1) Prussia emerges as the one to watch in the 18th century

2) It does so via centralizing authority of the sovereign

Page 20: HIST 2509  A History of Germany

Recap

3) This is accomplished via absolutist rule with a tinge of enlightened thinking.

4) It represents the modernization of rule -- statecraft, loyalty, institutions of governance.

5) Inherently militaristic??

Page 21: HIST 2509  A History of Germany

Test:

2 sections: 1 1/2 hours

-IDs: identify and give significance of terms and selections from readings

-essay: choice 1 of 3

Page 22: HIST 2509  A History of Germany

Ways to do well:

-do the readings, re-read lecture skeletons/notes

-ensure you have answered the question --why? --and not just --what?-- for IDs

-cite precise examples from the readings/lectures to support your claims

-

Page 23: HIST 2509  A History of Germany

**and, most importantly, in the essaymake an argument/have a thesis!

“I will argue that the lack of territorial boundaries, religious differences, and political decentralization delayed Germany’s emergence as a major European power.”