<h2><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P390"></SPAN></span><SPAN name="chapLXI"></SPAN>LXI<br/> THE RISE OF GERMANY TO PREDOMINANCE IN EUROPE</h2>
<p>WE have told how after the convulsion of the French
Revolution and the Napoleonic adventure, Europe settled down
again for a time to an insecure peace and a sort of
modernized revival of the political conditions of fifty years
before. Until the middle of the century the new facilities
in the handling of steel and the railway and steamship
produced no marked political consequences. But the social
tension due to the development of urban industrialism grew.
France remained a conspicuously uneasy country. The
revolution of 1830 was followed by another in 1848. Then
Napoleon III, a nephew of Napoleon Bonaparte, became first
President, and then (in 1852) Emperor.</p>
<p>He set about rebuilding Paris, and changed it from a
picturesque seventeenth century insanitary city into the
spacious Latinized city of marble it is to-day. He set about
rebuilding France, and made it into a brilliant-looking
modernized imperialism. He displayed a disposition to revive
that competitiveness of the Great Powers which had kept
Europe busy with futile wars during the seventeenth and
eighteenth centuries. The Tsar Nicholas I of Russia (1825-
1856) was also becoming aggressive and pressing southward
upon the Turkish Empire with his eyes on Constantinople.</p>
<p>After the turn of the century Europe broke out into a fresh
cycle of wars. They were chiefly “balance-of-
power” and ascendancy wars. England, France and
Sardinia assailed Russia in the Crimean war in defence of
Turkey; Prussia (with Italy as an ally) and Austria fought
for the leadership of Germany, France liberated North Italy
from Austria at the price of Savoy, and Italy gradually
unified itself into one kingdom. Then Napoleon III was so
ill advised as to attempt adventures in Mexico, during the
American Civil War; he set up an Emperor Maximilian there and
abandoned him hastily to <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P391"></SPAN></span>his fate—he was shot by the
Mexicans—when the victorious Federal Government showed
its teeth.</p>
<div class="fig"> <SPAN name="img-391"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/img-391.jpg" alt="Map of Europe, 1848-1871" width-obs="600" height-obs="575" /></div>
<p>In 1870 came a long-pending struggle for predominance in
Europe between France and Prussia. Prussia had long foreseen
and prepared for this struggle, and France was rotten with
financial corruption. Her defeat was swift and dramatic.
The Germans invaded France in August, one great French army
under the Emperor capitulated at Sedan in September, another
surrendered in October at Metz, and in January 1871, Paris,
after a siege and bombardment, fell into German hands. Peace
was signed at Frankfort surrendering the provinces of Alsace
and Lorraine to the Germans. <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P392"></SPAN></span>Germany, excluding Austria, was
unified as an empire, and the King of Prussia was added to
the galaxy of European Cæsars, as the German Emperor.</p>
<p>For the next forty-three years Germany was the leading power
upon the European continent. There was a Russo-Turkish war
in 1877-8, but thereafter, except for certain readjustments
in the Balkans, European frontiers remained uneasily stable
for thirty years.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />