Ununited Germany
In its long history, Germany has rarely been united. For
most of the two millennia that Central Europe has been inhabited by
German-speaking peoples, such as the Eastern Franks, the area now called
Germany was divided into hundreds of states, many quite small, including
duchies, principalities, free cities, and ecclesiastical states. Not even the
Romans united what is now known as Germany under one government; they managed
to occupy only its southern and western portions. In A.D. 800 Charlemagne, who
had been crowned Holy Roman emperor by Pope Leo III, ruled over a territory
that encompassed much of present-day Belgium, France, Germany, the Netherlands,
and Switzerland, but within a generation its existence was more symbolic than
real.
Medieval Germany
Medieval Germany was marked by division. As France and
England began their centuries-long evolution into united nation-states, Germany
was racked by a ceaseless series of wars among local rulers. The Habsburg
Dynasty's long monopoly of the crown of the Holy Roman Empire provided only the
semblance of German unity. Within the empire, German princes warred against one
another as before. The Protestant Reformation deprived Germany of even its
religious unity, leaving its population Roman Catholic, Lutheran, and
Calvinist. These religious divisions gave military strife an added ferocity in
the Thirty Years' War (1618–48), during which Germany was ravaged to a degree
not seen again until World War II.
Peace of Westphalia
The Peace of Westphalia of 1648 left German-speaking
Europe divided into hundreds of states. During the next two centuries, the two
largest of these states—Prussia and Austria—jockeyed for dominance. The smaller
states sought to retain their independence by allying themselves with one, then
the other, depending on local conditions. From the mid-1790s until Prussia,
Austria, and Russia defeated Napoleon at the Battle of Leipzig in 1813 and
drove him out of German territory, much of the area was occupied by French
troops. Napoleon's officials abolished numerous small states; as a result, in
1815, after the Congress of Vienna, German territory consisted of only about 40
states.
Revolutions for Unification and Democracy
During the next half-century, pressures for German
unification grew. Scholars, bureaucrats, students, journalists, and businessmen
agitated for a united Germany that would bring with it uniform laws and a
single currency and that would replace the benighted absolutism of petty German
states with democracy. The revolutions of 1848 seemed at first likely to
realize this dream of unity and freedom, but the monarch who was offered the
crown of a united Germany, King Friedrich Wilhelm IV of Prussia, rejected it.
The king, like the other rulers of Germany's kingdoms, opposed German unity
because he saw it as a threat to his power.
Otto von Bismarck
Despite the opposition of conservative forces, German
unification came more than two decades later, in 1871, following the
Franco-Prussian War, when Germany was unified and transformed into an empire
under Emperor Wilhelm I, king of Prussia. Unification was brought about not by
revolutionary or liberal forces but rather by a conservative Prussian
aristocrat, Otto von Bismarck. Sensing the power of nationalism, Bismarck
sought to use it for his own aims, the preservation of a feudal social order
and the triumph of his country, Prussia, in the long contest with Austria for
preeminence in Germany. By a series of masterful diplomatic maneuvers and three
brief and dazzlingly successful military campaigns, Bismarck achieved a united
Germany without Austria. He brought together the so-called "small
Germany," consisting of Prussia and the remaining German states, some of
which had been subdued by Prussian armies before they became part of a Germany
ruled by a Prussian emperor.
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