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David Blackbourn - The Long Nineteenth Century: A History of Germany, 1780-1918

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In the late eighteenth century, German-speaking Europe was a patchwork of principalities and lordships. Most people lived in the countryside, and just half survived until their late twenties. By the beginning of our own century, unified Germany was the most powerful state in Europe. No longer a provincial land of poets and thinkers, the country had been transformed into an industrial and military giant with an advanced welfare system. The Long Nineteenth Century: A History of Germany, 1780-1918, is a masterful account of this transformation. Spanning 150 years, from the eve of the French Revolution to the end of World War I, it introduces students to crucial areas of German social and cultural history -- demography and social structure, work and leisure, education and religion -- while providing a comprehensive account of political events. The text explains how Germany came to be unified, and the consequences of that unification. It describes the growing role of the state and new ways in which rulers asserted their authority, but questions clichs about German obedience. It also looks at the ways in which the factory, the railway, and the movement into towns created new social relations and altered perceptions of time and place. Drawing on a generation of work devoted to migration, housing, crime, medicine, and popular culture, Blackbourn offers a powerful and original account of a changing society, trying to do justice to the experiences of contemporary Germans, both women and men. Informed by the latest scholarship, The Long Nineteenth Century: A History of Germany, 1780-1918, provides a complete and up-to-date alternative to conventional political histories of this period and is essential reading for undergraduates in German history and political science courses.

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title:The Long Nineteenth Century : A History of Germany, 1780-1918
author:Blackbourn, David.
publisher:Oxford University Press
isbn10 | asin:
print isbn13:9780195076721
ebook isbn13:9780585368368
language:English
subjectGermany--History--1789-1900, Germany--History--1871-1918, Germany--Intellectual life--19th century, Germany--Social conditions--19th century, Germany--Social conditions--1871-1918.
publication date:1998
lcc:DD203.B59 1998eb
ddc:943/.07
subject:Germany--History--1789-1900, Germany--History--1871-1918, Germany--Intellectual life--19th century, Germany--Social conditions--19th century, Germany--Social conditions--1871-1918.
Page 1
Prologue:
Germany in the Late Eighteenth Century
Small Worlds
Many who have read little German history will know the folk tales collected by the brothers Grimm, the first two volumes of which were published in 1812 and 1815. Their stories are set in a landscape of dense woods where wolves are never far away. They depict a world shaped by bereavement, peopled with orphans, stepmothers and widowed women believed to be witches. Beggars are commonplace and most people are hungry, except for princes or a fortunate miller. Life is hard and filled with toil: children are valuable for the work they perform but a potential burden when they eat more than they produce. The stepmother of the folk tale often cruelly exploits the step-children; sometimes she and her husband abandon them altogether.
These tales, recorded and reworked by two middle-class academics, are infused with elements of violence and the supernatural typical of German Romanticism in the early nineteenth century. They cannot be seen as a simple reflection of everyday life in German-speaking Europe under the old regime. 1 Even passed through the filter of their collectors, however, the subjects and attitudes depicted in these stories offer some insight into the world that contemporaries experienced, and how they tried to make sense of their lot. It was a world in which wolves did frequent the forests that the following century would idealize, and women were executed for witchcraft into the 1780s. Life was, by our standards, short and precarious. It was threat-
Page 10
notes and sketches, perhaps bringing back ideas for an ornamental garden. England, the Netherlands, France and Italy were favoured destinations. Men of good birth might take a man-servant, perhaps a tutor; young princes, of which the Holy Roman Empire had so many, would travel with a larger retinue. On the first of his two grand tours, Frederick III of Gotha took a steward, two gentlemen-in-waiting, a secretary, a chaplain, a treasurer, a doctor, two pages, a groom, a lackey, a cook and two other servants. Travel became something of a mania in this period among the upper ranks of society and the educated, and I want to return later to the importance of this. But they made up a small proportion of eighteenth-century travellers. Much more important numerically were those such as emigrants, travelling on foot or in rudimentary wagons. Many came from areas of partible inheritance in the south and west where holdings became too small to support a familyBaden, Wrttemberg, the Palatinate, the Westerwald and the Hunsrck. Up to 300,000 migrated to Prussia in the course of the century, many being settled on reclaimed land at the mouths of the Oder and Vistula. Others made the longer journey to areas where the Habsburgs were encouraging settlement in the east, such as the Banat, Galicia and Bukowina, adding a potentially explosive element to the history of modern 'Germany'. The numbers involved were large. In 1789 it was estimated that in the Rhenish administrative districts of Bad Kreuznach, Stromberg and Bacharach (which included the Hunsrck) a twelfth of the total population had departed for Hungary or Poland in the previous decade. Just to the west, the area around Tholey and Lebach was known as 'Turkey' because so many of its inhabitants had left to settle there, moving from the western to the southeastern margin of central Europe. 13 Similar areas provided most of what was already a considerable transatlantic emigration. Others went to America for a different purpose: over 30,000 German soldiers served with the British forces during the American revolution.
Migrants and soldiers were joined on Germany's suspect but crowded roads by the many other travellers of the late eighteenth century. As much as 10 per cent of the German population was
Page 100
The coal mines in the new Prussian territory of the Saarland were state-owned. In addition to exploiting its own resources, the post-1815 state stimulated the economy in other ways. It built roads, canalized waterways, andfrom the late 1830sbegan to construct railways. Business activity was actively fostered by establishing semigovernmental agencies like chambers of commerce and societies to promote industry, by mounting exhibitions and setting up model workshops. This process was at work from relatively laissez-faire Prussia to the more statist encouragement of industry practised in Baden. 11 Attempts to establish uniform legal codes and criteria for citizenship pointed in the same direction, for they were designed to increase the movement of goods and mobility of labour. Educational provision went hand-in-hand with the new attention paid to the exploitation of public and private economic resources. It is true that German states took pride in their nonutilitarian classical grammar schools and model universities like Berlin or Heidelberg, and these were well-funded (and outstanding) by European standards. But many states also set contemporary standards for technical education and training. New institutions that taught engineering or agronomy were widely established in these years.
State officials placed their stamp on this period as they had on the reform era. Bureaucracies were largely recruited on the basis of competitive examinationsin Bavaria, marks were scrutinized down to two decimal places. Edicts and decrees regularized responsibilities, promotions, disciplinary procedures and pensions. Systems varied from state to state between the hierarchical and the collegial (the latter based on collective responsibility at a given administrative level), but the emphasis everywhere was placed on uniformity of approach and working within fixed guidelines. The bureaucracy also embodied the ethos of competence, order, duty and hard work. If this sounds obvious to modern ears, we should remember that it was less so at the time: few of these attributes were apparent among those who passed for officials in, say, contemporary England or the Papal States. For historical reasons already noted, Germany was a classic land of the modern bureaucratic spirit and it is no
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