Saturday 3 May 2014

In what ways did the outbreak of World War I bring to an end government efforts to contain the socio-economic and political problems manifested in...

The scale and duration of fighting that characterized the Great War (later renamed World War I) precipitated the demise of the European monarchies that had successfully survived the tumultuous events of 1848, known variously as "the Revolutions of 1848," "the Spring of Nations," and "the Springtime of Peoples." The reformist and revolutionary movements the actions of which brought about the short-lived consent on the part of the monarchies to liberalize and improve the welfare of their subjects manifested themselves more definitively in the chaotic atmosphere of the Great War. Especially in Russia, where the February popular revolt against the reign of Czar Nicholas II would soon be followed by the Bolshevik Revolution that imposed a totalitarian political and economic system on the population, the effects of the war on European societies were profound. The Romanov Dynasty was thrown out, and the czar and members of his family executed as a symbol of the irreversibility of the revolution.

The dire economic conditions that radicalized many people across Europe, including high unemployment and food prices, all exacerbated by failed agricultural crops, combined with frustrations over life in dictatorships to increase popular resentments against the kings and queens who ruled from dynastic thrones. These frustrations reached the boiling point by 1848, and ruling regimes in countries like France, Russia, and Austria felt compelled to at least provide the chimera of political reform. The monarchies, however, were not inclined to give up as much power as the growing social movements demanded. As time went on, the gains of 1848 proved more and more ephemeral. The political machinations and miscalculations that precipitated World War I, with its years of costly--in blood and treasure--fighting and the provisions of the Treaty of Versailles marked the end of most European monarchies, and serious weakening of those that survived.  Defeated were the Ottoman and Austro-Hungarian Empires, and the success of the Bolshevik movement in Russia fundamentally altered the political dynamics across Europe for decades to come.


While most European governments involved in World War I were successful in appealing to the nationalistic sentiments common to most peoples, the insanity of trench warfare, the use of chemical weapons along the front lines, and the scale of casualties returning home in boxes or permanently maimed was too much for those already teetering governments to endure. The financial costs of the war broke the treasuries of all of the European governments, and the revolutionary sentiments emboldened by the weakening governments marked an end to the idea of monarchical government. The socioeconomic conditions that led to the Revolutions of 1848 gave the populations of Europe a taste of liberal reform, and the political landscape of the continent was changed forever. Real reform, not the image of it, was the expectation.

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