The Emergence of Industrial Society in the West- Chapter 24
Romanticism
19th-century western European artistic and literary movement; held that emotion and impression, not reason, were the keys to the mysteries of human experience and nature; sought to portray passions, not calm reflection.
Declaration of the Rights of Man and the Citizen
Adopted during the French Revolution; proclaimed the equality of French citizens; became a source document for later liberal movements.
Triple Entente
Agreement among Britain, Russia, and France in 1907; part of the European balance of power system before World War I.
Triple Alliance
Alliance among Germany, Austria-Hungary, and Italy at the end of the 19th century; part of the European balance of power system before World War I.
Mass leisure culture
An aspect of the later Industrial Revolution; decreased time at work and offered opportunities for new forms of leisure time, such as vacation trips and team sports.
Count Camillo di Cavour
Architect of Italian unification in 1858; created a constitutional Italian monarchy under the king of Piedmont.
Napoleon Bonaparte
Army officer who rose in rank during the wars of the French Revolution; ended the democratic phase of the revolution; became emperor; deposed and exiled in 1815.
Charles Darwin
Biologist who developed the theory of evolution of species; argued that all living forms evolved through the successful ability to adapt in a struggle for survival.
Louis XVI
Bourbon ruler of France who was executed during the radical phase of the French Revolution.
Reform Bill of 1832
British legislation that extended the vote to most male members of the middle class.
Benjamin Disraeli
British politician; granted the vote to working-class men in 1867; an example of conservative politicians keeping stability through reform.
Otto von Bismarck
Conservative prime minister of Prussia; architect of German unification under the Prussian king in 1871; used liberal reforms to maintain stability.
James Watt
Devised a steam engine in the 1770s that could be used for production in many industries; a key step in the Industrial Revolution.
Louis Pasteur
Discoverer of germs and of the purifying process named after him.
Nationalism
European 19th-century viewpoint; often allied with other "isms"; urged the importance of national unity; valued a collective identity based on ethnic origins.
Radicals
Followers of a 19th-century Western European political emphasis; advocated broader voting rights than liberals did; urged reforms favoring the lower classes.
Albert Einstein
Formulated mathematical theories to explain the behavior of planetary motion and the movement of electrical particles; in about 1900 issued the theory of relativity.
American Civil War (1861-1865)
Fought to prevent secession of the southern states; the first war to incorporate the products and techniques of the Industrial Revolution; resulted in the abolition of slavery and the reunification of the United States.
Karl Marx
German socialist who saw history as a class struggle between groups out of power and those controlling the means of production; preached the inevitability of social revolution and the creation of a proletarian dictatorship.
Population revolution
Huge growth in population in western Europe beginning about 1730; prelude to industrialization.
Factory system
Intensification of all of the processes of production at a single site during the Industrial Revolution; involved greater organization of labor and increased discipline.
Guillotine
Introduced as a method of "humane" execution; used during the French Revolution against thousands of individuals, especially during the Reign of Terror.
Social question
Issues relating to workers and women in western Europe during the Industrial Revolution; became more critical than constitutional issues after 1870.
Congress of Vienna
Met in 1815 after the defeat of France to restore the European balance of power.
Balkan nationalism
Movements to create independent states and reunite ethnic groups in the Balkans; provoked crises within the European alliance system that ended with the outbreak of World War I.
French Revolution of 1848
Overthrew the French monarchy established in 1830; briefly established the Second French Republic.
French Revolution
Overthrow of the Bourbon monarchy through a revolution beginning in 1789; created a republic and eventually ended with Napoleon's French empire; the source of many liberal movements and constitutions in Europe.
Age of Revolution
Period of political upheaval beginning roughly with the American Revolution in 1775 and continuing through the French Revolution of 1789 and other movements for change up to 1848.
Socialism
Political ideology in 19th-century Europe; attacked private property in the name of equality; wanted state control of the means of production and an end to the capitalistic exploitation of the working class.
Liberalism
Political ideology that flourished in 19th-century western Europe; stressed limited state interference in private life, representation of the people in government; urged importance of constitutional rule and parliaments.
Transformismo
Political system in Italy that allied conservatives and liberals in support of the status quo.
Conservative
Political viewpoint with origins in western Europe during the 19th century; opposed revolutionary goals; advocated restoration of monarchy and defense of the church.
Protoindustrialization
Preliminary shift away from an agricultural economy; workers became full- or part-time producers who worked at home in a capitalist system in which materials, work, orders, and sales depended on urban merchants; prelude to the Industrial Revolution.
Belgian Revolution of 1830
Produced Belgian independence from the Dutch; established a constitutional monarchy.
American Revolution
Rebellion of the British American Atlantic seaboard colonies; ended with the formation of the independent United States.
Greek Revolution
Rebellion of the Greeks against the Ottoman Empire in 1820; a key step in the disintegration of the Turkish Balkan Empire.
French Revolution of 1830
Second revolution against the Bourbon dynasty; a liberal movement that created a bourgeois government under a moderate monarchy.
Industrial Revolution
Series of changes in economy of Western nations between 1740 and 20th century; stimulated by rapid population growth, increase in agricultural productivity, commercial revolution in 17th century, and development of new means of transportation; in essence involved technological change and the application of machines to the process of production.
Revisionism
Socialist thought that disagreed with Marx's formulation; believed that social and economic progress could be achieved through existing political institutions.
Feminist movement
Sought legal and economic gains for women, among them equal access to professions and higher education; came to concentrate on the right to vote; won initial support from middle-class women.
Revolutions of 1848
The nationalist and liberal movements in Italy, Germany, AustriaHungary; after temporary success they were suppressed.
Imperialism
The policy of expanding national territory through colonization and conquest.
Chartist movement
Unsuccessful attempt by British artisans and workers to gain the vote during the 1840s.
Sigmund Freud
Viennese physician who developed theories of the workings of the human subconscious; argued that behavior is determined by impulses.
Luddites
Workers in Britain who responded to the replacement of their labor by machines during the Industrial Revolution by attempting to destroy machines; named after the fictional worker Ned Ludd.