We #educreations to make this failure/ success chart that would be tool in measuring the results of each revolution. |
Our Survey Monkey--a few slip-ups here and there, but most students seemed to have a grasp on the information we were quizzing them on! |
Our Survey Monkey-- lots of successful results! |
The revolution that my group focused on was that of 1848 in
France. French middle class liberals wanted moderate political reforms, and the
poor working class wanted social and economic change that would allow them to acquire
jobs and provide for themselves. The revolution split into two more or less
segments, the first being in February, and the second in June. During this
first segment, the government catered to the people’s demands and created more
jobs under Louis Felipe. During the so called “June Days”, Louis Felipe abdicated
and workshops shut down, leaving the lower class angry and poor. Again people fought
hard for the reforms and jobs that they wanted, creating barricades to protect
themselves that playwright Victor Hugo describes to be made up of everything
from chairs to roofs. Soon Napoleon III takes over and reinstates the political
institutions that had “raised France to the height of prosperity and grandeur”
50 years earlier, making it almost as if no revolution had ever occurred. As the
end of the day, our group came to the conclusion that the 1848 French
revolution was somewhere at the halfway point between success and failure—nothing
had gotten worse because of it, but no changes, like increased jobs, ad
remained permanent.
Don't forget to check out and take our survey monkey by clicking here!!
After each group’s source analysis and survey monkey was
done, we took turns reading documents on each revolution and then taking each other’s
quizzes. In general the results of each revolution seemed to be pretty neutral,
taking in mind that the Decembrist revolt of 1825 was an exception as it was a
complete and utter failure. For example, the French revolution of 1830 was
successful in the sense that townspeople got absolutist king, Charles X, to
abdicate. But new ruler, Louis Felipe favored the bourgeoisie and used policies
that favored the middle class, leaving the lower class still unable to vote.
Another example is Hungary’s 1848 revolution. Hungarian nationalists demanded
an independent government from Austria, an end to serfdom, and a constitution
giving citizens basic rights. After a short period where all of these requests
were met, Austrian troops regained control and took away all reforms that had
been made—it was as if no revolution had ever happened. After learning about
the European revolutions of 1830 and 1848, I think that for the most part they
were neither prosperous nor failures. Most of these revolutions didn’t result
in any formal change, but they did get people thinking about change which would
spark future revolutions to come.
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