RY
OF THE
R] S
GUGGENBI
JOHN M. KEUY LIBRARY
Donated by
The Redemptorists of
the Toronto Province
from the Library Collection of
Holy Redeemer College, Windsor
University of
St. Michael's College, Toronto
HOLY REDEEMER LIBRARY,
oir
A GENERAL HISTORY
OF THE
CHRISTIAN ERA
FOR CATHOLIC COLLEGES AND READING CIRCLES,
AND FOR SELF-INSTRUCTION.
VOL. III.
THE SOCIAL REVOLUTION,
BY
A. GUGGENBERGER, S. J.
Professor of History at Canisius College, Buffalo, N. Y.
THIRD EDITION.
ST. LOUIS, MO., 1906.
PUBLISHED BY B. HERDER,
17 SOUTH BROADWAY.
•Nfbfl ©bstat.
JAMES A. ROCKLIFF, S. J.
Buffalo, N. r., Feb. 11, 1899.
Copyrighted 1899 by
JOSEPH GUMMERSBACB.
BECKTOLD
PRINTING AND BOOK MFG. CO.,
ST. LOUIS, MO.
ABBREVIATIONS IN THE LISTS OF BOOKS
FOR CONSULTATION.
A. C. Q. 9. SB American Catholic Quarterly. Vol. 9.
D. R. '79 ; 1, 2, 3, 4. = Dublin Review. 1879. January, April, July, October.
M. '78: 1, 2, 3. = Month. 1878. Jan.-April, May-Aug., Sept.-Dec.
St. 40. = Stimmen aus Maria Laach. Vol. 40.
I. Th. Z. '79. = Innsbruck Theologische Zeitschrift. 1879.
E. H. Q. 10; 1, 2, 3, 4. = English Historical Quarterly. Vol. 10. Jan.,
April, July, Oct.
E. R. '68; 1, 2, 3, 4. = Edinburgh Review. 1868. Jan., April, July, Oct.
Q. R. '91; 1, 2, 3, 4. = Quarterly Review (London). 1891. Jan., April,
July, Oct.
(3)
BOOK I.
CAUSES OF THE SOCIAL REVOLUTION.
CHAPTER I.
* THE HANOVERIAN SUCCESSION.
§ i.
THE HANOVERIAN OR PROTESTANT SUCCESSION IN ENGLAND.
1. Union of England and Scotland. — The Act of Settle-
ment, by which the crown of England was forever conferred on Sophia,
Electress of Hanover, the granddaughter of James I., and her issue,
had been passed in 1701. Three years later Scotland passed the
Act of Security which declared that, unless certain securities were
given for the religion, freedom and trade of Scotland, the Scotch
Parliament should, on the demise of Queen Anne, choose a king of
her own from among the Protestant descendants of the Stuarts. To
prevent this act from being carried into effect, a Parliamentary Union
of England and Scotland was effected ii). the second Parliament of
Queen Anne, 1707, though this union met with a strong opposition
in Scotland. The measure provided that Sophia and her Protestant
heirs should succeed to the crown of the united kingdom. Scotland
was to send sixteen elective Peers and forty-five Commoners to the
one Parliament of Great Britain. The Act of Union left the laws,
the legal administration and the Presbyterian kirk of Scotland un-
touched. The Union Jack, a combination of the crosses of St.
George and of St. Andrew, was adopted as the national flag of Great
Britain.
(5)
0 THE HANOVERIAN SUCCESSION.
2. Succession of George I., 1714-1727. —After the Peace of Utrecht,
the question of the English succession rose into greater prominence. The
health of Queen Anne was failing. The House of Commons was strongly
Tory, the House of Lords about equally divided between the two parties.
A large proportion of the Tories were Jacobites. In Scotland the dominant
sentiment of the Highlanders and the Episcopalians was Jacobite; but even
the Presbyterians of the Lowlands hated the union with England more than
the Catholic u Pretender." Nearly every leading statesman in England was
in correspondence with James III. Bolingbroke regarded the succession of
James as the only hope to save himself and the Tories from being ousted by
the Whigs, who all belonged to the Hanover party. Many civil and military
offices were consequently filled by the leading ministers with Jacobites ; the
government of Scotland was given to the Jacobite Earl of Mar. Queen
Anne had no sympathy for Sophia and the Elector of Hanover. Troubled in
conscience by the part she had taken in dethroning her father, she secretly
favored the succession of her exiled brother. The hesitation which the
Earl of Oxford betrayed in furthering the cause of James III. led to his
dismissal from office.
The succession to the throne of his fathers would surely have
fallen to James III. had he but complied with the one essential con-
dition demanded by all his Protestant adherents : his consent to
change or at least dissemble his Catholic faith. But with a mag-
nanimity that may be called heroic, he steadily refused this consent,
though he was ready to grant toleration to Protestants. His invari-
able answer was : "I neither want counsel nor advice to remain
unalterable in my fixed resolution of never dissembling my religion ;
but rather shall I abandon all than act against my conscience and
honor, cost what it will."
Such was the state of things when, on the day following Oxford's
dismissal, the queen's disease suddenly took a fatal turn. The Privy
Council was at once summoned, Argyle, Somerset and Shrewsbury,
three champions of the Protestant succession, took the management
of affairs into their hands, before the Jacobites could recover from
their bewilderment at the sudden change. The queen died August 1,
1714, and the Elector of Hanover was proclaimed as George I.
without opposition.
•v
3. Whig Policy. — Qeorge I. dismissed nearly all the Tories
from office and appointed a Whig ministry. The cabinet now
became still more independent of the sovereign than in the former
THE HANOVERIAN SUCCESSION IN ENGLAND. 7
reign, as George, who could not speak English, absented himself
from its meetings, an example which was followed by all subsequent
English kings. In the new Parliament, chosen 1715, the Whigs had
the majority in both houses. And indeed, Whig government was
indispensable for securing the stability of the Hanoverian succession.
All the measures adopted by the Whigs tended to make their success
permanent.
4. The Rising of the Earl of Mar, 1715-16. — The first
measure passed by the Whigs was the impeachment of the Tory
leaders as traitors on account of the secret agreements which they
had made with Louis XIV. during the peace negotiations. Oxford
was sentenced to two years imprisonment. Bolingbroke and Ormond
fled to France and were attainted in England. These proceedings
again swelled the ranks of the Jacobites. Everywhere the people
were ready to rise against George who had managed to make himself
unpopular in a very short time. The Earl of Mar rose in Scotland.
He was met by Argyle at Sheriff muir. Each commander-in-chief led
the right wing of his own army. The result was, that each right
wing was victorious , each left wing defeated. Argyle, however, main-
tained the field. At the same time the English Jacobites surrendered
at Preston without a battle. The landing of James III. in December,
1715, and his entry in Dundee could not save the lost cause, as the
death of Louis XIV. in the same year had deprived the pretender of
foreign aid, and the Whigs had all the resources of the government
at their disposal. In 1716 James Edward sailed back to France.
5. Change of Foreign Policy. — The second means adopted
by the Whigs to secure permanent power was a reversal of their
foreign policy. In France Philip, Duke of Orleans (1715—1723),
who set the boy king and the country an example of the most shame-
less debauchery, was Regent for the sickly Louis XV. In case of
Louis' death the crown, according to the Peace of Utrecht, was to
devolve upon the Regent. The only menace to his succession was
the intention, with which Philip V. of Spain was credited, of claim-
ing the French crown in spite of the Peace of Utrecht. This would
have led to another European war. Consequently the Regent con-
cluded a treaty with England and Holland which guaranteed the
8 THE HANOVERIAN SUCCESSION.
order of succession in France and England, and banished James III.
from French soil. Thus it happened, that in the new order of things
the Whigs and not the Tories, were the advocates of peace, and that
France upheld the Protestant succession which Louis XIV. had so
strenuously opposed.
6. The Septennial Act, 1716. — A third measure favorable
to the Whigs was the Septennial Act, under which future Parliaments
were to sit seven instead of three years. The present Parliament
thus prolonged its own duration for four years.
7. Administration of Walpole, 1721-1742. —The Whigs were further
strengthened by Robert Walpole's financial ability. The period of war had
been followed by a period of commercial speculation. Joint-stock com-
panies sprang up on every side. The most prominent among them, the
South Sea Company, was founded by Harley in 1711 for trading with
Spanish America. Swindlers, politicians, ministers of State, vied with each
other to raise the value of shares which were worthless in themselves.
The same popular infatuation raged in France (1718-20), where a Scotch-
man, John Law, founded the Royal Bank in connection with the Louisiana
Company, and issued notes to the amount of 3,000,000,000 francs. The
sudden collapse of the bank and the company in France led to the bursting
of the South Sea bubble in England, an event which beggared thousands
of families among all classes. Amidst the general crash Walpole was
appointed First Lord of the Treasury and Chancellor of the Exchequer.
By his clever devices the shareholders were saved at least a portion of their
property. What with the credit he obtained for allaying the financial panic,
and what with the unblushing bribery resorted to in electing Whig members
and in managing them after election, Walpole maintained himself in office
for twenty-one years. His administration (1721-1742) nearly ran parallel
with that of Cardinal Fleury in France (1726-1743). Walpole was the first
who had the power, if not the name, of Prime Minister in an English cab-
inet. Both under George I. and George II. every minister was dismissed
who questioned Walpole's authority. Henceforth it was the rule that the
First Lord of the Treasury, who had to find the revenues expended by the
other ministers, should be Prime Minister. Walpole's policy of "peace
abroad and doing nothing at home " was successful. He chose his meas-
ures, not for their wisdom or justice, but for their expediency. He was
convinced that every man has his price, and acted upon this conviction.
Since the Revolution of 1688, public morality had sunk lower and lower.
Walpole's administration fell in with a time of religious indiffereutism and
skepticism, of unconcealed vice from the court downward, of drunkenness
among the higher classes, of general venality and unscrupulous money-
DQaking.
PENAL LAWS AGAINST CATHOLICS IN IRELAND.
8. Death of George I. — George II., 1727-176O. —
George I. squandered his income on Hanoverian favorites. In 1727
he went over sea to enjoy himself in Hanover. On his way to Osna-
brueck he got a stroke of apoplexy and died in his carriage. His
son and successor, George II., had the advantage over his father of
speaking the English tongue. In difficulties he allowed himself to
be guided by the sound judgment of his wife, Queen Caroline, the
steady friend and protectress of Walpole.
The Electress Sophia on the Hanov. Succession. E. H. R. 1, 3. — Lord Mahon: Hist.
of Eng. 1701-13. — E. E. Morris : The Age of Anne. — Mackinon : The Union of England
and Scotland.— Const. Histories of Engl. — MacCarthy and Thackeray: The Four
Georges. — Lives of Walpole by: Dobson; Haywood (Emin. Statesmen); Scott (Biog-
raphies) ; Macaulay (Essays) ; Seeley ; Morley. — W. E. H. Lecky : A Hist, of Engl. in
the 18th Century, v. 1. ch. 1-3. Settlement of the Hanov. Succ. in Onno Klopp (House of
Stuart), vol. 14.
PENAL LAWS AGAINST CATHOLICS IN IRELAND.
9. The Penal Code. — The penal code, which began under
William III., received its worst features under Anne and was largely
extended under the first two Georges. It was entirely unprovoked
by any active disloyalty on the part of the Catholics, either in Eng-
land or in Ireland. Its statutes poisoned all official, social, com-
mercial and private relations between Catholics and Protestants, even
the most sacred domestic relations in Catholic families. It aimed
at nothing less than the complete extirpation of the Catholic faith
in Ireland.
10. Laws About Religious Worship. — All Catholic archbishops, bishops,
deans, vicars-general, all Jesuits, friars and unregistered priests were
ordered to leave the country, uuder penalty of being imprisoned on the
first offense, banished on the second, and hung, disemboweled and quar-
tered on the third. Under the law of 1703 a parish priest who had registered
his name, his parish and other particulars, and had taken the oath of allegi-
ance, could celebrate Mass, but only in his parish. He was not allowed to
have a curate. No steeple, bell or cross was to indicate the place and time
of worship. Pilgrimages were punished with fines and lashes. A Catholic
who induced a Protestant to join his faith, suffered the penalties of Prae-
munire. Under the law of 1709, every registered priest had to take, in addi-
tion to the oath of allegiance, the oath of abjuration, declaring that James
10 THE HANOVERIAN SUCCESSION.
III. had no right and title whatever to the crown, and approving " heartily,
freely and willingly," the justice of the Revolution and of an exclusively
Protestant succession. No self-respecting Catholic could take this oath.
The authorities of the church declared it sinful. Only thirty-three registered
priests, it is said, took this oath. A reward of SQL was offered for the
detection of a Catholic dignitary, 201. for a priest, and 10Z. for a teacher.
Two justices of the peace might compel any Catholic above 18 years of age
to disclose any particular which had come to his knowledge about priests,
the celebration of Mass, or Catholic schools; if he refused to answer he
was to be imprisoned for a year. Neglect in executing the provisions of
this law on the part of the magistrates entailed a fine of 100Z., one half to
go to the informer. Thus in a purely Catholic country, Catholic Bishops
and priests were obliged to live in obscure hovels, under feigned names,
moving continually from place to place, and meeting their flock under the
shadow of night, in caverns or among the mountains.
11. Laws as to Civil Bights. — Irish Catholics were forbidden to sit in
the Irish Parliament, to vote at elections or to serve on grand juries. They
were excluded from the army, from the navy, from the town corporations,
from the magistracies, from the bench, from the bar. from every government
office, high or low. Their houses might be ransacked at any time in search
of arms. Except in the linen trade, no Catholic could have more than two
apprentices. No Catholic could possess a horse worth more than 51. Any
Protestant offering that sum, could appropriate the horse of his Catholic
neighbor. Popish horses could be attached and seized for the militia.
12. Laws Prohibiting Catholic Education. — The laws on Catholic edu-
cation amounted to universal, unlimited, unqualified proscription. A Cath-
olic could not attend a University, nor be the guardian of a child, nor a
schoolmaster, nor a private tutor. Catholic parents could not send their
children to be educated abroad. Since 1733 the only schools supported by
public funds for Catholics were Protestant proselytizing schools.
13. Laws Affecting Property. — No Catholic was allowed to buy or
inherit, or will land or receive it as a gift from Protestants. No Catholic
could hold life annuities, or leases for more than 31 years. If by skill or
industry he increased his profits so as to exceed a certain rate fixed by law,
and at the same time failed to increase his rent, the farm was to belong to the
first Protestant who made the discovery. If a Catholic secretly purchased
his own forfeited estates, or any other land in the possession of a Protest-
ant, the first Protestant informer against him became the proprietor.
14. Laws Affecting Domestic Life. — Still worse were the laws intended
to sow discord and insubordination in Catholic families. The eldest son of
a Catholic who would turn Protestant, was to succeed to the family estate,
which from that moment could no longer be sold or charged with debt or
PENAL LAWS AGAINST CATHOLICS IN IRELAND. 11
legacy. If a child, however young, declared himself a Protestant, he was
to be immediately taken from his Catholic parents, and delivered to the
custody of a Protestant relative. The Court of Chancery could make out
an allowance for the maintenance of the son from the father's property at
the court's discretion. In like manner a wife who apostatized, was imme-
diately freed from the husband's control and assigned a certain portion of
her husband's property. No Protestant could marry a Catholic without
incurring all the disabilities of the penal code ; any priest who blessed such
a marriage was to be hanged. Some of the most outrageous acts, however,
of the Irish Parliament were shelved by Walpole.
15. Walpole's Power Waning. — Walpole's power began to
wane when, for a bitter quarrel with his father, Frederic Prince of
Wales had been banished from court. He placed himself at the
head of the opposition against Walpole. Still more disastrous for
the latter was the death of Queen Caroline, his steadfast friend.
Public opinion, roused by Spain's resistance to English smuggling in
America, forced Walpole against his inclination into a naval war with
Spain. The opposition charged Walpole with the poor success of
his desultory warfare. He resigned in 1742 and was transferred to
the House of Lords as Earl of Orford.
Lecky: v. 1, ch. 2, pp. 289-324. — H. Parnell: Penal Laws ag. the Irish Catholics from
the Treaty of Limerick to the Union. — Penal Laws, E. R.,1803. 4. Th. Burke: English
Misrule in Ireland. — Th<§baud, 8. J. : The Irish Race. — Madden : Hist. Notice of Penal
Laws ag. Rom. Cath. — A. Perraud: Ireland and English Rule. — W. Cunningham:
Repression of Woolen Manufact. in Ireland: E. H. It. 1, 2.
CHAPTER II.
THE MAKING OF RUSSIA.
§ i.
PETER THE GREAT.
16. The House of Romanow, 1613-1762. — Whilst the
western nations of Europe were fighting over the Spanish succes-
sion, a new power in the East began to make itself felt in the coun-
cils of the West. Muscovy, as Russia was still called, was more
Asiatic than European. The invasion and supremacy of the Tar-
tars had withdrawn Russia from Western influences. Gradually,
however, one State after the other was freed from the Mongol yoke
and annexed by the Grand Dukes of Moscow, the descendants of
Ruric. By breaking up the ancient nobility for a time, Ivan the
Terrible, 1533-84, created the Russian state, an equal people under
an absolute Czar. In spite of his excessive cruelties against the
boyars or nobles, Ivan was popular among the masses of the people.
With Feodor, the son of Ivan the Terrible, the House of Ruric
became extinct in 1598. A new dynasty, the House of Romanow,
related to the House of Ruric, emerged from the frightful anarchy
and civil war, the " Troublous Time," which followed the death of
Feodor.
17. Changes of Government. — During the reign of Feodor, the
son of Alexis, 1676-82, his accomplished and ambitious sister Sophia
was the soul of the government. After Feodor 's death the nobles
proclaimed Peter, a boy of healthy and vigorous frame, Czar over his
elder half brother, the sickly and weak-minded Ivan. But after a
series of bloody riots, the Strelitzes, the hereditary national guard
organized by Ivan the Terrible, proclaimed Ivan as the Czar first in
rank, and Sophia as regent, during the minority of the two princes.
Ruling at first in the name of the Czars, Sophia finally assumed not
only the power, but also the name of " autocrat," or self -ruler.
(12)
PETER THE GREAT. 13
A plot gotten up presumably by Sophia against Peter's life, induced
him to surround his person by an army or body guard, to execute
some and banish others of her adherents, and to send her into a
monastery. At the death of Ivan, 1696, Peter became the sole ruler
of all Russia.
18. Education of Czar Peter and His First Undertakings. — Peter spent
his boyhood at a village near Moscow with fifty companions in military exer-
cises under the direction of General Gordon, a Catholic Scotchman. He
studied some modern languages, and learned fourteen trades, his favorite
occupation being boat-building. In 1 690 he entered into closer friendship with
Gordon, Lefort of Geneva, and many other foreigners, who aided him in his
far reaching reforms. His Russian advisers he chose from the companions
of his boyhood. In 1695 he launched his first vessel at Archangel, in the
White Sea, the only Russian harbor of those days. For the siege of Azow,
1696, he built the first flotilla with which he drove the Turkish fleet to sea.
After the reduction of Azow he began the building of a merchant fleet for
the Black Sea. From Azow his generals extended their conquests along the
shores of the Sea of Azow.
19. First Journey to Western Europe, 1697-98. — In 1697 and 98 Czar
Peter made his first journey through western Europe. He traveled in dis-
guise as an attendant to a numerous embassy, to conclude commercial treaties,
to seek allies against Turkey, to study western customs, laws and religious
affairs, and to become an accomplished shipwright. In Holland he worked
in the ship yards like any other mechanic. From England he sent a large
number of artists and artisans to Russia. A new rising of the Strelitzes
hastened his return. He at once inflicted bloody punishment on the Strelitzes
and dissolved their organization.
20. Reforms, 17OO-1711. — In his steady aim to make Russia European,
Czar Peter began to make his reforms with externals. Beards had to be
shaved under penalty of heavy fines. A government pattern was prescribed
for articles of clothing. Young Russians were sent to foreign parts for
their education. The women were drawn from their oriental seclusion to
mingle more freely with society. The unwieldy Russian money was
replaced by copper, silver and gold coin. An official nobility divided into
fourteen grades, took the place of the ancient hereditary nobility. All per-
sons of noble birth had to enter military or naval service for twenty-five
years. Distinction in the Empire could be obtained by service only. No
one could be granted a higher grade without previously passing through the
lower ones. Czar Peter himself voluntarily began his service in the ranks.
In his war with Charles XII. he served as captain. At Pultowa he acted as
colonel; after that victory he was installed as marshal by his commander -
in-chief. The army was reorganized after the European pattern, and in the
earlier years of his reign, was almost exclusively officered by foreigners.
14 THE MAKING OF RU88IA.
To encourage immigration, foreigners were granted freedom of worship
(except the Jews), and placed under the jurisdiction of special courts of
foreigners, who conducted their proceedings according to the Common Law.
21. Administration, 17OO-1718. — Czar Peter divided Russia into ten
governments and forty-three provinces.
The inland governors had limited, those of frontier governments general
powers, both civil and military. The provinces were ruled by Woiwods
who were also the supreme judges of the province. Appeals from them
could be taken to the Departments or Colleges at St. Petersburg or to the
Imperial courts in the larger cities. The Secret Chancery was a kind of
Police Department intrusted with the trial of criminals and delinquents.
In this department vast numbers of men and women were continually on
the rack for real or imaginary crimes, frequently for some chance word or
misinterpreted expression, or upon the denunciation of some personal
enemy; for even anonymous denunciations were followed by rigid investi-
gation, and every investigation, whether it showed guilt or innocence, was
attended by inhuman tortures. An official called "revenue-finder" raised
taxes on all conceivable objects; the mining industry was alone exempt.
Spies and informers, popularly called "fiscals," were kept busy in every
department by the reward which they received of one half the penalties.
The condition of the common people was and remained that of serfdom.
The Departments as reorganized in 1717, consisted of the following Col-
leges : Foreign Affairs, Revenues, Expenditure, Control, Justice (including
internal affairs), War, Admiralty, Commerce, Mines, and Manufactures.
A Senate composed of nine boyars was the highest administrative author-
ity. It exercised jurisdiction over the nobility, nominated candidates for
offices, supervised the work of the lower officials, and accepted and disposed
of petitions.
In spite of the elaborate machinery of administration and supervision,
Peter was unable to eradicate the national sin of stealing. His reign is filled
with investigations of officials, from the lowest to the highest, for bribery,
% peculation and dishonesty.
22. Ecclesiastical Reforms.— There existed in Russia 557 (schismatical)
monasteries and convents. The monastic clergy in 1700 owned as many as
130,000 peasants' houses. In 1725 it was ascertained that 151 monasteries
possessed 242,108 male serfs. The new Department of Monasteries took
charge, i. e., confiscated all this monastic property, and in return paid an
annual pension of 10 rubles (20 dollars, later 5 rubles), and a certain amount
of grain and wood to each inmate of a monastery.
The Patriarchate of Moscow was abolished in 1721. When the last
Patriarch died, Peter left the see vacant. To the appeals of the clergy he
answered: " I will be your Patriarch." In its place he founded the Holy
Synod, whose members were appointed by the Czar himself. A secular
official, usually an officer of the army, presided over the synod.
PETER THE GREAT. 15
Czar Peter was indefatigable in promoting commerce, industry and secu-
lar education. He founded numerous schools and educational institutes,
especially military and naval schools and colleges for engineers. His great-
est foundation is the Russian Academy of Sciences. Very little was done
for the education of the clergy.
23. Discontent and Popular Uprisings, 17OO-171O. — The Reforms of
Czar Peter, the new taxes, the endless conscriptions and the cruelties of his
government caused wide-spread discontent. The simple and uneducated
people looked on Peter as a monster, a tyrant, an apostate to the " German
faith." as bewitched by foreigners. Popular stories circulated that Peter
was not the son of Czar Alexis, but a German changeling; that the Germans
had nailed up the real Czar, when a child, in a cask, and thrown him into
the sea. The religious -minded beheld in him the veritable antichrist.
Popular risings took place in different parts of the Empire, especially in the
southern and middle provinces ; after an uprising in Astrachan 365 men were
executed. A rising on the Volga cost the Russians over 300 villages burnt,
and 15,000 persons killed or dragged into captivity. The disaffected naturally
looked to the Czarewitch Alexis, the son of his imprisoned wife Eudoxia,
for relief. Never loved by his father, Alexis had been criminally neglected
in his youth. Fear of his father made him flee to Austria. But Peter's
agents discovered his places of concealment in the Tyrol and in Naples, and
took him back to Petersburg. His father tried him for treason. Though it
was impossible to convict him of conspiracy he was thrown into prison,
where he died, probably in consequence of the torture to which he had been
subjected. A few bishops, many nobles and other persons, were cruelly
executed or banished to Siberia.
24. Character and life of Czar Peter. — Peter had two wives, the one in
prison, the other on the throne. The reigning consort was a Livonian
captive who had assumed the name of Catharine. With all his reforms
Peter remained an educated barbarian, grossly immoral, coarse in his habits
and given to violent outbursts of anger when under the influence of liquor.
These faults were, in part, due to the corrupting influence to which his
youth was purposely exposed by those who wished to destroy him. Ex-
tremes were united in him. He possessed great energy and capacity for
work and a passionate desire to raise the Russian people to a higher state.
He put himself at the head of the Greek church which he found in existence,
because it would not lend itself to his great reforms. If serfdom was not
abolished, if no concession of popular liberty softened his autocracy, it must
bij conceded that the Russian people were not ripe for such concessions.
Books for Con snltation: — Pember : Ivan the Terrible.— Peter the Great, Lives by :
Abbott; Browning; BrUckner, (Peter der Grosse); Motley ; Schuyler; \Valiszuw.-ki;
Wight.— Segur: Hist, of Russia and Peter the Or. — Bain: Pupils of Peter the Gr.— The
Russian Church, its Hist, and Present Organization: D. R. '81. 2. — Arndt : Die Russ. Kirche
durch Peter (Jen Grossen. I. Th. Z. 1894. — Peter the Great: K. R. '98. 2. Gen. Patrick
Gordon: E. R. '5(5. 3. — Obolenski Posselt: Diary of Gen. Gordon.
16 THE MAKING OF KUSSIA.
THE GREAT NORTHERN WAR, 1700-1721.
25. Causes. — The making of Russia was intimately connected
with the Northern War. John Reinhold Patkul, a Livonian noble-
man, whose hatred of Sweden dated from the time when Charles XI.
abolished the privileges of the nobility, made it the object of his
life to stir up enemies against Sweden. In 1698 he proposed to
Augustus II., Elector of Saxony and King of Poland, a coalition of
Poland, Denmark and Russia against Sweden. In 1699 Peter
signed a secret treaty with Augustus II. for a general war of con-
quest at the expense of Sweden. The Czar was to obtain a por-
tion of the Baltic sea-board, Augustus was to annex Livonia to
Poland. Frederick IV. of Denmark, who had a quarrel with the
Duke of Holstein-Gottorp, the friend and brother-in-law of Charles
XII., joined the Northern League. The allies presumed on the
youth and inexperience of Charles XII.
26. Charles XII., King of Sweden, 1697-1718. — Charles XII. was in
his sixteenth year, when the four estates of Sweden (nobles, clergy, bur-
ghers and peasants), asked him to assume the government. The first years
of his reign were years of riotous pranks and hair-breadth escapes in the
wildest sports. But the moment he was faced by a real enemy, he mani-
fested the fully-developed character of a man. He had a high sense of
honor and justice, was religious in his own way, rigidly moral and abste-
mious, and possessed of indomitable courage. He loved war not for the
sake of gain, but for the excitement of battle. But he was headstrong
almost to madness, and implacable in his hate. When he received news
that Livonia was invaded, he declared to his council : " I have resolved
never to begin an unjust war, but also never to end a just war before I have
conquered my foes."
27. Danish War, 17OO. — In 1700 a Danish force entered Hoi-
stein, a Saxon army invaded Livonia, without a declaration of war,
and Czar Peter proceeded to besiege the Esthonian fortress of Narva
with 40,000 Russians. Charles XII. coolly remarked : " I will first
finish with one, then talk with the other." Charles began with Den-
mark. On July 24 he landed on Zealand and marched to Copen-
hagen ; on August 18 the King of Denmark was compelled to sign
the Peace of Travendal, to quit the Northern Alliance, to pay an
indemnity and to acknowledge the rights of the Duke of Holstein.
THE GEE AT NORTHERN WAR. 17
28. The Battle of Narva, 17OO. — Czar Peter's turn came next.
In spite of the stormy season Charles XII. crossed, in October, to the
Gulf of Riga, and landed an army of 8,000 Swedes. The sudden
appearance of the enemy and the rapid attack on the fortified camp of
Narva threw the Russians into the greatest confusion and panic. In a
quarter of an hour the trenches were taken, in three hours the Rus-
sians were hopelessly routed. The fame of Charles XII. soon rang
all over Europe.
«
29. The War in Poland, 17O1-17O5. — The contempt for the
Russians which the easy victory of Narva bred in Charles' mind, and
his personal feeling of hostility for Augustus II. as the primary mover
of the hostile alliance, induced Charles XII. to turn against his third
foe. By this move he gave time and opportunity to his most dan-
gerous enemy, Czar Peter, to reorganize his army and to build his
new capital on Swedish soil. The battle of Riga, the expulsion of
the Saxons from Livonia, and the invasion of Poland in 1701 ; the
occupation of Warsaw, the battle of Clissow and the taking of Cracow
in 1702 ; the battle of Pultusk in 1703, the taking of Lemberg in
1704 ; the Saxon rout at Fraustadt in 1705 and other successes
mark the triumphant progress of Charles' armies.
The Republic of Poland had taken no part in the war. Augustus fought
with the men and resources of his own hereditary Saxony. Charles XII.
wanted no war but friendship with Poland, but he refused to listen to any
proposition of treating with Augustus; he would be satisfied with nothing
less than his dethronement. This demand as coming from a foreign sov-
ereign, split Poland into two portions or Associations. The Association of
Warsaw (Shrod) deposed Augustus and chose Stanislaus Lesczinski, King of
Poland, at the bidding of Charles XII. He was crowned at Warsaw, not by
the Primate of Poland, but by the Archbishop of Lemberg, 1705. The
Association of Sandomir, comprising the majority of the Polish nobles,
rejected the validity of the coronation and supported Augustus II.
3D. The Invasion of Saxony and the Peace of Alt-Ran-
stadt, 1706. —By the end of 1705 Charles XII. had thoroughly
cleared Poland of the Saxons and their Russian auxiliaries. He now
invaded and overran all Saxony, leaving Poland to become the
camping ground of the Russians. Augustus II. found himself finally
compelled to conclude the Peace of Alt-Ranstadt, in which he re-
2
18 THE MAKING OF RUSSIA.
signed the crown of Poland, recognized King Stanislaus, and re-
nounced his alliance with Czar Peter. Saxony had to house, feed
and pay the Swedish army for an indefinite time. Augustus was
allowed to retain the simple title of King, but had personally to con-
gratulate Stanislaus on his elevation. Patkul was given up to Charles
XII. and, by his command, broken on the wheel. Charles was now
at the height of his power without having demanded from his con-
quered enemies a foot of land for himself.
31. Foundation of St. Petersburg, 17O3-1718. — Whilst
Charles was pushing his campaign of revenge in Poland and Saxony,
Czar Peter with an increased and reorganized army conquered the
Swedish province of Ingria (Ingermanland), and thus reached the
Baltic shore. Here on one of the marshy islands formed by the
branches of the Neva, he laid the foundation of his new capital, St.
Petersburg, at a reckless sacrifice of life and labor. To protect his
new city he built the fortress of Cronstadt on an island which faces
the mouth of the Neva. It was not before 1718, however, when
Petersburg numbered 40,000 buildings, that the last government
offices were removed from Moscow to the new capital. — In 1704 the
Russians took Narva, and overran Esthonia, Livonia and Curland in
1705, and Poland in 1706.
32. Pultowa and its Consequences, 17O8-17O9. — Late in
1707 Charles set out from Saxony, drove his enemies from Lithuania,
and entered Russia at Mohelew. His idea was to dethrone the Czar,
whom his reforms had made very unpopular among the conservative
Russians. But instead of marching directly upon Moscow as he was
strongly advised to do, he entered into negotiations with Mazeppa,
the Hetman of the Cossacks, with a view of marching southward to the
Ukraine.
The Cossacks were originally free military colonies for the defense of
the frontiers against Tartar invasions. The Cossacks of Ukraine, the
borderland of Little or Southern Russia, lived in towns, and recognized
the Polish, and since 1654 the Russian authority. They enjoyed special
privileges over the inland inhabitants. They were ruled by a chief called
Hetman. The Zaporovian Cossacks (za poroghi — beyond the cataracts,
sc. of the Dnieper) were a kind of military brotherhood. Their system of
life made adherence to the Greek schism, celibacy and a martial spirit,
CLOSE OF THE NORTHERN WAR. 19
obligatory. Many Cossacks of the towns joined the Zaporovians only for
a number of years. By the end of the sixteenth century the Zaporovians
numbered 20-30,000 braves. Owing a nominal allegiance to the Hetman,
they were practically independent.
Charles marched to the Ukraine without waiting for a second
Swedish army of 14,000 men who were ordered to join him with
provisions. But this army of relief never reached him. It was
routed by the Russians, the provisions were captured, and thus the
main army suffered fearfully from the difficulties of the march and
the terrible winter of 1708-1709. On arriving in the Ukraine,
Charles found Mazeppa deposed for treason and deserted by the
town Cossacks, whilst the Zaporovians had been beaten and scattered
by a Russian army. Only 1500 Cossacks under Mazeppa joined
him. With these and his own reduced army he began the siege of
Pultowa in May, 1709. The siege gave Czar Peter time to concen-
trate his troops near Pultowa. Though short of ammunition, and
with an army but one fourth that of the enemy, Charles resolved to
give battle. Suffering from a wound he was carried in a litter into
the thick of the fight ; but notwithstanding the desperate bravery of his
troops, nearly the whole Swedish army was destroyed or captured,
. and subsequently distributed through the Russian provinces. With a
mere handful of followers Charles escaped to Bender on Turkish soil.
The battle of Pultowa broke Sweden's supremacy in the north, and
enabled Russia to extend her boundaries from Finland and the Polar
Sea to the Caspian and Black Seas.
Charles XII. Lives by Alberg; Bain, (Heroes of the Nations); Treyxell; Wilson,
(Illustrious Soldiers). —Bain: Charles XII. and the Collapse of the Sivedish Empire.—
Crichton: Scandinavia, Ancient and Moderns—Sir E. S. Creasy: Hist, of the Ottoman
Turks. — Onno Klopp in : Fall des Hauses Stuart, Vol. 11-14.
§ 3.
CLOSE OF THE NORTHERN WAR AND TREATIES OF PEACE.
33. Russian War with Turkey, 171O. — Unwilling to return
home by way of Hungary and Germany, Charles remained at Bender
as the guest of the Sultan, and ruled his northern kingdom by corre-
spondence from the most southern country of Europe. During his
absence Stanislaus and the Swedish troops withdrew to Pomerania, and
20 THE MAKING OF RUSSIA.
*
Augustus re-entered Poland as King. The alliance between Russia,
Saxony and Denmark was renewed. Czar Peter, 1710, attacked Fin-
land, conquered Riga and the whole of Livonia and Esthonia for him-
self and occupied Curland. Jealousy of Peter's growing power in-
duced the Sultan to listen to the passionate appeals of his lively guest,
Charles XII., and to declare war against Russia, 1710. Czar Peter
secretly allied himself with the Hospadars or governors of Moldavia
and Wallachia, and marched with 40,000 men to the river Pruth.
Here he was betrayed by the Wallachian hospadar and, surrounded
by 200,000 Turks and Tartars, he was on the eve of falling with his
whole army into Turkish captivity. But bribery saved him. With the
jewels and moneys hastily gathered in the camp, he purchased a peace
from the Grand Vizier by which he restored Azow and all his con-
quests on the Sea of Azow to Turkey, and granted to Charles XII.
free passage through Russia or Poland. The King of Sweden indig-
nantly rejected this concession. But as his presence in Turkey be-
came, in course of time, a menace to the peace of the Pruth, Charles
in 1713 was invited to leave the country.
34. Return of Charles XII., 1714. — On his return to the north Czar
Peter suppressed the last opposition to Augustus II. in Poland and then
joined his allies in Pomerania, where the last Swedish army, after winning
two victories over the Danes, was disarmed by the Russians and Saxons.
To save her possessions in Germany, Sweden confided them to the safe-
keeping of Prussia as a neutral power, until peace should be made. This
arrangement met with the approval of the allies, but was rejected with indig-
nation by Charles, who was still at Bender. Thereupon Frederic William
I. of Prussia, the successor of Frederic I., joined the Northern Alliance,
1714. George I. of England, as Elector of Hanover, did the same to get
Bremen and Verden as his share from Sweden's dismemberment. Such was
the development of affairs when suddenly Charles stood before Stralsund.
It had taken 10,000 Turkish soldiers and a hand-to-hand fight through all the
rooms to dislodge him with his 400 followers from his dwellings in Bender.
Prussia asked him to refund the expenses for keeping his Pomeranian for-
tresses. He refused, and Prussia now actively co-operated in the cam-
paign. In 1715 Sweden lost Stralsund, and in 1716 the rest of her German
possessions.
35. Last Years' of Charles XII. — Charles now made new
efforts to punish his enemies. His plan included the conquest of
Norway, which belonged to Denmark, the reoccupation of Pomerania
CLOSE OF THE NORTHERN WAR. 21
and Poland, the invasion of England, and the restoration of the
Stuarts to chastise George I., for joining the hostile alliance. For
this purpose Baron Goertz, his new minister, who was as heartily
hated by the Swedish nobles as he was favored by the King, nego-
tiated not only a peace but an alliance between Charles XII. and
Czar Peter. From 1716— 18, Charles undertook three expeditions
into Norway. At the siege of Fredericshall the bullet, probably of
a conspirator, put an end to his far-reaching plans. The Swedish
nobles at once reasserted all the privileges which Charles XI. had
abolished. In raising Charles' sister, Ulrica Eleonora, to the throne,
the Council of State left her but a shadow of the former power, which
was still further restricted, when in 1720 she transferred the govern-
ment to her husband, Frederic of Hesse-Cassel.
36. Treaties of Peace, 1719-1721. — The Council of State
broke off the negotiations with Czar Peter, and condemned Baron
Goertz to death. It then made peace with George I., as Elector of
Hanover, *who retained Bremen and Verden by paying 1,000,000
thalers to Sweden, 1719. Prussia received Stettin and western
Pomerania with a few islands, and paid 2,000,000 thalers (1720).
Denmark restored all her conquests except Schleswig, and received
commercial advantages and an indemnity of 600,000 rix-dollars.
With Poland a truce concluded 1719 was prolonged indefinitely.
Augustus was recognized as King of Poland. Stanislaus retained
the royal title and received an indemnification in money. With Czar
Peter, who meanwhile, had harassed the Swedish coasts, Sweden con-
cluded the Peace of Ny stadt , 1721. Sweden ceded Livonia , E sthonia ,
Ingria, part of Carelia and a number of islands to Russia, while
Russia restored Finland to Sweden and paid 2,000,000 rix-dollars.
Having thus made Russia the leading power of the north at the
expense of Sweden, Czar Peter assumed the title of Emperor, and
was henceforth called Peter the Great.
Other Books for Consultation: — Morflll: Russia; Story of Russia. — M.
Kroalewski: Modern Customs and Ancient Laws of Russia, — Leroy-Beaulieu: The
Empire of the Tsars and the Russians (transl. by Eagozin;. — Histories of Russia, by
Ustrlalow; Kelly; Rambaud, — H. S. Edwards: The Romanoffs. — E. E. Morris: Age of
Queen Anne. — Burton: Hist, of Anne's Reign. — Crlchton : Scandinavia, Ancient and
Modern. — Hermann: Geschichte des russ. Staates. — Sarauw, Feldziige Karls XII.—
Gfrcerer: Geschichte des 18ten Jahrh.
22 THE MAKING OF RUSSIA.
f*.
CHANGES IN THE TREATIES OF CARLOWITZ, OF THE PRUTH,
AND OF UTRECHT.
37. Russian Affairs. — A law of Peter the Great issued in 1722 empow-
ered the reigning Czar to appoint his own successor. As Peter died with-
out naming a successor, his consort, Catharine , aided by Peter's favorite,
Mentchicow, ascended the imperial throne, 1725-27. She was followed
under her will by the boy Czar, Peter II., 1727-30. His instructor, Oster-
mann, and Prince Dolgoruky sent Mentchicow, the regent, to Siberia. At
Peter's early death Anna Ivanovna was proclaimed Empress. She banished
Dolgoruky and appointed Ostermann minister of foreign affairs and Mun-
nich minister of war. These two eminent foreigners were the souls of the
administration. Unfortunately her incapable favorite Biron (Biihren of
Curland) obtained a great influence in the government. Anna's reign,
1730-40, was marked by two wars, that of the Polish Succession and a
Turkish war in alliance with Austria. Under the child, Ivan IV. ,-1740-41,
Miinnich removed Biron to Siberia. But his days of power were also num-
bered. In a single night a bloodless palace revolution overthrew the gov-
ernment and the German influence. Elizabeth, the youngest daughter of
Peter the Great, appealed to the anti-German feeling of the Russian party.
With her own hands she lifted the little Czar from his cradle and sent him,
his mother, Miinnich, Ostermann and their German adherents, into prison
or exile. With Elizabeth began a rule of shameless favoritism which cost
millions to the country, and vied in debauchery with the scandals of Ver-
sailles under Louis XV.
38. War of the Turks with Venice, 1714-18, and with
Austria, 1716-18. — In 1714 the Turks broke the Peace of Car-
lowitz on the most frivolous pretence and declared war against the
Venetians. The following year they conquered Morea and besieged
Corfu. They were, however, repelled with a loss of 17,000 men
and of all their cannon, magazines and tents. In 1716, the Emperor
took up the cause of his Venetian ally, and dispatched Eugene of
Savoy, on what proved another brilliant campaign, to Hungary. Again
the Pope summoned the Christian nations against the infidels. Again
princes and nobles of every country flocked to the standard of the
great general. At Peterwardein Eugene attacked and routed a three-
fold more numerous foe and expelled him from Hungary. He next
laid siege to Belgrade and wrested this important stronghold from
the Turks after defeating under its very walls a new and formidable
CHANGES IN THE TREATIES. 23
Turkish army. Peace was made at Passarowitz, in which Austria
obtained Belgrade, the Banatof Temeswar, the only part of Hungary
yet under the Turks, and pushed her frontiers far into Servia and
Wallachia. Venice retained her Dalmatian conquests but ceded
Morea to the Porte. The Peace of Passarowitz marks the greatest
extension of the Austrian dominion.
The brilliant conquests of this campaign were, however, lost to a great
part, when eighteen years later a new war (1736-39), broke out with Tur-
key and ended disastrously for Charles VI. Austria had entered an alliance
with Russia against the Turks. Under her spirited general Miinnich, Russia
won great advantages in the field. But owing to the blundering interfer-
ence of Anne's favorite Biron, she had finally to relinquish all claims to naviga-
tion on the Black Sea, and to content herself with Azow and its dismantled
forts. Austria sent out an expedition from Vienna. But no Eugene led the
brave soldiers to victory. He had died in 1786. The expedition proved a
complete failure. In the Peace of Belgrade this important fortress together
with Servia and Little Wallachia were restored to the Turks.
39. Spain and the Quadruple Alliance, 1717-2O. — Anew
war broke out between Spain and Austria. The Emperor still clung
to his Spanish policy, an«d foolishly hoped to change the results of
the War of the Spanish Succession. On the other hand, Elizabeth
Farnese, Duchess of Parma, the second wife of Philip V., energetic
and ambitious as she was, planned with her still more ambitious prime
minister, Cardinal Alberoni, the reconquest of the Italian countries
awarded to Austria in the Peace of Utrecht. Elizabeth Farnese,
allied with Victor Amadeus, Duke of Savoy and King of Sicily,
gave Europe a great deal of trouble for the next thirty years. The
wars in which Spain became implicated did not benefit Spain, but
the sons of the Queen. The Cardinal's genius for organization had
raised Spain in a few years from a state of prostration to the position
of a European power. In 1717 the Cardinal sent out a fleet, osten-
sibly against the Turks, but in reality to land in Sardinia. The
island was wrested from Austria in two months. Thence he intended
to pass over to Naples. But as the capture of Belgrade enabled
Charles VI. to reinforce Naples, and as Victor Amadeus played false
and was courting favor with Austria, Alberoni directed all his forces
to Sicily and occupied the island with 30,000 men. This new aggres-
24 THE MAKING OF RUSSIA.
sion called forth the Quadruple Alliance between France, England,
the Emperor an$ Holland for the maintenance of the Peace of
Utrecht. The British fleet commanded by Admiral Byng almost
annihilated the Spanish navy in a desperate battle off Cape Passaro
near Syracuse and thus blighted the reviving greatness of Spain. At
the. same time a French army of 40,000 men crossed the Pyrenees,
while an Austrian force expelled the Spaniards from Sicily. Private
jealousies and public clamor drove Alberoni into exile. In 1720,
the agreements of the Quadruple Alliance were executed. Spain
evacuated Sardinia and Sicily, and renounced her claims to the Neth-
erlands, the two Sicilies and the Duchy of Milan. In return the
Emperor recognized the Spanish Bourbons. Victor Amadeus was
obliged to exchange Sicily for Sardinia. Henceforth the Dukes of
Savoy styled themselves Kings of Sardinia.
4O. The Pragmatic Sanction. — The chief aim of Charles VI. who had no
son was to secure the government of the Austrian dominions to his eldest
daughter Maria Theresa. For this purpose he established an order of suc-
cession, the so-called Pragmatic Sanction, which decreed : (1) that the lands
belonging to the House of Austria should be indivisible, (2) that their gov-
ernment should devolve upon Charles' daughters according to the law of
primogeniture, (3) that if this line should become extinct, the daughters of
Joseph I. and their descendants should succeed.
Leopold I.
Joseph I. Charles VI.
Maria Josepha Maria Amalia Maria Theresa,
m. Augustus III , in. Charles Albert, claims guaranteed by the
of Saxony-Poland. Prince Elector of Bavaria Pragmatic Sanction.
Both renounced their claims.
The Electresses of Bavaria and Saxony were barred by their own renun-
ciations. All the Austrian countries accepted the Pragmatic Sanction, and
at the sacrifice of valuable concessions the Emperor gradually obtained the
consent of most of the Powers. Thus Spain guaranteed the Pragmatic
Sanction in 1725, England in 1731. France still held aloof.
41. War of the Polish Succession, 1733-1735. — The
selfish policy of the leading Powers started at the death of Augus-
CHANGES IN THE TREATIES. 25
tus II. a war of succession in Poland. The great majority of the
Polish nobles chose Stanislaus King of Poland for the second time.
Stanislaus was supported by Louis XV. who had married his daugh-
ter Maria Lesczinska. Spain and Sardinia joined France in the hope
of extending their possessions in Italy. A small minority elected
Augustus III. Elector of Saxony, the son of Augustus II. Russia
and Prussia, desirous of increasing their territories by a division of
Poland, combined to give effect to this election. Partly frightened
by the attitude of France, Spain and Sardinia, partly induced by
the promise of Augustus III. to guarantee the Pragmatic Sanction,
Charles VI. joined the northern allies. In Poland itself a Russian
army at once settled the question of the succession in favor of
Augustus. Stanislaus was again a fugitive. The war speedily
changed its character and its objects. In Italy the southern allies
conquered Milan, Naples and Sicily. On the Upper Rhine the
French carried their arms successfully into Germany. The aged
Prince Eugene was powerless for want of means. The occupa-
tion of Lorraine and the seizure of Kehl by the French led to
negotiations which lasted till 1738 and resulted in the Peace of
Vienna.
42. Peace of Vienna, 1738. — Naples and Sicily passed to
Don Carlos, the first son of Queen Elizabeth of Spain, as a secondo-
geniture, so that these lands could never be united with the crown
of Spain. Thus a third Bourbon throne was established. In
exchange, Don Carlos ceded to Austria Parma and Piacenza, which
he had inherited in 1731 by the extinction of the House of Farnese.
Stanislaus, while retaining the title of King, was indemnified for
the loss of Poland by the Duchies of Lorraine and Bar, to revert at
his death to the crown of France. Stanislaus reigned till 1766, and
won in a high degree the affection of his subjects. Francis Stephen,
the Duke of Lorraine, received in exchange for his duchy the Grand
Duchy of Tuscany, which fell vacant in 1739 by the extinction of
the House of Medici. France insisted the more on this exchange,
as Francis Stephen, the husband of Maria Theresa, had reasonable
hopes of being chosen Emperor one day. But Lorraine, in the hands
of the Emperor, would have laid France open to Germany. In con-
26
THE MAKING OF RUSSIA.
sideration of this exchange Louis XV. guaranteed the Pragmatic
Sanction in the strongest possible terms.
Le«ky: I. 3. pp. 342-4U. — Morris : Early Hanoverians. — Armstrong: Elizabeth Far -
nese. — Cardinal Alberoni: James (Em. Foreign Statesmen); Lauth: Half Sours with
Ambassadors; Moore: Card. Alberoni and the Duke of Ripper da, — v. Arneth: Prince
Eugene. Other books for consultation about present and subseq. periods. Lord Mahon
(Earl Stanhope): Hist, of Engl., 1713-1783. — Martin ; Duruy: Hist, of France.— Wm.
Coxe: Hist, of the House of Austria. — A. Rabbe; J. Duncan: Hist, of Russia —Hammer:
Qeschichte de» Osmannischen Reiches. — G. Finlay : Hist, of Greece under Othoman and
Turkish Domination.
THE HANOVERIAN SUCCESSION IN ENGLAND AND HANOVER.
James I. of England, 1603-1625.
Elisabeth, m. Palsgrave Frederic V.
I (The Winter King.)
Sophia, m. Ernest August of Hanover.
GEORGE I., 1714-1727.
GEORGE II., 1727-1760.
Frederic Louis, d. 1761.
GEORGE III., 1760-1820.
GEORGE IV., WILLIAM IV., Edward August,
1820-1830. 1830-1837. Duke of Kent.
VICTORIA, 1837 -X.
Ernest August,
Duke of Cumberland,
King of Hanover,
1837-1850.
George, K. of Han.
1850-1866.
THE MAKING OF KUSSIA.
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CHAPTER m.
MARIA THERESA AND FREDERIC II. — WAR OF THE
AUSTRIAN SUCCESSION.
FIRST SILESIAN WAR, 1740-42. ,
43. Youth of Frederic II. — The deaths of Frederic William
of Prussia and of the Emperor Charles VI. in 1740, gave rise to
new constellations which plunged not only Europe but the whole
civilized world into a series of sanguinary wars.
Frederic William of Prussia had been a passionate, coarse and despotic
character, a narrow Calvinist, harsh and even brutal to his family, but
frugal, simple and moral in his private life. The tyrannical rule of the
father estranged his son Frederic, who tried to escape from a galling sub-
jection by flight. Being arrested he and officer Katte, the companion of his
flight, were peremptorily court-martialed and sentenced to death. Katte
was executed before the prison window of the crown prince. Frederic was
saved from a like fate only by the interposition of Charles VI. 's imperial
authority. Henceforth Frederic complied with every wish of his father,
with all the pliancy and dissimulation of a slave, even so far as to marry an
unfortunate princess of Brunswick, chosen for him by his father, but whom
he utterly despised. In his new establishments at Rheinsberg and Ruppin,
he corresponded with Voltaire, the French freethinker, cultivated literature
and art, and studied statesmanship in all its branches. His father left him
a well-filled treasury and a splendid army of 84,000 men.
44. Character of Frederic II — Frederic was a man of extraordinary
mental resources, his intellect shrewd and calculating, his judgment rapid
and clear. He was bold in danger, strong in adversity, indefatigable in the
detail work of civil and military organization. He intensely loved power
and money, but despised their pomp and display. Hard, selfish and cynical,
entirely void of any religious principles or moral scruple he was in political
dealings callous to every sentiment of generosity or honor. In his internal
government he introduced many beneficial measures. The very first days of
his reign he granted general toleration, and abolished trial by torture. His
rule was based on the maxim: all for the people; nothing through the
people.
3 (33)
34 MARIA THERESA AND FREDERIC II.
45. Maria Theresa, 174O-178O. — With the death of Charles
VI., 1740, the male line of the Hapsburgs became extinct. Maria
Theresa as Queen of Hungary and Bohemia and Archduchess of
Austria succeeded her father in the government of the Austrian mon-
archy. In the beginning of her reign no visible opposition was raised
against her succession, except by the protest of Charles Albert,
Elector of Bavaria.
To breadth of intellect and firmness of purpose and to royal loftiness of
thought and action the young queen added great accomplishments and per-
sonal charms. Her character was earnest, generous, chivalrous. She had
at heart the good of her people. The principles of the Catholic faith were
the mainsprings of her private life, but she was frequently deceived by
Kaunitz and other advisers as to the real interests of the church. The
centralization of power in Church and State which characterized the reign
of her son Joseph II. began in the latter part of her own reign. Her court
was the most virtuous of Europe. Whilst in the main she kept the reins of
government in her own hands, she associated her husband, Francis Stephen
of Lorraine, as co-regent with herself.
46. The Opponents of Maria Theresa. — Charles Albert grounded his
protest on his descent from Anne, the oldest daughter of Emperor Ferdinand
I. He claimed that Ferdinand had willed the Austrian possessions to Anne's
descendants, in case the male issue of her brother should fail. The court
of Vienna refuted this claim by exhibiting the original document which read :
in case the legitimate descendants of her brother should fail. Augustus
III., Elector of Saxony and King of Poland, claimed the succession in the
name of his wife, the eldest daughter of Joseph I. The^ Kings of Spain and
.Sardinia put in claims as descendants of Philip II, Elizabeth Farnese, the
Queen of Spain, who had obtained the two Sicilies for her son Don Carlos,
now wanted to obtain an equal portion in northern Italy for her second son,
Don Philip. All these powers, except Charles Albert, had recognized the
Pragmatic Sanction.
47. Invasion of Silesia. — Frederic II. acted in his own characteristic
way. The very day on which the death of Charles VI. was announced at
Berlin, he confided to his minister his intention of annexing Silesia, whilst
with the same breath he warmly protested his friendship to the young
queen and her prince*- consort. Publicly he recognized her royal title, but
not until he had matured his plans for the actual invasion of her territory.
Rights to Silesia he had none. Some shady claims to Liegnitz and Jagern-
dorf were raised to satisfy public opinion. He himself based Ms claims on
" his ready army and his well-filled exchequer."
Without any declaration of war or intimation of his design, at a
time when the province was enjoying perfect peace and was unpre-
FIKST SILESIAN WAK. 35
pared for defense, Frederic crossed the frontier of Silesia at the
head of 30,000 men, December, 1740. Then and not till then he
offered Maria Theresa his aid in defense of her throne, if she would
cede to him Lower Silesia. The offer, of course, was rejected.
Thereupon the whole province was overrun by Prussian soldiers, and
Breslau, the capital of Silesia, and other places were taken. In
April, 1741, Marshal Schwerin won the battle of Mollwitz for the
King of Prussia, after Frederic himself and his division had fled from
the field.
48. Secret Alliance of Nymphenhurg. — The battle of Moll-
witz encouraged the greedy opponents of Maria Theresa to come for-
ward. Foremost of all was Fleury, minister of France. Setting at
naught the solemn engagements of the Peace of Vienna he pledged
himself, in a secret entente with Prussia which was to last for four-
teen years, to guarantee to Frederic the possession of Silesia, and
to invade Germany with an army of 40,000 men. In -return Frederic
was to cast his electoral vote for Charles Albert, the imperial candi-
date of France. Bavaria, Saxony and Spain joined the convention at
Nymphenburg near Munich. Austria was thus to lose the imperial
dignity for the first time since Albrecht II.
Fleury was driven into the Prussian Alliance by the clamor of the young
and dissipated nobles who panted for a chance of winning glory and emolu-
ments in a war against Austria, France's hereditary rival. They found a
spokesman in the Count of Belleisle at a time when, under the sway of mis-
tresses, Louis XV. began to emancipate himself openly from his duties to
God, to his family, and to public morality. Belleisle was made embassador
to Germany and Marshal of France. On his way to Frankfort he bribed the
spiritual electors to vote for Charles Albert.'
49. The Fall of Prague and the Imperial Election. — The
Prussians now advanced into Moravia. The allied French and
Bavarian armies invaded Upper Austria, took Linz, where Charles
Albert was proclaimed Archduke of Austria, menaced Vienna,
but turned off into Bohemia. Marshal de Saxe, half-brother to
Augustus III., but in the service of France, surprised Prague by a
stroke of adventurous boldness, and before the end of the year
Charles Albert was crowned King of Bohemia. The capture of
Prague decided the imperial election at Frankfort. It threw out the
3
36 MARIA THERESA AND FREDERIC IT.
vote of Bohemia. The rest of the votes were cast for the Elector of
Bavaria. Seeing Hanover threatened on one side by a French, on
the other by a Prussian army, George II. had promised his vote for
the French candidate upon a guarantee of neutrality for Hanover.
Charles Albert assumed the title of Charles VII., 1742-1745.
50. Maria Theresa in Hungary. — Meanwhile Maria Theresa in her dire
straits had gone to Pressburg in Hungary. By his mild rule her father had
succeeded in gaining the confidence of that people. In a dignified Latin
speech she depicted the dangers threatening her person and her children,
and showed the confidence which she placed in the Hungarians, by authoriz-
ing, against the advice of her counsellors, a so-called insurrection, or general
arming of the nation, whereupon she was greeted with the exclamation :
vitam et sanguinem consecramus. A levy of 30,000 infantry was voted at
once ; the nobles bound themselves to serve in the cavalry. With the levies
of Croatia, Transilvaniaand the Banat of Temeswar, it was estimated that
little less than 100,000 men might be raised. Maria Theresa then granted
a number of concessions which were a compromise between the strict royal
claims and the extreme demands of the nationalists, and which for more
than a century formed the charter of the Hungarian Kingdom.
51. Austrian Victories, 1741-42. — The levy of the Hun-
garians and the fall of Walpole completely changed the desperate
position of Maria Theresa. Walpole was forced to retire before a
hostile Parliamentary majority. They charged him with betraying
the interests of Maria Theresa, for whose succession England stood
pledged, and with conniving at the vote cast by George II. at
Frankfort. Lord Carteret, the new minister of foreign affairs, at
once placed a large parliamentary subsidy and 12,000 men at the
Queen's disposal. A secret truce arranged between Frederic II.
and Maria Theresa as a preliminary for peace, enabled the Austrians
to attack the rest of the allies in two brilliant campaigns. The Duke
of Lorraine recovered the greater part of Bohemia and hemmed in
the French within the walls of Prague. Marshal Khevenhiiller
entered Upper Austria, seized Linz on the very day when Charles
VII. was elected, and compelled the French army to surrender. He
then overran Bavaria and entered Munich in triumph on the corona-
tion day of the now landless Emperor.
52. The Peace of Breslau and Berlin, 1742. — Awaiting
the course of events before deciding which of the Powers to betray,
FIRST SILESIAN WAR. 37
•
Frederic now offered a separate peace to Maria Theresa on the
condition of retaining Silesia. Maria Theresa was willing to cede
an equivalent but not Silesia. Thereupon the Prussian monarch
broke the truce and with unexpected rapidity attacked and defeated
Prince Charles of Lorraine, the brother of Francis Stephen, in the
hotly contested battle at Czaslau-Chotusitz, 1742. But instead of
pursuing the enemy and relieving Prague, he renewed his offers of
peace, which were now accepted. The peace was concluded at
Breslau in June, and signed at Berlin in July, 1742. Austria
yielded to Prussia Lower and the greater part of Upper Silesia and
the Bohemian county of Glatz. Prussia on her part withdrew her
troops without making the slightest provision for the safe retreat of
the allies, assumed the payment of the debt raised on the Silesian
revenues, and acknowledged the Pragmatic Sanction. The Elector
of Saxony acceded to the peace and recalled his troops from the
field.
53 Retreat of the French. — Beleaguered in Prague and deserted by
Frederic, Belleisle eluded the Austrians by a masterly move. On a dark
winter night he left Prague with the main army, and after a desperate
twelve days' inarch over snow and ice through the enemy's country he
reached Eger, where an "army of redemption " waited for him. The gar-
rison of 6,000 men remaining at Prague was allowed to capitulate with all
the honors of war. Of Belleisle's original 40,000 men, only 8,000 were left
when he recrossed the Rhine. In May, 1743, Maria Theresa was crowned
Queen of Bohemia, She concluded an alliance with the Elector of Saxony
and the King of Sardinia. Bavaria, temporarily reoccupied by Charles
VII., once more passed into the possession of Austria, whilst the Emperor
was little more than a fugitive at Frankfort.
54. England and the War — The Battle of Dettingen. —
Under the auspices of England a new confe'derate army of 44,000
men, the so-called Pragmatic Army, headed by the Earl of Stair,
had been formed in Flanders for the campaign in 1743. It was
composed chiefly of English and Hanoverian troops with some
Austrian, Dutch and Hessian auxiliaries. Whilst encamped in the
neighborhood of Frankfort, it was surrounded by a superior French
army under Noailles. But the gross blundering of the French lead-
ers, and the bravery of the allies enabled the latter to extricate them-
selves from their dangerous situation. George II., the last English
38 MARIA THERESA AND FREDERIC II.
King to take part in a battle, fought with due valor. The victory of
Dettingen led to no result beyond the seizure of a few fortresses.
This inefficiency of the Pragmatic army was caused by the many divisions
among the allies and especially by the bitter jealousy and deadly hatred
between the English and the Hanoverian troops. These sentiments of the
soldiers were but an echo of the public feeling in England which protested
against the subordination of English to Hanoverian interests. This popular
resentment was fanned, no doubt, by scheming politicians, but it is also true
that the King unduly favored his own countrymen, and diverted England's
resources to the interests of Hanover. The consequence was, that Carteret,
the English representative of the King's " German policy," had to resign
office and give way to the Pelhams. Carteret was created Lord Granville.
Ritter v. Arneth: Maria Theresa (10 vol. chief authority for the period). — M. Theresa :
Hewitt (III. Women); Jameson (Celebrated Fern. Sovereigns}; Jenkins (Heroines of
Hist.), — Broglie: Frederick the Great and Maria Theresa. — Lives of Frederic II: Brack-
enburg; Lord Dover; Morris (Great Cammanders); Onno Klopp (Germ.); Raumer:
Fred. II. and His Times. — Hist, of My Own Time; Posthumous Works, Correspondence
by Frederic himself. Broglie: Louis XV. (The King's Secret, etc.}. Youth of Fr. II.
E. R. '59, 4.— Cardwell: Fred. II: M. '77,2.— E. R. 42, 2.
§ 2. *
•SECOND SILESIAN WAR.
1744-45 (48).
55. Beginning of the War in the West. — Heretofore France
and England had been engaged in the war only as auxiliaries. With
the death of Fleury the war party got the upper hand, and France
formally declared war against England and Austria; 80,000 men
under Marshal Saxe, accompanied by the King, invaded the Nether-
lands and conquered a number of. Austrian fortresses. Meanwhile
Maria Theresa was not idle. She thirsted for the opportunity to re-
conquer the provinces Austria had lost in the treaties of Utrecht and
Vienna, and her generals, Charles of Lorraine and Marshal Traun, had
already crossed the Rhine, secured a foothold in Alsace, and were
advancing upon Lorraine, when a new enemy appeared in the field.
Frederic II. grew alarmed at the victorious progress of the Austrian
arms on the Rhine and began to fear for Silesia, though Maria Theresa
scrupulously avoided any act of hostility against Prussia. Accord-
ingly Frederic again allied himself with the two Powers whom he had
betrayed in the Peace of Breslau, with the Emperor and a few other
SECOND SILESIAN WAR. 39
German princes and with France. He did not declare war, but
notified the court of Vienna that he was acting on behalf of the
Emperor and Empire.
56. The War in the East. — Early in September, 1744, at the
head of 80,000 men of " Imperial Eeinforcements " Frederic pushed
his way through Saxony, invaded Bohemia and took Prague. From
Prague he made for Vienna. Again the Hungarians responded to the
Queen's appeal with enthusiastic loyalty. Frederic was completely
out-manoeuvered by the two armies which had hastened to Bohemia :
the Hungarians who met with the hearty support of the whole popu-
lation, and the Austrians who under the splendid leadership of
Marshal Traun had just effected a masterly retreat from the Rhine in
the face of a superior French army. Without risking a battle, Traun
forced Frederic to evacuate Prague and to retire with great hardship
and loss into Silesia, as the Saxons had cut off his retreat through
their own country. Frederic henceforth regarded Traun as his
teacher in the art of war. The gainers, however, at the end of 1744,
were France and the Emperor. Alsace was freed, of the invaders,
Marshal Saxe maintained his position in the Netherlands, and
Charles VII. had in the meantime reconquered the greater part of
Bavaria.
57. Death of Charles VII. — Francis I., 1745-1765.—
Frederic's position became still more critical by the death of Charles
VII., for it removed the pretense on which he had commenced the
war. Maria Theresa, however, refused, to listen to his offers of
peace. Shortly before the Emperor's death Augustus III. had joined
the league of Austria, England and Holland. Bavaria now sued for
peace. By the treaty of Fiissen the young Elector, Maximilian
Joseph, abandoned his pretensions to the Austrian succession, and
pledged his electoral vote to the husband of Maria Theresa, who
restored to him all his hereditary dominions. In Sept. the imperial
dignity again reverted to the House of Austria in the person of
Francis Stephen. He was elected as Francis I. by seven out of the
nine electoral votes, Frederic II. and the Palatine Elector, his ally,
voting in the negative. Maria Theresa was henceforth styled
Empress-Queen.
40 MARIA THERESA AND FREDERIC II.
58. The Battle of Fontenoy, 1745. — In the Netherlands English, Hano-
verian and Dutch troops with some Austrian auxiliaries, commanded by the
Duke of Cumberland, the second son of George II., stood opposed to 80.000
men under Marshal Saxe.
The decisive battle of the year was fought at Fontenoy. The allies
under Cumberland were marching to the relief of Tournay. Marshal
Saxe turned from the siege to meet him. The Dutch gave way early
in the struggle. But the English and Hanoverians forming a solid
column of 16,000 men carried everything before them. The battle
was all but lost for Louis, when Marshal Saxe ordered the Irish
Brigade, supported by four cannon and Louis' household troops, to
the front. The Irish Brigade consisted of several regiments of Irish
Catholics whom the violation of the Treaty of Limerick and the Penal
Laws had driven into French service. With the cry: " Remember
Limerick and Saxon treachery " they dashed forward, and by their
gallant charge decided the day. The British column was completely
broken up and scattered, and victory perched on the banners of
France. The next result was the fall of Tournay and of seven other
fortresses in the Austrian Netherlands.
Upon hearing of the bravery of the Irish, King George is said to have
exclaimed: " Cursed be the law that deprives me of such subjects."
59. The Peace of Dresden, 1745. — Undismayed by his
reverses Frederic II. continued the contest single-handed, defeated
the Austrians and Saxons under Prince Charles at Hohenfriedberg
in Silesia, and followed the retreating armies into Bohemia. England
strongly urged Maria Theresa to make peace. But failing in this,
England separately settled preliminaries with Frederic guaranteeing
him the possession of Silesia. Between Austria and Prussia the
war went on, and a fresh victory at Sohr in Bohemia won by Fred-
eric's genius over the stronger army of Prince Charles (Sept.)
and another sanguinary success obtained by Leopold of Dessau over
the Saxons at Kesselsdorf in Saxony (Dec.) led to the desired Peace
of Dresden. Maria Theresa guaranteed to Frederic the territorial
possessions accorded to him in the Peace of Breslau, whilst Fred-
eric acknowledged the disputed vote of Bohemia and recognized
Francis I. as Emperor.
SECOND SILESIAN WAR. 41
6O. Charles Edward in Scotland, 1745-46. — Charles
Edward, James III.'s son, styled Prince of Wales by the Jacobites,
the Young Pretender by the Hanoverians, landed in the western
Highlands, July, 1745, with only seven followers. In August he
raised the royal standard at Glenfinnan at the head of 1,600 men,
proclaimed his father as James VIII. of Scotland and James III. of
England, and marched straight to Edinburgh where he was royally
welcomed. With 2,500 Highlanders he stampeded in seven minutes
the English forces under Sir John Cope at Preston Pans. With
6,000 men he crossed the border, took Carlisle, and without rousing
either great sympathy or serious opposition marched as far as Derby,
where a stronger English army awaited him. The Prince was for
boldly marching upon London, but could not prevail on the chiefs
to follow, and had to turn back. At Falkirk he scattered another
English troop, but was then forced to encounter the Duke of Cum-
berland, who had been recalled from the Netherlands, and who had
now entered Scotland at the head of 8,000 men trained in the con-
tinental war. The decisive battle was fought at Culloden, the last
battle on Scotch territory. The first line of the enemy was broken
by the vigorous charge of the Highlanders, but the second stood
firm and overwhelmed the Scots by their superior numbers and train-
ing. By slaughtering or burning to death the wounded Higlanders,
Cumberland has deservedly earned and retained the nickname of
"The Butcher." Charles Edward was a fugitive. He owed his
life to the courage and touching fidelity of the Highlanders.
Though hundreds knew of his hiding-places, though £30,000 were
set on his head, yet not one was found to betray his fallen chief,
and after many hair-breadth escapes he again reached the shores of
France. As the Scotch Episcopalians were Jacobites, English leg-
islation in 1746 and later, though opposed by the bishops, nearly
crushed out the Episcopalian system in Scotland, and unfrocked
most of the Episcopalian clergy.
The Stuarts withdrew. James III. died 1765, his son 1788. His brother,
Cardinal Henry, who died in 1807, was the last Stuart of the male
line. The female line, descending from Henrietta, the youngest daughter
of Charles I., was continued in the Dukes of Savoy and Kings of Sardinia
and Italy.
42 MARIA THERESA AND FREDERIC II.
61. End of the Succession War. — In Italy, where the King of Sardinia
fought on the side of Austria, and Spain on the side of France, the war
had been waged with varying fortune, until 1746 Austria recovered almost
everything she had lost in the preceding years, and completely defeated the
Franco -Spanish army at Piacenza.
In the Netherlands success was uniformly on the side of France. They
not only held all the Austrian Netherlands but conquered a considerable por-
tion of the Dutch Republic. On the other hand, after the death of Philip V.;
1746, France was practically deserted by his successor, Ferdinand II., while
some of her American and Indian possessions were taken, others threatened,
and her navy almost destroyed by the English fleets. As Austria and Sar-
dinia were the only powers that desired to continue the war, they were
offered the alternative by the other allies of either joining the preliminaries
drawn up at Aachen or fighting alone.
62. The Peace of Aachen, 1748. — The Peace of Aachen which
ended the war of the Austrian succession was concluded on the
basis of a mutual restoration of all conquests made in Europe and
beyond the seas. The only exception was the cession by Austria of
the Duchies of Parma, Piacenza and Guastalla to Don Philip, second
son of Elizabeth of Spain. Thus the second secundo-geniture of
the Spanish Bourbons was established in Italy, and the fourth Bour-
bon court in Europe. Austria confirmed the cession of Silesia to
Frederic II. and obtained the recognition of the imperial election
and of the Pragmatic Sanction. The succession of the House of
Hanover, both in England and in Hanover, was guaranteed. Two
points which contained the germs of a future war were left unde-
cided: The right claimed by Spain of searching English vessels,
which had originally led to the naval war between the two powers,
and the disputed boundaries between the French and the English
possessions in North America. It is therefore time to turn our
attention to the American colonies.
Lecky, I, 3, 415-470. — Lord Mahon; Coxe; Morris; Martin ; Dumy (see prev.
chap.). — Gnizot: Pop. Hist, of France. — Wilson : Marshal Saxe (111. Soldiers).—
Chambers: Hist, of the Rebell. ofl746. — Cbev. de Johnstone: Memoirs of the Reb. of
1746. — Jesse: Memoirt of the Pretenders. — A. Shield: The Cardinal of York (thr> last
Stuarts). D. R. '96, 3.
CHAPTER IV.
THE COLONIES OF NORTH AMERICA.
§l.
FOUNDATION OF THE COLONIES.
63. North America. — At the time of colonization there may
have been some 200,000 or 300,000 Indians scattered over the vast
expanse of the North American continent. Mexico and Florida were
Spanish possessions. The Atlantic seaboard from Florida to Canada
was settled by the English with a sprinkling of colonists from
Holland, Sweden and other European countries. French settlers
occupied the country north of the English colonies, the St. Lawrence
valley, sending out spurs of Catholic missions and commercial posts
along the great lakes and the water-course of the Mississippi, all
subject to France. In the Spanish and English colonies a strong
negro population was living in servitude.
64. Florida. — Ponce de Leon, a companion of Columbus, dis-
covered Florida in 1512 for Spain.* The name Florida then signified
not only the peninsula but the country stretching northward and
eastward to an indefinite extent. For a time Huguenot settlers, sent
out by Admiral Coligny, disputed a portion of Florida, but after a
sanguinary struggle, disgraceful for both parties, the Spaniards finally
maintained their ground and founded St. Augustine, the oldest town
in the United States, 1565.
In 1696 Pensacola, founded by Spaniards from Mexico, became
the border town of Western Florida.
65. New France. — Pier de Gast, Sieur de Monts, effected the
first permanent settlement for France at Port Royal in Acadia, 1604.
Acadia originally comprised all the country from Pennsylvania to
New Brunswick. In course of time the term Acadia was restricted
(43)
44 THE COLONIES OF NORTH AMERICA.
to what is now Nova Scotia ; the valley of the St. Lawrence became
known as Canada and the French possessions in America as New
France. A colony sent out by de Monts under Champlain founded
Quebec, 1608. Following earlier Recollect (Franciscan) mission-
aries, the Jesuits undertook in 1632 the conversion of the Hurons,
the Abnakis, the Chippewas and other northern tribes, and founded
at Quebec a flourishing center for far-stretching missions. Among
the savage and warlike Iroquois they had at first little success.
Martyrdom, accompanied by all the excesses of Indian cruelty,
frequently ended a life of constant hardship. Martyrs, like FF.
Brebeuf, Lallemant, Jogues, Bressani, Daniel, Gamier, inspired
increasing numbers of their brethren to follow in their footsteps.
When in 1679 the Huron missions were destroyed by the Mohawks,
the hereditary foes of the Hurons, the missionaries followed the
fugitives along the great lakes, and carried the gospel and the
French name to what are now Ohio, Michigan, Illinois and Wis-
consin. Father Marquette discovered the Mississippi in 1673, and
floated down the great river a distance of over 1,000 miles. Cav-
alier de la Salle in 1682 descended the Mississippi to the Gulf of
Mexico, and named the vast territories along the river Louisiana, in
honor of Louis XIV. From the south the Canadian d'Iberville,
entered the river at the mouth and began to settle what are now the
States of Mississippi and Alabama. New Orleans was founded by
Law's famous Louisiana Company in 1718. Yet in all their settle-
ments the number of French was in no period more than one-tenth
of the population that occupied the English colonies. Unlike their
English neighbors they cared little for agriculture, if we except the
simple Norman peasants of Acadia ; the adventurous Frenchmen
preferred to be hunters, trappers, travelers or explorers.
66. English Colonies — Southern Group. — The thirteen
English colonies on the Atlantic coast may be divided into three
groups : the southern group centering in Virginia, the northern
group centering in Massachusetts, and the middle group with New
York for its center. The southern group comprises besides Vir-
ginia, Maryland, the two Carolinas and Georgia, all carved out of
the original territory of Virginia.
FOUNDATION OF THE COLONIES. 45
67. Virginia. — Virginia received its name from Walter Raleigh, who
made an unsuccessful attempt at colonization, in honor of Queen Elizabeth.
The first permanent settlement of Virginia was effected at Jamestown, 1607,
by a colony of English gentlemen and criminals sent out by the London
Company. Saved from being hopelessly scattered at the very start by
Captain John Smith, " the Father of Virginia," the struggling colony went
through all the stages of disappointment, misery, discouragement, anarchy,
martial law and despotism (under Argall), until with the arrival of Sir
George Yeardley, the u House of Burgesses," the first representative body
in America, was organized in 1G19. In 1624, when the London Company
was dissolved, Virginia became a royal province and remained so, with a
short interruption, until the War of Independence. Virginia became the
most populous as well as the richest of the English colonies. Tobacco, cul-
tivated by negro and white slaves, was both the staple and the currency of
Virginia.
68. Maryland. — Under a charter of 163-', a portion of the Virginia terri-
tory was transferred to George Calvert, first Lord Baltimore. Sir George
had resigned the secretaryship of State to embrace the Catholic faith, when
Catholicity was bitterly opposed in England. Cecil, the second Lord Balti-
more, now Proprietary Governor, intrusted the execution of the charter to
his younger brother, Leonard Calvert, and named the colony Maryland in
honor of Queen Maria Henrietta. The chief object of the colony was to
provide an asylum for the persecuted Catholics of England. John Leonard
Calvert and some two or three hundred colonists, mostly Catholic gentlemen,
with their dependents, accompanied by Father White and three other Jesuits,
arrived on two vessels, the Ark and the Dove. They sailed up the Potomac,
planted the cross in the heart of America, and paying the Indians for the
land, they founded -the town of St. Mary's. The rapidly increasing pros-
perity of the colony was due (a) to the religious guidance by which the
settlers profited from the beginning, (b) to the mutual acts of kindness and
charity exchanged between the settlers and the Indians, (cj to the religious
toleration granted by the Catholic government and enacted as law by the
colonial legislature. The conversion of the Indians progressed rapidly.
Maryland had never any serious Indian troubles within her frontiers. A
boundary dispute between Maryland and Pennsylvania was settled by the
establishment of " Mason and Dixon's Line " drawn by two surveyors
according to an agreement between the Maryland proprietor and Penn's
heirs in 1732.
69 The Carolinas. — Carolina was another parcel of the Virginia grant.
A charter was issued by Charles II. in 1663 to seven proprietors of whom
-the most prominent were the Lords Clarendon and Albemarle (Hyde and
Monk). The Grand Model, the most absurd constitution ever devised fora
new colony, was drawn up by the freethinkers Shaftesbury and Locke. The
settlers began their political life by dividing the one province of Carolina
\
46 THE COLONIES OF NORTH AMERICA.
into two governments, and by overthrowing the Grand Model. The only
provision retained was the clause that every freeman should have absolute
power over his negro slaves. Turbulence, lawlessness and a double slave
trade, one of importation from Africa, the other of exportation to the West
Indies, were the characteristics of these colonies.
70. Georgia. — Georgia was carved out of Carolina as Carolina was carved
out of Virginia. James Oglethorpe, an English philanthropist, for a time
a volunteer in the army of Prince Eugene, established Georgia under a
charter of George II. and chose the site of Savannah for his capital. Insolv-
ent debtors from England, Moravians and Lutherans from Germany, Scottish
Highlanders, the needy and the persecuted of many countries, sought a home
here. Oglethorpe absolutely excluded slavery from his colony.
71. The Northern or New England Group. — The northern
group comprises Massachusetts, Maine, New Hampshire, Connecti-
cut and Rhode Island. The name of New England was given to
this territory by John Smith of Virginia in an unsuccessful attempt
at colonization, 1615. In 1620 James I. incorporated forty of his
subjects as " the Council established at Plymouth in the County of
Devon, for the planting, ruling, ordering and governing of New
England. ' ' The territorial grant extended from 40° to 48° N. L. and
from the Atlantic to the Pacific.
72 Plymouth — The first permanent settlement was founded by 102
Puritan Separatists or Independents, who had first emigrated from England
to Holland, where they were known as the "Pilgrims." They sailed to
New England on the Mayflower and landed at Cape Cod. After the neces-
sary explorations the nineteen families of the Mayflower settled at Ply-
mouth, 1620. Plymouth increased but slowly, and as a separate colony never
prospered. It was absorbed by Massachusetts in 1692.
73. Massachusetts, — Other English Puritans led by John Endicott,
founded Salem, 1628, and obtained from Charles I. the Charter of the
Massachusetts Bay Colony, by which the government was transferred to
America and vested in the colonists. Upon the arrival of John Winthrop
with 1,500 settlers and the Massachusetts Charter, Boston and a number of
other towns were founded, 1630. The colony prospered rapidly and soon
became the most influential and the most domineering of the New England
Colonies.
74. Maine and New Hampshire. — In 1622 a portion of the domain of
New England was carved out as the province of Maine and granted to
Fernando Gorges and John Mason. In 1629 the two colonizers divided the
FOUNDATION OF THE COLONIES. 47
province, and Mason called his part New Hampshire. Both Maine and New
Hampshire were at times united with Massachusetts, and again returned to
the proprietary government of Gorges and Mason or their heirs.
75. Connecticut. — The first settlement on the Connecticut river was
the military post of some Plymouth men at Windsor on territory also claimed
by the Dutch. Saybrooke, at the mouth of the Connecticut, was founded
by Massachusetts' emigrants under a charter granted by the Council for
New England to Viscount Say and Seal and Lord Brooke, 1635. The same
year the Council surrendered its charter to the crown. At once a strong
immigration of Massachusetts people who looked with disfavor on the
theocratic policy of the Bay Colony, settled in and around Hartford, Wether-
field and Windsor, and established the separate colony or commonwealth
of Connecticut, 1636-37. In 1638 the three towns drew up the first Ameri-
can constitution independently of King, Parliament, Charter or mother
colony.
Another independent colony, New Haven, was founded in 1638 by a com-
pany of London traders. The only title which they had to their land, was
that of a fictitious purchase (nine coats for many miles of land) from the
Indians, They formed the first and only known government by a mere
social contract signed by every member of the commonwealth, a century
before Rousseau elaborated his system of the Social Contract. Saybrooke
was merged in the colony of Connecticut in 1644, New Haven in 1665.
76. Rhode_Island. — Rhode Island was founded by Roger Williams, a
young preacher of Salem, a champion of freedom of conscience for all
except Catholics, and a talker for the rights of the Indians. His denuncia-
tions, that the magistrates had no power in religion, that the King had no
right to take away their lands from the Indians without paying for them,
that the English charters were of doubtful legality, turned the Massa-
chusetts authorities into his enemies. Like many others, he was prosecuted
and banished for his opinions. In 1636 he founded Providence Plantation
in the territory of the Narragansetts from whom he purchased the land.
Another party of exiles from Massachusetts bought the Island of Aquiday
from the Narragansetts, and called it Rhode Island. In 1647 the four towns
of Providence and Rhode Island united under a royal charter, and estab-
lished a purely democratic government without any state religion. Rhode
Island had to contend with the hostility both of the Dutch Colony and of
Massachusetts. The United Colonies of New England, the first union of
American colonies (1643-66) comprising Massachusetts, Plymouth, Con-
necticut and New Haven, formed for the purpose of defense against the
Dutch and the Indians, was also hostile to Rhode Island.
77. The Middle Group. — The middle group of colonies, com-
prising New York, New Jersey, Delaware and Pennsylvania, was
48 THE COLONIES OF NORTH AMERICA.
originally settled by the Dutch and the Swedes, and with the excep-
tion of Pennsylvania, came to England by conquest.
78. New York and New Jersey. — After the discovery of the Delaware
Bay and the Hudson river, 1609, by Henry Hudson, an Englishman in Dutch
service, the lively fur trade springing up between Holland and the natives,
led to the erection of some trading posts and military forts, and the explora-
tion of the Connecticut, New Jersey and Delaware shores. The whole
region claimed by the Dutch was called New Netherlands, and ruled by
governors on behalf of the Dutch West India Company, established 1621.
The claims of the Dutch gave rise to frequent conflicts with the English on
the Connecticut and the Swedes on the Delaware. Peter Minuit, the first
of the four Dutch governors, founded New Amsterdam on Manhattan
Island, 1626. Further up the river was Fort Orange, the second place of
importance. The success of the colony was due to its favorable situation
on one of the best harbors of the world, to the influx of settlers from
every quarter, as the colony was soon thrown open to free immigration, to
religious toleration in the absence of wrangling parsons, and to the treaty
of peace concluded with the Five Nations, the most powerful Indian con-
federacy of the Iroquois. When the New Netherlands were conquered by
the English and New Amsterdam became New York, New Jersey received
its present name and was granted by the Duke of York to Lords Berkeley
and Carteret. Under William III. New Jersey became a royal province.
Thomas Dongan, governor of New York, " a man of integrity, moderation
and genteel manners," but " a professed papist," called the first assembly
of New York, 1683, settled finally the boundary dispute between New York
and Connecticut, and gave a city charter to New York, which was one of
the most liberal ever bestowed upon a colonial city. The Dongan charter
was, till lately, the fundamental law of the city of New York.
79. Delaware. — In 1638, when Sweden was ruled by Queen Christina, a
colony of Swedes made its appearance on the Delaware Bay and founded
Christiana. The settlement prospering for a time, extended into what later
became Pennsylvania, and was called New Sweden. Peter Stuyvesant, the
last Dutch governor, annexed New Sweden to the New Netherlands. With
the fall of the Dutch possessions Delaware passed under English rule.
80. Pennsylvania. — In 1G81 Charles II. granted William Penn, the son
of Admiral Penn and the leader of the English Quakers, a large tract west
of Jthe Delaware, 26,000,000 acres of the best land in the world, in exchange
for a debt due to his father, and called it Pennsylvania. The Duke of York
subsequently added Delaware to the grant. In 1682 Penn founded Phil-
adelphia and concluded a treaty of peace and friendship with the Indians.
The richness of the soil, Penn's peaceful, just and beneficent disposition,
and the religious toleration and political franchise which he granted to
SOCIAL, POLITICAL, AND RELIGIOUS STATE. 49
all who believed in God and abstained from work on Sunday, made the
settlement successful from the beginning. During Penn's absence from
America, Delaware was granted a separate assembly. The Quaker's friend-
ship for James II. brought upon him the persecution of William and Mary
and the forfeiture of his charter, which was, however, restored, when he
had proved his innocence of treason.
Charlevoix-Shea: Hist, of New France. — Parkman : Pioneer* of France; La Salle
and Discovery of the Great West. — M. Lummis: Spanish Pioneers. — Histories of the U. S.
(see Ch. IX.).— Winsor: Narrative and Critical Hist, of the U. S.— Doyle: English
Colonies; Puritan Col. — Lodge: Engl. Colonies. — J. Fiske: Old Virginia and Her
Neighbors; The Beginnings of New England. — Treacy : Old Cath. Maryland. — Scharf :
Hixt. of Maryland. — The. French in North America; E. R. '85, 3. — Martin: Life of F.
Isaac Jogues. — Maryland: Macleod, M. '78, 2. ; J. G. Shea, A. C. Q., 9. 10.
§ 2.
SOCIAL, POLITICAL, AND RELIGIOUS STATE OF THE COLONIES.
81. Population. — The free immigrants during colonial times were, as a
rule, men of strong character who had abandoned their country for religious
or political convictions. They were nearly all agriculturists and freehold-
ers, thinly scattered over a large territory. Another class of immigrants
were the white slaves. Such were the cargoes of Irish Catholics wrho at
frequent intervals since Cromwell's invasion "were deported for no other
crime than patriotism and religion — with atrocities scarcely inferior to
those of the African slave trade. Such were the insurgents in the civil
wars of England taken in the field and auctioned off to the colonies. In
Virginia they were resold to the highest bidder. The Scotch and Irish
coasts were lurking-places of pirates, who kidnaped unwary inhabitants
and sold them to American planters. In the early days of Virginia women
were sold as wives for 100-150 pounds of tobacco. Besides the honest and
the persecuted, the refuse of Europe also found its way to America. The
government deported criminals, debtors, " jail-birds; " the Mayor of Lon-r
don sent over homeless children picked up from the streets of the city.
After serving out their terms of forced labor, from five to seven years and
upward, the "indented servants" acquired the rights of freemen and, in
Virginia, the share allotted to all immigrants — fifty acres of land, but in
the outskirts of the cultivated country.
82. Government. — In general the English legislators of the seventeenth
century conceded to the colonies charters which secured to them almost
absolute self-gove'rumeut. In the Proprietary Colonies such as Maryland,
Pennsylvania, Carolina, Delaware, etc., the proprietors appointed the gov-
ernors, and since 1696 authorized them to summon legislative assemblies.
In the Crown Colonies, the governors, the councils and the judges were
appointed by the crown, but the assembly was a representative body elected
by the colonies. •
4
50 THE COLONIES OF NORTH AMERICA.
The home government in the New England colonies was more or less
Democratic. The "towns" were a reproduction of the Anglo-Saxon
townships. Their resident inhabitants or freemen constituted the electoral
body, the Anglo-Saxon " town moot" which admitted new members, chose
all local town officers, regulated all local taxation, and sent deputies to the
General Courts, as the representative bodies were called in New England.
The towns were responsible for their own roads, bridges, police, poor
relief and education. They had their grand and petty juries, their militia
regiments, their train -bands and even their whipping- posts and stocks as in
England under the rule of Cromwell. Thus all the political power in New
England was concentrated in the town ; the county was only a geographical
and later a judicial designation The southern colonies were aristocratic
in their government. The important political unit was the county, invested
with all the political powers which in New England resided in the town.
The county was responsible to the colonial legislature for its share of
taxation. The townships were laid out by the officers of the county; they
had, however, the right of electing their own officers, and of determining,
in the township meeting, the amount of taxes to be raised for local purposes.
The township submitted an estimate of the sums required to the county
authorities for approval, and were subject to county supervision in the
exercise of their local rights.
83. Special Forms of Government. — In Massachusetts the government
was theocratic. All the freemen enjoyed the franchise only under a religi-
ous test of narrow Puritanism, so that not one fourth of the adult males
were entitled to vote. Thus instead of a landed aristocracy, Massachusetts
set up an ecclesiastical aristocracy. Rhode Island was a pure democracy,
practically independent of King and Parliament, and without any State
religion. Connecticut became notorious for its Blue Laws, regulating not
only the opinions, but the minutest actions of the people. In New Haven the
Mosaic Law was declared the fundamental law of the colony. New York
and Pennsylvania in their political institutions ranged with the other
colonies in an inverted order of geographical position : New York with the
aristocratic South, Pennsylvania with the democratic North. In Virginia
large landed estates were entailed upon the oldest male heir. Each planter
claimed supremacy on his*own estate. The rich planters formed an aristoc-
racy, that controlled the selection of the. local magistrates nominally
appointed by the governor. The Grand Model of Carolina devised by
Shaf tesbury and Locke, was an attempt to transfer a feudal system of nobles,
palatines, landgraves, starosts, caziques, leitmen, borrowed from the Ger-
man, Polish, English, Anglo-Saxon and Indian systems, to the wild woods
of the Western continent.
84 Political Changes. — The numerous disputes between the settlers
and the proprietors, between the colonies and the home government, gener-
ally ended to the advantage of the* crown. Again, the favors shown to
SOCIAL, POLITICAL, AND RELIGIOUS STATE. 51
regicides of Charles I. in some New England colonies, the maintenance of
religious proscription and the violation of the navigation acts led to the
annulment of charters under Charles II., and to the appointment of irre-
sponsible governors under James II. This King published the Declaration of
Indulgence in the colonies and appointed one governor (Andros) for New
England, New York and New Jersey. William III. renewed the charters in
a form favorable to the crown, and granted religious toleration to all except
Catholics. Since 1G96 the government in England could reject a governor
appointed by a proprietor and annul any colonial legislation conflicting with
Acts of Parliament on the same subjects. Henceforth it became a funda-
mental maxim of the British Parliament, to maintain and increase its
ascendency over all colonial authorities, and to restrict American commerce
for the profit of the mother country.
85. Tlie Church in the Colonies. —The colonies were the seats of the
fiercest religious fanaticism, foremost the New England colonies. The
religion of Virginia was intolerant and prescriptive Episcopalianism. The
careful exclusion of Catholics was originally avowed as the special object of
Virginia's colonization. In New England, especially Massachusetts, Church
and State were most intimately blended. The General Courts exercised
supreme control in spiritual as well as in temporal matters. Marriage was
considered a mere civil contract, to be sanctioned by a magistrate. The
magistrates, too, granted divorces. Baptism was limited as a privilege to
church members. Furious contentions about doctrinal matters, condemna-
tions of " heretical " opinions, banishments of u heretics," especially Bap-
tists, the burning of witches, fill the annals of New England.
In 1688 a poor Irish woman was executed for witchcraft. In 1692
nineteen persons were hanged and one pressed to death for witchcraft at
Salem ; 150 were detained in prison and 200 more awaited their trials, before
reason and remonstrance broke the fatal spell.
To bring a Quaker into a New England colony was punishable by a fine
of £100. To entertain a Quaker for one hour, was fined with forty shillings.
Quakers themselves, besides being whipped and forced to hard labor in a
house of correction, were to lose their ears, to have their tongues bored
with a red hot iron, and on returning after deportation, to be executed.
Since 1701 any Jesuit or Popish priest was liable, as an incendiary and dis-
turber of the public peace, to perpetual imprisonment, and if an escape were
attempted, to death.
86. Maryland. — Founded as an asylum for the persecuted Catholics of
England, Maryland accorded perfect freedom to all Protestant sects, and
welcomed alike the persecuted Puritans of Virginia and the persecuted
Episcopalians of Massachusetts. With perfect impartiality the Protestants
were granted all the privileges which were possessed by the Catholics. The
law of 1649 enacted, that "no person within this province, professing to
believe in Jesus Christ, shall be in any way troubled, molested or discounte-
52 THE COLONIES OF NOKTIl AMERICA.
nanced for his or her religion or in any free exercise thereof; " and by the
Catholics at least, the promise of this la\v was never broken. A shameful
sequel followed this almost solitary example of toleration. " The Protest-
ants," says Mr. Lecky, " multiplied in the province. They outnumbered the
Catholics and then enslaved them. The democratic opposition to Lord Bal-
timore assisted them, and the Eevolution (of 1688) gave the signal for the
complete destruction of religious liberty in Maryland. The Catholics were
excluded from all prominent offices in the State which a Catholic had
founded for Catholics." Anglicanism was made the established church in
1704. The Mass was forbidden. The priest and the Catholic tutor or leader
were alike proscribed.
87. The Penal Laws. — Pennsylvania was the only other colony that
granted honest toleration. The toleration law of Rhode Island expressly
excluded Catholics. In 1734 the German Catholics were permitted to build
a church in Philadelphia in which Mass was openly celebrated, the only
instance of this kind previous to the War of Independence. Most of the
Irish immigrants in those days were Presbyterians.
With the Revolution which placed William of Orange on the English
throne, came the completion of that system of penal laws against Catholics
which remained for a century and more the opprobrium of the colonial
code.
See Works to § 1. — Lecky : II., 5. — J. G. Shea: The Boston of Winthrop, A. C. Q. 12. —
Blue Laws of Conn.: A. C Q. 2.— James II. and the U. S.: A. 0. Q. — Scudder: Men and
Manners One Hundred Tears Ago. — Lowcl]: New England Two Centuries Ago. — Lunt :
Old New England Traits. — A. Morse : Customs and Fashions in Old Nciv England. —
Coffin: Old Times in the Colonies. — Ch. W. Upham : Salem Witchcraft. — Cf. Goerres:
Mystik, v. 4, pp. 534-41. — Cotton Mather: Remarkable Providences.
§ 3.
TREATMENT OF THE INDIANS.
88. The Indians and Their Federations. — When the Europeans arrived
in America, the Indians had settled abodes, towns and villages. Their chief
occupations were hunting, fishing and war. South of the St. Lawrence the
women cultivated the land to a limited extent, chiefly by raising maize or
Indian corn.
To judge by their languages, the North American Indians formed large
nations or confederacies of kindred tribes. Their different dialects are
reduced to five general heads. The harsh Algonquin was spoken from the
Hudson Bay southeast to the Chesapeake and southwest to the Mississippi
and Ohio. Within the limits of the tribes of the Algonquin speech and al-
most surrounded by them, several powerful confederacies along the great
lakes, such as the Hurons, the Iroquois, the Eries, spoke the softer Wyaudot
languages. The Cherokee is peculiar to a confederacy of the same name who
TREATMENT OF THE INDIANS. 53
occupied the southern valleys of the Alleghanies. The common name of
the Mobilian, rich in vowels and indicating the influence of the southern v
climate, included the dialects of the Choctaws, the Chickasas, the Creeks
and other inhabitants of the lower Mississippi Valley and the Savannah.
The Dacotah or Sioux is still spoken in many dialects by the tribes west of
the Mississippi. Apart from these principal language groups there existed
tribes in different parts of the continent that spoke in tongues peculiar to
themselves.
89. Government. — The government was of the simplest. It comprised
the tribal chieftainship and the tribal council. The chieftainship was
usually hereditary. The chief was the guide rather than the ruler of his
tribe or village, having neither guard, nor prisons, nor officers of justice.
In the council all grown men had the right of speech. It decided on peace,
war and alliances and had jurisdiction in criminal matters of national or
tribal importance. Private crimes were either punished by private ven-
geance, or compromised between the parties concerned.
90. Character. — The North American Indians are grave and gloomy,
cool and deliberate, respectful and attentive in council, hospitable to
friends, implacable to enemies. They are trained from infancy to endure
with stolid composure taunts and blows and every sort of ill treatment.
But their passions once roused, they are sullen, treacherous, inappeasable,
and unspeakably cruel, especially in torturing their captives. The intro-
duction of ardent spirits has completely demoralized the Indian. On
account of intemperance whole tribes have " died in their tracks."
91. Religion. — The Indians believe in the " Great Spirit/' the immortality
of the soul, and a future reward of the brave in the happy hunting grounds.
They believe in a great number of subordinate spirits or manitous, that are
either superior types of animal life (the manitou of the buffalo, the boar),
or imaginary beings dwelling in the forests, rivers, mountains, in all nature
(mauitou of the Mississippi). They chiefly worship manitous that inspire
fear. The manitou of war was worshiped with human sacrifices. The one
Great Spirit ruling above all is too high for worship. Their priests, sor-
cerers or medicine men, are credited with knowing 'the secrets of nature
and the meaning of dreams which play a great part in the gross super-
stitions of the Indians. Polygamy was not frequent though not dishonor-
able among them.
92. The French and the Indians. — As to the treatment of the Indians
by the three principal European nations that occupied America, it may be
broadly stated that the Spanish method was conversion and amalgamation
with or without enslavement of the natives ; the French method, conversion
and amalgamation without enslavement; the English method extermination
or enslavement without conversion or amalgamation. The French always
recognized an immortal soul redeemed by Christ in the Indians. They
54 THE COLONIES OF NORTH AMERICA.
called them "brothers" and "children." Their missionaries sacrificed
everything for the conversion of the red inaii and were largely successful.
The French method of colonization and of dealing with the Indians did not
necessarily involve exterminating warfare, or oppression and injury, or
expulsion of the natives from their soil. Their objects were occupancy of a
portion of the soil, small in comparison with the territory left to the
Indians, peace, commerce and trade, and the christianizing of the natives.
Their sway over the Indians, based on justice and mutual consent, was
unquestioned, although the French never numbered more than one-tenth of
the English population. Individual cases of aggression and violence
undoubtedly occurred, especially in southern Louisiana, but they were
foreign to the policy of the noble Champlaiu and his successors. The
French and Indian wars with the Five Nations were provoked by the exter-
minating raids of the fierce Iroquois. u There is nothing similar," says a
modern historian (M. Ludlow), "to the wholesale christianizing of the
Indians in the Spanish colonies or to the vast network of French missions
in Northern America, and to their widespreading influence over the
natives."
93. Puritan Principles as to the Treatment of the Indians. — In the
early colonial enterprises of the English, feeble and attended by disaster as
they were, the Indians were invariably the supporters and benefactors of the
white man. In every case the kindly actions of the savages were ill requited.
The New England Puritans looked upon the natives as " a doomed race of
Adam " under a curse, whose existence had no value even to the Indian
himself. Although a number of very loose contracts were made with the
Indians, in which valuable districts were bought for trinkets, wampum strings,
tools, arms, kitchen utensils or small sums of money, yet the real principles
upon which the settlers acted, were clearly expressed by Dr. Increase
Mather: (' That the heathen people, amongst whom we live, and whose
lands the Lord God of our fathers has given to us for a rightful posses-
sion," etc. Cotton Mather calls Satan " the old landlord " of the Indian
country. Governor Bradford writes of the colonies as "vast and unpeopled
countries, which are fruitful and fit for habitation, being devoid of all civil
inhabitants, where there are only savage and brutish men which range up
and down little otherwise than the wild beasts of the same." The general
opinion of the Puritans and Dutch Calvinists was, that the Indians were a
part of the vermin and wild beasts such as wolves and wild cats, which the
whites have a right to exterminate in order to render the territory habitable
to civilized men. The few meagre attempts to convert the Indians to Puri
tanism were ridiculed and strenuously opposed by the mass of the settlers.
Of course, the Indians themselves contributed their part to this antagonism.
Their fierce retaliations, the night attacks, the tomahawk, the scalping knife,
the massacre and the torture, used by them unsparingly when they had the
upper hand, bred a savage spirit in the hearts of the magistrates, preachers
and people, without one redeeming trait of pity. They forgot, that the
v
TREATMENT OF THE INDIANS. 55
weight of condemnation for ruthless measures and unchristian wrongs must
fall on the first aggressors, because they were the stronger and more intelli-
gent party, and bound by their profession of Christianity to justice, mercy
and righteousness.
94 Specimens of Indian Wars. — The early settlers of Virginia had been
continuously indebted to the generosity of the natives for rescuing them
from starvation. In return the English insulted and despoiled their bene-
factors and drove them into a conspiracy. Three massacres of white men
resulted in a long war of extermination (from 1622), during which it was
enacted by law that no terms of peace should be entertained with the
natives. — In the war of the Dutch with the Indians wholesale massacres
were attended by terror, devastation and barbarous tortures which rivaled
in horror the savagery of the natives. — The Pequods in Connecticut had
slain two Englishmen, one for killing an Indian chief. A body of eighty
English and 100 Mohicans surprised the chief village of the Pequods, set
it on fire, " formed a circle around the burning huts, and slew their enemies
without mercy as the fire drove them into sight; 600 Pequods, men, women
and children, perished in an hour while but two of the English were lost; of
the rest of the tribe, 200 who surrendered, were sold into slavery, all the
others hunted down and exterminated" (1637).— The Narragansetts came
next. Miantonomo, their noble chief, had been falsely accused before the
magistrates of Massachusetts of dark plots. Forthwith his person was
seized by the Mohicans and surrendered to the commissioners of the United
Colonies. Although he and his uncle} Canonicus, had been the best friends
and benefactors of the colony, yet he was doomed to death by four Puritan
ministers. Not long after, a party of Wampanoags had killed eight or nine
Englishmen in revenge for some private offense. Philip, their chief, who
was the son of the famous Massosoit, the earliest friend of the colonists., is
said to have wept when he heard that a white man's blood had been shed.
The English prepared for war. Within a week the Wampanoags, 700 strong,
were driven from their palisades. Philip fled to the Indians of the interior
and roused all the tribes, save the Mohicans, from Maine to Connecticut. In
their first onslaught they destroyed twelve or thirteen towns, burnt some 600
houses, and killed in battle or cut off unawares between 500 and 600 settlers.
But retaliation came swift and unsparing. The Wampanoags were extermi-
nated by the butcheries of Captain Church, the Narragansetts by Captain
Winslow. Philip was shot in a swamp, his wife and his son were sold as
slaves to Bermuda. Such is the short story of " King Philip's War," 1675-76.
Reuben G. Thwaites: The Jesuit Relations and Allied Documents. — J. G. Shea: Catho-
lic Missions, 1529-1854. — G. E. Ellis: The Red Man and the White Man. — Bancroft :
Indian Races of the Pacific States. — Moore; Trumbull: Indian Wars. — Edna. Burke:
European Settlements in Am. — School craft: Historical and Statistical Information, etc. —
Catlin: On the Manners, Customs and Conditions of the Indians. — J. G. Shea: The Jesuits,
Recollects and the Indian* (Narrat. and Grit. Hist.). — De Smet: Letters and Sketches —
LUken : Die Traditionen des Menschengeschlechtes. — Parkman : Conspiracy of Pontiac.
56 THE COLONIES OF NORTH AMERICA.
NEGRO SLAVERY IN NORTH AMERICA.
95. Origin of Negro Slavery. — Negro slavery owed its origin to the
Moorish wars in the Spanish Peninsula. The Moors dragged thousands of
Christians into slavery, and the Spaniards and Portuguese retaliated.
Moorish captives and prisoners of war then purchased freedom with l( black
Moors " or negroes. Alexander III. had, however, reasserted the principle
already proclaimed by St. Gregory the Great, that " nature having made no
slaves all men have a natural right to liberty." Slavery was accordingly
treated as a punishment for crime, such as war or rebellion against Chris-
tians, felony, relapse into idolatry or cannibalism. At first, the severity of
bondage was mitigated by benevolent legislation. Commercial slave trade
with its barbarous slave hunts appeared in the middle of the fifteenth century.
The Holy See never sanctioned the slave trade, but since Eugene IV. repeat-
edly condemned the iniquitous traffic. Paul III. twice passed sentence of
excommunication against Europeans who would enslave negroes or any
other class of men. Cardinal Ximenes opposed the introduction of negroes
into Hispaniola though authorized by the Spanish law. Las Casas, who in
his charity for the weaker Indians had advised the employment of the
stronger negroes in the colonies, lived to regret his counsel.
96. England and the Slave Trade. — England became interested in the
slave trade through the pirate John Hawkins. Elizabeth herself was allured
by the gain so easily gotten and engaged in. the smuggling and selling of
negro slaves. Her example was followed by all the Stuarts and the earlier
Hanover kings* who each in his turn founded one or more slave -trading com-
panies. In 1749 the slave trade, until then monopolized by these companies,
was thrown open to all British subjects free from taxes. By the Assiento
contract, which Bolingbroke secured in the Peace of Utrecht, England
obtained the monopoly of importing into the Spanish West Indies 144,000
negroes at the rate of 4,800 a year, at a fixed duty, with the right of import-
ing any further number at a lower duty. Thus the Southern States of the
future Union were all peopled with negro slaves. Before the Peace of
Utrecht the colonies were equally responsible with the home government
for the slave trade. But after the peace the encouragement of this traffic
became the principal object of England's colonial policy, " the pillar and
support" of her trade in America. All Africa was convulsed with civil
wars and infested by bands of native slave hunters after victims for the
English trade. Bancroft in a careful computation estimates the number of
negroes imported by the English alone, between 1676 and 1776 — the century
preceding the prohibition of the slave trade by the American Congress — at
3,000,000, without counting the untold numbers that perished on the voyage.
The attempts of some of the colonies to prohibit or restrict the importation
of negroes was invariably defeated by England.
NEGRO SLAVERY IN NORTH AMERICA. 57
97. Slavery in the Colonies — The first slaves were conveyed to Vir-
ginia in a Dutch vessel, 1619. New England saw the first importation, 1637.
Henceforth slavery existed in all the colonies, both Dutch and English ;
but it speedily gravitated to the South. Although the importation of slaves
in New England was never considerable, yet the slave trade was mainly
carried on by ships from Massachusetts and Rhode Island, which carried
rum to Africa and brought back slaves to the southern colonies and to the
West Indies. By 1763 there were about 300,000 negroes in North America.
The treatment of slaves depended to a great extent on the character of
those who owned them. In the North they dwelt under the same roof with
their masters and were employed in agriculture and domestic services.
Public opinion protected them against cruelty. In Maryland, Virginia, the
Carolinas and Georgia, they dwelt in detached huts and worked on the
tobacco, rice and cotton plantations. In families imbued with .the spirit of
Christianity, they were treated like members of the household. This was
especially the case in the old Catholic families of Maryland. In general,
however, their lot was that of hopeless, abject and crushing servitude.
As the supply of slaves was abundant, bad masters found it to their interest
to work them to death, and to get new hands. When Georgia adopted
slavery with the approval of Methodist ministers, including Whitefield and
the two Wesleys, it added a clause for the religious instruction of the
negroes. But outside of Georgia, and parts of Maryland and Pennsylvania,
little heed was given to the conversion of the slaves. Many thought that
baptism would invalidate their titles of ownership. Others feared that
even primary and religious education would turn the slaves against their
oppressors. The Protestant Society for the Propagation of the Gospel sent
missionaries to the western coast of Africa, but absolutely refused to con-
vert their own slaves in Barbadoes.
98. Legislation. — Virginia in her first slave law (1663) enacted the
clause, that mulatto children should be bond or free according to the condi-
tion of the mother, thus declaring the greatest number of mulatto children
slaves. Maryland reversed the law and thereby freed the greatest number
of such children. Successive legislation discouraged enfranchisement and
made the master absolute lord over the negro. The law did not account as
felony the killing of a slave resulting from extreme correction. Absconding
or fugitive slaves who resisted apprehension could be lawfully wounded or
killed. Slave legislation reached its climax early. in the eighteenth century
when slaves were declared, by the English law, legal merchandize, and by
the colonial law real estate, being a fixture of the soil. Thus in the long
lapse of years the institution of slavery created a landed aristocracy
infinitely worse than the feudal nobility of the middle ages.
Lecky II. 5 — Histories of the U. S. esp. Hildreth and Bancroft. — Ludlow : War of
Amer. Independence.— G. W. Williams: History of the Negro Race in Am. — See WorkB
to B. III. Ch. 4 on the Slavery Question.
58
THE COLONIES OF NORTH AMERICA.
O i
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dian extermination since
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.ONIES IN NORTH AMERIC
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ORIGINAL ENGLISH C€
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1620, named after
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NEW ENGLAND, nam
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THE COLONIES OF NORTH AMERICA.
59
1 643-66 first Federation of
colonies. The New Engl.
Union of Hampsh., Mass.,
Plymouth, New Haven and
Conn (a) ag. The Indians;
(b) ag. Rhode Island;
Pequods exterminated by
Conn. King Philip's War-
Extermination of the Warn-
setts, 1675-76.
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60
THE COLONIES OF NORTH AMERICA.
Continued.
The Tuscaroras driven north-
ward, the Temassees into
Florida. Brutal warfare
against Catholic missions
and Christianized Indians.
Slavery excluded by Ogle-
thorpe; later introduced by
the settlers.
IN NORTH AMERICA — (
fi
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CONTACT OF COLONIAL WITH EUROPEAN HISTORY. 61
%
§ 5.
CONTACT OF COLONIAL WITH EUROPEAN HISTORY.
99. Codfisheries. — The codflsheries on the coast and banks of New-
foundland, discovered in the days of Henry VII. by the Cabots.and utilized
from that day to the present, formed the first link between Europe and
North America.
100. Treaty of St. Germain, 1632, — The last of the Hugue-
not wars in which Charles I. and Buckingham took part, was the
first European war that reached over to North America. In 1629
Kirk took Quebec under a commission of Charles I. The seizure
happened two months after the termination of the Anglo-French
war. Cardinal Richelieu . as Protector of Canada insisted on resti-
tution. Diplomatic negotiations accompanied by some desultory
fighting in New France finally led to the Peace of St. Germain, 1632,
in which England recognized New France, Canada and Acadia as
French possessions.
101. Acadia Taken and Restored by England. — When
the Anglo-Dutch war about the Navigation Act broke out between
Cromwell and Holland (1652-54), Cromwell ordered a New England
expedition under Sedgwick to attack the New Netherlands. The
Peace of London, however, was concluded before the expedition
sailed. By secret orders from Cromwell, Sedgwick attacked and
conquered Acadia, 1655. Acadia remained an English province
under the name of Nova Scotia, till the Peace of Breda, 1668.
102. Acquisition of New York by England. — The open disregard of the
Navigation Act in the dealings of the English colonies with the New Nether-
lands deprived England of a considerable revenue, whilst the self-govern-
ment of the English settlers was considered by the Stuarts as injurious to
the sovereignty of the mother country. Clarendon, then Chancellor, saw in
the conquest of the Dutch possessions the means of bringing the English
subjects into closer dependence on the King. Accordingly he purchased a
forgotten claim, contained in the New England Patent, covering the terri-
tory from the Connecticut to the Delaware, part of Maine, and some islands
Charles II. vested this claim in his brother, the Duke of York. James
being the presumptive heir, this claim was expected to be merged in the
crown at his accession.
62 THE COLONIES OF NORTH AMERICA.
In 1664 a small English fleet, reinforced by colonial forces,
appeared before New Amsterdam, and demanded and obtained the
surrender of the city and the country without bloodshed. The capit-
ulation confirmed the inhabitants in the possession of their property,
the exercise of their religion, and their freedom as citizens. The
names of New Amsterdam and New Netherlands were changed into
New York, that of Fort Orange into Albany, in honor of James
Duke of York^and Albany. This seizure was one of several acts of
hostility which led to the first Anglo-Dutch war under" Charles II.
(1665-67). France entered the contest as England's ally in 1666.
In the Peace of Breda between Holland, England and France, En-
gland retained New York and Delaware, restored Acadia to France
in exchange for some islands in South America, and left Surinam to
Holland.
In tiie second Anglo-Dutch war (1672—74), a Dutch squadron
reconquered the New Netherlands. But the Peace of Westminster
gave New York and Delaware to England on the principle of a
mutual restoration of conquests. Thus every mile of the American
coast from Maine to South Carolina was at length under the flag of
England.
1O3, King Williams' War, 1689-9O and 1696-97.— The
War of the Palatine Succession (1689—97) was called in the colonies
King William's war. The question of the English succession was
uppermost in America ; that of the Palatine succession in Europe.
As William III. had sent no instructions, the colonies acted for them-
selves. They rejected the offer of neutrality which Louis XIV. had
made in order to prevent Indian warfare. The Indians of Canada
and Maine sided with the French, the Five Nations of the Iroquois
with the English colonies.
Hostilities opened at Dover, New Hampshire, where Major Richard Wald-
ron, who had betrayed 350 Abenakis into slavery, was surprised by the
Penacook Indians of Maine and killed with 23 others. Next followed the
massacre of 200 Canadians at Lachine and the temporary occupation of
Montreal by a band of English and 1500 Iroquois. But Frontenac, Gover-
nor of Canada, avenged his losses by the capture of three colonial forts
(Schenectady, N. Y.; Salmon Falls, N. H.; Casco Bay, Maine), 1689.
In the meantime, the first Colonial Congress representing New York,
Massachusetts, Plymouth, Connecticut, met at New York, and resolved to
CONTACT OF COLONIAL WITH EUROPEAN HISTORY. 63
conquer Canada. Sir William Phips, who had taken Port Royal and effected
the submission of Acadia, sailed with 32 vessels and 2,000 troops to Quebec.
This undertaking, however, proved a signal failure as well as the march upon
Montreal of the New York contingent under Governor Leisler. This double
disaster and the retaking of Port Royal by the French put an end to the first
period of the war. In 1696 the Canadians captured Fort Pemaquid in Maine,
harassed the Five Nations, and were on the point of attacking Newfound-
land, when the Peace of Ryswick terminated hostilities in Europe and
America.
The Peace of Ryswick imposed on the American combatants a
reciprocal restitution of all conquests and intrusted the regulation of
the American frontiers to an international boundary commission,
which never met.
The Five Nations were not included in the Peace of Ryswick. Both
France and England contended for an alliance with the Iroquois. But
whilst William III. tried by all means to make them recognize his sov-
ereignty, France promised not to touch their national existence. Besides,
many Iroquois had become earnest Catholics. A law passed in New York,
1700, prohibiting any Catholic missionary under penalty of death to enter
the territory of the Iroquois, induced them to side with France. A treaty
of peace with the Indians and the authorities of Canada was signed in a
general assembly before the walls of Montreal, 1701.
104. Queen Anne's War, 17O1-1713. — The War of the
Spanish Succession is called in America Queen Anne's War. In
King William's War, France alone was fighting the colonies ; in the
present war France and Spain were united. The colonies that
entered the contest were New England, because of its neighborhood
to the French, and South Carolina, because of its neighborhood to
the Spaniards. The Five Nations, in accordance with the Peace of
Montreal, refused to attack the Indians of Canada. Schuyler, of
New York, negotiated a treaty of neutrality with Canada, thus New
York was not engaged in the struggle until 1709 and 1711, when the
failure and disgrace of its two expeditions had the only result of
burdening the colony with a heavy debt.
105. The War in the South. — The object of the Indian wars in South
Carolina was not so much to punish or destroy the natives as to capture
slaves for the West Indies. Therefore a bounty was offered for every
Indian prisoner. This style of warfare with its accompanying atrocities
roused the Indians to deeds of retaliation, and finally drove the Tuscaroras
64 THE COLONIES OB1 NORTH AMERICA.
northward, where they joined the coufederacj^ of the Five Nations as the
sixth. The Yemassees were driven into 1'lorida.
James Moore, the governor of South Carolina, organized a force
of 1,200 men, took command of the fleet, and made Colonel Daniel
commander of the land forces . The first deeds of these heroes were
an attack on the peaceful missions of the Franciscans on the coast
of what later became Georgia, the homes of converted and civilized
Indians. Their villages were destroyed, their churches burnt, the
converts killed or sold into slavery, and the surviving missionaries
carried away as prisoners. Moore then advanced upon St. Augus-
tine, and destroyed the town and the Franciscan mission. But the
vigorous defense of the citadel by Don Joseph de la Cerda, and the
appearance in the offing of two Spanish men of war, forced the
governor to a hasty and undignified retreat, 1702. At the head of
fifty whites and 1,000 heathen savages Moore then attacked the
numerous towns of the Indians living on the Bay of Apalache, who
had been converted and partly civilized by the Spanish missionaries.
The indiscriminate massacre of the missionaries and of 800 converts,
the tortures inflicted by the heathen tribesmen on their Catholic
victims and the sale of 1,400 captives into slavery fill a page in the
history of religious persecution rather than of civilized warfare.
1OG. The War in the North. — A New England raid into the
Canadian and Indian territory brought the northern natives down
upon Maine and New Hampshire and into the very heart of Mas-
sachusetts, 1704. A first attempt of Massachusetts in 1707 to
reduce Port Royal failed. After a preparation of two years, an
English and American fleet took Port Royal, which received the
name of Annapolis in honor of Queen Anne. Acadia was reduced
and became Nova Scotia, 1710. In the following year a far more
powerful armament was equipped to conquer Canada. Sir Walker
with a fleet of 15 men-of-war and 40 transports was to take Quebec,
and Nicholson, governor of New York, to march upon Montreal.
Incompetency and a severe storm on the St. Lawrence frustrated the
attempt on Quebec, and discouragement that on Montreal. The
Peace of Utrecht, 1713, secured Nova Scotia, the Hudson Bay and
Straits, and the fisheries of Newfoundland, to Great Britain.
CONTACT OF COLONIAL WITH EUROPEAN HISTORY. 65
The boundary question between the French and the English territories
was as little decided by the Teace of Utrecht as on former occasions, and
remained a bone of contention for the future. After the Peace of Utrecht
the English government promised the Catholic Acadians freedom of wor-
ship and released them from the obligation of fighting against their French
countrymen. From this period to the War of the Austrian Succession there
was only border warfare with the Indians during which Massachusetts
obtainqd cessions of territory from the Indians by fair and foul means,
aud ruthlessly destroyed the Catholic missions of the Abenakis in Maine.
1O7. King- George's War, 174O-48. — King George's War
is known in Europe as the War of the Austrian Succession. The
only important event of this war in America was the capture of
Louisburg on Cape Breton Island at the principal entrance of the
gulf and river of St. Lawrence. Louisburg, attacked from the sea
by the English Commodore Warren, and from the land by 4,000
colonial troops under William Pepperell, capitulated after a siege of
fifty days. But the Peace of Aachen compelled England to restore
Louisburg and Cape Breton Island to France.
Parkman: A Half Century of Conflict; C. Frontenac, New France and Louis XIV.;
Montcalm and Wolfe.
CHAPTER V.
THE SEVEN YEARS' WAR.
§1.
AMERICAN CAUSES OF THE SEVEN YEARS' WAR.
108. Conflicting Claims of France and England. — The
Seven Years' War in Europe had its remote cause in an outbreak of
hostilities between France and England in North America. It was
this hostility which, for the first time, determined the rearrangement
of European alliances, England and Prussia against Austria and
France. The claims of England and France to the interior of the
continent were irreconcilable. France based her claims (a) on dis-
covery and exploration made under the patronage and at the expense
of the kings, the nobility and the Church of France, (b) On actual,
though thinly scattered settlements and the possession of the inner
strongholds of the continent. The French had numerous fortresses,
more than sixty military trading and missionary posts from the
great lakes to New Orleans in a country wholly uninhabited by the
English, (c) On the expressed consent of the Indians whom the
French did not dispossess of their lands, and on the conversion of
many tribes. Against such claims the English, apart from the occu-
pation of the Atlantic colonies, had only paper charters, contradic-
tory grants of soil reaching across America to the Pacific, often
issued with absolute disregard of established rights, and valueless
without occupation. Owing to the unsettled state of the boundary
question, France still claimed the St. Lawrence basin connecting
Canada with the Ohio and Mississippi valleys,, called Louisiana.
The English were thus on all sides surrounded and hemmed in by
the territories of their rivals. The question became a contest for
colonial supremacy in America between France and England.
109. Ohio Valley Dispute. — To resist what the English
authorities considered French encroachments, Virginia founded the
Ohio Company, and obtained from George II. a grant of 500,000
(66)
AMERICAN CAUSES OF THE SEVEN YEARS' WAR. 67
acres, 1749. The governor of Canada at once sent a force of 300
men to trace and mark the Ohio Valley for France. After failing in
a diplomatic mission to Canada, 1753, George Washington, a young
Virginian of Westmoreland County on the Potomac, was sent as sec-
ond in command, under Colonel Fry, to the Ohio where the company
had built a fort. This fort had meanwhile been taken and strength-
ened by the French and named, after the governor of Canada, Fort
Duquesne. The Virginia party, too late to save the fort, defeated a
Canadian detachment at Great Meadows, 1754. By the death of
Fry, Washington became commander, but had to capitulate to a
superior French force, being accorded all the honors of war, 1754.
Thus war had actually broken out between France and England
before it was declared. Early in 1755 , General Braddock with 2 ,000
men arrived from England as commander-in-chief of all the colonial
troops.
11O. The Expulsion of the Acadians, 1755. — Four expedi-
tions were planned. The expedition to Niagara, a point which com-
manded the fur trade of the great lakes, resulted in the rebuilding of
Fort Oswego. The expedition to the Lakes Champlain and George
commanding the inland route of New York, New England and Mon-
treal resulted in the erection of Fort William Henry by the English,
whilst the French, though defeated in the field, maintained Crown
Point, and seized Ticonderoga. A third expedition, landing near
the Bay of Fundy, subdued New Brunswick and accomplished the
barbarous deportation of the Acadians.
The Acadians were Catholic peasants, immigrants from Normandy, a most
innocent and virtuous people, protected by their very situation in an out-
of the -way place. They lived in a state of perfect equality without dis-
tinction of rank, without ambition or avarice. They demanded no interest
for loans of money or other property, and anticipated one another's wants
with kindly liberality. They were humane and hospitable to strangers. They
were very remarkable for the inviolate purity of their morals. Joyful and
gay at heart they were almost always of one mind. Simplicity and candor
were their distinctive traits. Never at any time did the people dwelling in
the Acadian peninsula take up or even threaten to take up arms against the
English or for the French, since they became subjects of England. The
only points, guaranteed to them by England, on which they insisted with
unalterable firmness, were the free exercise of the Catholic religion, and
the privilege of not bearing arms against their French countrymen in Canada.
68 THE SEVEN YEARS' WAR.
The refusal of the Acadians to take the oath of allegiance shorn of this
privilege was the ostensible cause of their deportation. Greed was the real
cause. Governor Lawrence of Nova Scotia^ and his council, falsely invok-
ing the King's name, who had condemned the project, determined to disperse
the whole people, 18,000 souls, among the British colonies. The Acadians
were kept entirely ignorant of their destiny and allured to gather in their
harvest which was secretly allotted to the use of their conquerors. They
were then summoned to their churches (Colonel Winslow at Grand Pre),
where the proclamation of their fate was read to them. At the point of the
bayonet they were driven on board an English fleet, and irrespective of
family ties — parents separated from children, wives from husbands, sisters
from brothers — scattered all along the coast among the Protestant colonists
of the sea board from New Hampshire to Georgia. Before leaving the road-
stead of Nova Scotia they saw their cattle driven off, their property removed,
and their villages burnt to prevent them from returning. Seven thousand
were deported in 1755, the rest in the following years. This deportation of
peaceful and innocent folk, of which Bancroft says: "I know not if the
annals of the human race keep the record of sorrows so wantonly inflicted,
so bitter, and so perennial, as fell upon the French inhabitants of Acadia,"
was not only unauthorized by the British government but prompted solely
by the basest motives of pecuniary greed on the part of the provincial
authorities. Governor Lawrence got the live stock and personal property,
his accomplices the lands of the deported Acadians.*
111. Braddock's Defeat, 1755. — Of the four expeditions
planned, the principal one, commanded by General Braddock him-
self, with George Washington as his aid-de-camp, marched against
the French in the Ohio Valley. Despising Washington's sugges-
tions, and irritating the friendly Iroquois, Braddock blundered into
a French and Indian ambuscade, was defeated with terrible slaughter,
and mortally wounded in the battle of Fort Duquesne. He died
four days after the battle. Washington saved the scattered remnants
of his army. The defeat of Braddock caused widespread consterna-
tion in the English colonies, and hastened the rupture between
England and France in Europe.
Lecky: II., 8, p. 482.— A. R. Ropes: Causes of the Seven Tears' War (Royal Hist. Soc.
Transaction, new Series, v. 4). — Chapman: The French in the Allegheny V. — 3. G.
Shea: The Mississippi Valley. — Parkman: Montcalm and Wolfe. — Sargeant: Hist, of
Braddock's Defeat; Lives of Washington (see Ch. IX. § 2) - Ph. H. Smith: Acadia, a Lost
Chapter in Am. History. — Edouard Richard : Missing Links of a Lost Chapter in Am.
Hist. — Acadian Confessors of the Faith: C. A. Q., 9, 12.
* Mr. Edouard Richard (Missing Links of a Lost Chapter in American History) has
incontestibly established the true meaning of this historical episode against Atkins,
Parkman and other maligners of the Acadians.
OUTBREAK OF THE SEVEN YEARS' WAR IN EUROPE. 69
OUTBREAK OF THE SEVEN YEARS' WAR IN EUROPE.
112. The Naval War in Europe — Treaty of Westminster,
1756. — The defeat of Braddock did not nerve the incapable Duke
of Newcastle, Pelham's brother, now prime minister, to an open
war with France, but only to piratical seizures of French ships.
Three hundred French merchantmen and 8,000 sailors brought into
English ports, were the fruit of this lawless warfare. In his fear of
French retaliation George II. grew anxious for the safety of
Hanover. After groping about for alliances at Vienna and else-
where, the ministry finally concluded a treaty of neutrality with
Frederic II., who thereby abandoned his alliance with France. By
this treaty of Westminster the two Powers bound themselves to pre-
vent all foreign troops from entering Germany during the expected
war between France and England (January, 1756). The following
year this treaty became a subsidy treaty. France, meanwhile, had
quietly armed a powerful fleet at Toulon, which in April 1756
sailed to Minorca, and conquered the island with its important
harbor of Mahon from the English. Admiral Byng.had retreated
to Gibraltar before the somewhat larger French fleet, and subse-
quently paid for his timidity with his head. War was now formally
declared between England and France.
113. Treaty of Versailles, 1756. -7- The alliance of England
and Prussia led to an alliance of Austria and France by a treaty of
neutrality and defense signed near Versailles May 1, 1756, in which
each Power guaranteed the territory of the other.
Count Kaunitz, one of the most clever diplomats of the period, since
1753 Chancellor of State at Vienna, and for the next forty years director of
the Austrian foreign policy, was the first statesman to establish an alliance
with France, Austria's hereditary foe. The reconquest of Silesia with the
aid of France was the object of his policy.
114. Austria and Russia. — A similar treaty of mutual defense in case of
a new Prussian aggression existed between Austria and Russia since 1746.
The coarse jests of the philosophical King on the scandals at the court of
St. Petersburg had exasperated Elizabeth of Russia into a deadly enmity.
70 THE SEVEN YEARS' WAR.
Her policy was to support Austria in the most effective way. On the other
hand, Grand Duke Peter, the heir apparent, admired Frederic II. with
almost idolatrous hero worship. Hence throughout the Seven Years' War,
whenever the Russian Empress fell sick, her ministers and generals, in
deference to Peter, either withdrew the armies from the field, or kept them
inactive.
115. Maria Theresa and Frederic II. — In the interval of peace Frederic
built strong fortresses, increased and perfected his army and pressed into his
service whomsoever he could lay his hands upon. For this purpose he in-
vaded the homes of his subjects, his recruiting officers snatching young and
strong men from their beds at midnight, and enticed or kidnaped foreigners
into his army by the most outrageous devices. His bad conscience made
him fretful of any symptoms of danger and suspicion. Menzel, a corrupted
government clerk at Dresden, supplied him with copies of a number of
State papers preserved in the Saxon archives. A secretary of the Austrian
embassy at Berlin was also in his pay. From Petersburg Grand Duke Peter
furnished him information. When he perceived that the American quarrel
of England and France would be fought out in Europe, he determined to
anticipate his enemies. The aims of the Empress and Queen during the same
period — the peace and welfare of her subjects aud the defense of the Em-
pire — gradually assumed a more aggressive character. Since the treaty of
Versailles Maria Theresa resolved to attempt the humiliation of Prussia and
the recovery of Silesia.
116. Invasion of Saxony, 1756. — Aware- of the intention of
the Empress, Frederic II. sent a summons to Maria Theresa to dis-
arm. The answer not being satisfactory, Frederic at the head of
60,000 men swooped down upon Saxony without a declaration of
war, and, dismantling its forts, u lifting" the money he found in
the public treasuries, and exacting enormous war contributions,
marched to Dresden, which he entered without opposition. The
intention was to enter Bohemia at once and crush the Austrians
before they had time to concentrate their forces. But Augustus III.
took up a strong position on the river Pirna, appealed to Austria for
aid, and brought Frederic's advance to a stop.
Public opinion outside of Prussia regarded the invasion of Saxony as a
breach of the Law of Nations. To defend himself, Frederic obtained the
keys of the archives and the originals of Menzel's copies, not without the
personal humiliation of the Electress of Saxony. The famous defense
which he published to Europe, ostensibly based on these papers, was a
tissue of half truths and whole fabrications.
OUTBREAK OF THE SEVEN YEARS' WAR IN EUROPE. 71
117. The Battle of Lobositz, 1756. — An Austrian army
under Marshal Browne was sent to the relief of the Saxons.
Frederic met the Austrians just within the borders of Bohemia, and
fought the drawn battle of Lobositz, after which Marshal Browne
continued his march as if nothing had happened. But he could not
save the Saxons. They had failed to effect the junction agreed
upon and were forced to capitulate. Augustus III. was allowed to
retire to Poland. The officers were left the option of service under
Frederic or dismissal under parole. The rank and file was forcibly
enrolled under the Prussian flag and compelled to swear fidelity to
Frederic.
Frederic's gain in troops was small, for most of the Saxons deserted
before the beginning of the next campaign. Saxony had suffered terribly,
but her resistance had saved Austria. Frederic's intended campaign had
proved a failure; he was compelled to winter in Dresden. Meanwhile
Austria, France and Russia could perfect their coalition. A treaty for the
partition of some of Prussia's provinces was signed by the three Powers in
the spring of 1757. Sweden joined the league as the ally of France, but her
part in the war was unimportant. The Empire declared the invasion of
Saxony as a breach of the imperial peace and formally declared war.
Besides Hanover and Brunswick only a few minor princes continued in
alliance with Frederic. Thus the Seven Years' War meant for Germany a
civil war.
118. Campaign of 1757 in the East — Prague and Kolin. —
To get the start of the enemy, Frederic early in 1757, leaving the
defepse of Germany to the Duke of Cumberland, entered Bohemia.
Before Prague Frederic defeated the Austrians in the most bloody
battle since Malplaquet. The Austrians lost their best general,
Marshal Browne, and 13,000 men. The Prussians lost 12,500 men
and their old hero, Marshal Schwerin. The siege and bombardment
of Prague by 50,000 Prussians gave Marshal Daun time to
march to its relief. Frederic went to meet him and found him
encamped on the heights of Kolin. After seven unsuccessful
attacks the king was obliged to retreat in disorder. The retreat
turned into a rout, when, to avenge their country, three Saxon cavalry
regiments charged through the broken ranks of the Prussian infantry.
The loss of the battle meant the loss of the campaign. Frederic
was compelled to raise the siege of Prague and to evacuate
72
Bohemia. He returned to Saxony with 70,000 of the 117,000 with
which he had commenced the campaign.
The Russians had entered East Prussia under Apraxin and won a victory
(at Grossjagerndorf ) . But hearing that Elizabeth was sick, Apraxiu
returned home and was dismissed by the angry Empress. Whilst the
Austrians in slow advances conquered part of Silesia and took Breslau,
General Hadik made a dashing raid into the heart of Prussia, entered Berlin,
and raised contributions in city and country.
119. Campaign in the West — Hastenbeck and Kloster-
seven. — Before the end of March 100,000 French in two divisions
crossed the Rhine, occupied Cleve, and marched upon Hanover
plundering and destroying the property of friend and foe alike.
Eight days after the Battle of Kolin Marshal D'Estrees defeated the
Duke of Cumberland at Hastenbeck on the Weser. Cumberland
abandoned Hanover and Brunswick to the invaders, never stopping
in his retreat till he had reached the fortress of Stade near the mouth
of the Elbe. The entire army was soon at the mercy of the French.
Through the mediation of the King of Denmark, the Convention of
Klosterseven was concluded between Richelieu , D'Estrees' successor,
and Cumberland, which yielded Hanover, Brunswick and Hesse to
the French. Cumberland was allowed to dismiss his German
auxiliaries, whilst the Hanoverian army might winter around Stade.
Richelieu lost the fruit of his triumph. The transaction was really a
capitulation. But Cumberland begged so hard that the term might.be
avoided, that Richelieu good-naturedly allowed it to be called a convention,
forgetting that a convention, unlike a capitulation, was subject to ratification
by the respective governments. Public indignation in England forced the
Duke of Cumberland out of actual service. Pitt, then minister of war,
repudiated the Convention of Klosterseven. The Hanoverian army was
reorganized, and Prince Ferdinand of Brunswick, the brother of the reign-
ing Duke, called to the chief command.
120. Rossbach and Leuthen. — The position of Frederic was now pre-
carious. The French were masters in North Germany west of the Elbe.
The Russians stood in East Prussia. The Swedes threatened Pomerania
The Austrians advanced in Silesia. In Central Germany 40,000 French
under Soubise joined the 20,000 Imperial troops for the purpose of liberat-
ing Saxony. Frederic never lost his presence of mind or relaxed his efforts
to conquer the increasing difficulties. For a last extremity he always car-
•
WAR IN EUROPE. 73
ried poison about his person. His immediate plan was first to beat Soubise
and then to hasten to Silesia.
The French and Imperialists had advanced to the neighborhood of
Leipsic. At Rossbach, a few miles west of the battlefield of Liitzen,
Frederic with only 22,000 men encountered the enemy about 50, 000
strong. He masked his movements behind two low hills. The cavalry
of the allies were just mounting the lower hill, when Seidlitz with
his hussars suddenly appeared on the crest, and swept down on the
unsuspecting columns. In half an hour they were scattered ; in
another half hour the infantry was routed broadcast over the land.
The allies lost 8,000 dead, wounded and prisoners ; Frederic's loss
was 500. He was soon free to turn to Silesia, which he did with his
usual rapidity. The decisive battle was fought at Leuthen. The
Austrian battle array of nearly 80,000 men had the unreasonable
extension of six miles. Frederic's excellent tactics misled the
Austrian leaders. The result was the complete rout of the Austrians.
They lost 10,000 killed and wounded, 12,000 prisoners, thousands
more on their retreat to Bohemia, and 17,000 prisoners by the capi-
tulation of Breslau. By the spring of 1758, all Silesia was again in
Frederic's possession.
The battles of Rossbach and Leuthen did not restore the prestige which
Frederic enjoyed after the battle of Prague; yet they saved him from
destruction and gave him another fighting chance.
121. Pitt — Battle of Crefeld. — Pitt was now firmly established in power
and inspired England so completely with his own fiery spirit, that his ad-
ministration became one of the strongest in her history. He organized
numerous descents upon the coasts of France to divert her attention from
more important points, especially from the colonies. He obtained from
Parliament an annual subsidy of 670,OOOZ. for Frederic. He reinforced the
Hanoverian army of Ferdinand of Brunswick with 12,000 English troops.
After sharing the glories of Rossbach, Ferdinand drove the French behind
the Aller, and the following year across the Rhine, and defeated Prince
Clermont, Richelieu's successor, in the battle of Crefeld.
Books to Oh. III., § 1 and 2 — Lecky: II. 8, 487-537. — F. W. Longman: Fred, the Gr.
and the S. Y's War.— Live* of Pitt, Earl of Chatham: Brougham (Statesmen of the
Time of Oeo. III.); Earle (Engl. Premiers); Macaulay (Essays). — Schafer, Gesch. des
Siebenj Krleges.
74
§ 3.
THE SEVEN YEARS' WAR IN EUROPE — FREDERIC ON THE •
DEFENSIVE.
122. Frederic's Campaign of 1758 — Zorndorf . — Frederic
opened the campaign with th'e invasion of Moravia and with the siege
of Olmiitz, its most important fortress. His operations were greatly
hampered by the army of Daun who hovered about the besiegers, and
by the loyal devotion to Austria of the Moravian inhabitants. The
rising general Laudon, as quick and impetuous in his movements as
Daun was slow and cautious, surprised and partly captured, partly
destroyed, an immense Prussian convoy, and thus brought the siege
to a sudden close. Constantly harassed by the Austrians, Frederic
retreated through Bohemia into Silesia, but saw himself compelled to
face a new enemy. Again the Russians under Fermor had cut a way
through East Prussia with fire and sword and were approaching the
Oder. Frederic met them at Zorndorf. Though badly officered, the
Russians stood their ground with dogged courage for ten hours.
Seidlitz' hussars saved the day for Frederic. Zorndorf was the
bloodiest battle of the war, 11,500 Prussians and 21,000 Russians
covered the field. Fermor withdrew into Poland. Frederic hastened
to Saxony, where his brother, Prince Henry, was confronting Marshal
Daun and the army of the Empire. It took the wary Daun a month
before deciding on a battle. At Hochkirch he espied his chance. He
assailed Frederic's camp in a night attack. The excellent discipline
of the Prussians prevented a panic ; but they had to retreat with a loss
of three generals, 9,000 men and 100 cannon.
Marshal Daun failed to reap the fruit of his victory. He allowed Fred-
eric to reinforce himself, to evade the Austrian army, and to clear Silesia
of the enemy. Returning with his army reorganized, the King finally com-
pelled Daun to evacuate Saxony. Thus at the end of the year Frederic
was still in the undisputed possession of Silesia and Saxony.
123. Campaign of 1759 — Battle of Kunersdorf. — The campaign of
1759 did not begin before summer. Frederic was. straitened for money.
Whatever the country raised or England contributed went to the army.
Civil officers remained unpaid. Most of the veterans were dead and had
to be replaced by raw levies. Towards the middle of July the Russians
THE SEVEN YEARS* WAR IN EUROPE. 75
under Solticow advanced from Poland, and after defeating a Prussian
army (at Ziillichau) took possession of Frankfort on the Oder.
Daun took up a strongly fortified position on the river Neisse.
Laudon and Hadik with 12,000 horse and 8,000 foot effected a
junction with the 78,000 Russians who occupied the heights of
Kunersdorf near Frankfort. Frederic resolved to attack them with
only 50,000 men. The onslaught was irresistible ; the left wing
of the Russians gave way. Flushed with this first success Fred-
eric resolved, against the advice of his generals, to destroy the Rus-
sian army by seizing the Frankfort bridge and cutting off their
retreat. But assisted by six Austrian regiments, the Russians
turned the Prussian victory into a defeat. When Frederic was in
full retreat, General Laudon swept down on him and inflicted the
most bloody and disorderly rout of the war on the Prussian army.
For once in his life, Frederic was stupefied by this disaster, in which he
lost most of his generals, nearly 20,000 men and 200 cannon, barely saving
his own life. He resigned the command into the hands of his brother
Henry. When the news of Kunersdorf arrived, Dresden capitulated to the
Austrians, and was henceforth lost to Frederic. The King, however,
shook off his despair when he saw the allies neglecting to use their victory,
the Russians aud Austrians quarreling amongst themselves, Marshal Daun
remaining in stolid inactivity, and the Russians, in expectation of the death
of Elizabeth, marching back into Poland.
124. Maxen. — Desirous of concluding the campaign with a
victory, Frederic sent an army into Saxony to reinforce his brother
Henry and to reconquer Dresden. The result was, that Marshal
Daun surrounded a Prussian corps at Maxen, and captured nine
generals, five hundred officers and 12,000 of the line. The capitu-
lation of Maxen destroyed Frederic's plans for the year and left the
Saxon capital in the hands of the Austrians.
125. Campaign of 176O. — Whilst Frederic was facing the
army of Daun in Saxony, Laudon destroyed another Prussian army
corps at Landeshut, captured Glatz, and thereby opened Upper
Silesia to the Austrians. Frederic tried to indemnify himself by
the recapture of Dresden. But General Maguire, who commanded
at Dresden, vigorously defended the city till the approach of an
76 THE SEVEN YEARS' WAR.
Austrian army obliged Frederic to retire. Baffled in his design, he
bombarded the city with red hot balls, taking the churches and the
palaces for his aim, needlessly slaughtering multitudes of peaceful
inhabitants and laying whole quarters in ashes. Meanwhile the
Russians had again marched to the Oder. To prevent the union
of the Austrians and Russians, Frederic, who was tracked by two
Austrian armies under Daun and Lacy, marched from Saxony into
Silesia, where Laudon awaited him, while the Russians crossed the
Oder. With his usual rapidity he attacked Laudon, and inflicted
the first defeat on the brave general at Liegnitz, before the two other
armies came up to join him. Frederic thereupon sent an exagger-
ated report of the victory to Prince Henry, intended to be inter-
cepted by the Russians. The latter took the bait and recrossed the
Oder. Frederic closed the campaign of the year with the victory of
Torgau over Daun.
126. Campaign of 1761. — In western Germany, the war dragged on its
weary length without decisive action. Prince Ferdinand kept on the
defensive, as he had only 80,000 men against the 140,000 French troops.
On the other hand, the rottenness of the French administration, ruled by
favorites and women, pervaded every department of the army, and robbed
it of all its effectiveness. Austria and Prussia were equally exhausted. Thus
the campaign of 1761 was one of marches and maneuvers without a single
pitched battle. The only event of importance was the brilliant seizure
of the Silesian fortress of Schweidnitz by Laudon which enabled the
Austrians and Russians to winter in Silesia and Glatz, whilst another
Russian army after taking Kolberg wintered in Pomerania and Brandenburg.
Works already quoted. Lecky II. 8, pp. 651-565. Malleson: Military Life of Gen.
Laudon. — Mauvillon : Duke of Brunswick. — Duke of Brunswick: E. R. '97,3, '98,1.
§4.
THE WAR IN INDIA AND IN AMERICA.
127. Akbar the Great. — Whilst great battles were fought in
Europe, the war was simultaneously carried on in Asia and in
America. In India various Mohammedan dynasties were, in the
sixteenth century, subdued by the descendants of Tamerlane, who
founded a new Mongol Empire, 1526—1761. Its capital was first at
Agra, afterward at Delhi. Akbar the Great, whose reign was a long
THE WAR IN INDIA AND IN AMERICA. 77
series of conquests, was the most prominent Emperor of the line,
1556—1605. His policy was to unite the Hindoo and Mohammedan
populations by a religious toleration which would enable him to
obtain military support from both. He even conceived the idea of
founding a new universal religion made up of what he considered the
best elements of Islamism, Hindooism and Christianity. To study
the Christian doctrine he called the Jesuits to his court (Rodolfo
Aquaviva), and for several years treated them with great distinction.
His rationalizing temper, however, lack of moral courage and the influ-
ence of his surroundings prevented his conversion. His successors
abandoned his policy of toleration.
128. The Mahrattas. — Under the rule of Emperor Aurangzeb
(1658—1707), a Hindoo Kingdom of Mahrattas rose in the Deccan,
and after crippling the Mongol Empire became independent in
1726. Within the Empire the Indian Nabobs (vice-roys), whilst
still owing a nominal allegiance to the court of Delhi, made
themselves practically independent. By a similar process of dis-
integration, the Mahratta Kingdom, too, became a confederacy of
independent chiefs. The disputes of the Mohammedan rulers among
themselves and with the Mahrattas offered advantages to the Euro-
pean settlers to strengthen their own position by taking part in the
quarrels of the natives.
129. Rivalry between France and England in India. —
Since the discoyery of the Cape of Good Hope, the Portuguese occu-
pied Goa and Malacca, and for a century enjoyed the monopoly of
the trade with India. At the close of the sixteenth century the Dutch
and the English appeared as their rivals. The Dutch obtained a
foothold in the Indian archipelago. The English East India Com-
pany, chartered by Elizabeth in 1600, built Madras in the Carnatic
(1639), obtained Bombay from Charles II. (1668), who had acquired
it from Portugal by his marriage with Catharine of Braganza ; and set-
tled Calcutta on the river Hoogly (1696). The French had a strong
settlement at Pondicherry in the Carnatic, south of Madras. Since
the Peace of Aachen, 1748, a rivalry existed between the English and
the French colonists in India. Dupleix, the governor of Pondicherry,
was the first to organize the sepoys, native soldiers drilled after the
78 THE SEVEN YEARS' WAR.
European fashion. In the succession disputes of the native princes,
Dupleix selected his own candidates and supported them with his
sepoys, and thus made himself the most powerful potentate in the
Carnatic and in the whole of the Deccan. Dupleix next threatened
Madras. Robert Clive, a young officer of the East India Company,
took up the contest, conquered Arcot at the head of a force of sepoys,
won a number of victories over the French and their Indian allies,
and established English supremacy in southeastern India, 1752-53.
130. The Black Hole of Calcutta and the Battle of
Plassey. — In 1756 the viceroy of Bengal (Surajah Dowlah), cap-
tured Calcutta, seized all the property of the English, and thrust 146
Englishmen into the Black Hole of Calcutta, a room measuring only
18 feet by 14. During that day and the following night all but 23
were suffocated. The tragedy was followed by the complete expul-
sion of the English from Bengal. Clive, now governor of Fort St.
David, near Madras, proceeded with an English fleet to Bengal at the
head of 900 Europeans and about 2,000 sepoys, and retook Calcutta.
By the valor of the army, and by a treacherous understanding- with
the viceroy's chief officer (Meer Jaffier), Clive won a great victory
at Plassey over 60,000 men commanded by Surajah Dowlah. The
defeated viceroy was murdered by traitors, and Clive raised Meer
Jaffier, his creature, to the position of nominal Nabob. Under Clive
as governor-general of all the English possessions in Bengal, the
English virtually exercised an absolute rule over a country containing
30,000,000 inhabitants.
131. The French Lose India. — While these events were
happening in Bengal, the struggle for empire in India was decided
in the Carnatic, where it had begun. When the Seven Years' wtir
broke out in 1756, France selected Count Lally Tolendal to restore
the French power in India. Lally was descended from an Irish
Jacobite family, and had distinguished himself at Fontenoy and
elsewhere. After two years lost by delays, Lally arrived, 1758,
with an army in the Carnatic. Within five weeks he took Fort St.
David, the second in importance of the English strongholds, and
razed it to the ground. The fall of Madras would have been a
matter of certainty if Lally had been properly supported. But his
THE WAR IN INDIA AND IN AMERICA. 79
impetuous temper, his sharp tongue, and the energy with which he
fought the frightful corruption prevalent among the officials at Pon-
dicherry, alienated the local authorities, whilst he made enemies of
the natives by his ignorance and disregard of their most cherished
customs. The French admiral refused to convey his troops to
Madras, and the governor failed to furnish him the necessary funds.
By sheer energy and the sacrifice of his private fortune, he finally
succeeded in reaching Madras, but it was too late. Upon the
approach of the English squadron with reinforcements and stores
from Bombay he had to raise the siege, 1759. In 1760 the French
were defeated by Colonel Coote at Wandewash with a loss of about
2,000 Europeans. Having to contend with mutiny in his ill-pro-
visioned army, and with the opposition of the civil officials, Lally
was unable to prevent the French minor forts from falling one by
one into the hands of the English. In January, 1761, Pondicherry
surrendered at discretion, and with the surrender French dominion
in India ceased.
Lally was condemned by the Parliament of Paris for having betrayed the
interests of the King. The judicial murder was accompanied by outrage'ous
indignities. It was not till 1778 that his son by his filial devotion and great
eloquence succeeded in reversing the sentence and vindicating the honor of
his father.
132. The War in Canada. — When William Pitt acceded to
power he resolved to fight out his quarrel with France in the
colonies, especially in North America, and to drive the French from
the continent. For this purpose he sent a powerful fleet to America
and raised the number of the English and colonial forces to 50,000,
of whom 22,000 were regular troops. The entire French population
capable of bearing arms amounted to 20,000, of whom only 5,000
were regulars. Canada, abandoned by the worthless Louis XV.,
was suffering from famine, for the inhabitants had alternately to
fight and to till the ground.
133. The Marquis of Montcalm. — But in the Marquis of
Montcalm the Canadians had a governor and commander of restless
energy, dauntless courage and high-souled chivalry, who was adored
by the army and by the people. For a long time he held his own
80
against superior forces by skillful strategy and strong positions, by
concentrating his slender resources on some one point and by the
employment of Indian allies. Montcalm in 1756 captured and
destroyed Fort Oswego and Fort George, and seized in the latter
place part of the English war treasury. The following year he con-
structed a system of forts in the region of Illinois, and captured
Fort William Henry. In 1758 Abercrombie, the British commander-
in-chief, marched upon Ticonderoga with 16,000 men. Before
reaching the fortress the vanguard under General Howe was defeated,
and Lord Howe himself killed. Montcalm directed the defense of
the place in his shirt-sleeves, everywhere encouraging his men, who
numbered less than 4,000. Charge after charge was repulsed, until
the English were obliged to retreat with a loss of 2,000 men. But
disasters now began to overtake the French on every side.
134. The Conquest of Canada. — Even before the action of
Ticonderoga, Louisburg and Cape Breton Island, the French
Gibraltar at the mouth of the St. Lawrence, had been taken by Gen-
eral Amherst. General Forbes seized Fort du Quesne, which in
honor of William Pitt was named Pittsburg. In 1759 Sir William
Johnston took Fort Niagara and Amherst Ticonderoga. The
decisive battle was fought near Quebec. Major-General James
Wolfe, a young and gallant officer, fought his way up the St.
Lawrence, and besieged Quebec. Though manoeuvering with ad-
mirable skill around the defenses, Wolfe had almost given up all
hope of succeeding, when he resolved on a last, desperate feat.
He scaled with his men a steep cliff to the Plains of Abraham, an
elevated plateau behind Quebec, and forced Montcalm to accept open
battle. Both generals fell gallantly. Montcalm had still time to
receive the last sacraments. Wolfe, informed of the victory, expired
with the words : " God be praised, I die in peace." A last French
victory in the neighborhood of Quebec, 1760, could not save Canada,
betrayed, as she was, by her wretched King and his ministers.
Montreal, the second important town in the St. Lawrence Valley,
surrendered in the same year, and with Montreal, Canada.
" No other conquest of the war excited a greater enthusiasm in England .
Englishmen did not foresee the consequences of their victory. The destruc-
POLITICAL CHANGES AND TREATIES OF PEACE. 81
tion of the French power in America removed the one ever-pressing danger
which secured the dependence of the English colonies on the mother country.
The great colonial forces raised and successfully employed during the war
gave tne colonies for the first time a consciousness of their strength, and
furnished them with leaders for the War of Independence, while the burden
of the debt due to the lavish expenditure of Pitt revived the scheme Jor the
taxation of America, which led in a few years to the dismemberment of the
Empire." (Lecky.;
(India) Lecky: II. 8,495-96; 541-49. — Stewart : Hist, of Bengal. — Orme : Hist, of the
Military Operations in Hindostan. — J. G. Duff: Hist, of the Mahrattas. — J. Mill: Hist,
of Brit. India. — E. Thornlow: Hist, of the British Emp. in India. — Lord Justice James :
The British in India. — Malleson: Hist, of the French in India; Founders of the Indian
Empire; Decisive Battles of India. — Dupleix (Literature in Martin's Hist, of France);
E. II. R. 9, 1, 4.— Count Lally: E. H. R. 6, 3. — Lives of Lord Clive; Gleig; Macaulay
(Exsitys); Malcolm; Wilson.
(Canada) Lecky : II. 8, p. 539. — Hart : The Fall of New France. — Parkham : Montcalm
and Wolfe. — Warburton : Conquest of Canada.
§ 5-
POLITICAL CHANGES AND TREATIES* OF PEACE.
135. The Family Compact. — The successive deaths of three
sovereigns wrought political changes that disturbed existing alliances
and created new combinations. The death of Ferdinand VI. in
Spain and the succession of Charles III. reunited France and Spain
by the Family Compact. The death of George II. led to the fall of
Pitt and the reversal of his war policy. The death of Elizabeth of
Russia freed Frederic II. from one of his most formidable enemies,
and saved his kingdom
Ferdinand VI. of Spain died in 1759. His half-brother Don
Carlos, King of Naples, leaving his Italian Kingdom to his son,
ascended the throne of Spain as Charles III. Choiseul, the minister
of Louis XV., negotiated a Family Compact between the four Bour-
bon courts of France, of Spain, of Naples, and of Parma, by which
each promised to make common cause against any enemy, and to
guarantee each other's possessions. The Compact was signed August
15, 1.761. By a secret clause attached to it Spain pledged herself
to declare war against England on May 1, 1762, if England by
that time should not have concluded peace with France. Choiseul
promised Spain the restoration of Minorca as soon as war should be
declared.
82 THE SEVEN YEARS' WAR.
Several other disputed points, such as the possession of Gibraltar and
the rights of trade in the Indies were pending between Spain and England.
Charles III. was the more willing to go to war with England as he had
been insulted when still King of Naples by an English Admiral.
136. Fall of Pitt. — George II. died in 1760, and was suc-
ceeded by his grandson, George III., who had early lost his father,
Frederic, Prince of Wales. Prince George had been instructed by
the Earl of Bute in an extravagant view of the royal prerogative.
As the favorite of George III. Bute formed a new party, whose aim
it was to reassert the King's prerogatives by breaking up the Whig
nobility and by weakening the influence of Parliament. But as Pitt,
had his strength in the Parliament and in his brilliant war record
the new party was hostile to the war, because it was hostile to Pitt.
The Tories who resented their long exclusion from power, supported
the new party in a body. The dissensions and personal jealousies
within the ministry,, and Pitt's arrogant treatment of his colleagues
weakened his own position. The Family Compact, of which Pitt
had received secret intelligence, brought the contest of the parties
to an issue. Pitt demanded an immediate declaration of war,
before Spain should be ready. The majority of the Cabinet voted
against him. Thereupon Pitt resigned and his resignation was
accepted by the King.
Three months later the attitude of Spain became so threatening, that
Bute himself was compelled to declare war. The English successes in
Martinique, Havana, and Manila in the Philippine islands were still due to
the arrangement of Pitt and the enthusiastic spirit which he had infused
into the English service.
137. The Treaties of Petersburg and Hamburg, 1762. — The fall of
Pitt deprived Frederic of the alliance and the magnificent subsidies of
England. His own army was reduced to 60,000 men, most of them demoral-
ized, its gaps filled with vagabonds, thieves and deserters, all ripe for
mutiny. One half of his territories was in the hands of the enemy. But
the death of Elizabeth of Russia saved him and his kingdom.
Elizabeth died January 5, 1762, the day England declared war
against Spain. Her successor, Peter III., in his admiration of
Frederic, concluded with him not only the Peace of Petersburg
(March, 1762), but also an offensive and defensive alliance. By
POLITICAL CHANGES AND TREATIES OF PEACE. 83
the former he restored all the conquered territories to Prussia ; by
the latter he recalled the troops from the Austrian camp and ordered
them to join the Prussian army. The change of Russia induced
Sweden to come to terms with Frederic by the Peace of Hamburg
(May, 1762), which restored the condition existing before the war.
Peter's reign was of short duration. In less than six months he
exhausted the patience of his subjects by his unpopular introduction
of Prussian reforms. One morning he was arrested, in the evening
he was murdered. His wife, Catharine, reaped all the fruit of the
crime by proclaiming herself not regent for her son, but Empress of
Russia in her own authority. Catharine kept the peace with Prussia,
but recalled her troops.
138. The Last Campaign of the Seven Years' War, 1762. —
Under the altered circumstances Austria gave up the idea of recon-
quering the whole of Silesia, and restricted her efforts to the preser-
vation of the actual conquests. Her resources were exhausted, her
people taxed to the utmost. Frederic for the first time since 1758
took the initiative in the campaign of 1762. He marched against
Daun who was encamped in the neighborhood of Schweidnitz . Czerne-
chew had just received Catharine's order to return to Russia.
Frederic prevailed on the Russian general to remain with him for
three days to deceive the Austrians about the strength of the attacking
army. Czernechew remained but took, no part in the battle.
Frederic concentrated his efforts to storm the heights of Burkersdorf
and succeeded, (July). The Austrian army retreated towards the
Silesian frontiers, and Frederic reconquered Schweidnitz after a
lengthy siege. He then concluded a truce first with Marshal Daun
and afterwards with the Austrians in Saxony, who had been defeated
by Prince Henry at Freiberg. The preliminaries of the peace
between France and England, agreed to at Fontainebleau , made it
certain that the French troops would be withdrawn from Germany.
139. Peace of Paris, February 16, 1763. — The definite
peace between Great Britain, France and Spain was concluded at
Paris. France ceded to England in Europe, the island of Minorca ;
in Africa, her possessions on the Senegal ; in America, Canada,
84 THE SEVEN YEARS' WAR.
Nova Scotia and Cape Breton Island with all other possessions and
claims east of the Mississippi except New Orleans ; besides Grenada
in the West Indies. The navigation of the Mississippi was declared
free.
England restored to France Goree in Africa ; in Asia, all her con-
quests in India, but under restrictions which rendered the restoration
of little value. The French were to build no fortifications and to
maintain no troops in Bengal. They had to recognize the Nabobs
whom England set up as nominal rulers. In America England
granted to France the right of fishing on the coast of Newfoundland
and in the Gulf of St. Lawrence at the distance of three leagues from
the shore and the use of two small and open islands as a shelter for
their fishermen.
England restored to Spain in Oceania Manila and the Philippine
Islands ; in America, Havana and the rest of the Cuban conquests in
exchange for Florida. Outside of the treaty of Paris, France indem-
nified Spain for the loss of Florida by the cession of New Orleans
and of all Louisiana west of the Mississippi. Both France and
England had to withdraw their troops from Germany.
140. Peace of Hubertsburg, February 15, 1763. — The
Peace of Paris left Austria to face Prussia alone, and led to a treaty
of peace signed in the Saxon castle of Hubertsburg. The Peace
established the status quo ante bellum, i. e. Frederic retained Silesia
and Glatz and evacuated Saxony. In addition Prussia promised to
cast her vote in the imperial election for Archduke Joseph, the son of
Maria Theresa. Saxony, restored to the state before the war, was
included in the peace. The Seven Years' War raised England to
the summit of her territorial extent and power, made Prussia a rival
of Austria in Germany about equal in strength and one of the Great
Powers of Europe, and destroyed the colonial, naval, and commercial
greatness of France.
141. Pontiac War. — The English encountered great difficulties in taking
actual possession of the fortresses scattered here and there along the great
lakes. The Indians, under the celebrated Pontiac, the patriotic chief of the
Ottowas, offered determined resistance, partly on account of their friend-
liness to the French, their benefactors, partly on account of the insults and
POLITICAL CHANGES AND TREATIES OF PEACE.
85
cruel treatment they received at the hands of the English. The Indians got
possession of all the minor forts between Canada and the Mississippi.
But failing in the siege of Detroit and of some other places and ascertaining
the conclusion of a general peace, they dispersed.
Lecky: IV. 10, pp. 1-67. The Family Compact of the House of Bourbon: Seely, E. H. R.
1,1. — Hist, of the Reign of Peter III. and Cath. II. — Lives of Catharine II. : — Bruckner
(Germ.); Jenkins (Heroines of Hist.); E. R. '93, 3. — Text of the Treaty of Paris in
Entick: Hist, of the Late War. — The Treaty of Paris, 1763, and the Catholics of Am.
O'Sullivan, C. A. Q. 10.
Other Works for Consultation: Sir E. Cast: Wars of the 18th Century. — Ran -
som: Battles of Fred, the Great (from Carlyle's Fr. II.). — Green: Hist, of the Engl.
People. — Gfroerer: Gesch. des IStenJahrh. —Weiss: Weltgeschischte v. XI. and XII.—
Anderson : Hist, of George III.'s Reign.
86
THE SEVEN YEARS WAR.
=4
Treaties of Peace.
EACE OF ST. GERMAIN,
1632. New France: Can-
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EACE OF WESTMIINS-
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etc., restored to England.
EACE OF BTSWICK,
1797. Mutual restoration
of conquests. Interna-
tional Boundary Commis-
sion.
Peace of Montreal, 1701.
Treaty of Peace and Amity
betw. the Five Nations and
France.
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Alliances and Political Changes.
MARIA THERESA ^supported
by the greater part of the Km-
pi re and allied with Czarina
Elisabeth, succeeds, through
Kaumtz. to obtain the alliance
of France, and through
France, that of Sweden.
Treaties of Versailles, 1756-57.
THE SEVEN YEARS* WAR.
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TRAL AND WESTERN EUROPE. —
Frederic loses Dresden and part of
Saxony and Silesia.
/» Canada: Fall of Quebec, Montreal
and «M Canada (1759-60).
7w J^as^ /ndia : iaZ/?/ Tolendal forced
to raise the siege of Madras.
Campaign in Silesia.
In Western Germany: Desultory war-
fare.
In India.
In Europe: Desultory warfare; the
Powers exhausted.
In India: Fall of Pondicherry . End of
French dominion in India.
Silesia: During Peter's short reign,
the Russians joined the Prussians.
Withdrawn by Catharine II. they
remained in the Prussian camp
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THE SEVEN YEARS WAR.
91
CHAPTER VI*
THE DIVISION OF POLAND.
§ 1.
THE POLISH SUCCESSION.
&2. State of Poland in the 18th Century. — The elective kingdom or
rather republic of Poland in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries was
groaning under the most anarchical constitution of Europe : 1,500,000 nobles
held the entire population attached to the soil in servitude. All the mem-
bers of this democratic nobility stood on a footing of legal equality. No
decree proposed in the diet could become a law except by the unanimous
consent of the nuncios or deputies. The Liberum Veto of a single member
could frustrate the votes of all the rest. The Liberum Veto had destroyed
the work of forty-eight out of fifty-five diets within the space of 110 years.
In any dissension of votes the minority claimed the right of resisting by a
private confederation in arms. The kingship was not only elective, but
was conditioned at the commencement of each reign, by a special agree-
ment called the Pacta Conventa. These three institutions — Liberum Veto,
Private Confederations, and Pacta Conventa were a continual source of
political disturbance. The king was served by a vast crowd of undisci-
plined cavaliers. The " starosties " or certain administrative and judicial
privileges in the gift of the crown, were the only ties which bound the
king to the nobles and the soldiers. Ardent though misguided patriotism,
inborn attachment to the liberties of the country, fervent religious senti-
ment and respect for the authority of the Church were the elements that
supplied the absence of political union, and in spite of frequent civil strife,
retarded the final dissolution.
143. Encroachments of Neighboring States. — It is said that Peter the
.Great in his testament pointed out to his successors, how Poland could be
brought under Russian supremacy by the encouragement of internal dissen-
sions. In the war of the Polish Succession Poland herself had very little to
say, while Austrian and especially Russian troops lorded it in the kingdom.
In the war of the Austrian Succession Poland was little more than a
camping ground for the Muscovite forces. The frequent marches through
and prolonged sojourns of the Russians in Poland, the levying of war con-
tributions and the pressing of Polish recruits into Russian service may be
(92)
THE POLISH SUCCESSION. 93
called the beginning of Poland's downfall. True, Stanislas Lesczinski had,
by his appeals to the national sentiment, formed a party of patriots willing
to reform the constitutional abuses. But Elizabeth of Russia thwarted such
efforts by the threat to resist with force of arms any change in the Polish
constitution.
144. Election of Poniatowski. — At the accession of Catharine,
Augustus III. of Saxony, king of Poland, was already sick ; he
died in October, 1763. The death of his son in the same year
destroyed all hope of the House of Saxony to retain the Polish
crown. To control the election of the new king, Catharine of
Russia and Frederic II. concluded a treaty, in which they pledged
themselves to secure the crown to Stanislas Augustus Poniatowski
and to prevent any change in the Polish government and constitu-
tion. Still more treacherous was another clause of the treaty, by
which they bound themselves to protect the Greek and Protestant
"Dissidents" against the "oppression" of the Catholic Church.
Accordingly, the Russian party of Polish nobles designated Ponia-
towski as crown candidate.
Poniatowski, one of Catharine's former lovers, a polished courtier and
a shallow freethinker, had given assurances to the Empress that he would
treat the interests of Russia as his own.
In order to make the election of Poniatowski doubly sure, Cath-
arine surrounded the Polish territories with her troops, sent 10,000
men into Poland, furnished her ambassador with immense sums to
bribe the electors, and instructed him to intimidate them with threats
of her dire vengeance if they should fail to elect her candidate.
The patriots in the diet of Warsaw were divided and despondent.
Their candidates, General Brani9ki and Prince Radziwill, protested
against the coercion of the Diet already invaded by foreign soldiers.
A rising in their favor failed, and they had to flee as proscribed
exiles and rebels. Sept. 7, 1764, the Diet proclaimed Poniatowski
King of Poland under the name of Stanislas Augustus.
145. The Religious Question. — Catharine, who persecuted
both Catholics and Protestants in Russia, proclaimed herself in the
name of the sacred rights of mankind the protectress of the Polish
Dissidents.
94 THE DIVISION OF POLAND.
The Greek and Protestant Dissidents in Poland were not numerous.
They enjoyed freedom from persecution. They enjoyed the greatest free-
dom and security for their persons and property. Their political disabilities
were fewer than in any other country in Europe. Many dissenting noble-
men acknowledged their satisfaction with the existing state, and urged their
Catholic countrymen not to grant the demands of the two Powers, because
this religious agitation would ultimately subject Poland to foreign domi-
nation.
The first diets under Stanislas Augustus refused to alter the
religious state of the country. In 1766 Catharine and Frederic II.
instructed Stanislas to put all religions on the same footing. They
expected a refusal, for the Poles clung to religious unity as to the
last bond of their political unity. Stanislas pleaded in vain for
time, he was finally obliged to summon a diet in October, 1766, to
listen to the demands of Russia. Whilst the efforts of the patriots
to limit the Liberum Veto were defeated, the diet granted only
slight concessions to the Dissidents. So great wras the excitement
that the king himself was obliged to issue a declaration in support
of the Catholic cause. This declaration furnished Catharine a pre-
text for withdrawing her protection from him.
146. Diet of 1767. — A number of patriots, the exiled Radziwill among
them, conceived the fatal idea of approaching Russia in their turn. The
Empress received them graciously. An association of all the opponents of
Stanislas was formed at Radom under the direction of the Russian embassa-
dor Repnin. Confronted by this new combination the king sued for mercy
and declared himself willing to carry out Catharine's orders.
At the Diet of Warsaw, 1767, Repnin carried things with a high
hand ; 120,000 Russians were at his disposal ; a Prussian army
stood in Polish Prussia under pretext of a " sanitary " cordon.
Every deputy in the Diet had to sign a promise in no way to oppose
the Russian demands. The soldiers charged with obtaining the
signatures, had orders to fire the palaces or devastate the estates of
the recusants. The bishop of Cracow and others who remonstrated
in open diet against such violence, were seized at night by a squadron
of Cossacks and hurried off to Siberia. In such way was carried
the measure which destroyed the ecclesiastical unity of Poland.
De Broglie* The King's Secret (chiefly about the Partition of Poland).— J. Janssen:
Zur Genesis d. ersten Theilung Polens. — Dumouriex : Memoire*. — Woleki : Poland.
THE FIRST PARTITION OF POLAND. 95
§ 2.
,THE FIRST PARTITION OF POLAND.
147. The Confederation of Bar. — To destroy the Catholic
religion and to substitute a schismatical synod was now Catharine's
aim. Repnin had already expelled the Catholic priests from 300
villages. Clement XIII. solemnly protested, and ordered public
processions in Rome for the protection of Poland. The Poles rose
in defense of their faith. Eight gentlemen unknown to fame formed
a Confederation at the small town of Bar in Podolia, February, 1768.
Their motto was: aut vincere aut mori pro religione et libertate.
Their banner bore a crucifix and the image of the Blessed Virgin.
The movement spread with incredible rapidity, and in a few days
numbered many thousands of adherents. Envoys were sent to Ver-
sailles, Vienna, Constantinople, and other courts. The civil war
between the Confederation and Stanislas, who had the support of
Russia, was raging with the utmost bitterness, when Turkey declared
war against Russia. Her territory had been trespassed by Russian
troops in pursuit of Polish fugitives. But unfortunately the Turks
were as slow to mobilize as they were quick in declaring war, and the
brunt of the unequal contest fell upon the Confederates. The Zap-
oregian Cossacks let loose upon the plain of the Ukraine, " in honor
of the holy orthodox church" (of Russia) spread terror far and
wide by their horrible outrages.
Men, women, and children were massacred ; 16,000 defenseless people were
slaughtered alone at the town of Human. Several hundred Catholics were
buried in the ground up to their necks and their heads mowed off. Persons
whose faith was suspected were compelled to clear themselves by murder-
ing Catholic nobles and priests. Not less outrageous was the treatment of
the Confederates by the Russian regulars, who tied their prisoners of war to
trees to serve as marks for the sharpshooters, or bound them with chains into
groups to be killed with pikes, or lopped off their hands and then chased
them across the fields until they sank bleeding to death.
Before the spring of 1769 the remnants of the Confederates were
driven to take refuge on Ottoman or Austrian territory.
148. Catharine's First War with the Turks, 1768-
1774. — When at length the Turkish troops took the field they
96 THE DIVISION OF POLAND.
were routed in almost every encounter. The loss of Azow, Bender,
and other fortresses, the complete reduction of Moldavia and Wal-
lachia, and the destruction of the Turkish fleet in the waters of
Tschesme, off the island of Chios, destroyed the prestige of Turkey,
gave to Russia the political and military greatness she still enjoys,
and crushed the last hopes of Polish liberty.
149. Position of Austria.— Joseph II., 1765-1790, had, by the death of his
father, become Emperor and coregent with Maria Theresa in the Austrian
monarchy. Since 1770 Joseph's influence in the affairs of government began
to rise, his mother's to wane. Inch by inch she yielded, though with con-
stant misgivings, to the restless ambition of her son. In her sincere religious
faith she warmly sympathized with the Catholic Poles, and her conscience
revolted from the idea of deriving a personal advantage from Poland. But
her son, Joseph II., infected with the false philosophy of the eighteenth
century j looked up to Frederic II., and copied his policy and methods.
Kaunitz temporized between the mother and the son, but usually ended with
adopting Joseph's views.
The victorious advance of Russia, especially the occupation of
Moldavia and Wallachia caused great anxiety at the court of
Vienna, and induced Austria to place a military cordon along the
frontiers of Hungary and Transilvania, and temporarily to occupy a
strip of Polish territory, to which, however, Hungary had an undis-
puted claim. Frederic II. also, pledged as he was to subsidize
Russia during the war's duration, was anxious to see it ended.
Hence in a meeting at Neustadt between Frederic II., Joseph II.,
and Kaunitz, 1770, an agreement was reached to mediate a peace
between Russia and Turkey on the basis of a restoration of Moldavia
and Wallachia by Russia. No mention, as yet, was made of a par-
tition of Poland. After the meeting the Austrian cordon was
pushed a few miles further into Polish territory.
150. First Division of Poland. — Frederic II., in paying subsidies and
offering to mediate a peace, was steadily pursuing his own advantage.
Now that he saw Poland in a state of anarchy, the Confederates quarreling
among themselves, and Stanislas barely escaped from the hands of the in*
surgents, he moved his " sanitary " cordon twenty miles nearer to Warsaw.
He now came forward with his own plan of pacification.
Frederic proposed that Austria, Russia, and Prussia should give
their services to Stanislas and take their pay in the partial dismem-
THE FIRST PARTITION OF POLAND. 97
bermentof Poland. Russia should restore the Danube Principalities
(Moldavia and Wallachia) to the Porte for an equivalent to be carved
out of the kingdom of Poland. Prussia should recompense herself
for the subsidies paid by the annexation of Polish Prussia. To
keep up the equilibrium between the three Powers, Austria should
take a share equal in value to those of Russia and Prussia. It was
a plan of barefaced robbery. When first broached in Vienna, in
1771, Austria answered that rather than consent to such injustice,
they would withdraw their troops from the Polish districts — less than
twenty square miles — whilst the proposed annexations comprised
4,000 square miles. Accordingly, the Partition Treaty was con-
cluded by Russia and Prussia alone, February, 1772. In view of
the great increase of territory and the consequent preponderance
of power thus obtained by the two states, Joseph II. and Kaunitz
resolved to become accomplices in the deal, and to take their share
in the partition, August, 1772. It was with intense reluctance that
Maria Theresa consented. Russia obtained a great part of Lithuania
and other Polish districts ; Austria the provinces of Gallicia and
Lodomeria, and Frederic II. Polish Prussia (without Dantzig and
Thorn), smaller in extent than the other shares, but possessing for
Prussia a value out of all proportion to its area, because it united
the detached province of East Prussia with the main body of the
kingdom into a compact state. The three Powers guaranteed to each
other these new possessions. They then put down the Confederation
of Bar, and procured by bribery and intimidation the election of a
diet, which joined King Stanislas in signing away the integrity of
Poland. After this enforced ratification, both Frederic II. and
Joseph II. overstepped the stipulated bounds so far that Poland lost
an additional number of 64,000 inhabitants.
151. Peace of Kutchouc-Kainardji, 1774. — The war between Russia and
Turkey had been lagging since the conquest of the Crimea in 1771. Whilst
Prussia and Austria urged Catharine to make peace, a last success of the
Russians, who surrounded the Grand Vizier at Shumla, forced Turkey to
accept the terms proposed by the Powers.
In the Peace of Kainardji Russia restored the Danube Principalities
and some other conquests to Turkey, but retained part of the Crimea
and of the northern coast of the Black Sea. The Tartars of Crimea
7
98 THE DIVISION OF POLAND.
and elsewhere were released from their allegiance to the Porte, and
brought under Russian influence. The Russians secured the right
of free navigation in all Turkish waters for their merchant fleet, and
a strong diplomatic position at Constantinople including the right of
representing the interests of the Danube Principalities, of remonstrat-
ing against Turkish misrule in Christian provinces and of protecting
the Christians in Turkey.
152. Revolution in Sweden. — The government in Sweden, where the
House of Holstein-Gottorp succeeded in 1751, was, since the death of
Charles XII., in the hands of a diet composed of four Chambers, and divided
into hostile factions. By a clause of the secret treaty, which had brought
about the dissolution of Poland, Frederic II. and Catharine had bound them-
selves to maintain this constitution and to encourage the frequent disturb-
ances caused by the quarreling factions. The young king, Gustavus III., saw
the danger. Immediately after the partition of Poland he took his course.
Mounting his horse early one morning, he called out his devoted officers
and his guard, and so sudden and so spirited was his action, that without
violence or bloodshed he arrested the senators and deputies in the palace
of the States, dissolved their assemblies, and substituted a moderate con-
stitution for the state of anarchy which had hitherto prevailed. He spoiled,
however, a reign, which promised well in the beginning, by his adherence
to the impious principles of the new philosophy.
Lecky, v. ch. 21. pp. 539-42. v. Sybel: First Partition of Poland; Fortnightly Review,
74, 3. — Broglie: The King's Secret. — Weiss, v. 13. — Wolski: Poland.
§3.
THE FALL OF POLAND.
153. Second Turkish War of Catharine II., 1787-92. — Amid all the ex-
cesses of an abandoned and shameless life, Catharine II. did more for the
material improvement of her subjects than any of her predecessors, whilst she
continued her unscrupulous policy of external aggrandizement. In 1787, she
gained possession of the whole of the Crimea by a treaty with the Khan of the
Tartars. Joseph II., too, had a restless craving for new territory. After the
Peace of Kainardji he annexed that part of Moldavia which is now called
the Bukowina, 1775. His attempt to seize the greater part of Bavaria, when
the reigning House died out in 1778 was frustrated by the armed interference
and diplomatic resistance of Frederic II. (Bloodless War of the Bavarian
Succession). The death of Maria Theresa in 1780, and Joseph's accession
to full power, completely changed the friendly policy which the Empress-
queen had observed towards Turkey. Joseph II. became an admirer and
ally of Catharine II. and assisted her in grasping the Crimea. The death
THE FALL OF POLAND. 99
of Frederic II. in 1786 strengthened this alliance, which was cemented by a
personal meeting of the two monarchs during Catharine's triumphal prog-
ress through the Crimea. Catharine now resolved to drive the Turks from
Europe and to found a Greek Empire in Constantinople. Joseph agreed to
support the plan. But whilst the Russians stormed Oczacow amidst scenes
of appalling carnage, took Bender and other cities, and defeated the Turks in
several battles by land and sea, the Austrians with 200,000 men in the
field were for a long time wholly unsuccessful. The taking of Belgrade
(1789) by Laudon, the hero of the Seven Years' War, was almost the only
brilliant feat in the Austrian campaign. Joseph II., though personally
brave, was no commander. At Slatina he had to leave his camp to the
enemy. Discouraged he returned to Vienna carrying with him the germs
of the disease to which he succumbed in 1790. His brother and successor,
Leopold II. (1790-92) withdrew from the war, restored Belgrade, and made
peace with Turkey. The only gain of Austria was the small district of old
Orsova. The following year Catharine concluded the peace of Jassy, which
added Oczacow and its region as far as the Dniester in full sovereignty to
the Russian Empire.
154, Poland After the First Partition. — Whilst Russia
was thus occupied with Turkey, the Poles attempted to shake off
the fetters of Russian enslavement and to establish their domestic
affairs on a sounder basis by a revision of the Constitution. They
were urged on in this patriotic enterprise by the seemingly friendly
attitude of Prussia which sought in an alliance with Poland a coun-
terpoise against Russia's growing power, and, at the same time,
hoped to gain possession of Dantzig and Thorn by peaceful cession.
Frederic William I. (1786—1797) who had succeeded his uncle,
Frederic II., concluded a formal alliance with Poland, solemnly
guaranteed the integrity of her country, and promised protection in
case any foreign Power should interfere with her internal concerns,
1790. The new Constitution adopted by the patriotic party abol-
ished the elective character of the kingdom, named the Elector of
Saxony hereditary king after Stanislas' death, created a diet of two
houses, swept aw.ay the Liberum Veto, and made concessions to the
middle classes and the peasants. National feeling, however, was
opposed to a cession of Dantzig and Thorn, and Prussia gracefully
withdrew the demand.
155. Second Division of Poland, 1793. — Nothing was more
against Catharine's aims than to see Poland consolidated by a new
100 THE DIVISION OF POLAND.
Constitution. Under her auspices the Russian party in Poland
formed the Confederation of Targowitz. In May, 1792, 60,000
Russians crossed the Polish frontiers. Prince Poniatowski and
Thaddaeus Kosciusko, who had served in America under Washing-
ton, placed themselves at the head of the patriotic armies, and
fought bravely but in vain. They were crushed by threefold
superior numbers at Dubienka. In August the Russians entered
Warsaw. Catharine had compelled the helpless King of Poland to
repudiate the new Constitution and to join the Confederation of
Targowitz. Meanwhile the Poles had appealed to their sworn ally,
the King of Prussia. But this sovereign who in two treaties had
solemnly sworn to defend the integrity and independence of Poland,
had already perjured himself by an alliance with Catharine for a
second spoliation of that unhappy country. His army crossed the
western frontier of Poland and occupied the territory assigned to
him by Russia. In a joint proclamation the two monarchs formally
announced to the Polish nation the accomplished fact. Besides
Thorn and Dantzig Prussia took Great Poland or that part of the
kingdom which is now called South Prussia and South Silesia.
Russia took Volhynia, Podolia, and all that remained of Lithuania,
and enforced a treaty of union with the rest of Poland which gave
free entrance to her troops, the1 conduct of all future wars, and the
right of confirming all treaties made by Poland with foreign powers..
A Polish diet at Grodno had to ratify the robbery under the cannons
of the invaders. The two powers then guaranteed the integrity
of the remnants of Poland for all coming times. Two years later
they took the rest.
156. The Fall of Poland, 1794-95. — The national rising
of 1794 brought on the third and last partition and the disappear-
ance of Poland as a State from the map of Europe. After the dis-
aster of Dubienka, Kosciusko had been traveling in Europe to rouse
the sympathy of the western courts for Poland. At the call of the
patriots he returned to his country and was at once recognized as
the leader in the national movement. Peasants armed with scythes,
and drilled regiments from every part of old Poland flocked to his
standard. At Raslowitz he won the first victory. The Russian
garrison in Warsaw was in part cut down, in part driven from
THE FALL OF POLAND. 101
the city by the patriots. In the two days' battle at Szczekoziny
(pron. Shtchekoziny) he had all but defeated the Russians when
during the night 24,000 Prussians joined their allies and forced
Kosciusko to retreat upon Warsaw. For three months he defended
the city against 50,000 Prussians under the command of Frederic
William himself and 9,000 Russians. The Prussians meanwhile had
taken Cracow. A rising of the Poles in South Prussia induced
Frederic William to raise the siege. At this juncture, Austria, too,
sent an army against Poland. The decisive battle was fought at
Maciejowice (pr. Matchewitz) on the Vistula where the Russians
had concentrated all their available forces. The national hero per-
formed wonders of valor ; for five hours the Polish infantry sustained
the murderous fire of the Russian artillery till at last they had to
give way before overwhelming . numbers. Kosciusko, dangerously
wounded, was found unconscious by a Cossack, and delivered into
Russian captivity. In the last partition Prussia obtained Masowia
with the capital of Warsaw, New East Prussia and part of the dis-
trict of Cracow ; Austria, West Gallicia with the capital of Cracow ;
Russia, Curland and the rest of Poladd with the capital of Wilna.
By the three partitions : —
Russia obtained 181,000 square miles with 6,000,000 inhabitants.
Prussia " 57,000 . " 3,700,000 "
Austria 45,000 2,500,000 "
Stanislas Poniatowski, the deposed king, spent his last years at the court
of St. Petersburg, humbled and despised. Kosciusko recovered his freedom
after the death of Catharine II., went back to America and was sent as envoy
of the United States to Paris, where he labored unto the end for his cherished
project, a new Poland.
Lecky: v. ch. 19, pp. 210-24; 232-64; 442-46; 596-99. v. 22, p. 83-92. — Bain: The Second
Part, of Poland, E. H. R. '91, 2. — A Gielgud : The Centenary of the Polish Constitution of
1791. Westminster Rev. v. 135, p. 647. — T. J. Mackintosh: Account of the Partition of
Poland; E. R. '22, 4. — Saxton : Fall of Poland. — Raumer: Polens Untergang. — Ostrow-
ski : Les trois demenibrements de la Pologne, — Weiss, v. 19.
Other Works for Consultation: Adams: Kosciusko (Wrecked Lives); v. Sybel:
Hist, of the French Revolution. — Fletcher: Hist, of Poland — Cath. II. and Russia. Q. R.
'78, 3. — Schlosser : Hist, of the 18th Cent. — See also general works for the period.
102 THE DIVISION OF POLAND,
THE RUSSIAN RULERS OF THE HOUSE OF ROMANOW
AND HOLSTEIN-GOTTORP.
1. MICHAEL III., Romanow,
1615- I 1645.
2. ALEXEI,
Czarina Maria. 1645- I 1676. Czarina Natalia.
3. FEODOR, 4. IVAN, Sophia, regent for 5. PETER I., THE GREAT,
1676-1682. 1682-96. the minor princess Czar with Ivan 1682, sole
(retired 1689.) deposed by Peter, ruler 1C89 (1696)-1725.
I 1689. m.
8. ANNA IVANOYNA; 6' CATHAEINE '•>
1730-1740.
Alexei. Anna, Duchess of 9. ELISABETH,
HOLSTEIN
7. PETER II.,
GOTTORP. 1740-1762.
1727-1730. 1. PETER III., 1762.
m.
2. CATHARINE II. (Princess of Anhalt-Zerbst),
1762- I 1796.
3. PAUL I., 1796-1801.
4. ALEXANDER I., 1801-1825.
5. NICHOLAS I., 1825-1855.
6. ALEXANDER II., 1855-1881.
7. ALEXANDER III., 1881-1894.
8. NICHOLAS II., 1894-X.
THE DIVISION OF POLAND.
103
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to overpower without difficulty.
K. OF SWEDEN, 1697-1718, allied with
'czinski, rival king in Poland, 1704-1709;
\zeppa, Hetman of the Cossacks.
VENDAL, 1700. Frederic IV. renounced
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as; dropped from the alliance; had to
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3. The desire of AUGUSTUS II. to unite Liv
4. A quarrel of FREDERIC IV. with the Du
5. The youthfulness of CHARLES XII. who
ents.— Northern League, 1699: Czar Peter the
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. Conquest of Poland and Saxony by Chas. XII.
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THE DIVISION OF POLAND.
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•CHAPTER VII.
CAUSES OF THE POLITICAL AND SOCIAL REVOLU-
TION OF THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY.
The causes of the great Revolution which terminated the eight-
eenth century, were internal and external. The internal causes
were partly religious and doctrinal, partly political and social. The
chief external cause, as far as the French Revolution is concerned, was
the successful War of American Independence.
§ l.
RELIGIOUS AND DOCTRINAL CAUSES.
157. The Protestant Reformation. — The political and social Revolution
in Europe which culminated in the French Revolution, was the last deduction
from the principles of the Reformation. The denial of the divine authority
of the Church naturally led to the denial of all human authority in the
State. In France the spirit of rebellion against the Church had been
nurtured by the Huguenots, and after their defeat, by the Jansenists. The
Jansenists, so-called after Jansenius, Bishop of Ypres, were Calvinists in
disguise who maintained that they owed external acquiescence in, but not in-
ternal submission to, the decisions of the Church. Their heretical tenets
were condemned by Clement XI. in the bull " Unigenitus " (1713) and by
succeeding Popes. Among the French Catholics, opposition to the rights
of the Holy See was always fostered by the Gallican party. Gallicanism
and Jansenism had their strength in the Parliaments, especially that of Paris,
and in the legal profession, the judges and jurists of France. Their idea
was a State church after the pattern of the Anglican or Russian systems.
158. Parliamentary Opposition to the Church. — The
Parliament of Paris and the twelve provincial Parliaments had
regained their old position after the death of Louis XIV. Being
mostly composed of Gallicans and Jansenists, they carried on a
bitter warfare against the Holy See and the Bull " Unigenitus."
The pastorals of bishops who denied to the Parliaments the right of
interfering in dogmatical matters were rudely suppressed. The Par-
(108)
"•
RELIGIOUS AND DOCTRINAL CAUSES. 109
liament of Paris prosecuted, imprisoned and exiled priests for deny-
ing absolution to heretics. Louis XV., at first an opponent, later a
protector of these tribunals, banished archbishops and bishops and
gave full rein to the Parliament of Paris to condemn faithful priests
to perpetual exile or to the galleys. This aggressive body went so
far as to declare that the dogmatical decree of the Bull ' 4 Unigeni-
tus," was not a rule of faith, and to prohibit to any ecclesiastic
" of whatever order, quality or dignity he might be," to attribute
to it such character. The instruction of the Archbishop of Paris
supported by sixty bishops, excommunicating priests who would
allow themselves to be ruled in the administration of the sacraments
by any secular tribunal, was publicly burnt. When Benedict XIV.
confirmed the Bull " Unigenitus," a parliamentary decree suppressed
the Papal Brief. Again the Archbishop of Paris was exiled. Thus
the Parliaments contributed their full share to shake and destroy
that authority of the Church, which might have saved France,
already tottering to its fall.
159. Infidel Literature. — The so-called " philosophy of the
eighteenth century," an outgrowth of the skeptical literature of
England, was a powerful agency in bringing about the Revolution.
Since the days of Cromwell it was the leading object of the English skep-
tics, to reject the Bible, miracles, revelation and Christianity, and to assert
the sufficiency of natural religion. Men like John Locke, Mathew Tindal,
Thomas Woolston, and hosts of others, were at first called Deists or Ration-
alists. Anthony Collins introduced the name of Freethinkers for those who
like himself denied Christianity. Thomas Hobbes declared all religion a
mere human invention ; Charles Blount, a crafty device of the priesthood.
John Locke by his speculations about " thinking matter " became the fore-
runner of materialism which denied all spiritual existences from the human
soul upward. Whilst some of these writers wrote in a serious strain,
others like John Wilmot, Earl of Rochester, and Shaftesbury, mocked with
unblushing cynicism at religion and morality. Bolingbroke as author, sur-
passed in diabolical hatred of Christianity the freethinkers, whom he per-
secuted as Minister of State. Dean Swift was not an infidel, but his blas-
phemies were equaled only by those of his teacher, Giordano Bruno.
Science was restricted by these men to the exclusive and onersided investi-
gation of natural phenomena. The rejection of every higher truth that could
not be found with the dissecting knife, was called lt enlightenment." The
substitution of Deism, Pantheism and A theism for Christianity went by the
110 CAUSES OF POLITICAL AND SOCIAL REVOLUTION.
name of "philosophy." About 1740 a reaction set in in England against
this skeptical literature, and henceforth most of the freethinkers retired
into the secrecy of Masonic lodges.
160. Freemasonry. — The first grand lodge of Freemasonry was opened
in London, 1717. Between 1725 and 1750, the secret society spread to every
State of Europe, to North America and to East India. Princes like Francis
Stephen, the husband of Maria Theresa, Frederic II., the Prince of Wales,
statesmen and ministers, deists and freethinkers, members of the educated
and professional classes, whatever their denomination, joined the secret
order. The Freemasons borrowed their ritual from the masonic guilds of
the Middle Ages, perverting its meaning. Their real aim, surrounded with
impenetrable secrecy and guarded by terrible oaths, was to replace the
existing religious, political and social order based on Christianity by a
merely humanitarian, a ne 3- pagan state of society. They formed an organ-
ized conspiracy against Church and State. Neither the decrees of the Holy
See nor the prohibitions of the courts of Madrid, Vienna and Naples were
able to stay the spread of Freemasonry.
161. Freethinking on the Continent. — From England, the principles of
freethinking and the secret work of the lodges passed over to France and
the continent. Bolingbroke and other English infidels were familiarly
known in Paris. Nearly all the French " philosophers " traveled and
studied in England. Voltaire, who spent three years in England, and his
coadjutors fully acknowledged their obligations to the writings of English
infidels, Voltaire and his friends became the teachers of Frederic II. The
Irish skeptic, John Toland, spread infidelity and Freemasonry in Great
Britain and at the German courts. Freethinking princes and§ statesmen
became a power not only in Protestant countries, as Gustavus III. in
Sweden (assassinated in 1792), Struensee in Denmark, but still more so at
Catholic courts. Kaunitz in Austria, Pombal in Portugal, Arauda in Spain,
Choiseul in France, Tanucci in Naples, were all more or less outspoken
freethinkers and conspirators against the Holy See and the rights of the
Catholic Church.
162. French Philosophers. — But in no country did the new
philosophy assume a more virulent form and destructive influence
than in France. The French philosophers formed two groups, the
Encylcopedists to whom belonged the skeptical scientist D'Alem-
bert, the coarse atheists Diderot and Holbach, Damilaville "the
hater of God," the materialists Condillac, Helvetius, de la Mettrie,
and many others, who were indefatigable in propagating the gospel
of open impiety, unblushing immorality, and deadly hatred against
the Church by innumerable pamphlets, lampoons, dialogues, paro-
A PHILOSOPHICAL EMPEROR. Ill
dies, letters, novels, and scientific treatises among the higher and
middle classes of French and European society. For half a century
Voltaire, their leader, turned his brilliant gifts of poetry and wit
into weapons of invective, slander, ridicule, buffoonery and malice,
to wage war to the knife against the Catholic Church. " ^Icrasez
Pinfame " " crush the infamous thing," was the motto of his life.
Under Diderot's supervision the philosophical sect began in 1751,
the publication of the Encyclopedia, a dictionary ostensibly devoted
to the sciences, but in reality a vehicle for their pernicious teach-
ings. They boasted that it would be an easy thing for twelve phi-
losophers to destroy what twelve fishermen had built up. Diderot
declared they would not rest till the last king had been strangled
with the entrails of the last priest. The extreme fanatics of this
school proclaimed atheism as the supreme duty of mankind. — The
second group was that of Rousseau, author of the " Social Con-
tract," and the Socialists who aimed their attacks directly against
the government and the rights of private ownership. The dominant
philosophy of both schools undermined every existing institution
and denied all authority to custom, historical right, religion and the
State. The reading and discussion of such works became the
fashion, the rage in the salons, the clubs, the social and scientific
circles, at the royal court, and even among a portion of the higher
clergy.
On the Jansenists: A. G. Knight: M. '80, 3 (Oct. p. 198; Nov. p. 370); '81. 1. (Jan. p. 36;
Febr. p. 378): An ArchUsh. of Paris, (Beaumont). — Fr. X. Moll: A. C. Q. 10.— J.
Rickaby: M. '91,1. (Jan. p. 69; Febr. p. 246): Clement XI. and the Jansenists.—
Huuer. St. 13, 17 . — Freemasonry : Dechamps; Thebeaud: A. C. Q. 6. — M. '75.
Sppt. p. 90; M. '84. June, p. 153; July, p. 305. — F. X. Gautrelet: La Franc-Mason-
nerie et la Revolution. — Kreiten : Voltaire. — Nourisson : Voltaire et le Voltairianism. —
Reuben Parsons: Studies in Church Hist., v. IV.; The Bull Unigenitus; Freemasonry;
Voltaire. — Bain: Gustavus III.; also E. R. 81,3. Assassination: E. H. Q. I. p. 643.—
Weiss, v. 11 . Catherine II. and the Philosophers in Waliszewski : The Story of a
Throne; part II.
§2.
A PHILOSOPHICAL EMPEROR.
163. Josephinism. — The anti-ecclesiastical spirit and the
infidel philosophy of the age found a representative in Joseph II.
Joseph, like Frederic II. and Catharine II., was a philosophical king.
112 CAUSES OF POLITICAL AND SOCIAL REVOLUTION.
Shallow by nature and education though meaning well and desiring
the good of his people, he became an easy prey to the enemies of
the Church. Already before his accession a policy of innovation and
opposition to the Holy See, fostered by Kaunitz, cast a shadow over
the latter years of Maria Theresa's rule. But when Joseph II.
assumed full power he proceeded with headlong haste to introduce
the sweeping reforms suggested by his disordered imagination and
urged by his evil advisers. His " reforms " dealt with matters over
which the Church alone has jurisdiction, viz., with divine service,
communication with the Holy See, theological instruction and the
religious orders.
164. Divine Service. — By Imperial ordinances, he assumed to regulate
the forms of divine worship, religious processions and pilgrimages, the
number of feasts to be observed, even the number of candles to be used at
Mass. '* To save the forests," coffins were prohibited, and the bodies of
the common people were to be buried in large trenches, or sewed into sacks.
Such decrees naturally roused the anger of the people. He arrogated to the
State the inalienable right of the Church to legislate about the sacrament of
matrimony, and abolished ecclesiastical impediments.
165. Communication with the Holy See. — The free communications of
the bishops both with the Holy See and with their dioceses was either cut
off or placed under the supervision of the State. Pastoral letters were sub-
jected to the royal Placet.
166. Religious Instruction. — The episcopal seminaries were changed
into State schools (General Seminaries) in which freethinkers and religious
scoffers were not unfrequently appointed as professors. A new catechism,
more in harmony with the spirit of the age, was issued under Imperial
authority. Priests were ordered not to preach on dogmatical truths but on
moral subjects and national economy.
167. Religious Orders. — Joseph II. suppressed all the monasteries that
did not serve" a practical purpose," ejected 36,000 members from their
religious homes and confiscated their property. The remaining communities
were severed from their ecclesiastical superiors in Rome. The admission
of novices was made as difficult as possible. These " reforms," though
they exasperated the greater portion of the clergy and the mass of the
people, were encouraged by weak and time-serving bishops, freethinking
professors, and priests infected with Febronianism and Freemasonry.
168. Febronianism; Pius VI. Insulted. — Febronius (Hontheim) auxiliary
bishop of Trier, had published a book which gained widespread influence His
A PHILOSOPHICAL EMPEROR. 113
work denied the divine institution and universal jurisdiction of the Primacy,
derived all jurisdiction from the people as its source, and degraded the Pope
to the position of a Parliamentary president, and made the validity of his
decrees dependent on the consent of all the bishops. It advocated the
formation of national churches with independent national heads, and called
on the princes to block intercourse with Rome and to take the introduction
of these changes into their own hands.
Joseph II. was so imbued with these principles that he fettered his
own church whilst granting freedom to the sects. The liberty of the
press introduced by him gave unscrupulous infidels and immoral
writers full scope to attack the Church with every sort of indignity and
calumny. In the hope of being able to stem the tide of irreligion by
a personal meeting with the Emperor, Pius VI. came in 1782 to
Vienna. But whilst he was everywhere greeted by the people with
the spontaneous enthusiasm of unfeigned love and respect, he was
treated with coldness and positive insults by the Catholic Emperor
and his minister Kaunitz.
169. Joseph's Political Innovations — Defection of Bel-
gium. — With equal disregard to political and historical rights
Joseph undertook to reduce the administration of the different prov-
inces, so varied in race, character, and customs, to a dead level of
uniformity. To avoid taking an oath on the Hungarian Constitution
which he intended to change, he refused coronation, and conveyed the
crown of St. Stephen to Vienna. He still more exasperated the
national feelings of the Hungarians by making German the official
language of the kingdom, abolishing at the same time the local gov-
ernments and annulling the privileges of nobles and free cities. By
a stroke o# the pen he destroyed the Constitution of the Austrian
Netherlands which had been in force since the time of Maximilian I.
and replaced it by a centralized bureaucracy. When Joseph II.
approached his end, his dominions were in a state of utter confu-
sion. Hungary was in the throes of a furious rebellion. The
Tyrol, Bohemia, Moravia, were threatening open resistance. The
patience of the Belgian people had been stretched to the utmost
tension by Joseph's repeated attempts to secularize the episcopal
seminaries. When the new Constitution was produced, the provinces
rose, expelled the Austrian troops from their cities (1789), declared
8
114 CAUSES OF POLITICAL AND SOCIAL REVOLUTION.
their independence and constituted themselves the United States of
Belgium. Thus the inheritance of Maximilian I. was practically lost
to the House 'of Hapsburg. On his deathbed Joseph II. owned
himself defeated. He sent back the crown to Hungary, annulled the
greater part of his reforms and made his peace with God and the
Church . Almost his only measures that survived him , were a modified
toleration and the abolition of serfdom.
R. Parsons: Studies, v. IV.: Josephism; Febronianism. — Jaeger : I . Th. Z. '79; '80;
(Loop. II.). — Seb. Brunner: Jos. II.; v. Weiss v. 13. — W. C. Robinson: Cardinal de
Frankenberg. M. '78, 3, Nov. p. 305.
§ 3.
RELIGIOUS CAUSES CONTINUED —THE SUPPRESSION OF THE
SOCIETY OF JESUS.
17O. In Portugal. — In their warfare against the Church, the Encyclo-
pedists and Socialists found a vigorous opponent in the Society of Jesus.
" Once we have destroyed the Jesuits," wrote Voltaire to Helvetius, "we
shall have it all our own way with the infamous thing." To destroy the
order, they made common cause with the Galileans and Jansenists, with
Choiseul and the Parliaments, with Pombal in Portugal and the freethinking
ministers of the Bourbon courts. No calumny, scurrility or intrigue was
spared to blacken the Jesuits in the eyes of the rulers and the people.
In Portugal the upstart Carvalho, created Minister and Marquis of
Pombal by the weak Joseph I. Emmanuel (1750—1777), pursued with
despotic cruelty the aim of the philosophers : to crush the nobility
and the clergy, and to wean the Portuguese people from its obedience
to the Holy See. He prepared the minds of the king and of the
nation for his violent measures by a series of absurd charges against
the Jesuits.
He accused them of exciting the Indians in Paraguay to rebellion, of
having founded an Empire in Maranhao, of amassing fabulous riches in the
colonies, of having roused the people against his government during the
sufferings which followed the terrible earthquake of Lisbon (30,000 killed)
in 1755.
A feigned attempt on the life of the king, skillfully plotted and
deftly exploited by Pombal, secured him the royal ear and signet.
With the autocracy of a tyrant he sent the most powerful families
(the Aveiros and Tavoras) to the block, imprisoned the flower of
THE SUPPRESSION OF THE SOCIETY OF JESUS. 115
the Portuguese nobility and 'clergy and expelled the Jesuits. From
all the dominions of Portugal the Jesuits were closely packed in
ships and landed on the coast of the Papal States (1759). The
most influential members of the order were immured in the horrible
dungeons of the Tajo. When Pombal fell in 1777, the survivors
with 700 other innocent prisoners emerged, after a frightful captivity
of seventeen years, like specters from these keeps.
The released nobles, judges and ecclesiastics were restored to all their
rights and dignities. A commission appointed by the new Queen Mary
declared Pombal's most incriminated victims innocent of the plot on the
king's life. The sentence was tantamount to an official declaration that
the whole story of the conspiracy was false. Pombal was disgraced, exiled
and sentenced to death, but was spared the execution on account of his
decrepit age. His body remained neglected and unburied, till the Jesuits,
recalled to Portugal in 1830, had celebrated mass over the corpse.
171. In France. — In France the open war against the Jesuits began in
the literary world. The Jansenists had founded the so-called " Merchants'
Bank " for the purpose of disseminating slanderous books and pamphlets
against the order. The " Extracts," a book containing 758 text falsifica-
tions, charged the Jesuits with immoral and treasonable doctrines, while
the Philosophers in their writings lauded Pombal to the skies. The attempt
to charge them with complicity in Damien's attempt on the king's life,
recoiled on the accusers, as the investigation pointed to the complicity of
the Jansenists. The trial of Father La Valette furnished the Parliament of
Paris a pretext of publicly prosecuting the Jesuits, though he was no longer
a member of the Society. La Valette, whilst superior on the island of Mar-
tinique, had in defiance of rules and positive orders engaged in commercial
transactions and failed. Though he was dismissed for breach of rule, yet
the whole order was blamed for the transgression of one.
The Parliament of Paris in 1761 sentenced the Society to pay the
debts of La Valette, closed the Jesuit schools and colleges, sup-
pressed the sodalities as impious, and prohibited Frenchmen from
entering the order. In 1762 the Parliament suppressed the Society
itself, and denounced as godless, sacrilegious and treasonable
their Institute, which had been approved by so many Popes. Nearly
the whole Episcopate of France protested against this decree.
Clement XIII. declared it null and void. In 1764 the Parliament
left the Jesuits the alternative either to forswear their Institute and
their vows as impious and dangerous to the State, or to go into
116 CAUSES OF POLITICAL AND SOCIAL REVOLUTION.
exile. They went into exile. Of 4,000 French Jesuits only five
blenched. Clement XIII. issued in 1765 a bull in which he
declared the Society innocent and confirmed its Institute. Its pub-
lication, however, in France, was thwarted by Choiseul.
172. In Spain. — In Spain Aranda charged the Jesuits, who had done
their best to pacify the people, with causing bread riots. The Duke of Alva
even stooped to the forging of letters aspersing the legitimacy of the king,
in order to convict the Jesuits of high treason. The letters were written as
if coming from Father General. Alva himself confessed the forgery on his
deathbed. Pius VI. subsequently proved that they were written on Spanish,
not on Roman paper. These letters Alva secretly introduced into the Col-
lege of Madrid, and ordered them to be seized before they were opened.
By this gross deception Alva roused the resentment of King Charles III. to
the highest degree.
Charles III. signed the decree of banishment in 1766. By a pre-
arranged plan all the houses and colleges of the Society throughout
the Spanish possessions were invaded on the same day, their papers
sealed, their property confiscated. Without a hearing, without even
a semblance of a trial, 6,000 members provided only with the clothes
they wore and a breviary, were crowded into ships and thrown on
the snores of the Papal States and the island of Corsica, 1767.
The same year, and by the same methods, Tanucci, the minister of
Ferdinand IV., expelled the Jesuits from Naples. Parma, the
youngest of the Bourbon courts, followed suit in 1768.
173. Ecclesiastical Suppression. — The next step of the
Bourbon Courts was to bring about the suppression of the Society
by ecclesiastical authority. To exercise pressure on the Holy See,
France occupied the papal territory of Avignon, and Naples, the
duchies of Benevento and Montecorvo with their troops. The
saintly Clement XIII. withstood till death, 1769. In the conclave
which followed, Cardinal Ganganelli was chosen as Clement XIV.
As early as 1767 he had secretly expressed himself to the French
ambassador, D'Aubeterre, as favoring the suppression. After his
election, being constantly harassed by the courts, he made some
concessions, the consequence of which he hoped to escape by delays.
Before the end of the year he promised the 'suppression to Louis
XV. and Charles III. of Spain. Still he sought delay. But the
CAUSES OF THE FRENCH REVOLUTION. 117
Spanish ambassador, the crafty and violent Monino (afterwards Count
Florida Blanca) by his repeated threats of suppressing all religious
orders and of a Bourbon schism, finally overcame the reluctance of
the timid Pope. July 21, 1773, Clement XIV. signed the brief of
suppression for the sake of peace. It was not a judicial but an
administrative measure ; no investigation preceded the sentence. At
the time of suppression the Society numbered 39 provinces, 176
seminaries, 669 colleges, 359 smaller residences, and 223 flourishing
missions, most of them among heathen nations. The Jesuits, over
22,000 all over the world, submitted without a protest.
The Pope had a right to suppress the Society in an administrative way.
The order, so highly praised by Clement XIII. and his predecessors, could
not fall so low in three years as to deserve a judicial suppression. Although
the Jesuit houses were everywhere searched, and in many instances plun-
dered by the enemies of the Society, no trace of guilt, or of their pretended
wealth, was ever found. Lorenzo Ricci, the General of the Society, died in
the castle of St. Angelo solemnly attesting the innocence of the Order.
Their innocence was acknowledged by Maria Theresa, who bowed with
great sorrow to the decision of the Pope; by Frederic II. and Catharine II.,
who, with the permission of the Pope, retained their services in Silesia and
Russia; by the great majority of the bishops, the clergy and the people of
the Catholic world. The suppression did not bring the hoped for peace.
The persecution of the Church and the Holy See waxed in fierceness. The
revolutionary party alone was strengthened, for they had overcome one of
their boldest foes. The charge that Clement XIV. was poisoned by ex-
Jesuits is a groundless invention of hostile pamphleteers. Responsible
historians, both Catholic and Protestant, mention the calumny only to
reject it. The testimony of the Papal physicians and of all the attendants
shows that the sickness of the Pope took a perfectly natural course. At the
autopsy not a .trace of poison was discovered.
Suppression of the Jesuits: R. Parsons, Studies IV. — Suppression by Clement XIV.
A. C. Q. 13. — A. Weld: Suppression in the Portuguese Dominions. — Pombal and the
Jesuits: M '77, 3, Sept. p. 86; A. C. Q. 2, p. 51. — A. C. Q. 2, p. 51 — Duhr: Pombal
(Jesuiten Fabeln). — Ellis Schreiber: Father Malagrida M. '89, 1, Feb. p. 214.— The
Jesuits, Their Foundation and History. — v. Weiss, v. 13.— Cesare Cantu: Hist, of a
Hundred Years.
POLITICAL AND SOCIAL CAUSES OF THE FRENCH REVOLUTION.
174. The Reigns in France from Louis XIV. -Louis XVI. —The long
wars of Louis XIV. had exhausted the resources of France. He left a
118 CAUSES OF POLITICAL AND SOCIAL REVOLUTION.
public debt of 2,000,000,000 livres which steadily grew under his successors.
The regency of Philip of Orleans was a further step towards dissolution.
The debauchery of his shameless court found its way to the lower classes
of the people, whilst the swindling operations of Law undermined the credit
of the state and the prosperity of the country. The fruits of Fleury's wiser
administration were destroyed by the reverses and the enormous expendi-
ture in the War of the Austrian Succession and the Seven Years' War. The
acquisition of Corsica from Genoa in 1768 was no compensation for the loss
of the colonies. The prestige of royalty sank lower from day to day under
a king like Louis XV.
175. Royal Establishment. — Under the late Bourbon kings, the per-
sonal household of the king and the princes royal employed 15,000 persons
at an annual expense of 40 to 50 million livres, one -tenth of the public
revenue. The princes of the blood had a revenue of 24 or 25 million livres,
the Duke of Orleans CEgalitS) alone 11,400,000. The main duty of the
first persons of the kingdom was at every place where the court might
happen to reside, to be at all hours at the beck of the king's pleasure. The
occupations at court were an interminable round of feasting, hunting, plays
and receptions, pomp and parade. A corresponding extravagance was prac-
ticed in most of the great houses ; so that public affairs, private business,
the seclusion of family life, the education of children, and the precepts of
morality were sacrificed by the higher classes to frivolity and pleasure-
seeking.
176. Social Distinctions. — The nobility by birth numbered in France
about 140,000 persons or 60,000 families. To this estate was added a
great number of families of administrative officers, members of the Parlia-
ments, judges, etc., who since the time of Louis XIV. had purchased titles
of nobility to escape paying certain taxes. The old nobility which alone
had access to the court, rigorously maintained its social ascendency over
the so-called bourgeois, the middle class of merchants, traders, lawyers, etc.
This distinction was kept up in every profession, the army,, the navy, the
bench. Only noblemen could hold officer's rank in the army and navy,
and they were overpaid. The soldiers recruited from the lowest classes of
the people, were wretchedly underpaid, and fed worse than prison convicts.
Hence when the Revolution broke out, they headed instead of suppressing
the revolts. The resident nobility, though stiff against the bourgeois were
as a rule kindhearted and neighborly with their subjects. For this reason
there was still much cheer and light-hearted enjoyment among the simple
people living in villages and smaller towns. The sufferings of the peasants
came directly from the agents and middlemen of absentee nobles and clergy-
men of high position who resided in Paris. The same social distinction was
found in the clergy. The clergy of France numbered 131 archbishops and
bishops, 60,000 secular priests, 23,000 monks in 2,500 monasteries, and
CAUJ5ES OF THE FRENCH REVOLUTION. 119
37,000 nuns in 1,500 convents. The monasteries continued to be the
benefactors of the people, and were most generous in the support of the
poor in times of need. The church revenues from the soil amounted to 80
or 100 million livres to which were added another 100 million of tithes. A
great part of the revenues went to titular abbots ad commendam. The
bishops and abbots were usually nobles, and had incomes ranging from
25,000 to 100,000 livres or more. The abuse of pluralities still more swelled
the incomes of some of the great ecclesiastics. Thus Cardinal Rohan's
revenues amounted to 600,000 livres. The parish priests and vicars were
taken from among the bourgeois and peasants and had barely enough for
subsistence. Besides, their scanty salaries of from 250-700 francs were
heavily taxed. The wealth of the higher and the poverty of the lower
clergy were a source of innumerable abuses and created a bitter antagonism
between the two classes.
177. Feudal Dues. — At the period preceding the Revolution a fifth of
the soil of France was crown or communal lands, a fifth belonged to the
third estate, a fifth to the rural population, and two-fifths to the privileged
classes, the nobility and the clergy. There were still three kinds of feudal
rights and burdens connected with the soil: (a). The lord of the fief
enjoyed the right of administering justice which he often sold to the highest
bidder; the right of levying tolls at fairs and bridges, and the right of fish-
ing and hunting on the feudal estate. The farmer could not kill the deer
and rabbits roaming in his field nor bar the hunters from .galloping over
them. He had to pay a tax for the right of guarding his crops, and another
tax for the permission of selling them. (b). The farmer had to grind his
corn and to press his grapes at the seigneur's mill or press, and to work
for him a certain number of days, (c.) About a fifth of the soil was censive
land, i. e.t though the holder had all the rights of a proprietor, and could not
be removed as long as he paid his dues, and could sell or sublet the land,
he was subject to two restrictions : he had to pay an annual fee to the lord,
and he had to plant the crops which his lord prescribed. The feudal rights
were separable from the proprietorship of the fiefs, and as a marketable
property were frequently bought up by the townsmen, and passed from
hand to hand. This state of affairs caused interminable vexations and law-
suits, as sometimes half a dozen different persons claimed dues from the
same piece of land.
178. Administration. — Since Louis XIV. the administration was abso-
lute, arbitrary, and centralized. The smallest parish matter had to be
reported to Paris. Suspected and guilty persons of every class could be
sent to State prisons without a hearing, upon the sole warrant of sealed
letters (lettres de cachet) . If the Parliament of Paris refused to register
royal edicts, the royal court had recourse to " beds of justice " (lit de jus-
tice), a despotic enforcement of registration, and banished tl>e recalcitrant
120 CAUSES OF POLITICAL AND SOCIAL REVOLUTION.
members of the Parliament. The sale of offices, begun by Louis XIV.,
gradually extended to every administrative department. Pensions, sine-
cures, offices with enormous salaries, were created for the sole purpose of
being sold.
179. Taxation — The system of taxation was oppressive in its nature,
unjust in its distribution, and arbitraiy in its collection. Excise duties
were laid on the most common necessaries of life. The entrance fee or
octroi was a toll which peasants had to pay at the city gate of market
lowus. Two-thirds of the hated gabelle or salt tax were levied on one-third
of the kingdom. The same measure of salt which in the favored provinces
cost a few cents might cost as many francs in another province. Every
person over seven years of age had to buy annually seven pounds of salt for
kitchen and table use. For salting pork the farmer had to buy another
certified amount. If a villager economized his table salt for curing pork,
his pork was confiscated and he was fined 300 livres. It was forbidden
undi r a fine of 40 or 50 livres to evaporate ocean water. Violations of the
salt tax led annually to 4,000 seizures of dwellings, 3,400 imprisonments,
ami 500 sentences of flogging, exile or the galleys. Thes;ilt tax, excise and
custom dues were sold in advance to revenue farmers, who besides the tax
sought their own profit. The taille, a personal property tax, was in two-
thirds of France laid on land, houses and industries in proportion to the
presumed capacity of ihe tax-payer. At the first sign of increasing pros-
perity the tax was raised. In ten provinces the rich paid 1,500,000 livres,
the poor 11,636,000 livres taille. The poll tax was general. The poorest
rag-picker who earned ten or fifteen cents a day, had to pay his eight or
ten livres poll tax. Internal custom houses and tolls were so numerous,
that it took over three months instead of three weeks to carry goods from
the south to the north of France. A boat load of wine from Languedoc
had to pay over forty kinds of duties before reaching Paris. Laborers who
crossed the Rhone to their daily work, were taxed for their victuals.
Whilst the privileged classes paid few taxes, the common people bore the
heaviest part of the burden. Over a great portion of France a farmer of
the better sort had to pay 81 francs out of every hundred of his net revenue
in taxes and feudal dues, retaining less than a fifth for the support of
his family. Small farmers fared still worse.
180. Condition of the People. — Under such a system of administration
and taxation, the gap between the rich and the poor constantly widened.
Vast numbers of peasants deserted their lands and sought refuge beyond
the frontiers. Part of the French soil became a waste. The price of corn
and bread had to be fixed by the police. A slight rise in the price of bread
meant starvation for the poor. A fall in the price of corn impoverished
the producer. Famines and bread riots became periodic in the eighteenth
century. In 1715, immediately after the war of the Spanish succession,
CAUSES OF THE FRENCH REVOLUTION. 121
one-third of the population, 6,000,000, are said to have perished of hunger
and destitution. The years 1725, 1737, 1739, 1740, 1747, 1750, 1752, 1764-68,
1770, 1773, by no means exhaust the number of famine years. In 1740
Bishop Massillon wrote to Cardinal Fleury that the majority of the rural
inhabitants have, for half the year, to deprive themselves and their chil-
dren of their sole bread food made of barley and oats, to pay the taxes. In
1755, 800 persons died of misery within one month in a single quarter of
Paris. Private charity, though in many cases practiced on a grand scale,
was hopelessly inadequate to meet the evil. The country swarmed with
beggars, smugglers, poachers, and brigands; thousands of them were
imprisoned, sent to the galleys, hanged, or broken on the wheel. Into such
soil fell the revolutionary teaching of Jean Jaques Rousseau.
181. The Social Contract. — Not one of the "philosophers" obtained
an influence in shaping future events which could be compared with that
of Rousseau. The others appealed to the educated and official classes to
carry out the revolutionary changes; Rousseau appealed .to the common
people. His " Social Coutrat " and similar writings had a hundred times
more readers among the bourgeois and the lower classes than Voltaire's
works. Rousseau's t( Contract Social," published in 1762, became the
model of the revolutionary State. The liberty, the equality, the sovereignty
of the people was the foundation of the social contract. The State, with
Rousseau, is nothing but a collection of individuals freely associating
together, and forming a contract for the recognition of their rights. Every
one surrenders himself with all his rights to the community. This com-
munity excludes all other associations, especially the Church. A Christian
community, in which the Church has special rights not delegated by the
State, is, in his view, a contradiction. Whatever opposes an obstacle to
the equality of the citizens, possession of private property, a government,
an aristocracy, a church, must be overthrown. The first man who asserted
a property right, was a robber to the community. The people have the
inalienable right, to determine the form of government, and at any time to
change it, to accept or reject any proposed law by universal suffrage. It is
evident that such a theory, carried out in practice, must lead to anarchy
and mob rule.
182. Beginning of the Reign of Louis XVI. — Louis XVI.,
the grandson of Louis XV., succeeded to the throne in 1774. His
piety, moral purity, simplicity of tastes, and sincere good will were
neutralized by his lack of energy. He was married to Marie
Antoinette, the unfortunate daughter of Maria Theresa. Marie
Antoinette was of a vivacious temper, fond of enjoyment, but not
extravagant. She was not opposed to reforms, but meddled little
122 CAUSES OF POLITICAL AND SOCIAL REVOLUTION.
in politics until the danger of her family roused her inborn energy.
Long before the outbreak of the Revolution the court party nick-
named her a " Democrat " on account of her broad-minded views.
It Was systematic misrepresentation which undermined her pop-
ularity. The ministers chosen by the king were all freethinkers.
Turgot introduced a number of reforms in the regulation of trade
and labor, but his further plans were cut short by the opposition of
the privileged classes. It was a misfortune for the queen that his
dismissal was, in part, her work. After his dismissal a reaction set
in, and the attention of the nation was, for a time, diverted to the
events which took place in North America, events in which France
soon took an active part.
Causes of the Fr. Revol.: Lecky, v. ch.20, p. 300-441. — Taine: The Ancient Regime. —
Reeve : France Before the Revol. of '89. — De Tocquevllle : The Old Regime and the
Revol. — The 18th Century; D. R.'79, 4;'80, 1 ;'81, 4. — H. G. Mlvart: The Ancient Regime,
A. C. Q. 18, 19.— The Last Days of the Old Regime; M. 80, 3. — Lilly: Questions of
History. — J. Murray: French Finances Under Louis XV. — v. Weiss, v. 11. —See also
the Histories of the French Rev. to Ch. IX.
CHAPTER VIII.
AMERICAN WAR OF INDEPENDENCE.
§1.
CAUSES.
183. Conquest of Canada. — The submission of the colonies to the
mother country, before the Peace of Paris, was mainly due to the presence
of the French in Canada. The colonists depended for their security on the
armed support of England. Once the French had been driven from Amer-
ica, the colonies stood no longer in need of England's protection.
184. Conflicting Claims. — The conflicting claims of the colonies and
the British Parliament lay at the root of the controversy. The colonists
maintained that as Englishmen by birth or descent they were entitled to the
same degree of liberty as Englishmen enjoyed at home. Not being repre-
sented in Parliament they opposed Parliamentary taxation as an invasion of
their rights upon the principle that taxation without representation is
tyranny. Substantially, it was the same principle that had been adopted by
the bishops and barons of England in the first perfect Parliament of 1295,
and had been inserted in the Magna Charta, that no tax should be imposed
without consent of Parliament. On the other hand, Parliament claimed the
unrestricted right of legislating for, and of taxing the colonies, not merely
to defray the expenses of protecting them, but as a mark of colonial subor-
dination and dependence. The claims of the colonies were ably defended
in America by the writings and speeches of James Otis, George Washington,
Patrick Henry, Samuel and John Adams, and Benjamin Franklin, their
colonial agent in London ; and in the Purliament itself by Lord Chatham,
Edmund Burke., and other friends of the Americans.
185. Navigation and Trade Acts. — The English claims were practically
embodied in a number of Parliamentary Acts which the colonists considered
as prejudicial to their commerce, their manufactures and their rights of
self government. The Navigation Acts were designed to restrict colonial
commerce for the benefit of the English merchants. The colonies could
trade only with the mother country and its dependencies. All imports had
to pass through England. All exports, tobacco, cotton, and other products,
had to sell in British markets. Every sort of competition with English
manufacture was deliberately crushed. It was forbidden to ship woolens,
(123)
124 AMERICAN WAR OF INDEPENDENCE.
hats, etc., from one colony to another, or to set up mills and steel furnaces
in America. This selfish legislation led to wholesale smuggling. Nine-
tenths of all the tea and other articles of consumption were smuggled. To
put down this practice, so-called Writs of Assistance were issued for the
search and seizure of smuggled goods. Such a writ empowered the king's
officers to enter even private homes. The colonies protested in vain against
these writs. It must be confessed, however, that during the last French
war the colonists in their money-making spirit had carried on a vast con-
traband business with the enemy, and furnished them nearly all their
provisions.
186. The Stamp Act. — The policy of Grenville, Bute's suc-
cessor, brought the dissatisfaction of the colonies to a crisis. He
determined to enforce strictly the trade laws which were constantly
violated with the connivance of the royal officers, permanently to estab-
lish a British army of 10,000 men or more in America, and to raise by
parliamentary taxation first a part, later the whole, of the money
necessary for its support. For this purpose he proposed in 1764, the
Stamp Act, to obtain 100,0002. of revenue. It levied a tax ranging
from a half -penny to 61. on pamphlets, periodicals, legal documents,
etc. Revenue taxes had been heretofore imposed only by the colo-
nial assemblies. It was the first act which provoked a general out-
cry against the power and a denial of the right of Parliament to tax
America.
The Stamp Act was passed in 1765, despite the collective petitions
of the colonial assemblies.
Patrick Henry carried a resolution in the Virginia House of Burgesses,
denying the authority of Parliament to tax the colonies. A Congress at
New York representing nine colonies declared it the undoubted right of
Englishmen, that no taxes should be imposed on them but with tlieir own
consent given personally or by their representatives; that the colonists are
not and from their local circumstances cannot be represented in the House
of Commons ; hence only their representatives in the colonial assemblies
were competent to tax them. This position was ardently maintained in
Parliament by Chatham, Burke, and the friends of the colonies in general.
187. Repeal of the Stamp Act. — Meanwhile the " Sons of
Liberty," an American association against the Stamp Act, seized
and destroyed all the stamps they could lay their hands on, and
induced or forced the stamp masters to resign. In the frequent
CAUSES. 125
stamp riots both custom houses and private dwellings of unpopular
officials were plundered. Merchants refused to pay their debts in
England unless the act was repealed. No jury could be found to
punish mob violence. A non-importation agreement so far affected
the trade, that English merchants themselves petitioned Parliament
to repeal the Stamp Act. The new Rockingham ministry wished to
retire from an untenable position. Thus the act was repealed, but
with a declaration, affirming the right of Parliament to tax the British
colonies and to pass laws binding them " in all cases whatsoever."
The repeal restored peace and confidence in America, the declaration
was ignored.
188. The Tax on Tea. — In 1767 Charles Townshend, the
Chancellor of the Exchequer, again tried to tax America by imposing
a duty on tea and four other articles. The tax was not compulsory
as nobody was obliged to buy tea. But the Sons of Liberty would
brook parliamentary taxation in no form, and by their agitation kept
the revenue down to a minimum. In consequence Lord North, suc-
cessor to Townshend, urged Parliament to remove the duties from
four articles and to lower the tax on tea. This repeal, however, was
accompanied by two measures, which only aggravated the already
excited feeling in America. The one was the revival of a law of Henry
VIII. by which traitors were to be tried in England. The other was
the Mutiny Act, which ordered the colonies to maintain British
troops sent over for the enforcement of these obnoxious laws.
189. Conflicts between the British and Colonial Au-
thorities. — The New York Assembly refused to furnish supplies
for the troops, and was suspended. Assemblies met to protest against
English legislation, were dissolved by the governors, and met again
on their own authority. The troops pouring into the northern colo-
nies from England caused bitter feelings to grow up between the
soldiers and the citizens. In Boston a party of soldiers fired upon
a small mob that taunted them. Five men fell dead or dying, six
others were wounded. This so-called massacre of Boston added fuel
to the flame (1770). In North Carolina a regular battle was fought
between the governor commanding the militia, and the " Regulators,"
a secret society pledged to pay no taxes until their grievances were
126 AMERICAN AVAR OF INDEPENDENCE.
redressed. Two hundred of the insurgents fell and six were hanged
by the governor (1771). In the teeth of an act just passed, which
made it a capital offense to destroy ships or military and naval
stores, unknown parties of Rhode Island destroyed and burnt the
royal revenue cutter Gaspee, whose commander had made himself
obnoxious by a zeal for England that went far beyond the law ( 1772) .
The Sons of Liberty prevented the landing or the sale of tea. From
New York and Philadelphia the ships went back to England un-
loaded. At Charleston the tea was stored away in damp cellars.
In Boston, fifty persons disguised as Indians emptied 342 chests of
tea into the bay in the presence of a vast multitude (Boston Tea
Party, 1773).
In spite of the numerous riots and the general excitement the Americans
were singularly free from the thirst of blood. After the " Boston Massa-
cre " two patriots, bitterly opposed to England, John Adams and Josiah
Quincy, undertook the defense of Captain Preston, who had commanded the
firing party. He himself and all the soldiers were acquitted except two,
who were found guilty of manslaughter, and even these received only a
slight punishment. The American Revolution, unlike the French, was never
disgraced by political assassinations.
19O. Repressive Measures of the English Government, —
Parliament expressed its indignation at the proceedings in America
by five Acts in 1774. It closed the port of Boston to all vessels
(Boston Port Act). It remodeled by its own authority the Charter
of Massachusetts, and placed its government into the hands of the
king's officers. General Gage, commander-in-chief of the British
troops, was appointed governor of Massachusetts. It authorized the
removal to another, colony or to England for trial of persons indicted
for murder or other capital offenses, if the offense had been com-
mitted in aiding the magistrates. It legalized the quartering of
troops in the American colonies. It incorporated the country north
of the Ohio river between the AUeghanies and the Mississippi with
the province of Quebec (Quebec Act).
The Quebec Act allowed all civil causes to be tried by the French law, to
which the Canadians were accustomed, admitted Catholics to the legislative
council, established complete liberty of public worship for the Catholic
Church, and granted the Catholic clergy a full parliamentary title to their
old ecclesiastical estates.
CAUSES. 127
191. First Continental Congress, September 5, 1774. — Lord North
flattered himself that his measures would restore peace. The reverse hap-
pened. Provisions poured into Boston for the support of those whom the
Port Act had thrown out of employment. As soon as a colonial assembly
was dissolved by a governor, the representatives of the people met in their
own name. Juries refused to take the oath. Judges were prevented from
sitting. Riots were the order of the day.
The Virginia House resolved that an attack on one colony was an
attack on all and that it was expedient to call a General Congress.
Massachusetts took a similar course. Delegates from all the colonies
except Georgia met in Carpenter's Hall at Philadelphia, and organized
the Continental Congress. George Washington, Samuel Adams,
and Patrick Henry were the most prominent delegates. In a Declara-
tion of Rights Congress claimed for America the power of legislation,
denied to Parliament the right of taxing the colonies, restricted par-
liamentary authority to the mere regulation of trade, and nominally
rejected all of the acts, — eleven in number — from the Stamp Act
to the Quebec Act, passed since 1764. In separate addresses they
appealed to the king, to the people of England, and to the people of
Canada against Parliament. They finally voted to suspend all trade
with England, till justice should be done to the colonies.
In the address to the people of Great Britain drawn up by the bigoted John
Jay, they skillfully appealed to the strong anti-Catholic feeling of the nation
by denying the competence of the legislature to establish (in Canada) a
religion fraught with " sanguinary and impious tenets; »' " a religion that
has deluged your island in blood, and dispersed impiety, bigotry, persecu-
tion, murder, and rebellion through every part of the world." At the same
time they addressed the Catholic Canadians in the following terms : u We
are too well acquainted with the liberality of sentiment distinguishing your
nation to imagine, that difference of religion will prejudice you against a
hearty amity with us." The intolerance of New England Puritanism in
which happily Washington had no part, lost Canada to the cause of
independence.
192. New Measures of Parliament. — Parliament after re--
jecting the last motions for reconciliation made by Chatham and
Burke pronounced Massachusetts in a state of rebellion, restrained
the colonies from all trade with England, and raised the British force
in Boston to 10,000 men. The adherents upon whom the govern-
ment could count in the colonies, were its own officers, the Episco-
128 AMERICAN WAR OF INDEPENDENCE.
palians both in the North and the South, a large section of the
mercantile cfass that detested all measures interfering with their
trade, and a rich and powerful party of sympathizers especially in
New York, Boston, and Philadelphia known as the American Tories.
The Tories of New York succeeded in inducing their assembly to
withhold assent to the proceedings of the Continental Congress.
Lecky (Causes of Am. Rev.) : III. pp. 290-499 ; 569-591. — Sparks : Life of B. Franklin. —
W. W. Henry: Life of Patrick Henry. — T. K. Hosmer: Lives of S. Adams (Whig views)
and of Th. Hutchison (Tory views). — J. T. Morse, Jr.: J. Adams. — Channing: U. S.
of Am., 1765-1865. — Kidder: The Boston Massacre. — Frothingham : Rise of the Rep. of
the U. S. - O'Sullivan : The Quebec Act and the Church in Canada, A. C. Q. 10. — Speeches
of Chatham and Edm. Burke in Parliament.
§ 2.
WAR OF INDEPENDENCE— THE COLONIES UNASSISTED, 1775-1778.
193. Campaign of ^775 — Lexington and Concord. — The War of Inde-
pendence comprises two periods. In the first, 1775-1778, the fighting was
done in America, between the mother country and the colonies.. In the
second, 1778-83, France, Spain, and Holland joined the United States, and
the war spread to all parts of the world.
The first blood was shed at Lexington. General Gage sent a
detachment to seize pr destroy the military stores which the patriots
had collected at Concord, Mass. Sixty or seventy " minute men,"
volunteers who were to be ready at a moment's notice, had gathered
at Lexington, but were easily dispersed with a loss of sixteen killed
or wounded. The British troops proceeded to Concord and
destroyed the stores. On the return march to Boston the volunteers,
who had meanwhile gathered in larger numbers, constantly assailed
and finally routed the English who lost 273 men as against 88 on
the American side. The engagement dispelled the prestige of the
British regulars.
194. Bunker Hill, June. — All New England now fled to
arms. In May, Ethan Allen and Benedict Arnold surprised forts
Ticonderoga and Crown Point, a feat which gave the Americans the
command of Lake George, Lake Champlain, and the road to Canada.
Boston, with its 10,000 regulars, was gradually surrounded on the
land side by 15-20,000 volunteers. Entrenched on Breed's Hill
THE COLONIES UNASSISTED. 129
1,500 provincials repulsed two attacks of 3,000 regulars and
retreated in good order only when their ammunition had been
exhausted. The effect of this defeat was equivalent to a victory,
because the firmness of the volunteers in the face of twice their
number of English regulars encouraged the colonial leaders.
In the South the governors of Virginia (Lord Dunmore) and of the two
Carolinas sought refuge on board the English frigates. Dunmore prom-
ised freedom to negro slaves who should fight for England, and burnt the
town of Norfolk. These two measures excited deep resentment through-
out America.
195. Expedition to Canada. — Though it publicly disavowed the action,
Congress sent an expedition under Montgomery into Canada which took
Montreal. Arnold, reinforced by Montgomery, made a fruitless effort to
take Quebec. The Catholics of Canada, who had no sympathy for New
England Puritans, refused to support the movement. The Americans hav-
ing lost 5,000 men by desertion or death, fell back within the American
frontiers. By next spring all Canada was again in the hands of the English.
196. Second Meeting of the Continental Congress. —
Meanwhile Congress had met. New York now rallied to the cause.
By the accession of Georgia, before the close of the sessions, Congress
represented the whole of the thirteen colonies. Its two most import-
ant measures were the appointment of George Washington as com-
mander-in-chief of the American forces (1775) and the Declaration of
Independence (1776). Other veterans of the French war were given
subordinate commands. Congress took measures to provide military
supplies and to build up a navy, authorized privateers to cruise
against the ships of England, but not against those of Ireland, pro-
hibited the further importation of slaves into any colony, and
engaged the commercial interests of the world by throwing open the
trade of the colonies to all nations except the British.
One of the greatest difficulties with which Congress had to contend was
the state of the colonial finances. Having no revenue but that irregularly
supplied by the States, Congress resorted to all kinds of devices to borrow
money. Paper money was issued until it became almost worthless; lottery
loans were authorized; subsidies were. begged from France, and bonds
issued on the joint guarantees of all the colonies. In this financial distress
speculators gleaned a rich harvest. The soldiers were poorly and irregularly
paid, and were often driven to mutiny or desertion by delay of payment.
130 AMERICAN WAR OF INDEPENDENCE.
197. Washington's Character. — "To the appointment of Washington, far
more than to any other single circumstance, is due the ultimate success of
the American Revolution. For several years, and usually in the neighbor-
hood of 'superior forces, he commanded a perpetually fluctuating army
almost wholly destitute of discipline, torn by personal and provincial
jealousies, wretchedly armed, wretchedly clothed, and sometimes in immi-
nent danger of starvation." Washington "was often "unsupported by the
population among which he was quartered, thwarted by the jealousy of
rivals in the army and in Congress; " but he kept his forces together tl by a
combination of skill, firmness, patience, and judgment, which has rarely
been surpassed, and he led them at last to a signal triumph." Though pos-
sessed of keen sensibilities and strong passions, his power of self command
never failed him. t( In civil, as in military life, he was always the same calm,
wise, just, and single-minded man, pursuing the course which he believed to
be right without fear or favor. He was in the highest sense a man of honor,
and he carried into public life the severest standard of private morals. It
was soon acknowledged by the nation, and by the English themselves, that
in Washington America had found a leader, who could be induced by no
earthly motive to tell a falsehood, or to break an engagement, or to commit
any dishonorable act." (Lecky).
198. Fall of Boston and Attack on Charleston, 1776. —
When Washington arrived before Boston (July, 1775) he had to mould
two raw levies into effective troops, as the term of the earlier levy
expired in winter. In March, 1776, he succeeded at length in occupy-
ing the Dorchester Heights which commanded the city and harbor of
Boston. General Howe, who, in November, 1775, had relieved General
Gage of his command, was compelled to evacuate Boston and Wash-
ington entered the capital of Massachusetts in triumph. Besides the
troops the English fleet carried 1,000 American Tories to Halifax.
New England was henceforth substantially free. Washington trans-
ferred his headquarters to New York, leaving General Ward in
Boston.
Early in 1776 Sir Henry Clinton had sailed from Boston on a secret ex-
pedition. Foiled by General Lee in his attack on New York, Clinton made
a descent upon Charleston but was repulsed by Colonel Moultrie, and by
Lee who had followed him by land. After cruising about for a while
Clinton returned to New York.
199. Declaration of Independence. — Heretofore the majority of the
colonists had hoped for a peaceful settlement with England without a
formal separation from the mother country. But the war which was now
THE COLONIES UNASSISTED. 131
ablaze could end only in independence or in complete subjection. A strong
public sentiment for independence showed itself first in resolutions passed
by the separate colonial assemblies. When Congress contemplated an
appeal for aid to France, the first preliminary step seemed to call for inde-
pendence. Finally when England hired German mercenaries to fight against
her own subjects, the declaration of independence became inevitable.
On June 7, 1776, Richard Henry Lee of Virginia offered, and
John Adams of Massachusetts seqonded, a resolution, declaring the
independence of the United Colonies, the expediency of foreign
alliances and of a plan of confederation. Action on the independ-
ence clause was postponed for three weeks, the other two clauses
were passed at once. On July 2, the Independence clause of the
Lee resolution was passed and a committee appointed to draw up a
formal declaration. The Declaration was adopted July 4th, by
twelve States (New York alone still abstaining), and signed August
2d, by every member of Congress. It declared, that these United
Colonies are and of right ought to be free and independent States,
that they are absolved from all allegiance to the British Crown, and
that all political connection between them and the State of Great
Britain is, and ought to be totally dissolved.
The Declaration of Independence was drawn up by Jefferson, an adherent
of the new philosophy. The Declaration was far more justified by a
series of historical facts proving that England had become unfit to rule the
colonies, that her policy had become destructive of the ends of government,
than by the theoretical and somewhat declamatory principles laid down in
the preamble. Some of the phrases about equality and liberty of all men,
like the declaration of the rights of man issued by the first Continental
Congress, were a concession to the new philosophy. If the signers had
taken these assertions seriously, their first duty would have been the. imme-
diate abolition of slavery. The charge that the king endeavored to bring
on the inhabitants of our frontiers the merciless Indian savages, was
unfair, because the Americans were willing enough to employ the Indians
in their warfare against England, and actually employed them in the expe-
dition to Canada and elsewhere. The resoluteness of the independent
colonies was in the immediate future to be tested by a series of disasters.
2OO. The Long Island Campaign. — In the beginning of July,
General Howe landed from Halifax in Staten Island, where he was
joined by Clinton arriving from Charleston, and by his brother,
Admiral Lord Howe, arriving from England. These reinforcements
132 AMERICAN WAR OF INDEPENDENCE.
*
raised Howe's army to 30,000 men. With 15 ,000 men Howe attacked
and routed 8,000 Americans in the battle of Long Island. A few
thousand Americans hemmed in at Brooklyn retreated unobserved
across the river to the New York shore. The masterly retreat was
due to the skill of Washington, who had come to their rescue.
Howe now opened negotiations with Washington and with Congress,
The American general refused to adopt communications addressed to
" George Washington, Esq." or " George Washington, Esq., etc., etc./' and
denied that Howe had any power but to offer pardon, and pardon the Ameri-
cans would not accept. Congress answered they would listen to no terms
save independence. Thus the war went on.
Washington had to evacuate New York, and was leisurely pur-
sued by General Howe. Fort Washington and Fort Lee, on the
Hudson, fell into the hands of the English and opened the whole
province to the enemy. After a few skirmishes Howe returned to
New York whence he sent plundering raids into the country. An
expedition from New York towards the end of the year captured
Rhode Island which remained for three years in English possession.
201. Trenton and Princeton, 1776-1777. — Washington,
well-nigh deserted by his men and closely pursued by Cornwallis,
retreated through New Jersey across the Delaware into Pennsylvania.
The population was everywhere lukewarm. The leaders were dis-
couraged. Washington perceived that only some brilliant stroke
could save the cause. With consummate skill and courage he
crossed on Christmas night the Delaware to. Trenton, and with the
loss of only four men captured 1,000 Hessians, 1,000 stands of
arms and six field pieces, and recrossed the river in safety. A few
days after he once more crossed the Delaware, evaded an overwhelm-
ing English force, pounced upon Princeton, and wholly defeated
three English regiments. The courage of the patriots immediately
revived. Washington, who had meanwhile received from Congress
almost supreme power in war, raised sixteen battalions of regular
troops and cleared New Jersey of the enemy.
202. Negotiations with Prance. — Negotiations for a French alliance
were secretly carried on at Versailles since 1775. As yet, the government
was averse to an open rupture with England, though popular opinion was
THE COLONIES UNASSISTED. 133
wholly on the side of America. Meanwhile the hatred of England which domi-
nated the highest circles of the administration, procured to the struggling
colonies large loans of money, arms, ammunition, exceptional facilities for
the new American trade in French harbors, and the services of Lafayette and
a number of other experienced officers. The presence of Benjamin Franklin
in Paris created a general enthusiasm for America. Marie Antoinette pro-
moted the cause with all her influence. Military talents of other nations
joined the American army and aided its organization. Foremost among
them were Count Pulaski, who had greatly distinguished himself in resist-
ing the first division of Poland; Kosciusko, the hero of Poland's later
national rising; Baron Steuben, a veteran of the Seven Years' War and late
aid-de-camp of Frederic II., who became the real organizer of the American
forces, and Baron Kalb, who had served under Marshal Saxe.
203. Southern Campaign of 1777. — The British planned
two campaigns for the year, one to transfer the seat of war to
southern Pennsylvania, the other to subdue the north from Canada.
Howe embarked 18,000 men in the ships of his brother and entered
the Chesapeake to obtain possession of Philadelphia. Washington
with 13,000, of whom only 8,000 were fit for service, met him on the
Brandywine, but was routed in spite of the valor of his troops under
Sullivan, Lafayette, and Pulaski. On September 26, Philadelphia
was occupied by Howe. Washington's attempt to storm his forti-
fied camp at Germantown failed for lack of ammunition. Before
the end of the year the two forts Mifflin and Mercer on the Delaware
which commanded communication with the sea fell after a stubborn
defense into the hands of the English.
The Americans wintered amid the most terrible sufferings at Valley
Forge, some twenty miles from Philadelphia, where they had to contend
with extreme poverty, with disease, famine, and desertions. Here Wash-
ington spent the darkest days of his life, unbroken and undismayed, trust-
ing in God, to whom he would appeal with bended knees and tearful eyes.
Still a goodly number of brave and faithful men shared with him all the
privations of that frightful winter. ,
204. Surrender of Burgoyne, Oct. 17, 1777. — The plan
pursued in the northern campaign was to cut the colonies in two by
a simultaneous advance from Canada southward and New York
northward. General Burgoyne with an army of 10,000 men, com-
posed of Englishmen, Canadians, Germans, American Tories and
Indians, took Crown Point, Ticonderoga and Fort Edward. Pro-
134 AMERICAN WAR OF INDEPENDENCE.
ceeding southward he sent a detachment of his army to Bennington,
Vt., to destroy a rich depot of American stores. This detachment
was defeated by the State militia. The American General Gates
stopped the advance of Burgoyne in the first undecided battle of
Stillwater or Bemis ' Heights, crowned with the fortifications which
Kosciusko had erected. In the second battle of Stillwater or Bemis'
Heights, Gates defeated Burgoyne, who fell back upon Saratoga,
only to find it in the hands of the enemy. He was surrounded by
the Americans and had to surrender his entire army of about 6,000
men and all his arms and artillery.
2O5. Organization and Treaties- — In November, 1777, Congress, which
had retreated to Lancaster, voted the Articles of Union and Confederation,
which, for the time being, settled its constitution and powers, and defined the
respective limits of both the Central and the State Governments of the UNITED
STATES of America, and adopted the Stars and Stripes as the national flag.
The Articles were successively ratified by the State Assemblies between 1778
and 1781.
The surrender of Burgoyne put an end to the hesitation of the
French ministers. December 17, 1777, they informed the Ameri-
can commissioners that they were ready to conclude a treaty with
the United States, and February 6, 1778, the treaty was signed.
Each party agreed not to lay down their arms till the absolute inde-
pendence of the United States should be secured by treaty. Spain
joined the alliance in 1779 and stipulated that no peace should be
made with .England till Gibraltar was restored to Spain. The
Dutch Netherlands acceded to the league in 1780.
The French alliance, though of the utmost importance to America, was
not an unmixed blessing. The appointment of French officers in the army
roused the jealousy and resentment of the Americans. The late despond-
ency gave way to a feeling of security and overweening confidence. The
States neglected to send in their quota of men and money, shifting the
burdens of the war as much as possible on the French ally. Congress was
helpless and at times almost penniless, and the army was as fluctuating,
ill-paid, and ill-cared for in the second as it had been in the first period of
the war.
Lecky, IV. 14, p. 1-96. — Lives of Washington: W. Irving; Lodge ; Marshall; Scudder;
J. Sparks ; Upham, etc. ; B. H. Clarke ; A. 0. Q., 21. — Ludlow : The War of Am. Indep.—
Fhlnney: Battle of Lexington. — Howe: Campaign of Burgoyne. — Histories of the U. St.
ALLIANCE WITH EUROPEAN POWERS. 135
§3.
THE UNITED STATES IN ALLIANCE WITH EUROPEAN POWERS,
1778-1783.
206. The King's War. — The panic which the French alliance caused in
England was so great, that Lord North found no difficulty in carrying
through Parliament acts which conceded every American demand made
since 1763 save independence. On the other hand Congress rejected every
offer of reconciliation not based on the recognition of independence. In
this crisis the whole English nation clamored for Lord Chatham, whose
name would have been a power against France, to take the management of
affairs into his hands. But the King repeatedly affirmed, that no considera-
tion in life would bring him to treat personally with Chatham. The " great
commoner," however, soon after died of a stroke of apoplexy received in
his last American speech in Parliament. George III. insisted that the war
should be carried on in a more hostile spirit. No means of u distressing "
the Americans should be neglected. Lord North continued the war in
direct opposition to his own judgment at the sole entreaty of the king.
Hence the war was popularly called " the king's war." The spirit of
fiercer hostility in the English army soon manifested itself in numerous
burning raids and depredations, in a frightful destruction of property and
in the cruel treatment of American prisoners of war. France declared war
against England towards the end of July, 1778.
%
207. Campaign of 1778. — The French alliance made itself
felt at once in America. Henry Clinton, the successor in command
of Howe, evacuated Philadelphia with his troops accompanied by
3,000 Tories, before the Americans took any active measure.
Emerging from Valley Forge, Washington overtook the British at
Monmouth Courthouse in New Jersey, and in spite of the blundering
insubordination of General Lee inflicted a defeat on the English
rear. Clinton with the main army retreated to New York. Wash-
ington took up his position in the Hudson river valley near Tarry-
town. The British, who now held only two posts in the North, New
York and Newport, R. I., removed their principal forces to the
South, captured Savannah and overran Georgia.
The Iroquois, stirred up, led, and aided by American Tories, invaded the
Susquehannah and Cherry valleys, and massacred the peaceful settlers with
all the horrors of Indian warfare. These incursions were a crime com-
mitted without any military excuse, and could only embitter the strife and
prove fatal to the Indians. Accordingly Congress, the following year, sent
136 . AMERICAN WAR OF INDEPENDENCE.
General Sullivan into the Indian Territory to kill, burn and destroy till the
country became a desert. The remnants of the hostile tribes took refuge in
Canada. Similar race wars disgraced the campaign in the South.
208. Campaign of 1779. — In the North both parties were
too weak to venture on a decisive action. In the South General
Lincoln, assisted from the sea side by the French fleet, made an un-
successful attempt to recapture Savannah. The rest of the campaign
consisted in guerilla warfare, the capture and recapture of a few forts
in New York, and plundering expeditions of the British in New York,
Georgia, and South Carolina. But whilst the Americans lost ground
in the South, they spread to the West. The " county " of Ken-
tucky had been incorporated with Virginia since 1778 and 1779. The
Americans advanced to the Northwest, drove out the English posts,
surprised Kaskaskia, occupied the whole Illinois region, dislodged
the Cherokees and other tribes south of the Ohio, took hold of Ten-
nessee, fortified Natchez, and thus possessed themselves of the eastern
half of the Mississippi valley.
209. Campaign of 178O, — In 1780 the English invaded
South Carolina, captured Charleston, where they made 5,000
prisoners of war, including General Lincoln, and seized 400 cannon.
Thence they overran the whole State. After signally defeating
General Gates in the battle of Camden, where Baron Kalb was mor-
tally wounded, they held for a short time undisputed sway from
South Carolina to the Gulf. Their own severities, however, soon
embittered the inhabitants and gave an opportunity to guerilla leaders
like Marion, Sumpter, James Williams, to break forth from their
hiding-places and swamps, and to keep up a war of surprises against
the English. A British raiding expedition of 1,000 men into North
Carolina was cut down or captured by the Americans.
«
210. Campaign of 1781. — In 1781 General Morgan utterly
defeated the British cavalry under Tarleton in the battle of the
Cowpens, S. C. He then joined General Greene, who had been
appointed to succeed Gates. But both were obliged to fall back,
before Cornwallis, who defeated General Greene at Guilford Court-
house, N. C. Cornwallis' victory was a Pyrrhus victory, for his ranks
ALLIANCE WITH EUROPEAN POWERS. 137
were so thinned that he was compelled to flee before Greene and his
defeated Americans, till he reached Wilmington. From Wilmington,
not suspecting that he was running into a trap, Cornwallis entered
Virginia, where Benedict Arnold, now a British general, was plun-
dering and laying waste the country.
Benedict Arnold, who had been disciplined by Congress for some financial
irregularities, had treasonably bargained with Clinton to give up the fortress
of West Point which he commanded. The treason was discovered by the
capture of Major Andre", an English officer, who acted as Clinton's messen-
ger. Major Andre was convicted as a spy by the unanimous sentence
of a court-martial consisting of fourteen generals, two of them Lafayette
and Baron Steuben, and executed. The justice of the sentence cannot be
reasonably impugned; Washington, always eminently humane, acted with-
out passion and from a conviction of duty in the case. Arnold escaped to
New York and was made a brigadier -general.
In South Carolina General Greene, though defeated at Hobskirk
Hill and Eutaw Springs, inflicted a far greater loss on the enemy
than he suffered himself. He forced the English to seek shelter in
Charleston and kept them there to the end of the war. Savannah
and Charleston were now the only places held by the British south
of Virginia.
211. Movements of the First French Fleet. — Admiral D'Estaing
arrived in 1778 with 16 ships and 4,000 men at the mouth of the Delaware.
Finding that Howe's fleet had already left, he sailed to New York, which he
blockaded for a time. Unable to cross the bar at Sandy Hook, he pro-
ceeded to Newport, Rhode Island, and entered the harbor. The land army
which was to co-operate with him, was a week behind time. When it
appeared at last, Admiral Howe hove in sight, and D'Estaing went out to
meet him. A terrible storm separated the fleets, and forced the French
Admiral to refit in Boston. In November he sailed to the West Indies.
212. The General War. — The war which had begun in the colonies,
spread in 1778 to all parts of the world. There was a drawn battle off
Brest between the French and the English fleets. Paul Jones, a Scotch-
man in American service, harried the western coast of England, burnt the
shipping at Whitehaven, and captured two English men-of-war in the
North Sea; twice the French fleet, assisted by Spanish ships, ruled the Chan-
nel and forced the English vessels to seek shelter. In the West Indies
towns and islands were taken and retaken by the English and the French.
Ill Africa Senegal was conquered by the French, and Goree by the English.
138 AMERICAN WAR OF INDEPENDENCE.
In East India the British land and sea forces captured all the French settle-
ments and got embroiled in a war with Hyder Ali, ruler of Mysore, one of
the most formidable foes ever encountered by the English in India, and in
another war with the Mahrattas. The Spaniards concentrated their chief
efforts on the unsuccessful attempt of reconquering Gibraltar which was
twice relieved by an English fleet with great loss to the Spanish navy. The
Spanish conquered in Europe the island of Minorca, and in America Pensa-
cola and all western Florida. The Dutch fleet fought a drawn battle
with the English in the North sea. They were the greatest losers in the
war, for they lost all their East and West India possessions, and barely
saved with French aid their South American and African colonies.
213. Armed Neutrality at Sea. — The frequent captures
and searches of neutral ships in the American war led to the inter-
national agreement called "Armed Neutrality." It was directed
against the English pretensions to interfere in time of war with the
commerce of neutral nations. Catharine II. of Russia took the
lead in the negotiations which resulted in the acceptance by a major-
ity of European Powers of the following principles : Neutral vessels
may navigate from harbor to harbor along the coasts of belligerent
powers. All goods of belligerents which are not declared contra-
band by treaty, may be lawfully "carried by neutral vessels. A
harbor is not lawfully blockaded except when the ships of the enemy
are in control of the entrance. The principles of the armed neu-
trality were accepted by France, Spain, Denmark, Sweden (1780),
the Emperor, .Prussia (1782), and Portugal (1783). Without
formally accepting them England submitted to them for the time.
214. Final Campaign at Yorktown. — In March, 1781,
Admiral De Grasse embarked at Brest with 29 men of war, 6,000
men and a convoy of over 100 ships, sailed for the West Indies,
where the French had already a complete naval ascendency, con-
quered the rich island of Tobago, and, reinforced in San Domingo,
made for the North American waters. Meanwhile Cornwallis was
devastating Virginia, ruthlessly destroying property to the amount of
15,000,000 dollars. He gradually concentrated his forces at York-
town, situated at the mouths of the St. James and York rivers.
Washington was planning an attack on New York. For this purpose
he called from Rhode Island the French forces of Rochambeau , who
had landed the year before at Newport after its evacuation by the
THE PEACE OF PARIS.
139
English. Meanwhile Lafayette strongly urged Washington to march
upon Yorktown. Keeping Clinton in feverish excitement by dis-
patches intended to fall into his hands about an attack on New York,
Washington and Rochambeau succeeded in withdrawing their princi-
pal forces to the south, whilst Clinton was busy fortifying against
an imaginary foe. At the same time the powerful fleet of DeGrasse
appeared in the Chesapeake and was still further reinforced by the
French squadron of Rhode Island. When Washington and Rocham-
beau joined Lafayette in the investment of Yorktown, the position
of Cornwallis became absolutely untenable. After a siege of twenty
days he was obliged to capitulate and his 7,000 men became prison-
ers of war. The surrender of Cornwallis virtually terminated the
War of Independence. The British evacuated Savannah in July,
and Charleston in December, 1782.
Lecky : IV., 14, p. 97-220 ; 15, p. 221-288. — Brougham : Statesmen during the Reign of G.
III. — Patton: Yorktown. — Carrington : Battles of the Revol. — Ramsay ; J. Fiske : Am.
Revol. — Lifeof Gen. Greene, by his Grandson. — Mackenzie: Life of Paul Jones.— J. N.
Arnold: L. of B. Arnold. — Clarke: France's Aid to Am. A. C. Q., 22. — George III.
and Lord North: E. B. '67, 3. —Davis: Employment of Indian Auxiliaries in the Am. W.:
E. H. R.,2,4.
THE PEACE OF PARIS AND THE CONSTITUTION OF THE UNITED
STATES.
215. Peace of Paris and Versailles, 1783. — The surrender
of Cornwallis brought about the resignation of the ministry of Lord
North.
An armistice was declared and commissioners appointed to negotiate a
peace. The negotiations were retarded on the part of Spain, by her desire
to regain Gibraltar, and hastened forward, on the part of France, by a great
victory of Rodney over DeGrasse in the West Indies. The American com-
missioners, not without some treachery toward France, concluded with the
Nherborne ministry a separate preliminary peace, 1782.
The final treaty, the Peace of Paris and Versailles, was signed
Septembers, 1783. The principal stipulations were : 1. The inde-
pendence of the United States. The vast territory between the
Alleghanies and the Mississippi was acknowledged as part of the
United States, England ceding a large tract of what had been joined
140 AMERICAN WAR OF INDEPENDENCE.
to Canada by the Quebec Act. The Mississippi was made the
boundary between the American and the Spanish territories, England
retaining the right of free navigation. The Americans obtained the
right of fishing on all the banks of Newfoundland and in the Gulf
of St. Lawrence without granting a similar right to British subjects
along the coast of the United States.
2. France secured the right of fishing off Newfoundland and of
fortifying two small islands in the neighborhood ; the possession of
Tobago in the West Indies, Senegal and Goree in Africa, and the
restitution of her East Indian possessions.
3. Spain's efforts to obtain Gibraltar either by arms or by nego-
tiations failed. England, however, ceded to Spain the island of
Minorca, and East and West Florida.
4. England concluded a peace with Holland (1783) and with
Tipoo of Singalore (1784) on the basis of mutual restoration,
except that Holland lost Negapatam.
216. The Federation, 1781-1788. — The Articles of Federation proved
insufficient to bring order out of the political chaos which accompanied
and followed the War of Independence. The only bond of union was Con-
gress, composed of the delegates of the different States. No provision ex-
isted for a chief magistracy or a national judiciary. Foreign affairs, the
defense of the country in time of war, coinage, the post-office, were in-
trusted to Congress, but it had no power to force the payment of its own
expenses, of the salaries due the army, or of its foreign debt. Public con-
fidence was shaken; the unpaid army was more than once in a state of
mutiny. An insurrection of farmers in Massachusetts, whose ultimate
object was the repudiation of public and private debts and a redistribution
of property, had to be put down by General Lincoln. Congress was power-
less to defend the Tories from mob violence and from legal persecution by
the States, so that 100,000 persons were driven out of the country. England
distributed $16,000,000 among 4,000 destitute refugees, and continued to
hold her military posts in the ceded territory by way of indemnity. Dis-
putes arose between different States, some on account of commercial
jealousies, others from conflicting territorial claims. Each State en-
deavored to secure the lion's share in the acquisitions of the war. The
credit of the United States rapidly sank in Europe. Under these circum-
stances the best men of the country prevailed on the States to send
delegates to a Constitutional Convention .
217. The Constitution. — The Convention met in Philadelphia,
May, 1787, and chose George Washington its president. It was only
N-
THE PEACE OF PARIS., 141
after long and heated debates between the Federalists, who favored
a single government for the entire Union, and the Anti-federalists,
who advocated the existing league of independent sovereignties, that
the Convention was able to draft and sign the Constitution of the
United States to be submitted to the people for ratification.
The Constitution was a compromise, both between the two parties and
between the large and the small States. It was, however, on the whole, a
victory of the Federalists. The government of the United States was
divided into three departments, the legislative, the judiciary, and the exec-
utive. The Federal Congress was to consist of two houses, the House of
Representatives elected by the people, and the Senate elected by the State
legislatures. The popular election of the representatives satisfied the
large States by giving them representation according to population, The
election of an equal number of Senators from all States preserved the politi-
cal equality of the small States. The executive power was vested in the
President, chosen by electors for a term of four years, the electors to be
chosen by the people. As to the judiciary department, a Federal Supreme
Court was provided by the Constitution, and the creation of lower Federal
Courts was left to Congress.
Before August, 1788, all the States except Rhode Island and
North Carolina adopted the Constitution. The two States being
treated as foreign nations came to terms in 1789 and 1790 respec-
tively. The Continental Congress dispersed without the formality
of an adjournment. George Washington was duly elected first
President of the United States and inaugurated April 30, 1789.
C. Ellis Stevens: Sources of the Constitution of the U. St. — Dr. O. Brownson: The
Amer. Republic. — McMaster: Hist, of the People of the U. St., v. I. — J. Fiske: Critical
Period of Am. Hist.; Civil Government in the U. St. — Bancroft: Hist, of the Formation
of the Const. — De Tocqueville- Reeve: Democracy in America. — The Framers and the
Framing of the Const.: Century Mag., '77 (Sept.). — Madison's and Yates' Notes of Pro-
ceedings in the Convention, in Elliot's Debates, v. IV.
Other Works for Consultation: Histories of the U. St., especially by: Bancroft;
Doyle ; Hildreth ; Laboulaye ; Newmann ; Schouler, etc. Short Histories, by : Chan ning ;
Hassard; Johnston; McMaster; Scudder. — v. Weiss, v. 14.
142
AMERICAN WAR OF INDEPENDENCE.
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BOOK II.
CHAPTER I.
THE FRENCH REVOLUTION.
.§ i.
THE NATIONAL ASSEMBLY (LA CONSTITUANTE) .
218. The States General Summoned. — Louis XVI. had meanwhile
sanctioned many reforms and restored the Parliament of Paris, which, how-
ever, soon became a thorn in his side. Advised by his ministers, he had
granted civil rights to the Protestants, abolished the torture preliminary
to trials, abolished the unpaid labor of tenants for their lords, emancipated
his own serfs, diminished the expenses of his household, introduced re-
forms in hospitals and prisons, and in 1784, the year of inundations and
epidemics, had aided the suffering people to the amount of 3,000;000 livres.
But the building up of the marine, and the American war, had notwith-
standing Necker's economical administration (1776-81), increased the
deficit to nearly half of the yearly income. An Assembly of Notables in
1787 brought no relief. Tlie King was sincere in his desire to abolish
privileges of taxation. But the Parliament of Paris uncompromisingly
resisted additional taxation to be levied on privileged property, though it
was absolutely necessary and would have lightened the burden of the
people.
The King finally resolved to summon the States General, which had not
met since 1614, and, in 1788, recalled Necker to office. Before the meet-
ing of the States, the King collected statements of grievances (cahiers)
from every part of the kingdom, granted a double representation to the
Third Estate, and admitted to the Assembly of the Clergy a majority of
parish priests as more familiar with the sufferings of the people. In
March, 1789, at the opening of the primaries, nearly all the nobility and
the entire clergy declared themselves willing to renounce their immunities
from taxation.
219. The National Assembly. — The States General were
opened by the King at Versailles May 5, 1789. There were about
(146)
THE NATIONAL ASSEMBLY. 147
1200 deputies present, 300 of the nobility, 300 of the clergy, and
600 of the Third Estate, or Commoners. The great majority were
determined that reforms should be made, but convinced at the same
time that the government would never make the necessary reforms.
Whilst the powers of the members were being verified, a dispute
arose as to whether the Assembly should sit and vote in separate
chambers or in one chamber. Historically the States General had
always acted in three houses. The Third Estate, reinforced by
Lafayette, the Duke of Orleans, 45 other nobles, and 114 of the
clergy, voted for one chamber. The deadlock caused by their vote
lasted over a month. Upon the motion of Abbe Sieyes, who in a
widely-spread pamphlet had boldly declared the supremacy of the
Third Estate, the 600 commoners finally assumed the title of the
Constituent Assembly and invited the clergy and the nobles to join
them (June 17). Thereupon the hall was closed by the court, and
the meetings suspended for three days. On June 20, the members
resorted to a neighboring tennis court, chose the mathematician Bailly
president, and took an oath not* to separate until they had given a
new Constitution to the realm. Five Archbishops and Bishops, 143
parish priests, and a few nobles joined the Assembly. June 23 the
King appeared in the Assembly. Louis XVI. invited the deputies
to meet in three houses, and proposed a series of reforms, which
would have made France a constitutional monarchy and have swept
away nearly all the abuses in its government. When after the King's
departure the master of ceremonies asked the president, whether he
had heard the royal order, Count Mirabeau, who had entered the
States General as a representative of the Third Estate, rose and
answered that the deputies would quit their seats only at the point
of the bayonet. Subsequently the King himself requested the
nobility and the clergy to join the Third Estate. The King thus
accepted the principle that changes should be made without regard
to historic precedents and vested rights, i. e., the principle of
revolution.
22O. The Storming of the Bastille, July 14. — The gardens
adjoining the Palais Royal, the residence of the Duke of Orleans, were
the center of the revolutionary agitation. Here Camille Desmoulins
148 THE FRENCH REVOLUTION.
and other leaders expounded the ' ' Social Contract," inveighed against
the royal troops, and stirred up the masses to revolt.
The dismissal of Necker (July 11), was the signal for an outbreak of
riots and pillage. Stores and arsenals were plundered for arms, and
20,000 guns and 20 cannon were soon in the hands of the populace.
Most of the soldiers abandoned the King and fraternized with the
mob. The 120 electors of the 60 districts of Paris, who had chosen
the city deputies to the Assembly, established themselves in the city
hall (Hotel de Ville), usurped the municipal government, and
organized a national guard of 40,000 men. On July 14, the people
attacked the Bastille or State prison for five hours. It could not be
taken by force, but, compelled by his men, De Launey, the com-
mander, surrendered on condition that no harm should be done.
Only seven prisoners, who all deserved their fate, were found in
this " stronghold of tyranny." On rushing in the populace
instantly killed five officers and three men. De Launey was mur-
dered in the street and his head stuck on a pike. The mob tri-
umphed. Necker was recalled. Bailly was chosen mayor of Paris,
Lafayette, commander of the National Guard. The feeble and
pacific King accepted the situation.
Other scenes of horrible murder followed, such as the massacre of the
Invalids or disabled veterans. Proscription lists of the most prominent
men of France, beginning with the Count of Artois, the king's second
brother, were made up at the Palais Royal, and a price set on the head of
the victims. Foulon, the old minister of war, and Berthier, both benefac-
tors of the people on a large scale, were ruthlessly murdered in the streets ;
and Foulou's head and Berthier's heart carried on poles to the Palais
Royal. With the fall of the Bastille ancient royalty and all regular govern-
ment were destroyed. Power passed from the King and the National
Assembly to the mo)). In all France began that career of anarchy, the
reign of terror, which was crushed out only by the despotism of Napoleon.
221. Composition of the National Assembly. — Of the 600 deputies
belonging to the Third Estate about 360 were jurists, the rest authors,
merchants, farmers (38), and men of inferior positions. All were novices
in legislation, inexperienced in parliamentary rules, and most of them
intoxicated with the doctrines of Rousseau. The Assembly was divided
into four parties : (1) The Right comprised the members sitting to the right
of the president in the hall, which had the form of an amphitheater; they
were royalists and aristocrats ; most of the nobles and the upper clergy
THE NATIONAL ASSEMBLY. 149
belonged to this party (Cazales, the Abb6 Maury, Espremenil, etc.). (2)
The small minority of the Right Center comprised deputies of all th.e three
orders, and favored a constitution like that of the English Parliament with
two houses dominated by the landed proprietors (Mounier, Malouet, Lally
Tolendal). (3) The Center and Left numbered 7-800 members, parish
priests, and" the great number of the commoners, and aimed at government
by the middle classes under a constitutional monarchy (MIRABEAU, Abb£
Sieyes, Barnave). (4) The Extreme Left, about thirty advocates of a demo-
cratic republic formed the only compact party voting in a body (Robes-
pierre, Petion) . The three other parties constantly voted on opposite sides
and without preconcerted action. This assembly of 1,200 men, too unwieldy
for practical purposes and abounding in violent declaimers, was naturally
exposed to paroxysms of enthusiasm or of terror, easily swayed by the
frequent street riots, or carried away by the boldness of the revolutionary
extremists. The deputies became the slaves of the galleries, and of its
unruly crowd of 750 clubmen from the Palais Royal, all hired and
effective shouters. The leaders of this crowd received their orders from
the club, a^nd gave the signal to their men when to cheer and when to hoot.
They circulated in the city and in the provinces lists of unpopular members,
thus exposing them and their families to the fury of the revolutionary
mobs. Obnoxious deputies or unpopular officials were insulted and mal-
treated wherever they appeared in public; some were murdered by the
rabble. The result was, that before the completion of the Constitution the
whole of the moderate and constitutional opposition was reduced either to
flight or to silence.
222. The October Days ; Louis XVI. in Paris. — Whilst the
Assembly was engaged in tearing down the ancient regime, hunger
and agitation drove the populace of Paris to new excesses. An
imprudent demonstration of army officers who in presence of the King
and the Queen had replaced the tricolor, the emblem of the revolution,
by the royal white cockade, exasperated both the people and the
National Guards. On October 4th, according to a preconcerted
plan favored by the Duke of Orleans, 15,000 National Guards in
mutiny, preceded by 800 hungry and dissolute women, and followed
by 10,000 ruffians, marched to Versailles. The first bands reaching
Versailles broke into the Assembly hall and shouted in reply to the
speeches : « ' Bread ! bread ! not so many words ! ' ' Lafayette who had
been forced to join the National Guards, arrived before midnight.
At daybreak (October 5), the mob forced the door of the palace,
killed some royal guards and wounded others, and swarmed into the
150 THE FRENCH REVOLUTION.
rooms, even to the private apartments of the Queen and the King, where
they insulted the royal family, while the immense crowd before the
palace shouted : " To Paris with the King ! " With great difficulty
Lafayette succeeded in saving the Queen from personal violence.
The King who always shrank from the shedding of blood - consented
to transfer his residence and the seat of the Assembly to Paris, thus
handing over himself, his family and the dynasty to the tender
mercy of the sanguinary rabble of the city.
The King, a virtual prisoner, resided henceforth in the palace of the
Tuileries, protected by Lafayette's men. The Assembly established itself in
a neighboring riding school. Two hundred conservative deputies resigned
their seats and still more weakened the party of order. Again, many
noblemen and courtiers fled the country.
223. Anarchy in France. — The state of the country was a reflex
of the state of the capital. The people of France were made Desperate
by the famine which followed the bad harvest and the severe winter of
1788. Mobs ranging from 5,000 to 25,000 hungry men and women
went in quest of food wherever it could be found. Convo3rs of wheat
were captured on the roads. Towns raided rural districts, and rural
districts cut off the supplies of the towns. In the four months preced-
ing the fall of the Bastille over 300 popular outbreaks and bread riots
occurred all over France. In the city and in the provinces, vaga-
bonds, escaped convicts, deserters, and smugglers took the lead in
these riots. A general war against public and private property broke
out. The people recognized no creditor, least of all, the State.
Debts and taxes were no longer paid. Tax collectors were assailed,
maltreated, 'killed. Forests were devastated; castles, monasteries,
convents demolished ; tax rolls, records, registers, titles to property
or to rentals and charters of privileges delivered to the flames.
When the National Guards were introduced all over France, 400,000
guns were transferred from the military authorities to the people.
Citadels were captured from the regular troops, or surrendered to
the National Guards. Outbreaks in the army and in the navy be-
came of daily occurrence. On one occasion the whole squadron
lying at Brest numbering 20,000 men mutinied against the Admiral
and the National Assembly. Insubordination compelled thousands of
THE CONSTITUTION OF 1789. 151
officers to emigrate. This state of anarchy waxed worse, year by
year, as the revolution progressed.
Lecky, V. 21, p. £43-489.— Louis XVI. Political and Confidential Correspondence.— Mignet:
Hist, of the Fr. Rev., Introduction. — W '. Smyth: Lectures on the Hist, of the Fr. Rev. I.
Lect. 6. 8. etc. — Croker : Early Period of the Fr. Rev. - France 1783-99, E. R. '83, 1. —
Young: Travels in France 1787-89. — Mirabeau: Willert (Foreign Statesmen); Hoist
(French Rev. tested by M's Career) ; E.R.' 97, 4; (Family of) Pfulf (St. v. 44) ; E. Dumont,
(Recollections of). — B. Tuckerman: Life of Lafayette. See also Histories of the Revol. to
§§ 5, 6 and 7. The Fall of the Ancient Regime, Q. R. '93, 3. — The Bastille, Q. R. '97, 4.
THE CONSTITUTION OF 1789.
224. The Work of Three Months. — As early as August 4,
the Assembly with the full and voluntary concurrence of the clergy
and the nobles declared the feudal order destroyed, nullified all ex-
emptions not only of the privileged classes, but also the privileges of
provinces, towns, corporations and guilds, and opened civil, military,
and ecclesiastical preferments to all citizens without regard to birth.
The declaration of the " Rights of Man," Aug. 27, proclaimed the sover-
eignty of the people, freedom of religious opinions, freedom of the press,
the right of resisting oppression (right of revolution), the natural and civil
equality of all men, as taught by the new philosophy. Whilst the rights of
men were thus theoretically assorted, they were practically trampled under
foot by the Revolution.
By other decrees the Assembly abrogated without indemnity all
the dues payable to Pope, bishop and clergy, and to nobles as local
lords. Dues payable to nobles as landed proprietors were made
redeemable at a fixed rate, but were discarded by the people already
in general revolt. The clergy consented to the entire abolition of the
tithes. Subsequently the nobility itself with its territorial names and
armorial bearings was abolished.
Thus in the short space of three months the Revolution had covered au
immense field. (1) It had changed the States General into the Constituent
.Assembly. (2) It had forced the King to recognize its supremacy. (3) It
had cleared the ground for a new Constitution by destroying the whole frame-
work of institutions based on the public law of a thousand years.
225. Legislative Assembly. — The new Constitution, as it grad-
ually emerged from the interminable speech-making of the deputies,
152 THE FRENCH REVOLUTION.
was based on these principles : The person of the King as the high-
est executive officer, is inviolable ; the crown is hereditary with the
male-line ; the King has to proclaim the laws ; the legislative power
resides in the nation to which all officers are responsible ; private
property and personal liberty are inviolable. The future Legislative
Assembly was made absolute and independent. It was to consist
of one Chamber with the sole right of initiating laws. A second
chamber was rejected as too aristocratic. The legislative term was
to be two years. The 745 representatives of the nation were chosen
by electors, the electors by the active citizens or voters assembled
at the primaries. An active citizen was to be 25 years of age, a
tax-payer to the amount of at least three days' wages, and had to
serve in the National Guard. The tax qualification divided the
inhabitants of France into 4,300,000 active and 1,700,000 passive
citizens.
22G. The King'. — The- Constitution deprived the King of all real
power. He lacked the right to propose any law or to dissolve the
Legislative Assembly. His veto could suspend the adoption of a
measure only for two legislative terms. He could not declare war
or conclude peace or foreign treaties without the consent of the As-
sembly. He had no command over the army or* the National Guard,
and was deprived of the right of pardon. His ministers had no ap-
pointive powers. The King became the mere executive servant of
the Assembly.
227. Administration. — The old historical provinces, govern-
ments, parliaments and courts were all abolished. France was
divided, on a plea of perfect uniformity, into 83 departments, named
after rivers and mountains. The departments were subdivided into
374 districts and the districts into cantons.
The 44,000 communes or municipalities of France were left un-
changed. Each department and each district had a local assembly
composed of a general council, and an executive directory. There
was a civil court to each district and a criminal court to each canton,
chosen by the respective political body. Petty causes were decided
by justices of the peace elected by the cantons. Every appointment
in the civil, military and naval administration was made by a com-
THE CONSTITUTION OF 1789. 153
plicated system of elections. The only real power resided in the
lowest political unit, the commune. The municipal officers alone
could order about the military forces of the country. France was
now a conglomeration of 44,000 republics.
A number of the measures, such as the judicial reforms, the admission
of competent men to offices, the better distribution of taxes, the removal
of the custom .houses to the frontiers, were good and necessary. But they
could have been obtained without rebellion, irreligion, bloodshed, and
wholesale destruction of all the landmarks of human society, and their
operation throughout the Revolution was frustrated by mob law.
228. The Civil Constitution of the Clergy. — The war
against the Church began with the abolition of Religious Orders and
the prohibition of monastic vows (February, 1790). Next came
the Civil Constitution of the Clergy (July), passed by the irreligious
Left, and under the terrorism of the galleries against the dignified
protest of the Archbishop of Aix, Abbe Maury, Cazales, of 200
deputies of the Right, and of 30 bishops in the Assembly and 105
outside. The bishops were henceforth to be elected by the citizens
of the departments, and the parish priests by the citizens of the dis-
tricts, including Calvinist, Lutheran, Jewish, and infidel voters. The
appointed bishop was forbidden to apply to the Pope for confirma-
tion. As the diocese was made coextensive with the department,
48 bishoprics with their seminaries were suppressed. Upon the
motion of Talleyrand, the apostate bishop of Autun, the ecclesiastical
estates were declared national property, the State paying the salaries
of the clergy. Thus was the Catholic Church in France separated
from the center of unity, shorn of its divine constitution, and estab-
lished on a democratic and Presbyterian basis. Out of 130 archbishops,
bishops, and coadjutors only four, three of whom were skeptics and
profligates, took the required oath on the Civil Constitution. Out
of 70,000 priests nearly 50,000 refused to take the oath. There was
henceforth a schism in the Church and in the nation between the
sworn and unsworn or refractory priests and their adherents.
The non-juring priests were expelled from their cures. The
majority of the faithful were on the side of the non-juring priests
and shared in their persecutions.
154 THE FRENCH REVOLUTION.
229. Effect of the New Legislation. — In conformity with this legisla-
tion the apostate Gobel, sacrilegiously consecrated by Talleyrand, in his turn
consecrated other constitutional bishops and was chosen Archbishop of
Paris by 500 voters. Talleyrand and others returned to the state of laymen •
Loyal Catholics refused to receive the sacraments from constitutional
priests. Nou-juring priests were not only ejected, but against all laws de-
ported and tortured even to death; 37,000 nuns were deprived of their peace-
ful retreats, among them 14,000 sisters of charity driven from the hospitals
and thousands of teachers expelled from the only schools for girls then in
France. The abolition of the tithes did not benefit the poor, but made a
present of 60,000,000 to landholders who alone had paid the tithes since the
days of Charles the Great. An investment of four billions of Church prop-
erty, piled up through generations for the benefit of the children, the poor,
the infirm, the sick, was deviated from its purposes and pocketed by the
revolutionary State. All associations for pious, charitable, missionary, and
educational purposes were dissolved, the seminaries and colleges confis-
cated, the crown lands divided, and the way was opened for further rob-
beries by the Legislative Assembly and the Convention, and for the despotic
socialism of the Reign of Terror, which swept away all academies of science,
all literary and mercantile societies with their libraries, museums, botani-
cal gardens, banks, and investments. The confiscation of the Church and
the crown lands from which the State was wont to pay its salaries and
expenses, forced the revolutionary governments to issue paper money, the
so-called assignats, and drove the country into bankruptcy.
>
Pius VI., in 1791, condemned the Civil Constitution of the Clergy,
suspended all sworn priests, and declared the new ecclesiastical
elections invalid and sacrilegious. Thereupon the revolutionists
marched into the Papal territories of Avignon and Venaissin and
annexed them to France. Hundreds of inhabitants were murdered
with barbarous atrocity for their loyalty to the Pope, and their prop-
erty was plundered by the Jacobins.
230. The National Federation, July 14, 179O. — During
the spring of 1790, federations, or feasts of union in honor of the
Constitution, were held all over France. At the Federation of Paris
in which deputations of the National Guards from every department
took part, Louis XVI. took the oath to maintain the Constitution,
and the people swore fealty to the King. This sentiment of the
union of classes was but a phantastic illusion. The clergy were
bound in conscience to reject the Civil Constitution. The nobility
could not love an instrument which deprived them of all their rights
THE CONSTITUTION OF 1789. 155
without compensation. On the other hand, Desmoulins, Brissot,
Danton, Marat, Robespierre, in fact all the radicals hated the Con-
stitution because they hated the King, the royal veto, the restriction
of the franchise, and the measures of Lafayette to preserve at least
a semblance of order. The radicals soon became the chief power in
the State on account of their club organizations. The Revolution
had one of its most powerful aids in the political " Clubs."
231. Clubs. — The Club of Cordeliers, numbering Desmoulins, Hubert,
Marat, and other terrorists among its members, met under the presidency of
Danton in a monastery of Franciscans, whose name they adopted. The
jacobin Club was originally founded at Marseilles by a number of deputies
in 1789 (Club Breton). In Paris the Club moved into the library of the
Jacobins, a suppressed monastery of the Dominicans. The numerous off-
shoots of this Club overspread the whole territory of France. After the
fall of the throne there were 26,000 Jacobin Clubs in the country, keeping
up constant correspondence with the Central Club and obeying orders from
Paris. The Jacobin Club owed its rising power to the apathy of the law-
abiding citizens and to the unscrupulous energy of its members. Peace-
loving citizens stayed at home rather than spend one-sixth of all their time
in primaries, the elections and guard service, and thus left the elections to
the Jacobins. Besides, decent people were kept away from the polls by the
threats, domiciliary visits, ill-treatment, riots, and murders perpetrated by
the faction. Thus at the Paris primary elections for the Legislative As-
sembly in 1791, 74,000 out of 81,000 registered voters failed to respond. The
same proportion held good in the departments. Owing to these abstentions
the Jacobins secured in 1791 one-third, in 1792 the whole of the elective
offices. Still the number of Jacobins compared with that of the inhabitants
of France was always small. In Paris at the time of the greatest disturbances,
the Jacobins including the paid bandits and cut -throats, did not number
more than 10,000 in a population of 7-800,000 souls. In the departments there
was on an average but one Jacobin to 15 electors. All the Jacobins of France
did not amount to 500,000.
232. Plight of the Royal Family, June 2O, 1791. — The position of the
King and Queen meanwhile became intolerable. The Queen in whom suffer-
ing had brought out the traits of a noble and courageous character, devoted
all her thoughts to save France to her husband and son. The King, already
deeply wounded in his religious feelings by the Civil Constitution of the
Clergy, saw himself moreover deprived of his body guard and frequently
exposed to the menaces and insults of the Jacobins. Flight was their only
hope. The Queen had made some arrangements for the emergency with her
brother, Emperor Leopold, who promised to place a force on the frontiers
of Luxemburg.
156 THE FRENCH REVOLUTION.
On June 20, the King, disguised as a valet, the Queen with her two
children, and Madame Elizabeth, the King's sister, secretly left Paris
for the army of the North under the loyal Bouille. The fugitives
were recognized at Varennes and taken back to Paris as prisoners.
On hearing of the King's flight the Assembly forthwith suspended
him from all royal functions. Louis had left behind him a memorial
in which he protested that he had signed the lawless proceedings of
the Assembly only because he had no power to resist them and ex-
plained his intention of withdrawing for a time from the capital in
order to appeal in freedom to his people. The Radicals declared
the memorial of the King to be treason to the nation and clamored
for his deposition and for the proclamation of the Republic. The
Constitutionalists felt themselves in honor bound to stand by the
King and the Constitution ; moreover they feared an attack of the
Jacobins on themselves if they yielded. Accordingly the majority
of the Assembly resolved to restore executive power to the King if
he would accept the Constitution as a whole in the completed form.
For the first and only time the National Assembly nerved itself to
maintain order by force, and Lafayette suppressed with some blood-
shed a Republican rising.
This so-called Massacre of the Champ de Mars disrupted the Jacobins.
The Constitutionalists founded a new club, the Feuillants, so called from a
monastery of that name, but they were unable to introduce those conserva-
tive features into the Constitution which would have given the King some
real power.
233. Dissolution of the National Assembly. — When, after
a few changes, the Constitution was finally adopted as a whole, the
King accepted it in the hope that its defects would be revealed in
its practical operation. In the meantime he kept his oath to the
letter. Some time before its dissolution, the Constituent Assembly,
urged by Robespierre and the Jacobins, had carried a resolution
which excluded its members from the coming Legislative Assembly.
By this act it handed France over to the fanatics and the criminal
classes. The 3,000 decrees of the National Assembly remained a
dead letter.
Lecky V. 21 p. 496-534. — Taine: The French Rev., v. 2. — Clerke: The Principles of
'89 D. R. '89. 3. - R. Parsons: The Constitutional Clergy of France: Studies IV. — Die
THE FALL OF THE THRONE. 157
Revol. u. d. christliche Freifteit, St.. 37. — Ludovic Sciout : Hist, de la Const. Civile du
Clerge. — Edm. Burke : Reflections on the Fr. Revol. — Imbert de St. Amand : Marie
Antoinette and the End of the Old Regime. — The Flight to Varennes and other Hist.
Essays; Oscar Browning; A. B. Cochrane; also Q. R. '86. 3.— Henry Reeve: Royal and
Republican France. — Taine on Jacobinism: Q. R.'85. 4. — The Spirit of '89: Lilly: Hist.
Questions. — Mgr. Ricard: IS Abbe Maury. — M. Sept: La Chute de Vancienne France
La Federation (1789-91).— K. O'Meara: The Church of France and the Revol: A. C. Q. 8.
§3.
THE FALL OF THE THRONE.
234. Declaration of Pillnitz, Aug., 1791. — Meanwhile
Emperor Leopold. II., desirous of aiding his sister, and Frederick
William II. of Prussia, had, in a meeting at Pillnitz, August, 1791,
signed a declaration expressing their readiness to intervene in French
affairs, if other Powers would unite with them. But mutual rivalry
and the struggles of expiring Poland engaged their attention else-
where and the declaration remained a mere threat. A step in ad-
vance was taken in February, 1792, when the two Powers concluded
an alliance.
235. Legislative Assembly, Oct., 1791-Sept., 1792. — The Legislative
Assembly was of a far lower standard than the National Assembly. Out of
its 745 deputies about 400 were unknown provincial lawyers, besides a
great many writers without fame, and twenty constitutional priests; the
majority of members were under 30 years, 60 members under 26 years of
age. Nearly all were outgrowths of revolutionary Clubs. The Right, about
100 members, constitutional royalists, belonged to the Club of the Feuillants.
Of the 400 members of the " Plain " or " Marsh " as it was contemptuously
called (center), 160 belonged to the Feuillants. The rest were independents
and favored a Federal Republic. Their most important group were the
Girondists, anti-catholics, anti- Christians, destructionists and levellers.
The Left and the Mountain (so called from their high seats) were made up
of 236 radicals, adherents of a" United and Indivisible Republic," men like
Chabot and other leading Jacobins and Cordeliers. The radical Potion was
chosen Mayor of Paris.
236. Work of the Legislative Assembly. — Terrorized by
the galleries, the Legislative Assembly sentenced to death and con-
fiscation of property all Emigrants who should not return before the
end of the year (1791), exiled the 50,000 non-juring priests, and
ordered the erection of a camp around Paris to overawe the capital.
These decrees were vetoed by the King. On April 20, 1792, the
158 THE FRENCH REVOLUTION.
Assembly declared war against Francis II.,' the successor of Leo-
pold II., and against his Prussian ally.
Two grievances were alleged by the Assembly. The Emperor tolerated
the gathering of French Emigrants on the frontiers of Germany and Belgium,
and the German princes who had estates in Alsace, refused to part with the
feudal rights abolished by the National Assembly. The first grievance had
been removed by the Emperor, who dispersed the armed Emigrants; the sec-
ond might have been settled by negotiation. The real object of the war was
to establish the Republic at home, and to carry the principles of the Revolu-
tion to foreign countries. The fact that King and Queen had sought foreign
intervention, gave rise to exaggerated rumors of court conspiracies, and
the report was freely circulated that the King contemplated a return to the
feudal burdens and the unjust taxation of the Ancient Regime.
237. Invasion of the Tuileries by the Mob, June 2O,
1792. — France sent three armies into the field, the northern corps,
48,000 men, under Rochambeau, the middle corps, 52,000, under
Lafayette, and the southern, 42,000 strong, under Luckner, the
whole line forming a semi-circle from Dunkirk to Basle. The in-
subordination of the rank and file, and the ignominious flight of two
divisions before the foe, one murdering its own general, increased the
revolutionary excitement in Paris. The King dismissed the Girondist
ministry (Roland, etc.) which had been forced on him after the
declaration of Pillnitz, and which was pressing him to sign the vetoed
decrees. Thereupon the Jacobins arranged an outbreak and organized
battalions of pikemen. To give zest to the popular appetite for
violence, the lie was published on June 15, that the Queen was at
the head of an Austrian Committee in the Tuileries. On June 20,
the mob, men, women, and children, under the leadership of Santerre
the brewer, and Legendre the butcher, defiled through the Chamber
of Deputies with shouts of ' ' Down with the veto ! ' ' They next in-
vaded the Tuileries bent upon forcing the King to sign the vetoed
decrees and to recall the Girondist ministry. For four hours Louis
XVI. and his family were besieged in his apartment by a dense
crowd of ruffians and threatened with murder, whilst a mob of
15,000 persons swarmed over the palace and its grounds. But Louis
for once remained firm, spoke calmly to the people and to please
them donned the red bonnet. Some officers of the municipality and
of the National Guards finally persuaded the crowd to leave the
THE FALL OF THE THRONE.
159
palace. Lafayette incurred the wrath of the Jacobins by demanding
the punishment of the ring leaders.
238. Tenth of August. — The concentration of 80,000 Austrian troops on
the Rhine induced the Legislative Asssembly to pronounce the country in
danger. Sixty thousand volunteers answered the call. Both the Duke of
Brunswick, commander in chief of the allied forces, and the Girondist?
played unwittingly into the hands of the Jacobins: the Duke by issuing
an imprudent and threatening manifesto, the Girondists by a series of, dc
crees which removed the regular troops from Paris, deposed the better ele-
ments in the National Guard from command, and drew band after band of
ferocious characters from Marseilles and Brest into Paris. The immediate
demands of the Jacobins were the indictment of Lafayette and the dethrone-
ment of the King. The acquittal of Lafayette August 8, gave the signal for
a new outbreak of all the radical forces gathered in Paris.
A band of Jacobin conspirators who called themselves Commis-
sioners collected at the Hotel de Ville August 9, arrested the Mu-
nicipal Council, murdered Mandat, the commander of the National
Guard, and took the reins of the municipal government into their
hands. Early on the morning of August 10, the first bands of
rioters appeared before the Tuileries. There were 950 Swiss and
more than 4,000 National Guards at the palace, but the latter were
not reliable. The King and the royal family took refuge in the
Legislative Assembly. The Swiss made no attack on the populace,
they only refused to give up their arms to the rabble, until a chance
shot put them on their mettle. Then with a dash they cleared the
grounds. But upon an order sent by the King to cease firing they
promptly obeyed. One Swiss detachment on passing through the
gardens of the Tuileries, suffered itself to be cut down to a man,
rather than disobey orders. The wounded on the ground, the
surgeons who attended them and the palace domestics were all indis-
criminately murdered. The other detachment marched to the Legis-
lative Assembly and laid down their arms. They were part massacred,
part imprisoned for a later slaughter. The streets of the city were
reeking with murder. In the Legislative Assembly attended by 284
out of 745 deputies, the King was deprived of his functions and im-
prisoned with his family in the Temple. As the Assembly had no
power to make constitutional changes, a National Convention was
summoned to be elected by universal suffrage, and to draw up a new
Constitution for the State. The Commune raised its membership to
160 THE FRENCH REVOLUTION.
288 members, among them the most fanatical adherents of the
socialistic and atheistic Republic, such as Robespierre, Collot
d'Herbois, Hebert, Chaumette, Billaud-Varennes. Danton became
minister of justice.
Lafayette, declared traitor by the Assembly and abandoned by his troops,
fled and fell into the hands of the Austrians, who kept him prisoner at
Olmiitz till 1796.
239. The September Murders. — To consolidate their power, the Jacob-
ins resolved upon a massacre on a grand scale. Marat was the proposer
and agitator, Dantou the executive head of the scheme. His maxim was:
" We can rule only by fear." As minister of justice he obtained from the
Assembly the authorization to invade private homes, and thus filled the
prisons of Paris with many hundreds of suspected royalists. He also sent
out a circular calling upon the Departments to follow the example of Paris.
On September 2, the slaughter began and lasted six days and five
nights without interruption. The victims selected by the Commis-
sioners of the Commune were marched out of their prisons and
slaughtered by the twenty or more murderers assigned to each of the
eight prisons of Paris. The butchers received 6 francs a day besides
their meals and wine & much as they wanted.
The most conservative estimate of the number thus murdered in Paris is
about 1,400.
Among the victims were the Archbishop of Aries, two bishops,
Princess Lamballe, 250 priests, a great number of nobles belonging
to the best families of France, many former magistrates and officials,
the surviving Swiss guards and some criminals who were of no
service to the Jacobins. The September tragedy was repeated in
Versailles, Lyons, Rheims, Meaux, Orleans, and other cities. The
most infuriated members of the Commune were sent as Commis-
sioners into the departments, to encourage the work of pillage and
carnage.
Scenes of cannibalism accompanied this orgy of blood. The heart of
Princess Lamballe was devoured by a wretch; her head was carried about
oh a pike, and the royal family in the Temple was compelled to gaze on it.
The prison delivery was followed by an extensive spoliation of homes, by
the sack of the Tuileries, and by assault and robbery in the streets openly
committed by men decked in the tricolor. The spoils thus gathered in a
few days by the Jacobin bands amounted to many millions of francs.
THE FALL OF THE THRONE. 161
240. The War. — Meanwhile the allies under the Duke of
Brunswick were advancing into France with extreme hesitation.
They captured Longwy and Verdun, besieged Thionville and held one
of the five roads leading to Paris. Dumouriez took a strong position
at Menehould. At Valmy the allies retreated for the first time be-
fore the intrepid stand of the new French recruits under Kellermann.
From all sides French reinforcements arrived. Multitudes sought
relief on the battlefield from the horrors enacted at Paris and in the
departments. The siege of Thionville was raised, Verdun and
Longwy were retaken and the invading army saw itself compelled to
recross the Rhine. Sept. 10 France declared war against the King
of Sardinia who .had identified himself with the Coalition. Before
the end of the month the French conquered Savoy and Nice, and
drove the Piedmontese beyond the Alps. General Custine conquered
Spe3rer, Worms, Mainz, and Frankfort. The rapid conquest was
facilitated by the co-operation of the numerous freemasons in the
Rhenish cities. With still greater rapidity Dumouriez took the Bel-
gian fortresses dismantled by the folly of Joseph II., defeated the
Austrians at Jemappes, and before the end of the year conquered
all the Austrian Netherlands save Luxemburg. Wherever the
French came they confiscated ecclesiastical and communal property,
plundered churches and monasteries, imposed crushing taxes and
contributions on the rich, and flattered the poor by proclaiming war
to the palaces and peace to the cottages.
241. The National Convention, Sept. 21, 1792-Oct. 1795. — The elec-
tions for the Convention were held amidst the excesses perpetrated by the
Jacobins against the "aristocrats," now no longer the nobles, but proprie-
tors, traders, bourgeois, wealthy farmers, and peaceable citizens. Absten-
tions were numerous. In the municipal elections at Paris only 7,000 out of
160,000 votes were cast. In all the primaries of France 6,300,000 out of
7,000,000 voters abstained. By such an election the Jacobins obtained con-
trol of the Convention and of nearly all elective offices. Of the 749 mem-
bers of the Convention, 486 were new men. All the deputies were decided
Republicans and disciples of Rousseau, many of them advocates of an atheistic
Republic. The parties were the Right, 180 Girondists led by Vergniaud and
Brissot,the Plain, 500 members who were sure to go with the rising faction,
and the Mountain, all the members from Paris, Robespierre, the Duke of
Orleans,who assumed the name of Philip Egalite, Danton, Collot, d'Herbois,
etc., and terrorists from the departments.
11
162 THE FRENCH REVOLUTION.
At its opening session, September 21, the Convention unanimously
voted the abolition of royalty and declared France a Republic. In
December, the deposed King, henceforth called citizen Louis Capet,
was summoned before the Convention which for the purpose of try-
ing and condemning the King constituted itself into a bar of justice.
The charges were that Louis Capet had conspired against the liberty
of the nation and arrested the general welfare of the State. The trial
was a cruel travesty of justice. The accusation consisted of inflamma-
tory invective. The arguments of the defenders remained unanswered.
A vote of guilty was urged and it went heavily against the King (685
votes). Then came the sentence. The Girondists though they had
voted him guilty, yet shrank from the sentence of death. To shift
their responsibility they moved an appeal to the people, but it was
rejected by. the Convention. Thereupon a majority of one (360
votes) including the vote of Philip Egalite, condemned the King to
death. The other votes were cast for delay, imprisonment, or ban-
ishment. Upon a new motion for delay, the majority for the King's
execution rose to 60.
242. Murder of Louis XVI., Jan. 21, 1793. — During his
confinement, galled as it was by brutal treatment, Louis prepared
himself for death like a Christian. He heard his sentence with dig-
nity and resignation, forgave his enemies, received the sacraments
from the Irish Father Edgeworth, a non-juring priest, took a heart-
rending leave from his family and mounted the scaffold amid the
sorrowful silence of the city bristling with the guns of the National
Guard. Louis XVI. was guillotined on the Place de la Revolution.
243. The First Coalition. — The opening of the Scheldt,
which the Peace of Westphalia had closed to protect Dutch com-
merce, the order sent to all French generals everywhere to intro-
duce the revolutionary system of France, and the designs of the
Convention to invade Holland, would have driven England sooner
or later into war with France, though the younger Pitt, England's
leading statesman, did his utmost to maintain a strict neutrality.
The execution of the King and the decree to annex Belgium, whose
plunder was to relieve the desperate state of finances in France,
THE FALL OF THE THRONE. 163
brought matters to an issue. Pitt withdrew the English envoy from
Paris. The Convention at once unanimously declared war against
England and Holland. The Coalition against France soon com-
prised the Empire, Prussia, Sardinia, England, Holland, Spain,
and Portugal. The Emigrants under Prince Conde proclaimed the
Dauphin imprisoned in the Temple as Louis XVII.
244 The War. — In December Frankfort had been recaptured by the
Prussians and Custine had been driven back to the Rhine. Whilst the Duke
of Brunswick was operating against the latter, Dumouriez was defeated by
the Austrians under the Duke of Coburg at Neerwinden (March 18, 1793).
Dumouriez entered into negotiations with Coburg. He strongly condemned
the anarchical violence of the Jacobins and the execution of the King
whom he had in vain attempted to save, and longed to preserve the lives of
the Queen and the Dauphin by a march upon Paris. But, abandoned by his
troops, h-e went over to the Austrians accompanied by the Duke of Chartres,
the son of Philip Egalit6.
245. May 31st and June 2nd. — After the death of Louis
XVI. nearly all the deputies came armed to the sessions. A strug-
gle for life and death was waged between the Girondists and the
Mountain, each party hurling charges of treason against the other.
Under the triple pressure of the Mountain, the September murderers
in the galleries, and the Jacobins of the street, the Convention estab-
lished the Revolutionary Tribunal (March 9), outlawed the Emi-
grants whether they bore arms or not and their families living in
France, put their property in the market, extorted a forced loan of
a billion from the rich, and formed the Committee of Public Safety
(April 6). Marat was the first deputy who was cited before the
Revolutionary Tribunal charged with inciting insurrections. He
was acquitted and triumphantly restored to his seat. In May the
Convention arrested Hebert and other agitators to be tried by a
Commission of Twelve. The Convention was cowed into submission
by a street rising of the Jacobins (May 31), and dissolved the Com-
mission, but refused. to proscribe its members. Thereupon the Com-
mune organized a rising of its adherents commanded by Henriot. The
armed mob surrounded the Tuileries where the Convention sat, and
compelled it to arrest thirty-one Girondists, including Vergniaud,
Brissot, Guadet, and other leaders. June 2 the new ultra-demo-
cratic Constitution, wholly based on the Social Contract of Rousseau,
164 THE FRENCH REVOLUTION.
was passed with as much rapidity as levity. It contained a clause
demanding the immediate dissolution of the Convention and the call
for new primaries. But by a masquerade of gigantic size and phan-
tastic arrangement, in which 8,000 delegates from the departments
were artfully managed by Danton and Robespierre, the people were
made to declare the present Convention permanent, purged as it was
from all conservative elements, and Danton, in an impassioned
speech, proclaimed a Reign of Terror against all the foes of the
Paris Commune.
Lecky V. 21, pp. 535-595, 599-601 ; VI. 22, pp. 1-135. B. de Moleville, Private Memoirs :
Last Year of the Reign of Louis XVI. — Clery : Journal of Occurrences at the Temple dur-
ing the Confinement of L. XVI. — Lamartine: History of the Girondists. — The September
Massacres. A. C Q. 8. — Moore: Journal in France. — M. H. Wallon: Histoire du Tri-
bunal Revolutionaire de Paris. — Pierce L. Nolan : Irishmen in the French Revolution:
D. R. '90. 2.— Concerning the external war, v. Sybel — Perry : Hist, of the Fr. Rev. — E.
Balnes: Hist, of the Wars of the French Rev. — Griffiths: French Revolutionary Generals.
On Sorel'a Europe and the Fr. Rev. : E. R. 87, 3.
THE REIGN OF TERROR IN THE DEPARTMENTS.
246. The Jacobin Machinery. — The chief bodies which drove France
into a career of crime, terror, and suffering such as the world had never seen
before, were: (1) The Committee of Public Safety. Its prominent managers
were Danton, a real leader of men, clear-sighted and powerful in speech,
but brutal, who murdered for power, though he was less sanguinary than
his colleagues ; the blood-thirsty Marat, who murdered for pleasure ; and
the vainglorious and hypocritical Robespierre who murdered for the gratifi-
cation of jealousy and revenge. Other leaders were St. Just, Couthon,
Collot, and Carnot, — the latter confined himself with eminent success to the
management of the war. The Committee deliberated in secret, overawed
the ministers, and took whatever measures were deemed requisite for the
national defense. It had its representatives in the departments and in the
army, chosen from the members of the Convention, the so-called "Deputies
in mission." Marat's days, however, were numbered. On July 13th he
was murdered in his bath by Charlotte Corday, a young woman of Normandy,
who had come to Paris to rid the world of the monster. Two days after
the deed she calmly mounted the scaffold. (2) The Committee of General
Security, a sub-committee of the Committee of Public Safety. It was com-
posed of twelve Mountaineers ( Montagnards) charged with the detection of
political crimes and with the arrest of the " suspects " and proscribed. (3)
The Revolutionary Tribunal. Its 16 judges and 60 jurymen, the latter at 18
francs a day, were appointed by the Committee of Public Safety. Their
N
THE REIGN OF TERROR IN THE DEPARTMENTS. 165
duties consisted in promptly condemning the victims brought in by the
Committee of General Security without a hearing in batches of twenty, fifty,
or more. (4) The Commune of Paris, in reality the greatest power in the
State, acting through its committee of twenty at the Hotel de Ville under
the guidance of the atheists Chaurnette and Hubert whose maxim was : To
be safe you must kill all. (5) The 21,500 Revolutionary Committees in the
Departments, chiefly composed of ruffians and criminals at an expense to the
Republic of 591,000,000 francs a year or 100,000,000 more than the entire
taxation of the Ancient Regime. Their duties consisted in imprisoning,
despoiling and guillotining Frenchmen without trial. (6) The Revolution-
ary Army, organized September 5, 1793, 6,000 men with 1,200 cannoneers in
Paris and proportionate numbers in the cities of France. The revolutionary
army was, according to the decree of the Convention, intended " to guard
those who are shut up, arrest suspects, demolish castles, pull down belfreys,
ransack vestries for gold and silver objects, and to strike every anti-Jacobin
with physical terror."
247. Foreign and Civil War. — In July Mainz was captured
by the Prussians after a siege of three months, and the fortresses of
Conde and Valenciennes fell into the hands of the allies ; the defeated
General Custine was sent to the guillotine. The English laid siege
to Toulon, occupied it for a time, and drove back the republican
troops at almost all points. At the same time civil war threatened
the Republic. On learning the events of May 31 and June 2, all
the towns in the West, the South, the East, the center of France, de-
clared that the Convention was no longer free, and that its decrees
had no force of law. The citizens of Marseilles, Lyons, Caen,
Toulon, Bordeaux, took up arms, and tried, and in a few cases
executed, the Jacobin murderers. The fugitive Girondists stirred up
insurrections in the departments. The risings against the men that
managed the new Republic became the chief cause of the executions
en masse which characterized the Terror. Yet these protests and
risings, being local, led to no united effort of resistance, and were
easily overcome in detail by the " Deputies in mission." By July
9th forty-nine departments had sent in their submission to the Con-
vention. Only the sturdy Catholics of La Vendee and a few western
departments displayed energy. Twenty thousand royalists organized
in Lozere. A great Vendean army took Saumur, crossed the Loire,
entered Angers and besieged Nantes. Carnot took enevgetic meas-
ures to establish the power .of the Jacobins at home and abroad. A
166 THE FRENCH REVOLUTION.
levy of the whole male population was decreed, to besiege Lyons and
Toulon, and to fight the Spaniards in the Pyrenees, the Piedmontese
in the Alps, and the English, Austrians, and Prussians in the
Netherlands and on the Rhine. Fourteen armies were soon placed
in the field. Caen, Bordeaux, Marseilles, were conquered by the
Republicans. Lyons was captured after a two months' siege. The
Vendeans were defeated at Chollet (October) and again at Le Mans
(December).
On the Rhine the fortunes of war varied. The Austrians and Prussians
fetormed the French lines at Weissenburg (October) and the Duke of Bruns-
wick defeated the Republican General Hoche at Kaiserslautern (November) .
On the other hand, General Pichegru defeated in December the Austrians
under Wurmser. The allies had to retreat across the Rhine, and Worms and
Speyer were once more taken by the French. About the same time the
Republicans rescued Toulon from the English.
248. Punishment of the Risings. — In Bordeaux, where not an arm was
raised in self-defense, Tallien sent the Mayor and 881 others to the guillo-
tine, imprisoned 1,500 citizens, and levied a fine of 9,000,000 francs on the
wealthy. At Marseilles 12,000 persons were proscribed and their property
sold. At Toulon people were slaughtered in heaps. Four hundred work -
ingmen of the navy yard who marched out to receive Freron. were put to
death on the spot, for having worked during the English occupation.
Fre"ron then summoned the populace to the Marsfield on penalty of death .
There he told the local Jacobins to single out their enemies. The victims
thus designated were ranged along a wall and shot. The operation was for
some time repeated day after day. During three months the guillotine dis-
patched 1,800 more. Twelve thousand laborers were employed to pull down
the buildings. A population of 28,000 was reduced to 6-7,000. — In Lyons
thousands were murdered by the guillotine, or mowed down with grape-
shot or drowned in the Rhone. A tax of 6,000,000 was imposed on the city,
and the confiscation of private property continued for ten months. The
Republic at a cost of 15,000,000 francs employed 14,000 working men to
destroy the finest buildings of the city, valued at 3,400,000,000. The popu-
lation was reduced from 130,000 to 80,000.
249. La Vendee. — When the Catholics of the Vendee and the neighbor-
ing provinces saw their King guillotined, their archbishop driven to the
mountains, their priests hunted down, their churches plundered and dese
crated, handed over to an apostate priesthood, and themselves compelled to
travel for miles and miles to hear mass in the recesses of forests and caves,
they flocked to the standards of their brave leaders, the nobles Charette and
La Rochejaquelein, and the peasants Stofllet and Cathelineau, in defense of
S
THE REIGN OF TERROR IN THE DEPARTMENTS. 167
their faith and the royal house of France. When the fortune of war turned
against them, La Vendee became the scene of brutalities, the most horrible
committed during the Revolution. Carrier at the head of the Revolutionary
Tribunal of Nantes put to death 15,000 men, women and children during the
last three months of 1793. Prisoners were shot down in general fusillades,
4-5,000 were drowned (noyades). They were tied together two by two
and driven into the Loire, or placed in large crowds on rafts and lighters,
and sunk. . Penard made it his specialty to scour the rural districts for the
purpose of killing women and children. Other parties went forth to pick
up the Vendeans along the high roads, shooting them in batches of twenty -
five. In 1794 after the disastrous battle and massacre at Le Mans, Tur-
reau, sent by the Commune of Paris at the head of twelve " columns of
hell," entered La Vendee from different points. His orders were to exter-
minate the inhabitants and confiscate their lands. Accordingly he killed all
living things that came in his way, and burnt crops, mills and villages; 500
square leagues were devastated, 20 towns and 1,800 villages destroyed-
Among the 90,000 slain were 15,000 women and 22,000 children. The remain-
ing population fled to the woods, whence they carried on a desultory but
destructive warfare against the republican hordes.
In the autumn of the same year the smouldering insurrection broke out
anew and rapidly spread north of the Loire into Brittany, Maine, Anjou,
and Normandy. The Chouans, as the insurrectionists north of the Loire
were called, composed of fugitive Vendeans, returned Emigrants, and de-
serters from the regular army, fought under independent leaders and
received everywhere the support of the peasants, who resented the suppres-
sion of their religion and priesthood. After the fall of Robespierre the
Committee of Public Safety sent General Hoche into the affected depart-
ments. He allowed the churches to be reopened, left the clergy unharassed
and concluded a number of armed truces with Charette and other Venddan
and Chouan leaders. Cessation of hostilities and recognition of the exist-
ing authorities on the one hand, freedom of worship and the command of
the National Guard by the Vend^an and Chouan leaders on the other were
the terms of agreement.
25O. Revolutionary Taxation. — Famine was an everpresent
cause of terror and violence. To obtain provisions for the army
and food for the inhabitants of Paris and other cities, the Com-
mittee of Public Safety constructed a vast system of public and
private robbery authorized by decrees of the Convention. The
State established an income tax, an extraordinary revolutionary tax,
maximum price for commodities and labor, and a system of forced
requisitions. (1) The decrees on taxation distinguished in incomes
between the essential and the surplus. The essential was fixed at
168 THE FRENCH REVOLUTION.
1,000 francs per head. According to the excess, a quarter, a third,
a half, was levied as an income tax. When the income exceeded
9,000 francs, the whole excess was taken. (2) The revolutionary
tax, imposed on the capital of the rich, ranged from 300 francs all
the way up to 1,200,000 francs on a single person. Thus in Stras-
burg, v. g. 193 merchants and professional men were taxed in graded
amounts from 6,000 to 300,000 livres each, in all 9,000,000 payable
in twenty-four hours. (3) A third means of obtaining provisions
and labor was the maximum price, established September, 1793, for
a vast number of commodities and also for wages, payable in as-
signats. These assignats were printed by the billion. As early as
July, 1793, 100 francs in assignats were worth 33 francs in coin.
The grocers and shopkeepers had to display a list of all their pro-
visions and goods, sell them at the maximum price, and take
assignats at their face value as payment, i. e., they had to sell their
goods at one-half or one-third of cost. But as the State needed coin
to obtain war materials from foreign countries, those who had coin,
had to deliver it against assignats at par, and those who had none,
had to deliver their plate and jewels. The Catholic churches were
simply ransacked for their sacred vessels which were melted into
revolutionary coin. (4) By forced requisitions farmers had to
bring their crops to public granaries to be paid in assignats at their
face value. Tens of thousands of working men had to labor for the
State at the maximum price in assignats. In all these cases the
alternative was to pay, to deliver, to work, or to face the
guillotine. Whilst this ruinous system increased the chronic state
of famine, it enabled the government to raise the sums which the
war swallowed up, amounting in the first six months of 1793 to
490,000,000 francs, in the second half of the year to 300,000,000
francs a month. The insolvent Commune of Paris alone borrowed
110,000,000 from the State to feed the starving population.
Histories of the Revolution. - The Reign of Terror; a Collection of Authentic
Narratives. — Edw. Healy Thompson: The Sufferings of the Church in Brittany during
the Great Revol. — also M. '78, 1. Memoirs of Henri Larochejaquelein and the War in the
Vendee (Chambers' Miscell., v. 2) ; Memoirs of the Marchioness Larochejaquelein — Rising
in the Vendee: Q. R. '16, 1. — L. Gronlund: (ja-ira; or, Dahton in the Fr. Rev.— Lewis:
Life of Robespierre. — Van Olstlne: Charlotte Corday. — The War: see above; also His
tories, by Schlosser; Fyffe (Hist, of Mod. Europe}; Massey: Hist, of Engl. during the
R. of George III.— Capt. A. T. Mahan : Influence of Sea Power upon the F. Revol. and
Empire.
THE REIGN OF TERROR IN PARIS. 169
§5.
THE REIGN OF TERROR IN PARIS.
251. Law of Suspects, — Whilst cities and provinces were
devastated by the revolutionary despots, Paris became the scene of
crimes equally horrible. The Revolutionary Tribunal with Fouquier-
Tinville as public prosecutor reigned supreme. By the Law of
Suspects, passed September 5, 1793, the tribunal obtained unlimited
power over life and liberty. Ten classes of people could be tried on
suspicion of unfriendliness to the Republic ; the last class comprised
persons whom the tribunals had declared innocent. This law created
600, 000 suspects in France.
252. Execution of Marie Antoinette,, Oct. 16. — Since the
execution of her husband the Queen had been shut off from all com-
munication with the outer world, separated from her son, and ex-
posed to the brutal insults of her keepers. Amidst the indignity of
her imprisonment and the diabolical malice of her trial — they
attempted to destroy the mother by the testimony of her little inno-
cen^t son — she was ever dignified and queenly, and above all imbued
with Christian resignation. Seated in a common cart, her arms tied
behind her, she was conveyed to the Place de la Revolution, and
guillotined, October 16. The King's sister, the saintly Madame
Elizabeth, who had shared the capitivity of the royal family, followed
the Queen to the scaffold.
•
Louis XVII., a pious and intelligent child of eight years, was placed
under the absolute power of Simon, " governor of the Temple," a foul-
mouthed cobbler, who took fiendish delight in beating and torturing the
delicately nurtured Prince, cruelly depriving him of sleep, forcing him to
inebriety and degrading his body and mind to a complete wreck. Thus
perished in the Temple, June, 1794, at the age of ten, the last direct heir oi
St. Louis. His sister, Marie Th^rese, the last prisoner in the Temple, was
delivered to the Austrians in 1795, in exchange for some captured deputies
of the Convention. The Emigrants henceforth acknowledged the Duke of
Provence, the King's eldest brother, as Louis XVIII. Soon after the execu-
tion of the Queen, the royal tombs at St. Denys were desecrated, the bones
of the kings of France thrown into a common ditch, and their skulls tossed
about like balls in the Jacobin club.
170 THE FRENCH REVOLUTION.
253. Other Executions. — On October 3d, two proscription lists
of the Mountain, dictated by Robespierre, had been read in the Con-
vention with closed doors, no debate being allowed ; 73 Girondists
arraigned before the bar were doomed to imprisonment, 21 others to
the guillotine. They were guillotined October 31st. Vergniaud,
Guadet, Brissot, ex-Mayor Bailly, Barnave, Madame Roland, who in
her writings had inspired and glorified the Girondists, Philip
Egalite, the traitor of the royal house, all reaped the fruit of their
own teachings and doings on the scaffold. The Girondists who had
escaped to the departments, were hunted down and guillotined.
Roland, Condorcet, and a number of others stabbed, drowned or
shot themselves. Of the 180 Girondists who had led the Convention
140 were executed, imprisoned, or in hiding. The Mountain ruled
without a rival.
254. The War against Religion. — No article of the Jacobin
programme was carried out with more cruelty and perseverance than
the war against religion, especially Catholicism. A very large
majority of the Catholic clergy, including many converts from the
Civil Constitution, rather than abandon their flocks, preferred the
risk of being stripped of everything, of being exiled, imprisoned,
transported to Cayenne, tortured, guillotined 24 hours after seizure,
and made martyrs of like the primitive Christians ; 18,000 priests
emigrated or were transported before, 18,000 after, the Septem-
ber murders. The persecution now menaced also Constitutional
priests, Protestant ministers and Jewish rabbis. The atheistic
Republic had no use for them. No baptism, confession, extreme unc-
tion, marriage rite, or Christian burial was tolerated by the Commune.
Decrees of the Convention broke up the Christian family by sup-
pressing the marital and parental authority of its head and the dis-
tinction between legitimate and illegitimate children. To destroy
Catholic civilization to the roots, the Convention replaced the
Christian era by the revolutionary era of the year I., (beginning Sept.
22, 1792), the week of seven days by a week of ten days, the
Sunday by the decade, and all the ecclesiastical by revolutionary
festivals and anniversaries.
The months were called Vend^miaire (Vintage month), Brumaire (the
foggy), Frimaire (the frosty), Nivose (the snowy), Pluviose (the rainy),
THE REIGN OF TERROR IN PARIS. 171
Ventose (the windy), Germinal (the sprouting), Floreal (the flowery),
Prairial (the hay-making), Messidor (the harvesting), Thermidor (the heat-
giving), Fructidor (the fruit- giving). Each month had thirty days; the five
intercalary days were called sansculottes. Christmas day was dishonored
by the name of dog's day (le chien).
Day after day during the last months of 1793, scenes of religious
mockery disgraced the sittings of the Convention. In one of them
Gobel, the constitutional Archbishop of Paris, threw off the insignia
of his office, and publicly rejected Christianity. The Convention
finally abolished the worship of God and the belief in the immor-
tality of the soul, and set up the cult of reason in Paris and in the
departments. The Cathedral of Notre Dame in Paris was made the
scene of an unspeakable desecration. Similar outrages were com-
mitted in the departments, where the Jacobins closed, confiscated,
and desecrated -the churches.
255. Internecine Strife. — This delirium of infidelity called
forth, first, a religious, then a political reaction.' Danton carried a
decree excluding religious masquerades from the Convention. The
terrorists split into three hostile factions. The Dantonists repre-
sented the more moderate section of the Mountain. The Hebertists
represented the ultra-revolutionary and atheistic Commune. Robes-
pierre, supported by Couthon, St. Just, Billaud-Varennes and Collot
controlled the Committee of Public Safety. By intrigues worthy of
his treacherous character, Robespierre used one party against the
other and crushed them both. The first attack was directed against
the Commune, by the Mountaineers who desired to make the Conven-
tion independent, by the Dantonists, who wished to stay the action
of the guillotine, and by Robespierre who sought the extension of
his own authority. An attempt headed by the Cordeliers to get up
an insurrection against the Convention failed. March 15, 1794, the
leading Hebertists were arrested and condemned without hearing.
March the 24th, Hebert, Chaumette, Anacharsis Clootz, who had ar-
ranged the feast of reason, Gobel, and others, were guillotined. Some
days later came the turn of the Dantonists. The heads of Danton,
Desmoulins, Herault de Sechelles and others fell April 5th.
Danton, forewarned, made no effort to save himself. When the blow fell,
011 March 29, he said : " On such a day I organized the Revolutionary Court.
I ask pardon of God and man."
172 THE FRENCH REVOLUTION.
256. Increase of the Terror — Condition of Paris Pris-
ons. — Robespierre and the Committee of Public Safety were now
undisputed masters of the guillotine. Robespierre abolished the
worship of reason and bade the Convention to decree the existence of
a Supreme Being and the immortality of the soul. At the fan-
tastic feast of the Supreme Being on the Marsfield, June 8, the
man of blood acted as the high priest. By a decree of the
Convention passed two days later the calling of witnesses and the
hearing of evidence, generally ignored heretofore in state trials, were
formally abolished. A simple list of names sufficed for executions en
masse. The executions on the Place de la Revolution now ran up to
fifty, sixty, and more a day. Outside of Paris every Revolutionary
Committee had its guillotine. There were stationary, traveling, and
elegant house guillotines ; the latter for the execution of sick persons
who could not be moved from their homes.
The Reign of Terror did not materially change the gaiety and usual tenor of
Paris life. People continued their wonted pursuits of gain and pleasure.
All the average Parisian cared for was his dinner, his paper, and his even-
ing amusement. The clubs, theaters, caf6s, and other public resorts were
patronized by their usual customers. Under the system of general espion-
age and denunciation inaugurated by the Committee minor criminals such
as thieves, pick-pockets, and the like, disappeared, No riots disturbed the
streets, as men did not venture even to express their opinions much less to
fight for them. Everybody strove to comply in dress, language, and manner
with the craze of ** equality." " Citizen" and " citizeness," "thou" and
"thee," replaced the old and more poli'te forms of address. The turbulent
market women, who had played an important part in the street riots
of Paris and Versailles, were subdued into quiet by the Terrorist authori-
ties. They were now sitting in the Place de la Revolution as " tricoteuses,"
or knitting women, watching the guillotine whilst they plied their needles.
The guillotine itself became an object of popular worship or pleasantry.
The women of the time wore tiny guillotines as earrings and clasps ; children
amused themselves with toy guillotines; at dinner parties human figures
were guillotined from which wine or syrup flowed instead of blood. Hymns
were sung to uThe Guillotine," and many a joke cracked on the " national
razor." A similar frivolity reigned in the overcrowded prisons, where
scenes of heroic devotion were enacted in the midst of much love and
merry making and orgies of revolting immorality.
The Reign of Terror raised the number of Emigrants to 200,000. The
prisons were everywhere filled. The thirty-six regular prisons aud the
ninety-six temporary jails of Paris, constantly contained 7-9,000 prisoners;
THE REIGN OF TERROR IN PARIS. 173
the 1,200 regular and 40,000 privisional jails in the departments contained
each more than 200 inmates. In Nantes, 3,000 prisoners died of typhoid
in two months. The lists of the Committee of Public Safety, before the
end of the Terror, show nearly 400,000 prisoners. For Robespierre every
person who was not a sans-culotte (breechless, surname of the low born
Republicans, to whose condition all had to accommodate themselves), was
'fa suspect." Generals who failed, or who were too successful, were
accused of treason and guillotined. University regents, professors, heads
of schools, scientists and educated men, were sent to the guillotine for their
superior knowledge, though they were provided with certificates of civism.
Expressions of grief or pity, looks of disapprobation, even silence, became
state crimes. It was a crime to be rich. Purchasers of ecclesiastical and
communal lands were guillotined by the scores, that their lands might be
brought into the market a second time. (l We coin money on the Place de
la Revolution," is the cynical saying ascribed to Barere. Nor were the
lowly spared. Numbers of farmers, mechanics, domestics, women, filled
the prisons or were shot, drowned or guillotined, because they had harbored
an innocent outlaw or a hunted priest or had secretly attended the mass of
an unsworn priest. Out of 12,000 persons sentenced to death, whose pro-
fessions have been ascertained, 7,540 were farmers, artisans, soldiers, sailors,
and servants of both sexes. At Angers 800 were guillotined merely to clear
the prison for new victims. In Anjou, apart from those who, being taken
with arms in their hands, were shot or sabred down on the spot, 10,000 were
murdered without trial. In eleven western departments including La
Vendee, the dead of both sexes and all ages exceeded 400,000. Thus the
lives of 1,200,000 Frenchmen were sacrificed to the revolutionary fury during
the Reign of Terror.
257. The Fall of Robespierre, Thermidor 9. — The fear
which everybody, even the members of the Committee, felt for their
own lives under the bloody dictatorship of Maximilian Robespierre,
encouraged his enemies, Tallien, Freron, Fouche, Vadier, Collot,
and Billaud-Varennes, to devise his fall. Dantonists, Hebertists,
Mountaineers conspired with members of the two Committees. July
26, Robespierre hurled threats at his enemies in the Convention, but
without naming any one. The following day, July 27, the 9th of
Thermidor, he was greeted with shouts of " Down with the tyrant! "
For hours he struggled in vain against his fate. He was arrested
with his brother, Augustin Robespierre, Couthon and St. Just. The
Nfour were ' released by an insurrection of their adherents. Upon the
Convention outlawing them, they were abandoned by the Sections,
or districts of Paris, surprised in the Hotel de Ville, and taken to
174 THE FRENCH REVOLUTION.
the Committee of Public Safety. Robespierre, lying on a table, his
jaw fractured by a pistol shot (in attempted suicide), was exposed
to the taunts of his foes. Next morning the two Robespierres,
Couthon and St. Just, with eighteen others, were guillotined without
trial. Within two days eighty Terrorists were executed. The
Commune was nearly extinct.
Abbe Dumesnil: Recollections of the Reign of Terror. — Reign of Terror Episodes: M.
'75, 2, p. 90; '90, 1, pp. 213, 374. — J. Wilson: The R. of T. and its Secret Police; also Q.
11. 72, 3. — Wallon : Hist of the Revol. Tribunal (French). — Duchesse de Duras: Prison
Journals during the Reign of Terror. — G. Everitt: Guillotine the Great. — I,. Sclout:
L'Eglise sous la Terreur. — K. O'Meara: The Church of France and the Rev. — A. C. Q.
8. — La Rocheterie: Life of Marie Antoinette; Lettres de Marie Antoinette — Memoirs of
Mad. Campan. — Imbert de St. Amand : Marie Antoinette and the Downfall of Royalty. —
French Biogr. vindicating Marie Antoinette's character: La Rocheterie; Vire; Ct. de
Reiset.— M. Ant: D. R. '59, 3.; E. R. '59, 3. -M. C. Bishop: The Prison Life of M. A.—
Lord Glower: Last Days of M. A. — A. de Beauchesne: The Life, the Sufferings, and the
Death of Louis XVII. — Lives of Max. Robespierre by Adams; Ballard; Lewis.— The
Conciergerie Q R. '98 2. — E. de Pressenc£: Religion and the Reign of Terror.
§6.
THE REACTION — 1794-1795.
258. The Reaction. — A change of policy at once made itself
felt in the Convention, where the Thermidorians held the balance
of power among quarreling factions. Revolutionary authorities
and laws fell into contempt. The Jacobin Club was closed (Novem-
ber 12) and the Committees shorn of their power. Thousands of
prisoners were set free and officials were changed all over the country.
Carrier, the tyrant of Nantes, and Fouquier Tinville were condemned
for their crimes at the bar of the Convention, and executed. The
73 Girondists who had been imprisoned on June 2, 1793, and others
who had survived, returned to their seats in the Convention.
259. Misery. — The result of the maximum price, of the boundless issue
of assignats and of the forced requisitions in use during the Reign of Terror
was widespread misery and famine. In Paris and all the larger cities the
government had to distribute rations of bread, often amounting to only a few
ounces a day. Long rows of people had to wait their turn from midnight
till late in the day to obtain their scanty allowance, or, as the case might
be, to leave empty-handed after ten hours' waiting. In many districts people
had to dig up roots for their subsistence, or to live on worms, bran, grass,
or other unhealthy food. Entire communes were without bread for two or
THE REACTION 1794-1795. 175
three months. In a place of 6,000 inhabitants, 1,200 received for a long
time, each eight ounces and then three ounces of wheat every eight days.
In their downward course the assignats had sunk in May, 1795, to seven per
cent. Still later an assignat of 100 francs sank to five sous. A pound of
bread, in 1796, cost fifty francs, a pound of meat sixty francs. Later a bag
of flour rose to 13,000 francs in assignats. Over one million died of hunger
and misery, and several millions of inhabitants were ruined by the revolu-
tionary famine. And all this while the leading Terrorists amassed enormous
fortunes by plunder and speculation. In the face of this misery the recon-
structed Convention abolished the maximum price, but continued the use
of the assi gnats.
26O. The Third Constitution and the 13th Vendem-
iaire. — The remaining Terrorists of the Mountain used the misery
of the people to excite bread riots and insurrections against the Con-
vention on April 1st (12 Germinal) and on May 20th (1 Prairial),
which, however, were suppressed by the reorganized National Guards
and the young men of the better classes. The revolutionary quarters
of Paris were disarmed ; 10,000 Jacobins, among them 60 Moun-
taineers, were arrested. Collot d'Herbois, Billaud-Varennes, Barere
and many others were transported, others condemned to death.
Two of them killed themselves before sentence. Five stabbed them-
selves on the stairs of the tribunal ; of these two who survived were car-
ried still bleeding to the guillotine and executed with the rest. In
the departments acts of violence were committed by returned Emi-
grants against imprisoned Terrorists in retaliation for their former
crimes. This violent reaction received the name of White Terror.
Still the reactionary members of the Convention, as they had been
accomplices in the crimes of the Terrorists, .earned only the con-
tempt of the country. In the fear for their own lives they added to
the new (3d) Constitution a clause according to which two-thirds of
the actual members of the Convention had to be re-elected to the new
Legislature, the Corps Legislatif . The clause met with general dis-
approval. In Paris the National Guards and the better class of the
Sections rose against the decree. On the motion of Barras, a young
general, Napoleon Bonaparte, who had won his first laurels at the siege
of Toulon, was placed in command of the troops of the Convention.
At the head of 9,000 regulars, Bonaparte raked with his cannon the
Rue St. Honore and the Quay Voltaire, and mowed down 600 men
176 TTTE FRENCH REVOLUTION.
of the Sections in the bloody victory of the 1 3th Vendemiaire, Octo-
ber 5, 1795.
261. The War. — Whilst the clash of opinions, interests,
and ambitions was still driving France from one revolution to an-
other, the army in a school of danger, discipline and subordination
had become strong and successful beyond the frontiers. The
Prussians after two other battles at Kaiserslautern were compelled
to recross the Rhine. The Austro-Sardinians in the western Alps
and the Spaniards in the Pyrenees had to retreat before the advanc-
ing Republicans. The Duke of Coburg, defeated at Fleurus by
General Jourdan (June 26, 1794), resigned his command. The
allies evacuated Belgium. Pichegru invaded Holland in the winter
of 1794-95, and drove the hereditary Stadtholder to England. Hol-
land, now transformed into the Batavian Republic, surrendered
Dutch Flanders to France. The Coalition gradually broke up.
Tuscany was the first Power to make peace. Prussia betrayed the
integrity of the Empire to make terms with France in the Peace
of Basle (April 5, 1795). Openly it left its territories on the left
bank of the Rhine to France until peace should be made with the
Empire, but secretly it absolutely ceded the left bank of the Rhine
to France, to be indemnified by the secularization of ecclesiastical
territory (the bishopric of Minister). The Princes of northern Ger-
many withdrew their contingents from the army of the Empire, and
received for this service the recognition by France of a line of de-
markation from the Rhine to Silesia which secured neutrality to the
northern States. The Empire was henceforth torn in twain. In
July Spain, also at Basle, ceded Spanish San Domingo to France,
whilst all other conquests were restored by the Republic. Of all
the allies only England was successful throughout in her naval war,
and conquered most Of the remaining French possessions in East and
West India.
In the west of France an English force and 5,000 Emigrants landed at
Quiberon in Brittany, and joined the Chouans, but were defeated by 12,000
republicans under Hoche, and slain or made prisoners amid scenes of utter
confusion and distress. Whilst the lives of the Chouans were spared, over
a thousand Emigrants were shot by order of the Convention. In the Vendee
too the war was terminated by the victorious arms of Hoche, who had been
THE DIRECTORY 1795-1799. 177
reinforced after the peace with Spam. The heroic leaders of the Vendeans,
Stoittet and Charette, were executed the former in 1795, the latter in March,
1796.
Histories of the French Bevol.— By Taine; H. M. Stephens; Thlers (laudatory) ;
Gardiner; W. Hohoff (Germ.) ; Bertrand de Moleville: Annals of the Fr. R. — Adams:
Growth of the Fr. Nation. — Gen. Jomini: L. of Napoleon Bonaparte. — S6gur : Hist, of
Fred, Wm. II. — Europe and the Fr. Rev , E. R. '87, 3.
THE DIRECTORY— 1795-1799.
262. The New Constitution. — The Constitution of the year
III., or 1795, broke up both the largest and the smallest municipali-
ties. Only communes with a population of 5,000 inhabitants had
their own municipality. Communes of over 100,000 inhabitants
were divided into several municipalities ; thus Paris into twelve.
The Corps Legislatif had two houses. A Council of Five Hundred
who introduced the laws, and a Council of 250 Ancients (forty
years of age) who approved or rejected the laws. The executive
power was intrusted to a Directory of five members elected by the
Ancients from a list put up by the Five Hundred. The Corps
Legislatif was to be renewed by a third of its number, the Directory
by one member every year. By the special law of the 5th Fruc-
tidor (August 22), binding the electoral assemblies to return two-
thirds of the Convention members, the revolutionists had a secure
majority in both houses, and chose a Directory of five regicides :
Barras, La-Revelliere-Lepoux, Rewbel, Carnot, and Letourneur.
263. Wars of the Directory. — To force the Empire to a
peace, the Directory sent Jourdan into Franconia, Moreau into
Suabia and Bavaria, Napoleon Bonaparte into Italy with orders to
join his colleagues in southern Germany after subduing Italy. To
face England, the Directory concluded an offensive and defensive
alliance with Spain, where Minister Godoy, the peacemaker of Basle,
was all deference and subserviency to the Republic. Jourdan's forces
were so completely defeated and scattered by the Emperor's brother,
Archduke Charles, at Amberg and Wiirzburg, that Jourdan laid
down his command. Moreau was compelled by the Archduke to
retreat through the Black Forest to the Upper Rhine. But the cam-
12
178 THE FRENCH REVOLUTION.
paign of Bonaparte in Italy was a series of brilliant victories. Start-
ing from Nice and following the coast he defeated the Austrians at
Millesimo, and the Piedrnontese at Mondovi, and forced Victor
Amadeus, King of Sardinia, to cede Savoy and Nice to France, and
to admit French garrisons into the fortresses of Piedmont. Then
pursuing the Austrians, Napoleon stormed the bridge over the Adda
at Lodi, entered Milan, and subdued all Lombardy as far as Man-
tua. The Dukes of Modeua and Parma were compelled to pur-
chase a truce with enormous sacrifices of money and art treasures.
The King of Naples was compelled to withdraw his troops from the
Austrian army and his ships from the English fleet. Four strenuous
attempts of the Austrians to save Mantua, their last stronghold, were
frustrated by five victories of the conqueror (at Castiglione, Rove-
redo, Bassano, Arcole, and Rivoli). After a long siege (July, 1796
Feb. 1797) Mantua surrendered under honorable terms.
264. Pius VI. and Napoleon. — It was now the turn of Pius
VI. to treat with Napoleon, who had crossed the Po, occupied
Ferrara and Bologna, arrested the Cardinal Legates, and imposed an
oppressive truce on the Pope. The French Republic honored Pius
VI. with its special hatred, because he had condemned the Civil
Constitution of the Clergy, praised the non-juring priesthood, sus-
pended the constitutional priests, received many fugitives, celebrated
solemn obsequies for Louis XVI., protested against the occupation
of Avignon, and, most of all, because he was the successor of St.
Peter. The Directory demanded the revocation of the dogmatical
and canonical decrees of Pius VI. regarding the Church in France.
But the Pope refused to make the slightest concession in matters of
faith and morals and, ready to die at his post, declined the asylum
offered him by England and Naples. Napoleon was more foresighted
than the Directory. He was looking forward to the favor of the
French Catholics. Accordingly, whilst he forced Pius VI. to
conclude the Treaty of Tolentino, by which the Pope had to cede
Avignon already annexed to France, as well as Bologna and the
Romagna, he waived the religious question.
Napoleon is said to have sent a secret message to Pius VI., reading: I am
no Attila, and if I were, remember you are the successor of Leo I.
THE DIRECTORY — 1795-1799. 179
265. Italian Kepublics. — Napoleon now crossed the eastern
Alps into Carinthia and Styria to fight Archduke Charles at home.
But the patriotic rising of the people in Venice, the Tyrol and
Bohemia, threatening to cut off his retreat to Italy induced him to
conclude a preliminary peace at Leoben in Styria. Whilst negotia-
tions for a definite peace were pending, French troops invited by
the republicans of Venice, occupied the Republic and aided them in
overthrowing the aristocratic and organizing a revolutionary govern-
ment. The States of northern and central Italy were transformed
into the Cisalpine and Genoa into the Ligurian Republics under
French control, and administered after the pattern of the Direc-
tory.
266. The Coup d'Etat of Fructidor 18, 1797, at Paris. —
The Jacobin power, cowed for a time by the White Terror, again
raised its head in the Corps Legislatif . The regicide Directory ap-
pointed agents of its own stamp. The trials of the Terrorists were
quashed. Appointive offices in the departments were again filled
with Jacobins. The most odious laws of the Reign of Terror were
still in force only locally mitigated by the personal character of the
officials. On the other hand the elections by the people everywhere
returned moderate and conservative men to the new third of the Corps
Legislatif and to the elective offices in the departments. It was
calculated, that by the year VI., the last Jacobins would have to
depart. The moderates in the Corps Legislatif demanded regular
trials, removal of Jacobins from office, suppression or reform of the
penal laws against religion, nobles, and Emigrants. On the arrival
of the second third of the moderates the leading Jacobins became
alarmed at the prospect of losing their accumulated spoils, perhaps
their heads. This fear led to the Coup d'Etat of September 4
(Fructidor 18). Again a small Terrorist minority defeated a waver-
ing majority. The three directors Barras, Rewbel and Revelliere
overthrew their more moderate colleagues, Barthelemy and Carnot.
Five thousand roughs and 8-10,000 troops under Agereau sur-
rounded . the .Tuileries, arrested the constitutionalist members of
both houses " by the Law of the Sabre." The Councils thus purged,
canceled the election of their colleagues in forty-nine departments,
passed decrees of transportation by fifteen votes against seven, all the
180 THE FRENCH REVOLUTION.
rest being motionless from terror, and through forced or voluntary
resignation of about 300 members became a radical Rump. The
Coup was in all respects equal to the overthrow -of the Girondists,
save that the soldiers were the actors instead of the populace.
267. The Second Terror. — Thus the anti- Christian and despotic system
of 1793 was again introduced under a dictatorship of three Directors.
The irresponsible tribunals of former days were now managed by military
divisions. BarthSlerny, Pichegru and other prominent men were transported.
Carnot escaped by flight. Transportations en masse took the place of
the guillotine. The imprisonment on the marshes of Rochefort, the over-
crowded ships and the deadly climate of Cayenne did the work just as
effectually. Ninety per cent of the victims transported without trial, died
on the voyage or in the colony. The process of extirpating the Catholic
Church by the laws of 1793 and 94 was pursued with the old virulence. In
Belgium alone 7,300 ecclesiastics were hunte,d down for deportation. Three-
fourths of them died within a few mouths. Forty.five departments were
declared to be in a state of disturbance. Former nobles, returned Emigrants,
property holders with all their relatives, in all 200,000 persons, were excluded
from the franchise, made personally responsible for all acts of violence, not
only committed, but suspected in their neighborhood, banished from the
cities, and burdened with a forced loan of 100,000,000 francs.
268. Peace of Campo Formio October 17, 1797. —After
lengthy parleys France and Austria concluded the Peace of Campo
Formio. Austria ceded Belgium to France, recognized the Cisalpine
Republic, indemnified the Prince of Modena with Breisgau, agreed
in a secret clause to the cession of the left bank of the Rhine, and
received in return the territories of Venice, Istria and Dalmatia.
France retained the Ionian Islands which had belonged to Venice.
The navigation of the Rhine was left open to France and Germany.
Austria and the princes who suffered by the cession of German ter-
ritories were to be indemnified by the secularization of ecclesiastical
territory (archbishopric. of Salzburg). The conclusion of a peace
between France and the Empire was entrusted to the Congress of
Rastadt. But the formation of the Second Coalition put an end to
its labors, and the Congress terminated with the assassination of two
French plenipotentiaries, by Austrian hussars. It is certain that
the attack was not authorized by the Austrian government. It
seems to have been privately planned by French emigre officers serv-
ing in the Austrian army to possess themselves of the dispatches.
THE DIRECTORY 1795-1799. 181
269. The Roman and the Helvetian Republics, 1798. —
After the Peace of Tolentino, Joseph Bonaparte, Napoleon's brother,
was sent to Rome as ambassador of the French Republic. His house
became the resort of domestic and foreign revolutionists, who set
on foot the usual agitation against the Papal government. In a
street mob purposely incited, a French general lost his life. This
event gave the Directory the long desired pretext to occupy Rome.
General Berthier marched into the city, February 10, 1799, and five
days later overthrew the pontifical government, and proclaimed,
against the protest of the people, the Roman Republic. Its
symbol was the statue of liberty with the tiara under her feet ; the
city of the Popes was desecrated with the abominations of the
atheistic revolution.
Shortly after the French entered Switzerland under pretense of settling a
local discussion, changed the Swiss Confederacy into the one Helvetian
Republic, and annexed Geneva.
The fear lest the presence of the Pope might foster the disaffection
of the Romans against the French, determined the Directory to
remove the aged Pontiff to Valence in southern France. The order
was carried out with studied brutality by Berthier 's successor, Gen-
eral Massena, and the commissioners of the Directory. Pius VI.
surrounded by the touching homage of the Catholic people, closed
the days of his troubled life at Valence, August, 1799.
270. Spoils of War. — Like the Committee of Public Safety the Directory
waged a war of conquest, pillage, and propagandism. Authentic lists of
Jacobin exactions imposed on Belgium, Holland, Germany, and Italy, apart
from private plundering, furnish the following figures up to 1798: Exac-
tions in coin, 655 millions; removal of gold and silver objects and works of
art, 305 millions; provisions, 361 millions; confiscation of church, govern-
ment, and corporation property, 700 millions, or two billion livres in five
years. The churches alone contributed 146 millions. The spoils of Rome
and of the Vatican amounted to 43 millions, including even the pastoral ring
which a commissary of the Directory wrested from the finger of Pius VI.
The forced conscription of 1798 sent 800,000 Frenchmen to the field. The
waste of lives in the field amounted to 900,000 in eight years.
271. Napoleon in Egypt, 1798-99. — The Peace of Campo
Formio being concluded, Napoleon returned to Paris and received a
most enthusiastic ovation from the people, whilst the Directory re-
182 THE FRENCH REVOLUTION.
garded his successes with jealous eyes. To remove the popular hero
from Paris and France, the Directory gave him the chief command
over an army ostensibly formed for an invasion of England, but
really destined for Egypt. The subjugation of Egypt was intended
as a preliminary step toward the conquest of the British possessions
in India and the destruction of English commerce. Having sailed
from Toulon with 35,000 men and a large number of scientists,
Napoleon took Malta, landed in Egypt, stormed Alexandria, de-
feated the Mamelukes in the Battle of the Pyramids and captured
Cairo. Meanwhile Admiral Nelson had annihilated the French
fleet in the Battle of the Nile at Aboukir, and the Porte had declared
war against France and mobilized the forces of Syria. To anticipate
an attack Napoleon threw himself into Syria and gained several suc-
cesses (storming of Jaffa; battle at Mount Tabor), but Acre,
defended by the English, resisted his assaults. Pursued by the
plague, Napoleon returned to Egypt, and quickly routed a Turkish
army which had landed at Aboukir. Advised of the state of affairs
in France, he appointed Generals Kleber and Desaix as his suc-
cessors in Egypt, escaped the vigilance* of the English fleet, and
arrived unannounced and unexpected in France.
272. War of tne Second Coalition, 1799-18O1. — Paul I., Emperor of
Russia, had succeeded his mother, Catherine II., 1796-1801. The Knights
of Malta, just deprived of their island, chose him for Grand-Master. He
succeeded in forming a new Coalition, consisting of Russia, Austria, Eng.
land, Portugal, Turkey, and Naples, where King Ferdinand's wife, Caroline,
a sister of Marie Antoinette, was the soul of the government. The war
began in 1798, before the Coalition treaty was signed, by a Neapolitan inva-
sion of the Roman Republic. It was repulsed by the French, who in their
turn invaded Naples. Nelson conveyed the king to Palermo. The higher
classes, infected with revolutionary ideas, admitted the French into Naples,
while the common people still fought for days in the streets of the capital
for their king and their religion. The French changed the kingdom of
Naples into the Partheuopean Republic. In the north of Italy the Duke of
Tuscany, the Emperor's brother, was driven from his domain. The King
of Sardinia fled to Cagliari on the island of Sardinia. His fortresses on the
mainland were occupied by French troops.
According to the plan of the Coalition, Austria was to fight in
Germany, Austria and Russia in Italy, Russia and England in the
Netherlands. The attack on the Netherlands failed. Although Arch-
f
THE DIRECTORY 1795-1799. 183
duke Charles, in the German campaign, drove Jourdan andBerna-
dotte across the Rhine, the allies were unable to dislodge the French
from Switzerland and trans-Rhenish Germany owing to Massena's
victory over Korsakow at Zurich, and to the divided councils of the
allied leaders. But the campaign in Italy was a brilliant success.
The Austrians under Kray and Melas, and the Russians under
Suwarow, defeated in a series of victories the French under Scherer
and Moreau in northern Italy. Macdonald, who hastened from
Naples to assist the vanquished armies of France, was beaten on the
Trebbia. General Joubert, whom the Directory sent with a new
army to Italy, lost life and victory in the bloody battle of Novi.
Suwarow now crossed the St. Gothard to join Korsakow in Switzer-
land, but instead of his colleague he found the victorious Massena
and had to fight his way out of the mountains under great hardships
and losses. Dissatisfied with the allies, Paul I. recalled his generals
to Russia (1800). Meanwhile the Austrians completed the expul-
sion of the French from Italy. The fortresses, badly provisioned by
the rapacious commissaries of the Directory, fell rapidly. The result
of the campaign was the overthrow of the Cisalpine, Parthenopean,
and Roman Republics. A Russo-Turkish fleet had wrested the
Ionian islands from French control in May, 1799.
At the death of Pius VI. the enemies of the Church boasted that
they had buried the last Pope. But the reconquest of Italy by the allies
enabled sixty-five Cardinals to go into Conclave at Venice, where they
elected Cardinal Chiaramonti as Plus VII., May 4, 1800.
273. Coup d'Etat of Brumaire 18 and 19. — The loss of Italy and a
new revolution in Paris were the causes of Napoleon's sudden return. The
reverses of the war had created a profound excitement in Paris. The
Directory was loudly charged with criminal mismanagement by the party of
order. On the other hand the remaining Jacobins prepared for a revival of
the Terror. But by the coup d'etat of June 18th, the Directory of Three
was replaced by a Directory of Five, and the Terrorist Rewbel had to make
room for the more moderate Sieyes. In the general conviction that the gov-
ernment by the Directory was no longer tenable, Napoleon's journey from
his landing place, Fr^jus, to Paris, became a triumphal procession. In the
Directory, Barras had secretly come to an understanding with Louis XVIII.
Sieyfes and Roger-Duclos with the same secrecy surrendered to Napoleon.
On November 9th, 1799 (Brumaire 18, of the year VIII.) the
Council of Ancients transferred the sessions of the Corps Legislatif to
184 THE FRENCH REVOLUTION.
St. Cloud, and appointed Napoleon commander of the troops in Paris.
Sieyes and Roger-Duclos overthrew the Directory ; the two resigned
according to a previous agreement ; Barras was compelled to sign his
resignation in his bath ; the other two were arrested. On Novem-
ber 10, Napoleon's grenadiers entered the chamber of the Five Hun-
dred with fixed bayonets and drums beating, whilst the deputies
precipitately scrambled out of the windows. The Council of
Ancients approved the measure, named Napoleon, Sieyes and Roger-
Duclos provisional Consuls and adopted a new Constitution inspired
by Napoleon and drawn up by Sieyes. December 15, 1799, the
Fourth Constitution was proclaimed. France was now a military
monarchy under the guise of a Republic.
Under the new Constitution Napoleon Bonaparte was inaugurated as First
Consul for ten years with practically supreme power (December 24). The
other two Consuls, Cainbace'res and Le Brun had only consultative votes
A Senate of 80 members with good pay and little work were elected for life.
The people voted for Notables of the Communes. These elected a tenth of
their number as Notables of the Departments, these again a tenth as Notables
of France. From this last list the Senate appointed the members of the
Legislative Department, the higher officials and the judges. The Legislative
Department had two branches, a Tribunate of 100, and a Legislative
Chamber of 300 members. The Tribunate discussed the proposals of the
government icithout voting. The Legislative Chamber accepted or rejected
these proposals ivithout debate. The executive power was in the hands of
the First Consul aided by a Council of State. The establishment of Prefec-
tures or administrations of departments and of Sub-prefectures or admin-
istrations of arondissements created the centralization of power which still
prevails in France.
Histories (continued).— Alison : Hist, of Europe, 1789-1815.— W. O'C. Morris: The
French Rev. and the First Empire. — Mignet: Hist, of the Fr. Rev. 1789-1814. — J. E.
Darras: Hist. oftheCath. Church. — Reuben Parsons: The Pontificate of Pius VI. (Stu-
dies 4). — Chev.O'Clery: The Italian Revolution. Ch. II. — II. M. Stephens: The Principal
Speeches of the Revolution. — Lockwood : Constitutional Hist, of France. — Adams : Great
Campaigns, 1796-1870.— Laiifrey; Lockhart: Lives of Nap. I — southey : L. of Nelson. —
Victor Pierre: Fructidor. — John Alger: Englishmen in the French Revolution. — Le
Vicomte de Broc: La France pendant la Revolution. — Mgr. Freppel, Eveque d' Angers:
La Revolution Francaise a propos du Centenaire de 1780. — Ch. D'Hericault: La France
Revolutionaire, 1789-1889. — Lord Ormathwaite: Lessons of the French Revol.—
L'Abb6 Sicard : L'Ancien Clerge de France; Les Eveques pendant la Revolution. — T. B.
Scannel : The Intemuncio at Paris during the Revol. — L'Abb6 de Brogliu: Le Present et
PAvenir du Catholicisme en France (a corrective to Taine's views on the Church).—
Taine's French Revol., D. R. '82. 4.— Li\>es of Suwarow by Spalding; de Laverne.
THE FRENCH REVOLUTION.
185
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186
THE FRENCH REVOLUTION.
lie Church and the decisions of the
ecially the Parliament of Paris.
Woolston, etc.), and of other free-
•, etc.), against Christianity and all
3id spread on the Continent,
leadership of Voltaire and Rousseau,
achy Helvetius, de la Mettrie-Encyclo-
iialists (Rousseau's Social Contract}
ownership. These schools under -
isses, exercised a decisive influence
i and vandalism.
t confined to France. In Germany,
in Prussia Gustamis III. in Sweden,
fluenced by freethinking statesmen,
[Josephinism) and Kaunitz in Austria,
tc.
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Cazale*s, Abb6 Maury; Es-
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Mounier, Malouet, Lally
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THE FRENCH REVC
he Right, royalists and
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LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY
Oct. 1, 1791 — Sept. 21,
1792: 745 new representa-
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THE FRENCH REVOLUTION.
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THE FRENCH RPIVOLUTION.
THE FRENCH REVOLUTION — Con tinned.
8 Fructidor (Sept 4) 1897. Coup d'etat at Paris. Victory of the Jacobin minority over
the moderate majority. Directory reduced to three regicides: Barras, La Revelliere,
and Bewbel. " The Law of the Sabre." Second reign of terror.
Prairial (June 18), 1799. The Directory reorganized under Sieyes in the interest of Na-
poleon Bonaparte.
8 BRUMAIRE. NAPOLEON BONAPARTE'S coup d'etat. Overthrow of the Directory.
THE CONSULATE, Dec. 25, 1799— May 20, 1804, Napoleon Bonaparte First Consul,
with practically absolute power. Cambaceres and Lebrun, Second and Third Consuls.
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THE DIRECTORY, Oct. 26,
1795— Nov. 9, 1799. First
Directors: Barras, La R6-
velliere-Lepoux, Rewbel,
Carnot, Letourneur.
FOURTH CONSTITUTION,
the Const, of Year VIII.
Three Consuls; Senate of
80 life members; Corps
Legislatif: Tribunate of
100, Legislative Chamber
of 300.
s
CHAPTER II.
THE ERA OF NAPOLEON* I. —1800-18W.
§1.
THE CONSULATE AND THE WAR OF THE SECOND COALITION.
274. Preparations lor the Campaign. — Napoleon had securely estab-
lished his power at home as First Consul. He appointed as ministers the
ex -Bishop Talleyrand for foreign affairs, and Carnot for war; FouchS re-
mained at the head of the police. Napoleon now turned his attention to
foreign affairs. He made overtures of peace, by personal letters, to George
III. and Francis II. The Powers rejected them, but by doing so they played
into the hands of Napoleon ; for in the eyes of the French people he gained
credit for his moderation, and threw the responsibilities of a war which he
secretly coveted, upon the allies. In view of the approaching campaign he
secured the peaceful submission of La. Vendee by a general amnesty, full
liberty of Catholic worship, and public funeral honors awarded to Pius VI.
The remnants of the'Chouan insurrection in Normandy and Brittany were
crushed by force. Russia was detached from the Coalition. Paul I. thought
himself badly treated by Austria and quarreled with England about the pos-
session of Malta. On the other hand he greatly admired Napoleon's ex-
ploits, and answered his flatteries by withdrawing from the alliance. He
did more. The neutral Powers were angered by England's forcible search of
neutral vessels in violation of the Armed Neutrality of 1780. At the instance
of Paul I. the League of Armed Neutrality against England was renewed
before the end of the year by Russia, Denmark, Sweden, and Prussia. The
United States also signed its articles.
275. Campaign in Italy, Marengo, 18OO. — Melas, the
Austrian commander in Italy, had defeated Massena at Voltri, and
taken Nice. Massena was shut up in Genoa, besieged by the Aus-
trians and blockaded by the English. So stubborn was his defense,
that only after 15,000 persons had perished by famine, did Massena
capitulate under the most honorable terms. Melas meanwhile ex-
pected Napoleon to come upon him by the passes of Mont Cenis.
But Napoleon sent only smaller detachments through those passes,
whilst he himself led the main army across the Great St. Bernard
13 (193)
194 THE ERA OF NAPOLEON I. 1800-1815.
into the plains of Lombardy, and occupied Milan and other cities.
By this daring march he took the Austrians in the rear. Though
caught between two fires, Melas resolved to fight. On the plain of
MARENGO, outside the gates of Alessandria, Melas had already won
the field and left the command to a subordinate general when Na-
poleon, unexpectedly reinforced by Desaix, rushed upon the unwary
Austrians and turned defeat into victory. Crushed by the disaster,'
the octogenarian Melas consented, in the Truce of Alessandria, to
abandon the greater part of northern Italy and to withdraw behind
the Mincio. Thus in one battle the French regained nearly all they
lost in 1799. Marengo gave to Napoleon an unrivaled preponder-
ance in Europe and undisputed sway in France.
Desaix had shortly before arrived from Egypt, where K16ber had sup-
pressed a revolt, won the battle of Hierapolis with 12,000 Frenchmen against
80,000 Turks, and conquered Egypt a second time. On the same day that
Desaix fell at Marengo, Kleber was assassinated by a fanatical Moslem.
276. The Campaign in Germany, 18OO — Holienlinden. —
Meanwhile JVtoreau had carried on a successful campaign in Upper
Germany against the Austrians under Kray, and the troops of Ger-
man princes in the pay of England. After conquering Suabia and
Bavaria, he reached Munich in July. His campaign was interrupted
by the Truce of Alessandria. The peace negotiations that ensued
proved unsuccessful, because Austria refused to conclude without
England, and England refused to extend the truce to the sea.
Hostilities were resumed, and Moreau won in December the de-
cisive victory of Hohenlinden over Archduke John, the Emperor's
brother, and advanced within twelve miles of Vienna. Francis II.,
overtaken by these disasters, was compelled to conclude the separate
peace of Luneville on the basis of the Treaty of Campo Formio.
277. Peace of Luneville, February 9, 18O1. — The Empe-
ror recognized the Batavian, Helvetian, Cisalpine, and Ligurian
Republics. The Rhine was established as the boundary between
France and Germany, and the Adige as the Austrian boundary in
Italy. The Emperor yielded Tuscany, which Napoleon transferred
as kingdom of Etruria to the hereditary prince of Parma, the hus-
band of the Infanta of Spain, in reward for Spain's good offices
THE CONSULATE AND WAR OF SECOND COALITION. 195
during the war. Spain in return ceded Louisiana to France. Tus-
cany and Modena, the German princes who were losers by the treaty,
and the Stadtholder of the Dutch Republic were to be indemnified
by German territories.
278. Dismemberment of the Empire. — The special proposals for indem-
nifications were drawn up by a Deputation of Delegates of the Empire. The
actual work of its dismemberment was done by Napoleon, Alexander of
Russia, and the king of Prussia. The shameful negotiations lasted more
than two years, during which the ambassadors of German princes and
princelings haunted the antechamber of the First Consul and bribed French
ambassadors and secretaries to obtain additional slices of land. It was
chiefly ecclesiastical territory and free cities that were sacrificed to the
greed of both Catholic and Protestant princes. The Catholic estates were
robbed of 1/295 square miles and over 2,300,000 inhabitants. Of forty-eight
free imperial cities only six were spared. As a rule the indemnified princes
gained more than they had lost in the two Coalition wars. These transac-
tions practically put an end to the Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation.
279>. Peace of Florence, 18O1. — Soon after the Peace of
Luneville, Napoleon, in deference to the wishes of Paul I., concluded
the Peace of Florence with the King of Naples. The independence
of Naples was acknowledged, but the King had to close his ports to
English ships, to surrender his Tuscan coast line and islands to the
kingdom of Etruria, and to maintain a division of 15,000 French in
the gulf of Tarento.
28O. The Peace of Amiens, 18O2. — In March, 1801, Paul I. was assas-
sinated in a palace revolution, and his son Alexander I. accepted the crown
from the hands of the murderers. In the same month an English expedi-
tion conquered Egypt, whilst Nelson by a naval swoop upon Copenhagen
forced Denmark to sign a truce. Alexander made up with England. The
League of Neutrals collapsed. .These events disposed Napoleon to peace.
On the other hand the military and diplomatic successes of Marengo,
Hohenlinden, and Luneville, the occupation by French and Spanish
troops of Portugal, England's last continental ally, and Napoleon's vast
armaments for an invasion of Britain, inclined the English cabinet to come
to terms with her formidable neighbor. The result of long negotiations,
during which Pitt withdrew from the cabinet^ was the Peace of Amiens.
t
England restored to the French Republic and her allies all the
colonies conquered during the war except the Spanish island of
Trinidad and the Batavian Island of Ceylon. Egypt was restored to
196 THE ERA OF NAPOLEON I. 1800-1815.
Turkey, Malta to the Order of St. John. The integrity of Portugal
was acknowledged.
Books covering the whole Period, see § 1 2.— Lanf rey : History of Napoleon I. v. 1.
Lockhart: Life of Nap. I.—C. Botta: Italy during the Consulate and the Empire of Na-
pol.— C. Joyneville: Life and Times of Alexander /.— Gleig: Sir A. Abercromby (Em.
Brit. Mllit. Commanders). — Briick: Geschichte der Kathol Kirche in Deutschl. im 19ten
Jahrh. — Pitt's War Policy Q. R., '92,3. Taine: The Modern Regime.
§2.
THE FIRST EMPIRE.
281. Napoleon and Pius VII. — The cessation of hostilities
agreed upon at Alessandria enabled Pius VII., just elected at Venice,
to repair to Rome. Against all expectations Napoleon acknowledged
the independence of the Papal States, shorn, however, of Ferrara,
Bologna, and the Romagna. The year 1801 witnessed the opening of
the churches and the restoration of the Catholic worship in France.
Knowing full well the impossibility of re-establishing civil order in
France without the Catholic religion, and above all anxious to recon-
cile the clergy to the new order of things and to break the last bond
by which the ancient dynasty was still connected with the country,
Napoleon opened negotiations with the Holy See for the restoration
of the Church. Cardinal Consalvi was the Papal negotiator. The
agreement, secured in 1801 only by extensive concessions on the
part of the Pope, was embodied in the famous Concordat.
282. The Concordat.— The free and public worship of the Catholic relig-
ion was guaranteed, subject, however, to such police regulations, u as public
safety might demand in the judgment of the government." (Art. 1.) The
135 bishoprics of France were reduced to sixty. (Art. 2.) The Pope under-
took to induce the surviving bishops to resign their sees. (Art. 3 ) The
First Consul exercises the right to nominate the bishops; the Pope to give
them the canonical institution. The parish priests were to be appointed by
the bishops with the approbation of the government; the holders of confls-
cated'church property were to remain in undisturbed possession; in com-
pensation the government pledged itself to make suitable provision for the
maintenance of the clergy. The Concordat met with considerable opposi-
tion. Of the surviving bishops, forty-five immediately complied with the
Papal request. Others remonstrated against their dispossession. In some
places resistance led to temporary schisms. The fifty-nine constitutional
bishops were ordered by the First Consul to give up their sees. A fierce
THE FIRST EMPIRE. 197
opposition arose also in the republican party chiefly in the army. Napoleon
himself, in defiance of all treaty rights, annulled important provisions by
publishing together with the Concordat seventy seven organic articles which
revived Gallicanisin, and forged new fetters for the Church. Rome's
often repeated protests were ignored.
283. The March to the Throne. — The First Consulship could never
satisfy Napoleon's ambition. All his measures during the Consulate were
taken with a view to prepare the way to a monarchical throne. He allowed
the Emigres, who were willing to pledge their allegiance to him, to return
to France. He changed the Cisalpine Republic into the Italian Republic and
had himself elected its president. He purged the Legislative Department
and the Tribunate of his opponents, and transferred the powers of these
bodies to a subservient Senate. (The Tribunate was abolished in 1807.)
A plebiscite adroitly managed elected him Consul for life by three
and a half million votes against a few thousand, whilst a senatorial
decree gave him the right of appointing a successor (1802). Other
senatorial decrees abolished the Constitution of the year VIII., and
substituted a new one (the fifth), according to which electors for life
presented candidates for the assemblies, from among whom the gov-
ernment chose the members. The First Consul took an active part in
the compilation of a uniform code of civil law, the Code Napoleon. From
this code, excellent in many regards for its legal clearness and systematic
arrangement, the revolutionary and anti- Christian doctrine of civil marriage
and civil divorce has passed into many modern legislations. The reorgani-
zation of the University (completed in 1808) with its State examinations,
the official position of the teachers, the 6,400 scholarships exclusively in the
gift of the First Consul, placed the entire system of higher education under
the control of the State. The improvement of finance, the encouragement
of commerce and industry, the foundations of schools of arts and of trades,
the building of roads and canals, all under the supervision of the First Con-
sul, who displayed an astonishing capacity for work, revived the material
prosperity and the national wealth of France.
In 1803 Napoleon approached the Bourbon princes to effect a resignation
of their rights to the throne. But Louis XVIII., then at Warsaw, spurned
every offer.
284. Removal of Opponents. — As early as 1800 Napoleon had seized the
occasion of an unsuccessful Chouan conspiracy against his life to deport 130
surviving Terrorists, not for complicity in this plot, but for their previous
conduct. When the Concordat, and the introduction of a new decoration called
*• The Legion of Honor" roused the ire of Moreau's republican soldiers, Napo-
leon sent 35,000 of them to San Domingo, where the negroes during the Revo-
lution had shaken off French supremacy, to reconquer the island. Only a few
thousand returned from the disastrous expedition. The following year the
French royalists in England who clustered around the Count of Artois, began to
198 THE ERA OF NAPOLEON I. 1800-1815.
pull wires with the disaffected republicans. Their plau was to strike down
the First Consul in the rnidst of his guards and then to appeal to the popple.
Their chief agents were the Chouan leader, George Cadoudal and General
Pichegru, who had escaped from Cayenne. Moreau's complicity could not
be proved. Aware of the plot., Napoleon ordered the police to encourage
the intriguers with a view of getting the Count of Artois into his power
(1803) . When all hope of seizing the Count on French soil vanished, the
plot was published in 1804, and proceedings were begun. Pichegru was
found mysteriously strangled in his prison. - Cadoudal, with eleven others,
was executed. Moreau was banished to America for two years. To strike
the Bourbons personally, the innocent Duke of Enghien, last heir of the
House of Conde", was forcibly arrested in the territory of Baden, conveyed
to Vincennes, subjected to a mock trial at midnight, and shot before morn-
ing. These tragedies fiiled Europe with consternation, reduced the royalists
to silence and inaction, and deprived the Republicans of their only formid-
able leader.
285. Napoleon I. Hereditary Emperor, 18O4-1815. —
Everything was prepared. On May 8th, 1804, the Tribunate and
the Senate conferred the imperial title on Napoleon Bonaparte and
his descendants. In default of a present heir the succession was
settled on his brothers Joseph and Louis. His elevation was ratified
by a plebiscite of over 3,500,000 votes against 2,569. He now sur-
rounded himself with a brilliant court, in which not only the new
nobility — revolutionists, former terrorists, regicides, dubbed with
courtly titles — but also members of the ancient nobility, figured
conspicuously. Eighteen generals were named Marshals of the
Empire, and received, in the course of new campaigns, conquered
cities as principalities and dukedoms. Napoleon invited Pius VII.
to Paris to crown him Emperor. After long and anxious delibera-
tions Pius VII. consented in the sole hope of promoting the interests
of religion in France. At the coronation in Notre Dame, December 2d,
Pius VII. anointed Napoleon I., but when he approached to crown
him, the Emperor snatched the diadem from his hands and placed
it on his head himself. Napoleon then crowned his wife Josephine.
The Pope was disappointed. The organic articles remained unrepealed.
It was even proposed to Pius VII. to fix his seat in Paris with a hint that the
Emperor had the power to enforce his wish. The Pope calmly replied,
lt that for such an emergency his resignation was already in the hands of
Cardinal Pignatelli; the moment he was deprived of his liberty, he would
cease to be Pope and become once more the Benedictine monk, Barnabo
s
WAR OF THE THIRD COALITION. 199
Chiaramonti." No further obstacles were placed in the way of his de-
parture.
The following year Napoleon crowned himself King Of Italy with
the Iron Crown of Lombardy. He then appointed Eugene Beau-
harnais, Josephine's son of her first marriage, Viceroy of Italy, and
annexed the Ligurian Republic, Parma, Piacenza and Guastalla to
France.
Briick; Alzog; Darras: Hist, of the Cath. Church. — Leon Sech6: Les Origines du
Concordat.— C. C. Fauriel: The Last Days of the Consulate. — M. H. Allies : Life of Pope
Pius VII., also M. '80. 2. — E. Parsons: Pius VII. Studies V. — Mad. de Remusat:
Memoirs: M. *80. 3 .— Letters of Mad. de Remusat: M. '81. 2.— About the Duke d'
Enghien: Lanfrey, V. ch. 9-10; Ed. Rev. '89, 2.
§ 3.
WAR OF THE THIRD COALITION.
286. The Third Coalition. — Whilst Paris was revelling in the festivities
of the new order of things, another war cloud had already begun to over-
shadow Europe. As early as 1803, a colonial war had broken out between
England and France in consequence of England's refusal to surrender Malta
to the Knights of St. John. This war between two neighbors soon became
a European conflict between 1803 and 1805. England seized San Domingo
and various colonies ceded in the Peace of Amiens, called 300,000 volunteers
to arms, and added 40,000 to the 80,000 marines already serving in the navy.
Napoleon 'established a strong military encampment at Boulogne, threw an
army into Hanover, the patrimony x>f George III., occupied Naples for
refusing an alliance with him, and garrisoned the Papal cities of Ancona
and Civita Vecchia as if they were his own. Pitt, who returned to office,
negotiated the Third Coalition against France, comprising England, Russia,
Austria and Sweden for the purpose of restoring the European balance of
power disturbed by Napoleon's recent aggressions in Germany and Italy.
Prussia did not openly join the Coalition, but concluded a secret treaty with
Russia. Napoleon had the active support of Spain, Bavaria, Wiirtemberg,
Baden, and some other States that had been gainers in the breaking up of
the German Empire.
287. Ulm and Trafalgar. — Deceived by Napoleon's feint
against England at Boulogne, Austria began hostilities by invading
Bavaria and dispatching Archduke Charles to Italy. This precipi-
tate action was just what Napoleon most desired. Confiding in
Massena to cope with the Archduke, Napoleon himself directed the
campaign in Germany. With astonishing rapidity he hurried his
200 THE ERA OF NAPOLEON I. 1800-1815.
various army corps from Boulogne, from Hanover, from the allied
German States to the Danube, and before his designs were guessed,
he had completely enveloped the Austrian army in Ulm, and cut off
retreat. After several sharp encounters in which the Austrians lost
20,000 men, General Mack was forced to surrender in his strong-
hold with 30,000 stands of arms. The French loss did not exceed
8,000. — The day after the evacuation of Ulm the combined navies of
France and Spain were destroyed by the English off Trafalgar.
Nelson fell early in the action.
288. Austerlitz — Undeterred by this disaster, Napoleon, by
skillfully concerting his operations with those of his generals, pushed
into the very heart of Austria. He entered Vienna without resist-
ance, advanced into Moravia and established his headquarters at
Briinn. It was here that Francis II. and Alexander I. had at last
joined their forces. In the pitched battle fought at Austerlitz Decem-
ber 2, " The Battle of the Three Emperors," Napoleon completely
defeated the armies of Austria and Russia. Francis II. sued for
peace. In a personal interview with Napoleon he concluded a truce
which compelled him to dismiss his Russian allies.
0
289. Napoleon and Prussia — To join Napoleon before Ulm, Bernadotte
had violated the neutral territory of Anspach belonging to Prussia. Frederic
William III. at first swallowed the affront in the fond hope held out to him
by Napoleon of obtaining the imperial crown in case Austria were effectually
humbled. But when the Czar joined Francis II., the King of Prussia sent
Count Haugnitz to Napoleon with a declaration of war. The count arrived
in the French camp on the eve of the great conflict, but was told by Napoleon
to deliver his message after the battle. The day being won, Haugnitz was
among the first to congratulate the victor. Napoleon then offered Hanover,
the heritage of George III., to Prussia. With some hesitation the King ac-
cepted the bribe, concluded an offensive and defensive, alliance with Napo-
leon, and ceded Anspach and Baireuth to Bavaria, and Neufchatel to France.
290. The Peace of Pressburg, 18O6. — The definite Treaty
of Peace with Francis II. was signed at Pressburg. Austria yielded
Venice, I stria and Dalmatia to the Kingdom of Italy, the Tyrol and
other contiguous provinces and the free city of Augsburg to Bavaria,
her Suabian possessions to Wurtemberg and Baden, and received the
territory of Salzburg as a Ismail indemnification. Bavaria and Wiir-
WAR OF THE THIRD COALITION. 201
temberg were made kingdoms. The peace entailed on the House of
Austria the loss of one-fifth of its territory and of nearly all the out-
lets to the sea. No peace was concluded by Napoleon with England
and Russia.
291. Additional Results of the Battle of Austerlitz. —
(a.) Immediately after the battle of Austerlitz, Napoleon issued a
decree from the palace of Schoenbrunn at Vienna that i ' the Royal
House of Naples had ceased to reign." A Russo-English expedition
which had landed at Naples, withdrew. Joseph, Napoleon's eldest
brother, was proclaimed King of Naples, whilst the Bourbons retired
to the island of Sicily.
(b.) The Batavian Republic was changed into a kingdom, and
Louis, Napoleon's third brother, proclaimed King of Holland.
(c.) Cleve and Berg (the latter ceded by Bavaria) , were joined
into the Grand Duchy of Berg, and given to Murat, Napoleon's
brother-in-law.
(d.) In Germany Napoleon organized the Confederacy of the
Rhine which gradually came to include all the German States except
Austria, Prussia, Brunswick, and electoral Hesse. It was an alliance
under the protectorate of Napoleon, offensive and defensive in per-
petuity. The Confederation had to furnish the Emperor an army
of 63,000 men. Francis I. of Austria (1806-1835) now formally
abdicated the crown of the Holy Roman Empire.
Napoleon at once began to arrange a number of family alliances in order
to consolidate his power by the intermarriage of his relatives with older
dynasties. Thus Eugene the Viceroy married a daughter of the King of
Bavaria; Louis of Holland was compelled by his brother to marry Hor-
tense, daughter of Josephine; the Emperor's brother Jerome had to
dismiss his American wife (Miss Patterson), and marry a princess of Wiir-
temberg.
Lanfrey, v. 2.— Lockhart. — W. O'C. Morris; Napoleon.— Lives of Pitt.— W. C. Rus-
sell: Nelson and the Naval Supremacy of England — Capt. Mali an: Life of Nelson. —
James-Chamler: Naval Hist, of Great Brit. 1793-1820. — Robert A. O' Byrne: James'
Naval Hist, epitomized in one Vol. — J. R. Seeley: Life and Times of St ein. — Bryce :
The Holy Roman Empire. — Oscar Browning; Queen Caroline of Naples, 1803-1806; E.
H. R. 2. 4.— Mtmoirs de General Baron de Marbot, I. (Genes, Austerlitz, Eylan.)
202 THE ERA OF NAPOLEON I. - 1800-1815.
THE WAR WITH PRUSSIA AND RUSSIA. — 1806-1807.
292. Causes. — '• To conquer England on the Continent " was henceforth
Napoleon's settled policy. To this end he bid Prussia close her rivers
against England. He garrisoned half of Germany with French troops and
allowed Murat to seize additional towns. He secretly prevented the forma-
tion of the northern Confederacy under Prussia's leadership which he himself
had proposed to Frederic William. He added the galling indignity of offer-
ing the restitution of Hanover to England, without even consulting Prussia,
if England would abandon the defense of Sicily. Whilst he thus treated the
government of Prussia with unfeigned contempt, he roused the hatred of the
Prussian people by an act of international violence, the seizure and execu-
tion of a peaceful citizen, Palm, at Nuremberg, for publishing an attack
against him. Prussia's King, with his habitual indecision, was still nego-
tiating in Paris and arming at home, when Napoleon appeared in Germany.
Prussia had only two allies, distant Russia, which voluntarily offered her
aid, and Saxony, which was coerced into cooperation by a Prussian invasion.
The Cabinet was undecided. England, angered at the annexation of Han-
over, kept aloof.
293. Jena and Auerstadt, 18O6. — The Prussian army con-
centrated on the Saale in Thuringia under the Duke of Bruns-
wick. The commander had grown old ; the army was badly drilled ;
the officers, arrogant and insubordinate, overrated their own
strength and underrated that of the French. They were quickly
undeceived. The Prussian advance under Prince Ludwrig Ferdinand
was defeated by the French at Saalfeld (October 10), the Prince
himself killed. Napoleon now crossed the Saale, and by blowing up
the magazines of Naumburg announced to the King of Prussia that
he was in his rear. The decisive battle — the double battle at Jena and
Auerstadt — was fought October 1 3 . Napoleon's heavy artillery being
yet thirty-six hours in the rear, he planted his light guns on a rock
which the Prussians had deemed inaccessible, and which commanded
the battle field. The impetuosity of Murat 's cavalry broke up the
main army of the Prussians after a brave resistance. On the road
to Weimar the routed Prussians met their comrades fleeing from
Auerstadt; 20,000 Prussians were killed or taken, 300 guns,
seventy generals and sixty standards captured. The Duke of
Brunswick received a wound in the face of which he died the fol-
lowing month.
THE WAR WITH PRUSSIA AND RUSSIA. 1806-1807 . 203
The routed divisions fell an easy prey to the French pursuers. Whole
regiments were captured by the way. Prince Eugene of Wurteuberg sur-
rendered with 16,000 men at Halle; the Prince of Hohenlohe with 20,000
men at Prenzlau. The brave General Bliicher lost 4,000 prisoners at Lii-
beck, and had to surrender on the Danish frontiers. The Prussian fortresses
with few exceptions fell with incredible rapidity. The king fled to Koenigs-
berg followed by the remnants of his army.
294. The Berlin Decrees 18O7. — In the flush of victory and power
Napoleon issued his famous " Berlin Decrees," by which he intended to deal
a deadly blow to English commerce. All European ports were closed to
British trade, all English goods were confiscated wherever found; all
Englishmen that could be seized were made prisoners of war. This " Con-
tinental System," could not, however, be well maintained. It affected the
personal comforts of millions Smuggling, bribery, evasions of every sort,
practiced or connived at by officials high and low, not excepting Napoleon's
brothers, frustrated its efficiency
295. The Russian Campaign — Eylavi and Friedland,
18O7. — In the meantime the Russians were collecting on the banks
of the Vistula. By way of preparation for the impending struggle,
Napoleon levied heavy contributions of men and money in the con-
quered provinces. He concluded an alliance with the Elector of
Saxony, who joined the Rhenish Confederacy as King of Saxony.
By appeals to their patriotism and by numerous proclamations he
called the Poles to arms, and was received by them with indescribable
enthusiasm, though he gave them no formal promise of liberation.
Leaving Murat at Warsaw, Napoleon crossed the Vistula and pursued
the Russians who retreated to Pultusk. Here several bloody engage-
ments were fought. The severity of the season, however, soon
forced the parties to seek winter quarters. Early in February, Napo-
leon was stirred out of his winter quarters by Russians under Ben-
ingsen, marching from Koenigsberg to the relief of Danzig and other
forts still held by the Prussians. Napoleon met the united Russians
and Prussians on the frozen plains of Eylau in a murderous two days'
battle (October 7 and 8). The Prussians defeated the right wing of
the French under Davoust, but Napoleon remained master of the
battlefield and stayed long enough to see the enemy withdraw
toward Koenigsberg, whereupon he returned into winter quarters.
Operations being resumed in May, Danzig, in spite of its brave
resistance, was captured by the French. After various maneuvers the
204 THE ERA OF NAPOLEON I. — 1800-1815.
decisive blow was struck at Friedland on the Aller, June 14. By his
masterly movements Napoleon drew the whole Russian army from
their sheltered position on the eastern bank to the western, where
they were at his mercy. In broken columns the Russians retreated
to the Niemen.
296 The Meeting of Tilsit. — On June 21st Beningseu demanded and
obtained a truce On the 25th the Emperors of France and Russia met on a
raft moored in the Niemen near Tilsit. The two sovereigns seemed to pass
in a moment from open war to the most friendly relations. The import of
their long private interview has never been revealed, but there is little
doubt that they virtually divided Europe between themselves; Alexander
leaving a free hand to Napoleon as to Spain, Portugal and England, whilst
he was to count on equal forbearance in the North and in Turkey. To save
appearances King Frederic William was then invited to an interview and
also to the Treaty of Peace, but was treated with cold civility.
297. Peace of Tilsit between France and Russia, July 7 ;
between France and Prussia, July 9, 18O7. — (a.) The eastern
cessions of Prussia, including whatever Frederic II. had annexed in
the second and third Partitions of Poland, were erected into the Grand
Duchy of Warsaw and bestowed on the King of Saxony, except
Danzig which became a free city, and a part of West Prussia which
was ceded to Russia.
(b.) Russia recognized the Napoleonic kings and the Confederacy
of the Rhine, which now included all Germany save the Austrian,
Prussian, and Danish lands. In a secret treaty Alexander ceded the
Ionian islands to France, and concluded a defensive and offensive
alliance with Napoleon against England in case the latter should
reject the proffered peace.
(c.) The western cessions of Prussia, the lands between the Elbe
and the Rhine were placed at Napoleon's disposal, and were, with a
few exceptions, united into the kingdom of Westphalia and given to
Jerome Bonaparte, Napoleon's youngest brother, the seventh king
created by the conqueror. Prussia had to reduce its army to
42,000 men and to join the Continental System until the conclusion
of a peace with England
By a supplementary treaty at Koenigsberg it was settled that the French
would continue to occupy the Prussian provinces and fortresses until Prussia
should have paid her war indemnities in full. Prussia placed the arrears at
THE PENINSULAR WAR AND ITS COMPLICATIONS. 205
19,000,000; the French demanded 120,000,000, arid in 1808, 140,000,000.
Until evacuation occurred, Prussia, reduced to one -half of her size, had to
support 140,000 French troops. Prussia employed the time of her weakness
and humiliation to reform her administration and army. The patriotic
Baron von Stein freed industry, abolished serfdom, and reformed the man-
agement of public finances. Scharnhorst quietly reorganized the army on
the basis of universal military service without increasing the active strength
of the army beyond the number allowed by Napoleon. For as soon as a batch
of recruits were sufficiently drilled, they were quietly sent home and replaced
by others.
Lanfrey, v. 3-4. — Lockhart. — M arbot : Memoirs. — Seeley's Stein. — Minister v. Stein,
E. R., '56, 1. — Seeley : Prussian History; Macmillan's Mag. \. 36, p. 342.^-Kambaud: Hist
of Russia.— Rose : Nap. and Engl. Commerce, E. R. '8, 4.— Text of English Orders in Council
and Decrees, In Levi : Hist of British Commerce — Nap. and Alex. I., Q. R. '93, 4. — Albert
Vandal: Napoleon and Alexandre I., vol. 1. L' Alliance Russe.
THE PENINSULAR WAR AND ITS COMPLICATIONS.
298. Napoleon and the Smaller States. — Denmark had been summoned
by Napoleon to join the Continental System. In retaliation England sent a
powerful squadron to Copenhagen and without a declaration of war bom-
barded the city for three days, and carried off the Danish fleet. This un-
warranted action had the result of driving Denmark into Napoleon's arms,
whilst it furnished Russia with a plea to declare war against England
according to the secret understanding at Tilsit, and to occupy Finland.
In Italy the Kingdom of Etruria was taken possession of by Eugene the
Viceroy, because English merchandise had been allowed to enter Leghorn.
299. Spain and Portugal. — Portugal had refused to sub-
mit to the Berlin Decrees. To coerce it Napoleon desired the co-
operation of Spain. Spanish affairs at this junction were in a most
deplorable condition. Charles IV., the King, was a weakling ; his
dissolute Queen was swayed by her favorite, the upstart Godoy,
" the Prince of Peace." The Infante Ferdinand, the heir to the
throne, was leagued with the malcontents against his parents and
their hated minister. The distracted state of things afforded Napo-
leon an easy means of subduing not only Portugal, but Spain as
well. He lured Godoy into his toils by making him party to a
scheme of dividing Portugal between themselves and the Queen of
Etruria, whom he had just deprived of her kingdom in Italy. Ac-
cordingly in November, 1809, a French army under Junot, reinforced
206 THE ERA OF NAPOLEON I. 1800-1815.
by a Spanish contingent, entered Portugal. A few hours before
Junot appeared before Lisbon, John of Braganza, regent for his in-
sane mother, Maria, sought safety on English ships, and with the
royal family and treasures embarked for Brazil. Disgusted with
the cowardice of the royal house, the people suffered Junot to
take capital and kingdom almost without protest. Napoleon now
ignored his stipulated partition with Godoy, and simply decreed that
the House of Braganza had ceased to reign.
300. The Acquisition of Spain.— Soon after 100,000 French-
men under pretext of guarding the coasts against England, entered
Spain, seized, in a friendly country, all the strong places within their
reach, and by a concentric movement pushed their way towards
Madrid. A suspicion that the King and Queen were preparing to
leave the country caused an insurrection at Aranjuez. Godoy was
captured by the infuriated populace, but succeeded in effecting his
escape. In his fright, Charles IV. abdicated in favor of his son,
Ferdinand VII. While this home revolution was going on, the
French under Murat entered Madrid. Through his agents Napoleon
now persuaded Charles IV. to retract his abdication as obtained by
force. He next succeeded in enticing the royal pair, their sons,
Ferdinand and Don Carlos, and the Prince of Peace, to Bayonne,
where amid disgraceful scenes of family rancor he compelled them to
resign in his favor the throne of Spain. Only Don Carlos absolutely
refused to surrender his rights. The royal heads received in compen-
sation a few castles apd a yearly pension of 10,000,000 francs to be
paid out of the Spanish taxes. Joseph Bonaparte was proclaimed
King of Spain, whilst Murat took his place as King of Naples.
By rousing the mortal resistance of a patriotic nation Napoleon
embarked in an enterprise which ultimately led to his downfall.
301. The Rising of the Spaniards and Portuguese. — The
Spaniards everywhere rose almost simultaneously, nobles, peasants,
citizens, monks, priests, soldiers, vied with each other in patriotic
zeal. All partisans of Napoleon and Godoy, French residents and
soldiers, single or in detachments, were cut down without mercy.
Self-organized bodies or juntas assumed the conduct of affairs in
most cities and provinces, seized arsenals, armed the population and
THE PENINSULAR WAR AND ITS COMPLICATIONS. 207
decreed levies en masse. The army before Valencia was forced to
retreat. At Bay Ion Dupont was beaten and capitulated with 20,000
men. This defeat necessitated the evacuation of Madrid and the
flight of King Joseph. The siege of Saragossa, heroically defended
by the citizens under Jose Palafox, had to be raised. The French
armies retreated to the Ebro. Portugal had followed the example
of Spain. English aid was sought and obtained.
302. The English in the Peninsula. — In August, 1808,
14,000 English under Arthur Wellesley, afterwards Duke of Wel-
lington, landed at Oporto in Portugal. Junot advanced as far as
the Torres Vedras to drive him back into the sea, but was defeated
at Vimiero. By the Convention of Cintra the French army had to
evacuate the whole of Portugal. English ships conveyed them with
arms and baggage to French harbors.'
303. The Meeting at Erfurt — Napoleon hearing of the reverses in
Spain and Portugal perceived that his own presence there was necessary.
The disasters sustained by Ris armies had produced an indescribable sensa-
tion throughout Europe. Austria openly refused to acknowledge Joseph as
King of Spain and was arming secretly. All over Germany secret societies
(the u Tugendbund ") were forming for the purpose of driving out one day
their foreign oppressors. Napoleon arranged a meeting with Alexander I.
at Erfurt to show Europe the strength of his influence and to intimidate
Austria. The Emperor of Russia, four kings, and thirty-four ruling princes
paid homage to the conqueror. In the Treaty of Erfurt Alexander engaged
to co-operate with Napoleon against England and Austria, while Napoleon
undertook to support Alexander should Austria oppose the Russian occupa-
tion of the Danube Principalities.
304. Napoleon's Spanish Campaign. — Having detailed two
fresh levies of 80,000 men each to serve in Germany and Italy,
Napoleon crossed into Spain, whither he had already dispatched over
200,000 veterans. At Vittoria, disdaining the palace prepared for
him, he alighted at the first roadside inn, called for maps and re-
ports, and within two hours drew up his plan of attack. Three
Spanish armies of 100,000 men had formed a wide crescent resting
on the French frontiers. First the Spanish left was broken after a
few fierce onslaughts. Next the combined armies of the center at
Tudela were scattered to the winds. Then detain' ng Marshal Soult
to keep the English in check, Napoleon made for Madrid. In pass-
208 THE ERA OF NAPOLEON I. 1800-1815.
ing through the almost inaccessible denies of Somosierra he was
stopped by a corps of 12,000 men. Napoleon himself rode up into
the mouth of the pass to scan the situation ; seeing that his infantry
would be useless, he directed his Polish lancers to storm the batteries
and to clear the way. Madrid had prepared for a vigorous defense,
but was reduced after a siege of twenty-four hours. The victor
proclaimed a general amnesty with but a few exceptions, and by a
number of decrees suppressed the feudal rights, the Inquisition, the
custom house duties between the provinces, and one-third of the
monasteries. He then turned against Sir John Moore, who had
landed with 33,000 men in Portugal and crossed into Spain. But
seeing the English in retreat, he left them to Soult; Moore's retreat
to Corunna became an undisciplined rout. But at Corunna the En-
glish stood at bay and gave battle to Soult with the result that they
secured their embarkment for England. Moore fell mortally wounded
in the action which repelled the French attack on all hands.
Napoleon, meanwhile, returned to Paris before he had obtained a
lasting victory. The Emperor of Austria in distrust of Napoleon's
promises was preparing for war to prevent being swallowed up by
the Conqueror..
Saragossa fell in the second siege, February, 1809, after losing 50,000 men
in the two sieges. Palafox, its heroic defender, was retained a prisoner till
the Emperor's fall. The south of Spain remained practically uncouquered.
Lanfrey v. 3.— Lockhart. — B. Southey: Hist, of the Peninsular War. — H. R. Clinton;
Gen. Foy; Napier: Hist, of the War in the Peninsula. — F. Hamilton: Annals of the Penins.
Campaign.— Wellington in the Peninsula; Q. R. '67, 2 — Lives of the D. of Wellington, by
Brialmont-Gleig ; Hooper; Maxwell; Morris (Great Commanders); Roberts: (Rise of
JP.); Stacqueler; Williams; Wilson: (Illustr. Soldiers). —Rose: Channing and Den-
mark in 1807: E. H. R. 11. 1. — Wellington's Milit. Career: E. R. 38, 4; 39, 3; '59, 3.
62, 3. — Gen. Marbot. E. R. 92. 1.
§6.
THE WAR WITH AUSTRIA IN 1809.
3O5. Declaration of War,— Austria declared war April 6, 1809. The
rising of the Spaniards had encouraged Francis I. to attempt the recovery
of his lost possessions and to extricate himself from his perilous position
between two powerful foes, France and Russia. The country answered his
appeal with patriotic eagerness. Hundreds of thousands flocked to the
Hapsburg standard. The Hungarians, roused to enthusiasm by the Empress,
THE AVAR WITH AUSTRIA IN 1809. 209
sent 12,000 horsemen and 50,000 infantry. The people brought their cash
and their gold and silverware to cover the expenses. Archduke Charles,
who had reorganized the army, headed the main corps and invaded Bavaria.
A second army, under Archduke John, entered Italy and reckoned on the
support of the Tirolese. A third army under Archduke Ferdinand operated
against Russia by invading Poland and taking Warsaw.
306. The Campaign on the Upper Danube. — Napoleon
assumed the* conduct of the war in Germany at the head of 300-
000 men. His military genius never appeared more fertile in
resources than during the five days' battles in which, whilst repeat-
edly rectifying the blunders of his generals, he first defeated then
utterly routed the advance corps of Archduke Ludwig at Thaun,
Abensberg, Eckmiihl and Landshut, broke through the Austrian
center held by 100,000 under Archduke Charles, drove the fugitive
troops out of Ratisbon, and pushed the broken corps of the enemy
across the Danube and into Bohemia. Massena defeated the last
Austrian army that obstructed the way to Vienna, and Napoleon
appeared before the walls of the capital May 9, and received its
capitulation May 10th, after Archduke Maximilian had evacuated
the city. For the second time the Emperor of the French established
his headquarters at the Imperial palace of Schoenbrunn.
307. Napoleon's First Defeat at Aspern andEssling, May
21 and 22. — In Bohemia Archduke Charles promptly reunited
and recruited his armies, and recalled Ferdinand from Poland, and
John from Italy. Thus reinforced he advanced again to the Danube
opposite Vienna. To give him battle Napoleon transferred his men
to the island of Lobau and thence by a bridge of boats to the left
bank, and occupied the villages of Aspern and. Essling. Confident
of victory the Austrians rushed to the attack. For two days the
battle raged with unabated fury and gallantry on both sides ;
50,000 dead strewed the field. In the second night Napoleon deemed
it prudent to recross to Lobau to save his communication with
Vienna. It was his first defeat. Archduke Charles had won the
field, but his heavy losses prevented him from pursuing his advan-
tage.
308. Wagram, July 5th and 6th. — Napoleon's situation had
become critical. His absence and his defeat were animating the
14
210 THE ERA OF NAPOLEON I. 1800-1815.
risings of the subjugated peoples. Only a decisive victory at Vienna
could restore his prestige in the distance. Hence with indefatigable
activity he fortified his position at Lobau, accumulated forces from
all quarters and constructed a series of open bridges and hidden
floats, whereby to cross the Danube en masse. On July 4th, Napo-
leon made a great feint to cross on the open bridges. While the
Austrians in their strong redoubts were alert to dispute the passage,
Napoleon under cover of the following night threw his floats and rafts
across the river lower down and before dawn had flanked the enemy
and rendered their entrenchments useless. On July 6th, the two
greatest hosts of modern times, 350,000 disciplined soldiers, met on
the plain of Wagram in murderous strife. Napoleon won the day.
The Austrians retreated to Moravia ; at Znaim a truce was signed
with a view to a definite peace.
309. English Enterprises in Spain and Holland. — The peace negotia-
tions were retarded because both parties waited for the outcome of two
English expeditions, one to Spain, and one to Holland. Marshal Soult had
meanwhile conquered Portugal as far as Oporto. Here he was surprised
by Wellesley and forced to evacuate the kingdom. Wellesley advanced
toward Madrid with 50,000 English and Spanish soldiers, and defeated King
Joseph at Talavera. The victory made him Viscount Wellington. The
massing of French troops in his rear, however, caused his precipitate retreat
into Portugal. The second English expedition of nearly 1,000 vessels carry-
ing 40,000 men landed in the island of Walcheren. The capture of Flushing
was the only exploit of the armament which ended in complete failure.
The retreat of Wellington and the failure of the Walcheren expedition
brought the peace negotiations to an issue.
310. The Peace of Vienna. — The Peace of Vienna was con-
cluded on the basis of population. Austria ceded a population of
1,500,000 on the frontiers of Italy and Dalmatia to Napoleon; a
population of 2,000,000 souls in Galicia to be divided between
Saxony and Russia. Saxony received the lion's share, the Duchy
of Warsaw and all West Galicia, whilst only one district of East
Galicia went to Russia. This division, suggesting a possible revival
of Poland, roused the suspicions of Alexander I. The territory
ceded by Austria amounted to 32,000 square miles. The lands ad-
jacent to Illyria together with the Ionian Islands were formed by
Napoleon into the new State of the Illyrian Provinces, under Mar-
THE WAR WITH AUSTRIA IN 1809. 211
shal Marmont as Duke of Ragusa. Napoleon thus completed the
connection of Italy with his Illyrian possessions, obtained the entire
coast of the Adriatic and stripped Austria of her last seaport. The
Emperor was now at the summit of his power (1810-12). Holland
was annexed to France after the abdication and flight of King Louis,
who had refused to ruin his country by the Continental System. The
annexation to France of the Hansa towns, a part of Germany and
Switzerland, swelled the number of the French departments to 130.
311. The Rising of the Tyrolese 18O9-1O — When opening the campaign,
Archduke Charles had summoned the German people to take part in the
struggle against French supremacy. The Tyrol alone under the patriotic
leadership of Andreas Hofer answered the summons by a general rising. The
mountaineers seized the passes of the Alps. In a few days they cleared the
country of every French and Bavarian soldier. They repelled a French
invasion under General Lef evre and in their turn invaded Bavaria, all with-
out the aid of any regular troops. Left to the mercy of Napoleon in the
Peace of Vienna they continued the war with heroic courage, but were in
the end subdued by superior numbers. Andreas Hofer was captured, and
shot by the French at Mantua. The Tyrol was divided between Bavaria, the
kingdom of Italy and the Illyrian provinces.
312. The War in the Peninsula. — From the victorious field of the
Danube, Massena, now Prince of Essling, was sent to Portugal, where at
the head of 100,000 men he operated against the 50,000 English and Por-
tuguese under Wellington. The English commander retreated to the Torres
Vedras where he entrenched himself in an unassailable position, and secured
Lisbon and the adjacent territory against all attacks. The next spring
(1811) Wellington defeated Massena, and once more drove the French out
of Portugal. In Spain the guerrilla war continued, all the principal for-
tresses save Cadiz and Valencia were in the hands of the French, but they
could not count an inch of soil their own beyond the outposts of the forts.
The nation was unsubdued. After the deliverance of Portugal, Wellington
in 1812 captured the cities of Ciudad Roderigo and Badajoz., won the battle
of Salamanca, and entered Madrid. The superior strength of the French
forces, however, compelled him to fall back upon Ciudad Roderigo.
313. The Spanish Constitution of 1812. —The French
Revolution, the rotten administration of Godoy, and the demoraliza-
tion caused by the civil war, greatly changed the political views of
large sections of the Spanish people. When the Cortes were sum-
moned to Cadiz in 1810 to replace the incapable Central Junta, the
majority of its members were enthusiastic adherents of popular
212 THE EKA OF NAPOLKON I. 1800-1815.
sovereignty. In endless deliberations they worked out the misshapen
Constitution of 18 12 . In it the Cortes declared themselves independent
of the King who could neither summon, prorogue nor dissolve them.
A law passed in three successive sessions did not require royal
assent. If the King married or left the country without the consent
of the Cortes, he was considered as having abdicated. A Council of
State chosen from candidates presented by the Cortes had the
appointment of the judges and the ecclesiastical dignitaries. The
ministers were in the minutest details of their departments subject
to the supervision of the Cortes. The only clause which connected
Spain with its historical past, was the recognition of the Catholic
religion as the religion of the State. This Constitution was the work
of revolutionary doctrinaires. It did not represent the conviction of
the people. It plunged Spain into endless civil wars. By refusing
active and passive representation to the Spaniards living in the
colonies it contributed to the subsequent separation of the American
colonies from the Spanish crown.
Lanfrey, v. 3-4. — Kelly: Hist, of the House of Austria (Continuation of Coxe). — J.
C. Rope's Lectures. (4) on the First Nap. — Seeley's Stein. — 0. K. Hall: Life of Andrew
Hofer. — Memoirs of A. Hofer. — Hist. of A. Hofer, Quarterly Rev., July, 1817. - 2 he
Tyrolese in 1809, E. R. '27. — About Spain, see § 5, also, Gen. Vane: Story of the
Penins. War. —Gen. Jones : Journal of the Sieges in Spain. — Marbot's Memoirs, vol. II.
Madrid Essling Torres Vedras.
§7.
PIUS VII. AND NAPOLEON I.
314. The Prisoner of the Quirinal. — The grasping ambition of Napoleon
brought him into early conflict with the Sovereign Pontiff. Where he could,
Pius VII. yielded for the sake of peace, but on questions of right and prin-
ciple, he was inflexible. The common Father of Christendom, the guardian
of Christian morality and of the Patrimony of St. Peter could not join
the Continental System, nor sanction the spoliation of Naples, nor regard
-Napoleon's foes as his own; he could not resign the papal right to Ancona;
above all he could not give his sanction to the civil marriage and divorce
laws of the Code Napoleon, and to the Gallican liberties, nor could he com-
ply with Napoleon's demand to solve the bonds of matrimony between
Jerome Bonaparte and his lawful American wife. To intimidate Pius VII.
Napoleon in 1808 ordered General Miollis to occupy Rome. In dignified
reply the Pontiff declared that pending the occupation he would consider
himself a prisoner in the Quirinal and decline all negotiations. During this
PIUS VII. AND NAPOLEON I. 213
first year of his captivity, Pius VII. had to witness unheard of violences
in his dominions. Napoleon as " successor of Charles the Great" revoked
the donations of Pipin and Charles, and annexed the Duchies (Ancona,
Urbiiio, Macerato an* Camerino) to the kingdom of Italy. Cardinals and
bishops were banished, papal officials arrested, papal subjects sentenced to
death. Napoleon demanded the suppression of the religious orders, the
abolition of celibacy^tnd the erection of a French Patriarchate. Nothing
was left the Pontiff but to address an Encyclical of protest and remonstrance
to the Catholic world.
315. Destruction of the Papal States, 18O9. — May 17,
1809, Napoleon issued his decree from the palace of Schoenbrunn
which transformed the Papal States into French Departments, made
Rome the second city of the Empire, and assigned to the Pope a
salary of 2,000,000 francs and the possession of his palaces. On
June 10, whilst the cannon of St. Angelo announced the end of the
Papal government, Pius VII. signed a Bull of excommunication
against Napoleon and his agents without mentioning names. Na-
poleon made light of it. Even before the Bull was issued he wrote
to the Viceroy: " What does Pius VII. expect from denouncing me
to Christendom? Does he imagine that their arms will fall from the
hands of my soldiers? " On the night of July 5, General Radet in
pursuance of his orders, surrounded the Quirinal, scaled the walls,
forced the doors and disarmed the Swiss guard. Axe in hand he
entered the room where Pius VII. with Cardinals Consalvi and Pacca
awaited him, and demanded the immediate abdication of the Pope as
temporal ruler. The Pope firmly refused. Thereupon Pius VII.
accompanied only by his secretary Pacca, was conducted to a travel-
ing carriage, and removed from his capital. The same night, in
spite of the watchfulness of the French soldiery, the Bull of excom-
munication and the farewell address of Pius VII. to the Roman
people were affixed to the doors of the chief basilicas. The captive
Pope was conveyed under a military escort to Florence, to Turin,
thence to Grenoble in France and back to Savona. Here Cardinal
Pacca was separated from the Pontiff and confined in the Alpine
fortress of Fenestrella.
316. Napoleon's Divorce. — As early as 1796 Napoleon had
contracted a civil marriage with the widowed Josephine de Beau-
harnais. The marriage was most probably a valid union because in
214 THE ERA OF NAPOLEON I. 1800-1815.
1796 the recourse to a legitimate parish priest prescribed by the
Council of Trent was morally impossible. At the urgent solicitation
of Josephine, Cardinal Fesch performed a secret ecclesiastical cere-
mony on the eve of Napoleon's coronation (Dec. 1, 1804) to which the
Emperor assented for the sole purpose of appeasing the scruples of
his wife. This ceremony had no influence on the original marriage,
for in spite of this outward consent Napoleon was resolved not to
bind himself by the new ceremony. As Emperor of the French he
desired above all to have a lineal descendant, and Josephine was
childless. Having now, in 1809, reached the pinnacle of his power,
he considered the time arrived to sacrifice Josephine and to seek the
hand of Maria Louisa, daughter of Emperor Francis I. The Senate
granted the civil divorce without difficulty Dec. 16, 1809. But the
court of Vienna demanded an ecclesiastical decision about the
former marriage. The only competent authority to give the decision
in the case was the Pope. But Napoleon did not dare to submit the
question to his prisoner. Accordingly he laid the case before a
church court called the Officially of Paris. But as this court was
incompetent and its decision dictated not by canon law but by abject
servility to the Emperor, the divorce thus obtained was void of legal
force. It served, however, its purpose of calming the consciences
of the court of Vienna and its compliant Archbishop.
Napoleon invited the bishops and ordered the Cardinals to repair to Paris
in order to adorn by their presence the celebration of his victories and of
his marriage with the Habsburg princess. Consalvi and twelve other Car-
dinals absented themselves from the marriage festivities; in revenge
Napoleon confiscated their property, sent them into exile, and forbade them
to wear the insignia of their office. Hence the distinction between Black
and Red Cardinals.
317. The Prisoner of Savona, 18O9-1812. — Napoleon found in the
patience and gentleness of Pius VII. an insurmountable obstacle to
his plans. Though he cut down the number of bishoprics, suppressed
the monasteries, seized the property of the prelates who rejected the
Organic Articles, filled the dungeons of Feuestrella with churchmen, put
the Pope himself on a prisoner's allowance and compelled him to live
three years almost entirely on alms, Pius VII. could not be induced to
infringe the laws of the Church. He refused to install the bishops unlaw-
fully appointed by the Emperor. Napoleon next tried to work his will
through a National Council, «* My Council." This Council, dragooned into
THE RUSSIAN WAR, 1812. 215
obedience, empowered the Metropolitan to install the newly appointed
bishops, if the Pope would not do it within six months. Pius VII. con-
sented to this decree, provided the installation be performed in the name
of the Pope alone. Thereupon Napoleon declared in high dudgeon that he
would henceforward institute bishops without any papal interference, and
dissolved the Council without ceremony.
318. The Prisoner of Pontainebleau. — In 1812 Napoleon ordered Pius
VII., though he was dangerously sick, to be conveyed in disguise to Fon-
taiuebleau. Here Pius VII. encountered the last storm of persecution, face
to face with the persecutor, and after some painful wavering energetically
condemned the aggressions of Napoleon. Before long, however, the ruling
of a Higher Power decided the contest. Whilst Napoleon was on the way
to his tirst exile, Pius VII. made Ms triumphal progress through Italy to
Rome.
Chev. O'Clery: Hist, of the Italian Revol. ch. 2. — M. H. Allies: Life of Pope Pius
VII. — R. Parsons: The Pontificate of Pius VII.; The Pretended Divorces of Nap.
and Jerome Bonaparte, Studies v. 5. — Memoirs of Card. Pacca, Consalvi, Talleyrand (v.
2). — H. W. Wilberforce: The Church and Napoleon I.; Pius VII. at Savona and Fon-
tainebleau (the Church and the Empires}. — H. Chotard: Le Pape Pie VII. & Savone. —
On Nap. Divorce also Henri Welchinger.— Scannel: Pius VII. at Savona, D. K. '87. 3.—
Dubr, S. J. : Ehescheidung u. Zweite Ehe Nap , I. Th. Z., '88. — Napoleon's Ehescheidung>
bt. 38. — Imbert de St. Amand: (Josephine) Wife of the First Consul; Court of the
Empress; Happy Days of Maria Louisa. — Memoirs of M. Louisa. — Albert Vandal:
Napoleon et Alexandre I. Vol. II. L' Alliance Russe. Le Second Mariage de Nap.
Declin de V Alliance.
THE RUSSIAN WAR, 1812.
319. Causes. — Alexander I. saw in Napoleon's family alliance
with Austria a menace to his sovereignty in the North. The ex-
tension of the territory of Warsaw with an independent Poland
looming in the distance deeply rankled in his mind. Besides the
Continental System weighed heavily on Russia's commerce. Then
the annexation of the coast of Germany together with the Duchy of
Oldenburg increased his disaffection, for Oldenburg had been guaran-
teed in the Peace of Tilsit to Alexander's brother-in-law. In this
frame of mind he demanded the evacuation of Prussia by the French
armies. This demand was interpreted by Napoleon as a declaration
of war. Forthwith he summoned his royal vassals, among them the
Emperor of Austria and the King of Prussia, to Dresden, to make
sure of their support.
This undertaking indicates an ambition bordering on madness. Alexan-
der's grievances were easy of settlement by diplomacy. The distance and
216 THE ERA OF NAPOLEON I. 1800-1815.
climatic rigor of the seat of war, the difficulties of provisioning the army,
the necessity of carrying on two wars at the same time, and the restlessness
and hatred of the subdued nations whom he would have in his rear, were
strong reasons to induce him to find a pi acef ul solution of the difficulties.
But his mind was flxed. As if driven by a pursuing fatality he rushed into
his destruction.
320. Armaments and Preparation. — France, Italy, Germany, Switzer-
land, Holland, and Poland had to yield their levies in the aggregate of about
530,OCO men; 20,000 Prussians under York and 30,000 Austrians under
Schwarzenberg formed separate corps but displayed little activity through-
out the campaign. On the other hand, Sweden broke loose from France,
concluded an aggressive treaty with Russia and made peace with England
with which it had been at war at Napoleon's dictation. Through England's
mediation Alexander settled his dispute with Turkey and established the
Prutli and the Danube as southern boundaries. Thus disengaged from all
other entanglements, the whole armed power of Russia — about 260,000
men — was pitched against the power of Napoleon.
321. Invasion of Russia, Battle of Borodino, 1812. — In
June, 1812, " The Grand Army " crossed the Niemen, and Napo-
leon occupied Wilna in Lithuania. The Russian army accompanied
by the peasantry constantly retreated destroying whatever they could
not remove. The ensuing scarcity of provisions was still increased
by the failure of the Polish Jews to fulfill their army contracts, and
told terribly on man and beast. Still Napoleon hurried on.
August 17 he reached Smolensk and stormed the city. But the
retreating Russians delivered it to the flames. At last the Russians
began to clamor for a fight. Kutusow, the new commander, took his
stand at Borodino on the Moskwa. The shock was the most des-
perate that Napoleon had yet encountered. On Sept. 7, over
70,000 corpses covered the battle field. The defeated Russians
withdrew, Napoleon pursuing them to the very walls of Moscow.
322. The Burning of Moscow, September 16-2O. — The
city was at once deserted by all but the rabble and the convicts that
had been restored to liberty by the Governor, Rostopchin, before he
departed. Napoleon took up his residence in the ancient palace of
the Kremlin. For a short time his soldiers reveled in luxuries and
made immense booty. But in the night of the 16th, a series of con-
flagrations, laid by Rostopchin's agents, broke out, and raging for
four days reduced the city with its magnificent palaces, temples,
THE RUSSIAN WAR, 1812. 217
and monuments of art, to a heap of smoking ruins. Napoleon's
position became hourly more critical. His proposals for a truce
were ignored. The Russian hosts constantly reinforced by enthu-
siastic recruits, were thickening around him, and threatened to cut
him off from his magazines in Poland. A reverse suffered by Murat
finally induced Napoleon to retreat. His Grand Army had melted
down to little over 100,000.
323. The Retreat from Moscow. — The retreating French were followed
and incessantly harassed by Kutusow. Countless swarms of Kos sacks
hung around them by day and night. The roads were everywhere incum-
bered with abandoned artillery and booty and with the dying and the dead.
At several places the separate corps had to engage in desperate struggles to
check their pursuers. With November 6 began a season of unusually cold
weather which increased the hardships to the Grand Army beyond descrip-
tion. The arms literally fell from the hands of the soldiers. Of those who
had left Moscow, 40,000 effective men reached Smolensk. By his valor
against overwhelming numbers at Krasnoy Marshal Ney earned the title of
the "bravest of the brave " In the tragic crossing of the Berezina, Ney
and Oudinot with 8,500 men forced a passage against 25,000 Russians.
From this point the flight of the French became a disorganized rout. Soon
after the crossing of the Berezina Napoleon, hearing of a republican
rising in France, issued his last bulletin (No. 29) and hurried post- haste
to Paris, where he arrived unexpected December 18. The remnants of
the army continued their precipitous retreat. Of the old Imperial Guard
only 500 marched into Koenigsberg. According to official accounts 240,000
bodies of the French and their allies were interred in Russia. The Russians
claimed besides 100,000 prisoners. Schwarzenberg, after Napoleon's de-
parture, concluded a truce with the Russians, and General York, on his own
responsibility, a treaty of neutrality.
324. New Armaments. — Upon his arrival at home Napoleon
found the republican rising suppressed and its leaders executed. In
a short time he re-established his prestige, shaken by the reverses of
his Russian campaign. By drawing regiments from Spain and Italy
and by new levies in France he obtained an available force of 350,000
men with which he contemplated dealing a blow to his enemies that
would at once replace him on the pinnacle of his former power.
E. Lebauine: Circumstantial Narrative of the Campaign in Russia — Joyneville:
Alexander I. — Rambaud's Russia. — Ct. de Segur: Hist, of the Expedition to Russia. —
J. Phillppart: Northern Campaigns, 1712-13. — Earl Stanhope: The French Retreat
from Moscow; Hist. Essays. — E. R., '67, 4. — Imb. de St. Amand: Marie Louise; De-
cadence of the Empire. — Albert Vandal: Napoleon et Alexandre I., vol. III.; La Rup-
ture. — Henri Welchinger: Le Marechal Ney.
218 THE ERA OF NAPOLEON I. 1800-1815.
§9.
THE GREAT WAR OF LIBERATION, 1813.
325. New Alliances. — The year 1813 brought a great shifting of European
alliances. The treaty of Kalish, February 3, reunited Russia and Prussia in
a defensive and offensive alliance, which later in the year was subsidized
by England. England and Sweden concluded a subsidy treaty, England
pledging herself to pay 1,000,000 rix dollars, and Bernadotte, to take the
field against his former chief with 30,000 men. Marshal Bernadotte had
been adopted by Sweden as crown prince, in the absence of an heir to
Charles XIII. Frederic William III. appealed to his army and people. In
response two armies sprang into existence; the regular army quietly re-
organized by Scharnhorst, and the "Landwehr" or volunteer corps.
Hamburg for a short time threw off the yoke of the foreigner, but was fear-
fully punished by Davoust for her defection. Part of the Russian forces
entered Silesia. Many Prussian fortresses, however, were still in French
possession.
326. Opening of the Campaign; Bautzen. — In March, the
Russians under Wittgenstein (Kutusow had lately died), and the
Prussians under Bliicher occupied Dresden. The French army and
the confederate forces concentrated in Franconia, Thuringia, and on
the Elbe. Unexpectedly attacked by the allies at Liitzen, Napoleon
with his old skill rearranged the position of his troops and forced
the enemy to withdraw upon Leipsic and Dresden, and thence to
Bautzen. After a short stay in Dresden the Emperor followed up
the allies, stormed them out of their strong position at Bautzen,
though with fearful loss to himself, and drove them into Silesia.
327. The Congress of Prague and Its Consequences. —
Austria now stepped forward as mediator. Upon her proposal,
Napoleon granted a truce and consented to a diplomatic Congress
at Prague, whilst military preparations continued on both sides.
Against the advice of his ministers and generals, the Emperor of the
French rejected all overtures of the Powers until it was too late.
The truce ended August 10. Austria at length signed an offensive
and defensive alliance with Russia and Prussia for the restoration
of the Austrian and Prussian monarchies to the condition of 1805.
(Treaty of Teplitz, ratified September 9.) The allies supported
by English subsidies placed three armies in the field : the Bohemian
army, Austrians, Russians, and Prussians, commanded by Schwarzen-
THE GREAT WAR OF LIBERATION, 1813. '219
berg, and accompanied by the three monarchs, Alexander I., Francis
I., and Frederic William III. ; the Silesian army, Russians and
Prussians under Bliicher ; and the Northern army, Swedes, Russians
and Prussians under Bernadotte. These armies were grouped in a
wide circle around Napoleon's center at Dresden. The military
talents of General Moreau, who had returned from his American
exile, were engaged by Alexander I.
328. Battle of Dresden, August 26-27. — Hostilities were
reopened at once. At Grossbeeren, Oudinot and Regnier were
defeated by Biilow who, in consequence, saved Berlin. Bliicher de-
feated Macdonald on the river Katzbach near Wahlstadt, and there-
by earned a marshal's staff and the title of Prince of Wahlstadt. By
the soldiers he was dubbed " Marshal Forward." These French
reverses were somewhat retrieved by Napoleon's last great victory
in Germany, at Dresden. The whole army of Bohemia, 200,000
men, had swooped down upon Dresden. But Napoleon on the first
day checked them with smaller numbers, and concentrating mean-
while 200,000 men, completely defeated them on the second day,
and drove them back into Bohemia. The allies left 8,000 dead on
the field, and 20,000 prisoners in Napoleon's hand, and lost their
best general, Moreau. But fortune shifted again. Vendome
while too hot in pursuit was captured with 8 or 10,000 men. A
week later Marshal Ney in his attempt to capture Berlin was
defeated at Dennewitz.
329. Battle of Leipsic, October 16-19. — The next movements
of the armies were maneuvers for position. Bavaria being guar-
anteed its possessions, withdrew from the Confederacy of the Rhine
and joined the allies. The allies then endeavored to unite in
Napoleon's rear and thus cut off his retreat. To frustrate such a
junction Napoleon concentrated his forces for a crushing blow at
Leipsic. But he himself was crushed beneath the overwhelming
numbers of his enraged enemies and his power broken in this great
battle of nations struggling for liberation.
On the first day of the battle the allies outnumbered the French by nearly
100,000. To the south of the city Napoleon and his generals held their
ground against Schwarzenberg. In the north, Marmont was driven by
220 THE ERA OF NAPOLEON I. 1800-1815.
Bliicher closer to walls of Leipsic. The second day was a day of rest.
Napoleon offered peace to Francis I. with g^reat sacrifices. He received
no answer from his father-in-law. In the evening all the allied armies,
increased by the arrival of Beruadotte and the Russian reserves, united.
They now stood 300,000 against 130,000 French. On the third day the
battle raged from morning to night without intermission. Where Napoleon
commanded, the French held their ground to the eud. But in the north
Marmont and Ney who had to contend against the superior forces of Bliicher
and Bernadotte, were suddenly crippled by the defection of 10,000 Saxons
who in the thick of the fight turned their cannon against their comrades.
With the wane of day Napoleon saw his last hopes vanish, and at midnight
began his retreat. On the last day when the French were tiling through
Leipsic the allies stormed the city. The King of Saxony was sent a prisoner
to Berlin. The premature blowing up, by mistake, of the Elster bridge,
hurled several thousand Frenchmen to a watery grave, among them the
gallant Prince Poniatowski, and cut off the retreat of 25,,000 men who
became prisoners of war. Napoleon, beating back his pursuers on his
retreat, crossed the Rhine at Mainz with 70,000 men, the remnants of his
great army. He arrived in Paris November 9.
330. Immediate Consequences. — The Illyrian Provinces
were conquered and Italy was invaded by Austria. The kingdom
of Westphalia and other Napoleonic creations in Germany collapsed,
except in a few places where the French garrisons maintained them-
selves. The Confederacy of the Rhine was dissolved, and its mem-
bers joined the allies. The Dutch expelled the French officials,
Biilow conquered Holland and the House of Orange returned from
England. Norway was separated from Denmark, which had preserved
its alliance with France, and united with Sweden. This union was
the price paid to Bernadotte for joining the Alliance. Murat, King
of Naples, surrendered his fleet to England, and promised Austria
his co-operation in Italy against Napoleon.
331. The Loss of Spain, 1813. — The withdrawal of a large
number of troops, under Marshal Soult, from Spain, in February
1813, had considerably weakened Napoleon's hold on the Peninsula.
In June Wellington defeated King Joseph and Jourdan, Soult 's
successor, in the battle of Vittoria. Joseph fled to France. In July
Soult, who had returned with reinforcements, was repulsed by
Wellington at the foot of the Pyrenees. After the Spaniards had
taken Pampeluna in October, Wellington crossed the frontiers,
THE FALL OF NAPOLEOtt. 221
defeated Soult on French ground and forced him to retreat to
Bayonne. To secure himself against Spain, Napoleon released
Ferdinand VII. from his confinement at Valencay, and acknowl-
edged him as King of Spain and the Indies. But the Cortes refused
to accept a peace which did not include England. Still pursuing
Soult, Wellington, in March, 1814, occupied Bordeaux, the first city
that again unfurled the standard of the Bourbons.
Seeley's Stein. — J. Mitchell: The Fall of Napoleon. — Gleig: The Leipsic Campaign;
Mem. of Prince Metternich. — J . Philippart: Campaign in Germany and France, 1813;
Marshal Davoust: E. R. '86, 3. — Camille Rousset: Souvenirs du Marechal Macdonald. —
L. de Lanzac de Labourie: La Domination Franqaise en Belgique, 1795-1814.
§10.
THE FALL OF NAPOLEON.
332. Campaign in France. — The allies offered Napoleon a
peace which would have secured the Alps and the Rhine as the
boundaries of France. Napoleon rejected the offer and obtained
from the Senate a new levy of 300,000 men. Under these circum-
stances the allies invaded France with 200,000 men. Schwarzenberg
and Bliicher defeated Napoleon at La Rothier. But when the victors
separated to facilitate provisioning, Napoleon with astonishing bold-
ness hurled himself on the forces of Bliicher and defeated him in
four battles. Then turning like a flash upon the main army under
Schwarzenberg he won the two victories* of Nangis and Montereau.
Again the allies offered peace at Chatillon, but emboldened by his
successes Napoleon raised his demands beyond the endurance of the
Powers. %
333. The Fall of Paris, March. — In the progress of the
war, Oudinot and Macdonald were defeated at Bar-sur-Aube, and
Napoleon himself at Laon by Bliicher, and at Arcis by Schwarzen-
berg. Whilst the Emperor conceived the plan of throwing himself
in the rear of the enemy and raising the populace, the allies marched
directly upon Paris. Maria Louisa, the regent, with the Imperial
Prince, " the King of Rome," fled to Blois. Marmont and Mortiers,
defeated in the neighborhood of the city, threw themselves into the
capital which they bravely defended for a few days. But the storm-
222 THE ERA OF NAPOLEON I. 1800-1815.
ing of Montmartre, the southern outworks of Paris, by the allies, de-
cided the fate of the capital. The marshals capitulated against free
departure, and on March 31, the allied monarchs and their armies
entered the capital of France.
334. Napoleon's Abdication. — Upon the motion of Talley-
rand, who, in the course of a long life, betrayed every cause he had
espoused, the Senate decreed that Napoleon and his family had for-
feited the throne of France. The fallen Emperor was abandoned
by his marshals at Fontainebleau, the last prison of Pius VII.
He finally abdicated for himself and his heirs, and received
the island of Elba as a sovereign principality and an annual
pension of 2,000,000 francs to be paid by France. Maria Louisa,
who was never again to see her husband, received the Duchy of
Parma. Both retained the Imperial title. Louis XVIII., the
brother of Louis XVI., was placed on the throne of France. By
his title he recognized the rights of the unfortunate son of
his murdered brother. Louis XVIII. concluded with the allies
the first Peace of Paris, in which France retained, on the whole, the
boundaries of 1792. He then published a Charter which called for
a Chamber of Peers appointed by the king, and a Chamber of Deputies
chosen by limited suffrage, and which made of France a constitu-
tional monarchy.
335. Congress of Vienna, 1814-1815. — To rearrange European relations,
the Congress of Vienna met in September, 1814. The Emperors of Austria
and Russia, the Kings of Denmark, Prussia, Bavaria, and Wiirtemberg, and
numerous German princes were present in person. Austria, France, Great
Britain, Prussia, and Russia, the Powers who had concluded the Peace of
Paris, formed a closer union among themselves under the name t Pentarchy
of the Great Powers. For special cases Spain, Portugal, Sweden, etc., were
also admitted. Distinguished among the representatives were Metternich,
of Austria, who presided over the deliberations, Cardinal Consalvi, the repre-
sentative of the Holy See, Talleyrand, Wellington. But the deliberations
were hampered by endless dissensions among the contracting Powers. For a
time it looked as if the peacemakers were going to war among themselves
over the distribution of the spoils. Russia demanded all Poland, Prussia
all Saxony. Against these demands Austria, France, and England concluded
a secret alliance. The news of these quarrels and the growing dissatisfac-
tion in France over the new order of things inspired Napoleon with the bold
attempt to reclaim his forfeited throne.
THE FALL OF NAPOLEON. 223
336. Napoleon's Return and the Hundred Days. — After
a stay of ten months Napoleon left his exile at Elba on the approach
of spring, 1815, and landed at Cannes with about 1,000 veterans.
His advance towards Paris, unpromising at the start, soon became
a triumphal progress. One general after the other sent against him,
chief among them Marshal Ney, joined his standard. Louis XVIII.
fled to Ghent. Napoleon having regained his empire without
shedding a drop of blood re-entered the Tuileries amid the rapturous
applause of his adherents.
At once he applied himself to re-establish his power at home and abroad.
He sent 17,000 men into the Vendee to check a general insurrection against
him led by the Marquis de la Rochejaquelein. In two months he raised 80,000,-
000 francs. Setting all the foundries at work he filled the arsenals and fort-
resses, which had been stripped by the allies of 12,000 pieces of cannon, with
complete equipments for 220,000 men. His actual force in June numbered
200,000. In the civil organization of the country he only partly succeeded.
Substantial citizens declined to take office or seats in the Chamber; factional
strife ran high; the new deputies had a will of their own and evinced a
strong determination to overrule the Emperor. In one point he failed
completely, in his efforts to re-establish diplomatic relations with the Powers.
Their representatives at Vienna on March 13 issued a declaration of out-
lawry against hiin. The allies still retained nearly a million of men in /the
field, 700,000 of whom were at once detailed for a second invasion of France.
Before the decisive campaign began, Murat, who had again declared for
Napoleon, was defeated by the Austrians at Tolentiuo and fled to France.
Ferdinand was reinstated as King of Naples. Appointing his brother
Joseph as regent, Napoleon left Paris, June 12, for the Belgian frontier, where
he was expected by Blucher and Wellington.
337. Campaign of Waterloo, June 14-18. — The plan of campaign drawn
up by Napoleon is universally conceded to be the work of a military genius.
But during these four days he was suffering from the recurrence of a
malady which at times incapacitated him for physical and mental exertion.
Thus several lengthy fits of drowsiness caused a series of delays in the
operations of the army which in their aggregate ruined the campaign.
On June 14, Napoleon forced back the Prussians under Ziethen in the
engagement of Charleroi. On the 15th Napoleon defeated Blucher at
Ligny. It was Napoleon's last victory. Blucher retreated to Wavre.
On the 16th Marshal Ney was defeated by the Prince of Orange at
Quatre-Bras. Napoleon meanwhile sent Grouchy to engage Blucher at
Wavre. There Grouchy fell in with a corps of Thieleman, which, by
224 THE ERA OF NAPOLEON I. 1800-1815.
a singular mistake, he mistook for the whole 'Prussiun army, whilst
Bliieher was on his way to join Wellington. Under the impression
that he had prevented the union of Wellington and Bliieher, Napoleon
hurled himself upon Wellington's British and German forces at
Waterloo. By the afternoon of the 18th Wellington's troops, though
still holding their ground, had suffered so heavily that the day was
saved only by Bliieher' 8 arrival. The two armies uniting completely
defeated, routed, and scattered the army of Napoleon, who withdrew
from the battle field in a dazed condition surrounded by a square of
his faithful guards.
338. Napoleon's Last Years — His Character— Second Restoration. —
Napoleon reached Paris June 21st. The Chamber was in an uproar. For
the second time Napoleon abdicated, in favor of his son. Wellington and
Bliieher entered Paris July 7, Napoleon fled to Rochefort and failing in his
attempt to embark for America surrendered to the British admiral Hotham.
An English man-of-war, in pursuance of the unanimous resolve of the
allies, conveyed him to the island rock of St. Helena. Here he lived, on
the whole, in dignified seclusion, writing his memoirs, receiving stray
visitors, and returning to the religious practices of his earliest youth. He
died after receiving the last sacraments May 5th, 1821.
Napoleon was small in stature and somewhat corpulent, his face square,
and his smile uncommonly winning. In spite of his carelessness in dress
and a certain awkwardness of bearing, he had a rare power of fascinating
those with whom he came into closer contact. The greatness of his fame
rests on his military career, his administrative genius, his providence in
council and untiring energy in execution, and his almost incredible capacity
for work. He was the idol of the army both for his personal intrepidity,
which was of the highest order, and for his readiness to reward merit
wherever he saw it. In fact, the facility with which he opened splendid
careers to talents of every kind, was a chief element of his power. This
readiness, however, had its root in the leading trait of his character,
intense selfishness. Untruthfulness, duplicity, sovereign contempt for the
most solemn obligations, public and private, became habitual with him.
His bulletins from the seats of war were filled with exaggerations and
falsehoods. uTo lie like a bulletin," became a popular proverb. He could
be petty, mean, fawning, or haughty, cruel, ferocious, as his self-interest
required it. Whilst sensitive to individual misery, he was careless of
human suffering at large and reckless of slaughter. This selfishness made
him a despot at home and a conqueror abroad whose aim was universal
domination. All the world, including his royal brothers, were to be the
slaves of military France, and France, the slave of her Emperor.
The same unbounded selfishness guided him in his dealings with the
THE UNITED STATES AND THE EUROPEAN REVOLUTION. 225
Church, her dignitaries and laws ; they had to bend to his will, to serve his
interests or to break in his grip. It was only when an overruling Provi-
dence had sent him to a solitary rock in mid-ocean, that he was once more
drawn to the religion which he had so bitterly persecuted.
Louis XVIII. was restored to the throne. In the second Peace of Paris
(Nov. 20), France was reduced to the boundaries of 1790, had to pay a war
indemnity of 700,000,000 francs and to restore the art treasures amassed in
Paris from almost every country of Europe. Murat, who made a reckless
attempt to recover his kingdom by landing in Calabria, was court-martialed
and shot. The fugitive Marshal Ney was captured in the south of France
and executed December 7.
Campbell: Nap. at Fontaiiiebleau and Elba. — Lamartine : Hist, of the Restoration. —
G. Hooper: Waterloo. — Gardner: Quatre- Bras, Ligny, and Waterloo. — W. Siborne:
Hist, of the War in France and Belgium, 1815. — Gleig: Story of the B of Waterloo. —
W. O'C. Morris: The Campaign of 1815. — Also E. H. R., 10, 1.— Ropes: The Campaign
of Waterloo. — Wolseley : Decline and Fall of N. — Guizot : Memoirs of My Time. — Mem.
of Prince Talleyrand. — Lives of Talleyrand by Blennerhasset; Clarke; McHarg. —
Ct. de las Casas: Life, Exile, and Conversations of Nap. — Montholon ; W. Forsyth:
Hist, of the Captivity of Nap.— Nap. Memoirs, dictated at St. Helena.— R. C. Seaton:
Sir Hudson Lowe and Napoleon. — E. B. O'Meara : Nap. in Exile. — Irabert de St. Amand :
Marie Louise; The Invasion of 1814; The Island of Elba; The Hundred Days. — Henri
Welchinger: Le Hoi de Home, 1811-1832.
§11.
THE UNITED STATES AND THE EUROPEAN REVOLUTION.
339. Washington and the Revolution. — The French Revolu-
tion was at first hailed with delight by all parties in the United States.
When, however, the anarchical elements in France grew daily bolder,
the Federalists began to turn away. The Republicans (Democrats),
on the contrary, the successors of the Ant i -Federalists under the
leadership of Jefferson, clung more 'closely to the French Revolution
and revived the old calumny as to the "monarchical" tend-
encies of the Federalists. Washington with a firm hand prevented
the young Republic becoming entangled with the French Terrorists,
and issued April 22, 1793, his celebrated Proclamation of Neutrality,
notwithstanding the violent rage of the Republican press against the
measure. About the same time " citizen Genet," the representative
of the French Convention, appeared on our shores. From the first,
Genet assumed the character of a master. The United States was
to be an ally of France. He formally called upon the Republicans
to oppose the administration under his leadership even though Wash-
15
226 THE ERA OF NAPOLEON I. 1800-1815.
ington was tit the head of it. He made use of American harbors to
fit out privateers against England. He declared that the United
States were bound by the former treaties with France. The admin-
istration answered that it was not bound by an agreement with a gov-
ernment which the Revolution had overthrown, and maintained its
neutrality. Washington demanded the recall of Genet and concluded
a treaty with England in 1795 which secured to America the long
desired evacuation of the Northwestern posts by the English. But
these two measures increased the tension between France and
America. Whilst the difficulty was still pending, Washington's
second term approached its close and he established a precedent for
the future by refusing a third term though it was offered him by all
parties. It is one of the great merits of his administration that he
saved the United States from complicity in the French Revolution.
The difficulty with France came to a head under the administration
of the Federalist,, John Adams (1797-1801). During the latter
half of 1798, a state of war without a declaration of war existed
between the Unite4 States and the French Directory. Whilst the Di-
rectory ordered the seizure of American cargoes, Congress formally
abolished the treaties with France, formed an army and increased
the navy. Napoleon Bonaparte, as First Consul, restored in 1799
the friendly 'relations between the two countries.
340. The Louisiana Purchase. — Spain in 1800 ceded the
whole of Louisiana to France. Jefferson well understood the dan-
gers threatening the Union if the mouth of the Mississippi were to
remain in the hands of a foreign Power. His negotiations with
Napoleon, begun in 1801, came the following year to a successful
issue. Napoleon ceded the whole of Louisiana to the United States
for $15,000,000.
341. Causes of the War of 1812. — Owing to the war between Napoleon
and England, the merchant flag of almost every belligerent save England
disappeared from the sea; and since 1803 the carrying trade of Europe was,
for a time, in American hands. The products of the French colonies were
conveyed in American vessels to the United States, and then shipped to
France as American property. England grew jealous of this thriving trade.
She had not yet recognized the principles of the Armed Neutrality of 1780.
Accordingly American ships were seized on the high seas and condemned
for carrying enemy's goods. Moreover the growth of American shipping
THE UNITED STATES AND THE EUROPEAN REVOLUTION. 227
had stimulated desertions from the British service, and these desertions led
to the vigorous exercise of the right of search and imprisonment which was
extended even to American waters. Although almost every deserter carried
papers of American citizenship, yet England held that the allegiance of her
subjects could not be transferred, and that American naturalization was
worthless. Thus grievances accumulated on either side.
342. Embargo and Non-intervention. — By his Berlin Decree, in No-
vember, 1806, Napoleon prohibited the introduction into France and her
dependencies of British goods whether in her own ships or those of other
nations. England retorted by an Order in Council, forbidding any trade in
neutral vessels, unless they had first paid duties on their cargoes in some
British port. Thereupon Napoleon, in his Milan Decree, declared every
vessel a lawful prize that submitted to the English demands. These pro-
ceedings placed America between two fires and well-nigh destroyed her trade.
Unwilling to go to war, Jefferson experimented with retaliatory measures.
First he gave his sanction to a law which proposed to defend our harbors
with some worthless gunboats. Then in 1807 he signed the Embargo Act
which forbade all American vessels to leave American ports. He had hoped
the act would bring the European Powers to terms, but it resulted only in
offending England and France without doing them any perceptible harm.
The chief sufferers were the Americans themselves. Accordingly the act
was repealed in 1809, and replaced by the Non- intercourse Act, which
simply forbade trade with England and France. The law authorized the
President to suspend this prohibition in favor of Great Britain or of France,
as soon as the one or the other should desist from violating neutral rights.
343. Outbreak of the War. — The whole situation was
changed when Napoleon in August, 1810, announced his intention
to revoke on November 1 the Decrees of Berlin and Milan, if either
England rescinded her Orders in Councilor 4;The United States
caused their rights to be respected by England." The announce-
ment was a farce from the beginning, but the Americans took it in
all seriousness. " To cause American rights to be respected,"
the government of Madison (1809-1817) withdrew the name of
France from the Non-intercourse Act, and permanently broke off all
trade with England. This measure barred the door against any
peaceful settlement with England. Popular agitation kept alive by
Henry Clay, John C. Calhoun and others, a new school of young
Republican leaders, called for war with England. It was declared
by Congress June 18, although the United States had not more than
eighteen ships to send against England's magnificent fleet of 1,000
sail.
228 THE ERA OF NAPOLEON I. 1800-1815.
344. The Lake Erie Campaign. — The war opened dis-
astrously for the United States, by the surrender of Detroit
and Michigan, 1812. To relieve this disaster, General Harrison,
who had ended an Indian war in the Northwest by his victory
on the Tippecanoe river (1811) was appointed commander-in-chief
of the Western army. The splendid co-operation of an American
flotilla on Lake Erie under Captain Oliver H. Perry opened Detroit
to General Harrison. Perry defeated Barclay's English squadron
off Put-in-Bay island, and, reinforced by the captured ships, con-
veyed Harrison's troops from the American to the Canada side. In
a number of successful engagements the Americans regained posses-
sion of Detroit and the whole of Michigan and added to it a portion
of Western Canada.
An attempt to invade Canada in 1812 — two abortive invasions (burning
of Toronto and temporary capture of Fort George; which caused the Cana-
dians to retaliate by the devastation of the Niagara frontier and the burn-
ing of Buffalo in 1813 — the successful defense of Fort Erie, held by the
Americans, and young Macdonough's naval victory on Lake Champlain in
1814, constitute the history of the campaign on the New York borders.
345. At Sea. — While the army on the frontier was accomplish-
ing little, the warships were winning victory after victory at sea.
The ships built for the American navy were the best of their class.
Most of the officers, carefully selected, had received an excellent
training in Preble's squadron before Tripoli, when the United States
waged war with the pirates of the Barbary coast, and gained the
freedom of the Mediterranean (1801-1805). The losses which the
navy suffered were caused by superior forces ; only three ships were
lost in an equal fight. But the unprecedented number of American
victories at sea in 1812 and 13 caused a great excitement in En-
gland, and in Europe generally. The British began to be cautious ;
instead of seeking open conflicts, they reinforced their blockading
squadron on the Chesapeake, and in 1814 declared a blockade of the
whole Atlantic coast. Regular squadrons were detailed to keep a
single American frigate cooped up in some port, whilst others landed
raiding parties and captured a few coast towns.
346. Destruction of Washington. — In July, 1814, an ex-
pedition carrying 4,000 veterans of Wellington's army under Ross
arrived from Bermuda in the Chesapeake Bay. They landed in
THE UNITED STATES AND THE EUROPEAN REVOLUTION. 229
Maryland and having routed 5,000 hastily collected militia and volun-
teers they marched upon Washington, which was then a straggling
village of about 2,000 inhabitants, and since 1800 the national
capital. They burnt the capitol with its documents and congres-
sional library as well as other buildings, public and private, and then
withdrew to their ships. On a second landing they sacked Alexan-
dria. General Ross fell shortly after in an unsuccessful attempt to
capture Baltimore.
347. Battle of New Orleans, January 8, 1815. — When
the allies had compelled Napoleon to retire to the island of Elba,
England sent fresh forces to America. An army of 12,000 of Wel-
lington's veterans was secretly dispatched to New Orleans. The
defense was intrusted to General Jackson, fresh from his first cam-
paign against the Indians of the Mississippi valley (Creek War,
1813—14). Pakenham's English army crept up almost unopposed
but not unobserved to Jackson's lines in the neighborhood of New
Orleans. The Americans stood 5,000, of whom less than 1,000 were
regulars, against 10,000 assailants. Pakenham's attempt to storm
Jackson's entrenchment resulted in a bloody defeat. Pakenham,
two other generals, 2,600 men fell on the British side, while the
Americans had only eight killed and thirteen wounded. Lambert,
the only remaining general, retreated hastily and abandoned the ex-
pedition. A few days later the news arrived that peace had been
signed at Ghent, December 24, 1814.
348. The Peace of Ghent. — The Treaty of Ghent provided
for Commissions to run the boundaries as determined by previous
treaties. The treaty ignored the causes of the war. But Great
Britain tacitly withdrew from her opposition to the principles
of maritime neutrality, allowed her Orders in Council to lapse and
never again advanced the claim of search and impressment against
the United States.
Histories of the TJ. S. — Lives of Washington, Ch. 8, § 2.— Me Master' s History
of the People of the U. St. , v. II.-I V.— Von Hoist : Constit. and Polit. Hist, of the U. St., v. 1 —
L. Rosenthal: America and France.— H. Adams: Hist, of the U. St. (Adm. of Jefferson
and Adams). — Maclay: Hist, of the U. St. Navy. — Roosevelt : Naval War of 1812.—
R. Johnson: Hist, of the War of 1812-15. — Soley: The Wars of the U. S. (Narrat. and
Critic. Hist.)— Williams: Invasion and Capture of Washington. — Walker: Jackson and
New Orleans. — Glelg: Campaigns of the Brit. Army at Wash, and N. Or/.— Stanley
Lane-Poole: The Barbary Corsairs (Story of Nations Series).
230 THE ERA OF NAPOLEON I. 1800-1815.
§ 12.
ACTS OF THE CONGRESS OF VIENNA.
349. Spirit of the Congress. — The principles which guided the delibera-
tions at Vienna did not differ much from the policy of the Revolution or
of Napoleon. The governments that prided themselves in their legitimacy
respected neither historical rights, nor the just demands of the patriotic
people, who had voluntarily taken up arms to free the fatherland. The
Catholic Church in Germany obtained no justice or restitution for the
gigantic robbery committed in 1803. All that Cardinal Consalvi in the
name of Pius VII. could do was to enter before Congress a solemn protest
against this injustice.
350. The German Confederacy. — -The Holy Roman Empire
was replaced by a loose Confederacy which secured the semblance
of unity, but allowed almost complete independence to the separate
States. It numbered thirty-eight members, among them the Em-
peror of Austria for his German provinces, the Kings of Prussia, of
Hanover, of Saxony, who retained Dresden and about half of his
dominions, of Bavaria, of Wiirtemberg ; a number of minor sov-
ereign princes, and the free cities of Frankfort, Liibeck, Hamburg,
and Bremen. Denmark voted in the Diet for Holstein, etc., and
the Netherlands for Limburg and Luxemburg. The leadership natu-
rally fell to Austria.
351. Austria. — Austria recovered her Italian possessions, the
kingdoms of Dalmatia and Illyria, Salzburg, the Tyrol, and Galicia.
352. Russia. — Russia obtained the greater part of the Grand
Duchy of Warsaw as the Kingdom of Poland, of which Alexander
became the King, giving it a Constitution. Cracow was made a free
State under the protection of the three conterminous Powers, Russia,
Austria, and Prussia.
353. Prussia. — Prussia received its former possessions in West-
phalia and new territories on the left bank of the Rhine, the greater
part of Saxony and the smaller part of Warsaw with the city of
Danzig. Adding to these larger tracts a number of minor territories
obtained in the way of exchange, Prussia was restored to a some-
what smaller area but a larger population than it had possessed in
1805, whilst its influence increased by the new possessions beyond
the Rhine which brought her in contact with France.
ACTS OF THE CONGRESS OF VIENNA. 231
354. England. — England retained Malta, Heligoland, which it
had taken from the Danes, a portion of the French and Dutch colonies,
and the protectorate over the seven Ionian islands.
355. Other States. — In Spain the Bourbon dynasty was re-
stored in the person of Ferdinand VII. The former Republic of
Holland (minus East Friesland, which went to Hanover), and the
Austrian Netherlands, though conflicting in religion, language, char-
acter and material interests, were united into the one kingdom of
the Netherlands under the Stadtholder of the House of Orange as
King William I. Sweden retained Norway with a constitution of its
own. By the accession of Geneva, Wallis, and Neufchatel (the
latter under Prussian suzerainty), Switzerland was increased to 22
Cantons, each enjoying home rule, and was declared permanently
neutral.
356. The Arrangements in Italy. — The arrangements made
concerning Italy (with the exception of Rome and Genoa) were more
in accordance with justice and long-standing treaties than those in
the northern countries. The States of the Church were restored
with two exceptions. The river Po was made the boundary between
the States of the Church and Austria, which gave a few square miles
of Papal territory to Austria ; the territories of Avignon and
Venaissin were assigned to France. Austria was also allowed the
right of garrison in Ferrara and Commachio on the plea of self-
defense. Victor Emmanuel I., king of Sardinia, was restored to his
kingdom of Savoy and Piedmont, to which was added — much to
the disgust of the Genoese — the Republic of Genoa as a Duchy.
Ferdinand IV. of Naples, after the defeat of Murat and the close of
the Congress, was placed over his former possessions under the title
of Ferdinand I., King of the two Sicilies.
The Duchy of Parma was conferred for life on the ex-Empress
Maria Louisa. No State was assigned to the Imperial Prince, but -he
received private estates in Bohemia and the title of Duke of Reich-
stadt. Tuscany was restored to its Grand Duke Ferdinand of Aus-
tria, and Modena to Archduke Francis, the heir of the House of
Este.
357. The Position of Austria in Italy. — Austria obtained in
the Congress Lombardy and Venetia under the title of the Lombardo-
232 THE ERA OF NAPOLEON I. 1800-1815.
Venetian Kingdom. Independently of the Congress Metternich
concluded private treaties with the members of the younger side-
lines of Austria in Tuscany and Modena for mutual defense, and an
engagement of very questionable wisdom with the Kings of Sardinia
and Naples, by which Victor Emmanuel and Ferdinand I. pledged
themselves to do nothing in their respective kingdoms contrary to
the political system adopted by Austria in the Lombardo-Venetian
Kingdom. These arrangements gave Austria a pre-eminence in
Italy.
The arrangements of the Congress of Vienna were approved at the
time by the vast majority of the Italians themselves. When Murat in
March, 1815, unfurled his flag against Austria and invaded central Italy with
40,000 men to form a kingdom of United Italy, he found no aid or encour-
agement among the inhabitants. The restored sovereigns were hailed with
joy and pleasure by the people. Later, however, the preponderance of
Austria gave rise and color to the war cry of the Italian Revolutionists :
War to the Foreigners !
358. The Holy Alliance. — Upon the suggestion of Alexander
I., the Holy Alliance was founded in September, 1815. It was
theoretically an intimate union on a basis of Christian morality and
religion, inspired by the tremendous events of the late years, and
comprising at first Russia, Austria, Prussia, later also France. The
Holy See and England refused to join this alliance. Pius VII. ex-
pected nothing from a semi-religious league whose members were so
widely apart in their religious principles, and in fact, the non-Catholic
members continued to persecute and oppress the Church, as they had
done before. The union very soon degenerated into a military ma-
chine for the protection of dynastic interests and monarchical abso-
lutism. The Decrees of Vienna regulated for the next forty years
the relations of the European States.
E. Hertslet: The Map of Europe by Treaty. — Corresp. of Prince Talleyrand with
Louis X VIII. during the Congress of Vienna. — Mettemich's Memoirs — Arrangements for
Italy: -Chev. O'Clery, ch. 2, pp. 94-109.
General Works for the Period. — Alison : History of Europe, 1789-1815. — Epi-
tome of Alison's Hist.— Walter Scott: Life of Napoleon. — Thiers: Hist, of the Consulate
and Empire. —Monis: The French Revol. and the First Empire. — H. Martin: Popular
Hist, of France fr. the First Revol. — Seeley: Short Hist, of Nap. — W. O'Morris: Na-
poleon.— J. C. Ropes: The First Napoleon. — Headly: Napoteon and His Marshals.—
Other Lives by Home, Jomini; Masson (N. at Home) ; Sloane. — H. Morse Stephens:
Europe, 1789-1815. — J. H. Rose: The Revolutionary and Napoleonic Era, 1789-181<>.
(Cambridge Hist. Series). — Captain A. T. Mahan: Influence of Sea Power upon the
French Revol. and Empire.
THE ERA OF NAPOLEON I. 1800-1815.
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v
CHAPTER in.
CATHOLIC EMANCIPATION IN GEE AT BRITAIN.
§ l.
RELIEF BILLS — INSURRECTION OF" '98"— THE UNION.
359. First Irish Relief Acts. — The ferocious penal laws of England
and Ireland reached their full maturity in the first fourteen years of George
III. Catholics had neither social nor legal standing in Great Britain. The
Irish Parliament itself , Protestant though it was, had become subject to the
English Parliament and the Privy Council. But the impending conflict with
America (1774) made it a matter of policy to conciliate the Irish Catholics.
Accordingly the government procured the passing of an act of condescen-
sion in the Irish Parliament enabling the Irish Catholics to testify their
allegiance to his Majesty.
The first real Relief Act was passed in 1778, when the Franco-
American alliance frightened Lord North's ministry into new con-
cessions. Under the leadership of the great orator Grattan, the
Irish Parliament passed an act which abolished the penal laws as far
as they disabled Catholics from purchasing, holding, and transferring
landed property, 1778. The withdrawal of all regular troops from
Ireland necessitated by the American war, gave the Irish Parliament
a welcome opportunity of creating an army of volunteers under Lord
Edward Fitzgerald, for the defense of the country against a French
invasion. With this army to back him, Grattan, the Parliamentary
leader, demanded and obtained from England an independent Irish
Parliament.
360. English Relief Act — Lord Gordon Riots. — The
year 1778 brought also the first Relief Act to the Catholics of Eng-
land. The English Act declared it expedient to repeal the clauses
of William III. against the prelates, clergymen, and school teachers,
and to restore to Catholics the right of acquiring property by pur-
chase and will. But when an extension of the English Relief Act
(245)
246 CATHOLIC EMANCIPATION IN GREAT BRITAIN.
to Scotland was proposed, a violent storm of Protestant intolerance
burst over the country. The Scotch Presbyterians rose against the
very notion of relief to Catholics. In Glasgow and Edinburgh the
mob destroyed Catholic chapels in 1778. In England, a Protestant
Association was formed on the model of the Solemn League and
Covenant, to prevent further concessions to Catholics and to bring
about the repeal of the Relief Act. The agitation, led by Lord
George Gordon, the narrow-minded president of the Association,
and fed by the inflammatory speeches of John Wesley and other
Methodist firebrands in 1779, led to the Gordon riots of 1780. For
five days London was at the mercy of an infuriated mob.
The chapels of the foreign ambassadors and other places of Catholic
worship, with their altars, sacred vestments, libraries, documents, and fur-
niture, piled up in the streets, were delivered to the flames. The houses
of Catholics or their Protestant friends were burned down or looted, among
them the residences of Lord North, of Sir George Savile who had carried
the Relief Act, of Lord Mansfield, who, as Lord Chief Justice, had put every
available obstacle in the way of the conviction of priests. Edmund Burke,
the defender of Catholics in Parliamant, had to flee for his life. The chief
prisons of London were broken into and the prisoners released. Drunk-
enness added to the horror. On January 7, 200 persons were shot dead in
the streets and 250 more were lying in the hospitals. All this time the
authorities were supinely inactive. Only when the King himself ordered
the troops to act without waiting for directions from the civil magistrates,
did the riots cease, January 8. As Lord Gordon had lost control over his
adherents from the outset of the riots, he was acquitted of high treason.
361. The Belief Act of 1791. — The alarm which the French
Revolution roused in England again quickened the desire of the
government to promote as far as possible peace and union in the
realm, and led to the substantial Relief Act of 1791, which abolished
for Catholics the oath of supremacy, and the declaration against
Transubstantiation ; it legalized the public worship of the Catholic
Church, opened Catholic schools, admitted Catholics to the bar, and
removed a number of other disabilities. Similar relief was extended
to Scotland.
A better feeling between Catholics and Protestants than had ever existed
since the days of the Reformation, was brought about by the emigrant priests
who crowded to the English shores to escape the persecution of revolution-
ary France. English society from the court downward, including the Angli-
RELIEF BILLS INSURRECTION- THE UNION. 247
can clergy, contributed to the support of these Confessors of the Faith, whose
modest bearing and good example under extreme privations helped to re-
move anti-Catholic prejudices.
362. Causes of the Irish Insurrection of 1798. — In spite
of the independence achieved in 1782, the Irish Parliament was
still a most anomalous body. Of its 300 members 200 were borough
members, whose election was controlled by less than 100 men. The
Catholics — three-fourths of the population — could neither vote for
nor sit in Parliament. The Lord-Lieutenant was responsible only to
the English government. The army of volunteers withered away under
the intrigues of the Viceroys and the inactivity of Grattan. To
remedy these evils, Wolfe Tone, a Presbyterian, founded the Society
of United Irishmen.
Their object was originally a peaceful one : to bring about a Par-
liamentary reform by a union of Catholics and Protestants. It was
Pitt who drove them into rebellion. To baffle their aims, he first
granted to the Irish Catholics the illusory right of voting for mem-
bers but not of sitting in Parliament. The victories of the French
armies at Toulon and along the whole line over the, English called
a temporary halt to this policy. The result was the appointment of
Fitzwilliams, who had freely identified himself with the hopes of the
Catholics and Reformers, as Lord-Lieutenant. But his high sense of
justice and impartiality to all alike did not please the government,
and he was speedily recalled to make room for the Party of the ' c Prot-
estant Ascendency " and the murderous Orange Society, which had
been founded for setting Catholic and Protestant at daggers drawn.
The recall of Fitzwilliams, amidst the consternation of the country,
induced the United Irishmen to meet in secret, bind themselves by
oath, arm and fix their eyes on France. After the recall of Fitz-
williams Wolfe Tone appealed to France for aid. The French ex-
pedition under Hoche to Bantry Bay was prevented from landing
by stress of weather.
363. The Insurrection of 1798. — The measures resorted to
by Castlereagh, Fitzwilliams' successor, to goad the Irish people into
insurrection, were plenary powers given to the country gentlemen
and the Orange lodges to flog, torture, kill, violate, burn at their
248 CATHOLIC EMANCIPATION IN GREAT BRITAIN.
heart's content. Neither age nor sex nor acknowledged innocence
afforded protection. The only crime which the objects of this
ruthless persecution were charged with, was a profession of the
Catholic faith, or, in the case of Protestants, political sympathy with
the Catholics. Priests who had sternly opposed the United Irish
Society, had to suffer similar outrages. The insurrection which was
called forth by these measures was confined almost wholly to the
provinces of Leinster and Connaught. Wexford was the chief seat
of resistance, and held for four weeks army after army at bay. The
cowardice of the instigators was as great as their cruelty ; again and
again large bodies of them fled before a small number of ill-armed
Irish peasants. • It took 150,000 men under Cornwallis, and cost
30,000 lives to suppress the civil war so wantonly provoked ; but it
served its purpose, for it hastened Pitt's favorite measure, the Par-
liamentary Union of England and Ireland. Most of the Irish lead-
ers who survived the contest died on the gallows, in prison, or in
exile.
3G4. The Union. — Pitt at once took up the question of the
Union. The insurrection had removed the national leaders. By a
system of wholesale bribery Pitt strove to gain over the Irish Parlia-
ment to his measure, More than 1,000,OOOZ. was spent by the gov-
ernment to carry the act. Places, offices, and peerages were lavishly
distributed. Owners of Irish boroughs were compensated at the rate
of 15,OOOL a seat. To obtain the moral support of the Catholics,
Pitt entered into a0 pledge promulgated all over Ireland in the form
of a printed speech in which Catholics were promised admission to
Parliament. The Irish Parliament of 1799 was not yet sufficiently
corrupted to pass the measure. But in the last Irish Parliament of
1800 the union with England was carried by a majority of sixty.
The Act of Union took effect January 1, 1801.
The attempt of Robert Emmet in 1803 to surprise the Castle, rouse Dub-
lin and destroy the Union, had the only result of sending Emmet to the
gallows, and causing a new reign of terror to be inflicted on Ireland.
365. The Catholics Deceived. — It was now the time for Pitt
to fulfill his pledge. But George III. had been made to consider
the admission of Catholics to Parliament as incompatible with his
DANIEL O'CONNELL AND THE CATHOLIC EMANCIPATION. 249
coronation oath. The idea of Catholic Emancipation so preyed on
George's mind as to cause a return of the "king's illness " — insanity.
Pitt availed himself of the occasion to hand in his resignation, a step
by which he escaped the disagreeable duty of making peaoe with
Napoleon. When, however, the reopening of the war between En-
gland and France brought Pitt back to office, he simply ignored his
former promises to the Irish Catholics.
After the failure of the Grattan Relief Bill of 1813, the emancipation
question began to lose ground. England's fears were calmed by the fall of
Napoleon. It was not till 1821 that the successful fight began which after
eight years of hard campaigning resulted in the victory of 1829.
W. J. Amherst, 8. J.: Hist, of Cath. Emancipation, 1771-1820.— J. Morris: Cath.
Engl. in Modern Times, M. '91. 3; '92; 1, 2. — Irish Hist., 1761-81, M. '82, 1.— Lilly:
Resurr. of Ireland, D. R. '82, 4. — W. J. O'Neill Daunt: Essays on Ireland; Ireland and
the LegisL Union; D. R. '83, 1. — Alex. J. F. Mills: The Gordon Riots. — Lecky, III, 13,
pp. 533-567. — L. Johnson: Gordon Riots; Cath. Truth Soc.; M. '93, 2. — John Wesley
a. the Rise of Methodism; D. R. '74, 3. — Bridgett: The Story of the French Exiles, D.
R. '87, 1; M. '87, 1. — Ireland 1760-1782, Lecky, IV., 16-17, pp. 520-606; 1782-1793, VI.,
24-25, pp. 301-610. — F. X. Plasse: Le Clerge Francois refugie en Angleterre.— The Irish
Rebellion, 1793-1801, Lecky, vol. VII. and VIII. (chief work on the period).— McCarthy :
Grattan. — Th. Moore: L. of Sir Ed. Fitzgerald; also E. R. 81, 3. —Barry O'Brien:
Wolfe's Autobiography. — Dr. Curry: Review of the Irish Civil War. — W. T. Fitz-
patrick • Secret Service under Pitt. — Thos. Reynolds : The Life of Thos. Reynolds (Sen.) :
Hist, of an Irish Informer in 1798.— On Irish Life, 1745-1833 see: Mrs. M. J. O'Con-
nel: The Last Colonel of the Irish Brigade. — Lilly : Irish Constit. of 1782: D. R. '89, 4;
The Jacobin Movement in Ireland, D. R. '91, 1. — Irish Affairs, 1793; D. R. '91, 1. — J.
Benner: Rise and Fall of Irish LegisL Independence; M. '83, 1. — A. Bushnell Hart:
Formation of the Union, 1760-1829. — Ingram; History of the LegisL Union, (English
view).— Thompson; The French Exped. to Ireland, 1798; D. R. '91,3. — Lives of Pitt.
§2.
DANIEL O'CONNELL AND THE CATHOLIC EMANCIPATION.
366. Daniel O'Connell. — Daniel O'Connell, a devout son of
his Church as well as an ardent patriot, fought as much for the freedom
of his country as of religion, but it was his strong religious convictions
that gave perseverance and success to his patriotism. His path was
strewn with difficulties. He had to overcome both the hostility of
the Protestants and the apathy of Catholics. Orangeism as a secret
society founded in 1795 was all-powerful. Its aim was to maintain
the ascendency of Protestantism in Ireland. It dominated the courts
of justice. The Catholics as a class were disheartened. But by
250 CATHOLIC EMANCIPATION IN GREAT BRITAIN.
his eloquence, his absolute disinterestedness and his defiant aggres-
siveness, which, however, always kept within the limits of law-abiding
agitation, O'Connell aroused, united and swayed the vast body of
Irish Catholics in the pursuit of a common purpose, as no other
leader before or after him has done. In 1823 he organized the wide-
spread Catholic Association which soon struck the government with
alarm. It was condemned by Parliament in 1825 as illegal. To
prevent English interference, O'Connell himself dissolved the organ-
ization. Still he continued to stir up Catholic public sentiment in
favor of his enterprise by restless activity and various forms of
public meetings.
367. The Clare Election. — In England there was a division
of sentiment concerning the Irish movement for freedom and justice.
Already in 1825, shortly after the dissolution of the Catholic Asso-
ciation, an Act of Emancipation had been discussed and passed in
the House of Commons, but was thrown out by the Lords. After
the formation of the Wellington ministry in 1828, Lord John Russell,
against the wish of the ministry, succeeded in repealing the Test and
Corporation Acts, as far as they compelled applicants for office and for
seats in Parliament to receive the communion in the Church of Eng-
land. In consequence Parliament was opened to all dissenters, but
remained barred to Catholics by the oath still in force against
Transubstantiation, which Russell did not propose to repeal. Taking
advantage of his right of election, O'Connell came before the people
of Clare as candidate for the House of Commons. He openly
declared that if elected he would present himself before Parliament
and claim his seat though he would decline and denounce the
infamous oath against the Holy Eucharist. The government strained
every nerve to elect its candidate, but O'Connell won by a tremendous
majority.
368. Catholic Emancipation, 1829. — Wellington new stood
before the alternative of granting Catholic Emancipation or risking
a civil war. It was in consequence of this dread and not for any
principle of truth and justice that Wellington and Mr. Peel decided
to bring in an act abolishing the civil and political disabilities of the
Catholics. To guard against treachery on the part of George IV.
DANIEL O'CONNELL AND THE CATHOLIC EMANCIPATION. 251
(1820—30) who was no friend of the Catholic cause, the ministers
secured a written authorization from him. Thus Catholic Eman-
cipation was carried in consequence of the Clare election, a few
days before O'Connell presented himself before the House. With
characteristic spite Robert Peel had inserted a clause by which only
those who had been elected after the passage of the act should be
benefited by it. The offensive oath was consequently tendered to
O'Connell, but sternly refused. A new writ had to be issued for
the county of Clare. But Peel's petty ingenuity only furnished
O'Connell the triumph of a second election.
The Emancipation Act opened Parliament and all offices, except those of
Regent, Lord Chancellor of England and Ireland, and Viceroy of Ireland, to
the Roman Catholics. An accompanying act disfranchised forty- shilling
freeholders who had been allowed to vote as long as their votes were given
to the landlords.
369. The Tithe War, 183O-38. — The Catholic Church was no
longer directly persecuted, but the Episcopal State Church of Ireland
was still supported by the tithes exacted at the point of the bayonet
from the impoverished Catholic peasantry. Whilst thousands of
Catholics were huddled together in miserable hovels to attend mass,
they had to pay their tithes to the Episcopalian clergyman whose
whole congregation often consisted of a solitary clerk. O'Connell's
dreaded eloquence in Parliament never rose to loftier flights than
when he branded this iniquitous system. He was strongly sup-
ported by public opinion in Ireland. As political meetings were
prohibited under successive Insurrection Acts, opposition to the
tithe system was organized at hurling matches. The opposition
produced a state of unrest close to civil strife. Down to the year
1833 the military force necessitated by the tithe war cost over a
million. The loss of life in exacting the tribute was enor-
mous. Parliamentary commission reports and temporary measures
followed in rapid succession, but the unjust principle was not touched
until the Irish tithe agitation crossed over into England, where the
same grievance existed. This brought matters to an issue. In 1836
Lord John Russell's tithe bill settled the question for England, that
of 1838 for Ireland. The payment of tithes was transferred from the
tenants to the landlords, and Parliament voted a quarter of a million
252 CATHOLIC EMANCIPATION IN GREAT BRITAIN.
for the extinction of arrears. The tithe war struck a blow at the
Established Church in Ireland • from which it never recovered. Its
consequence, at a later period, was the disestablishment of the Irish
Protestant Church.
37O. The Repeal Agitation. — O'Connell was less fortunate and suc-
cessful in his agitation for the repeal of the Union. True, he received the
warm support of Father Mathew's temperance movement. His own Sun-
day assemblies gradually swelled into monster meetings It is said that
at Tara, 250,000 persons listened to the bitter invectives of his impassioned
oratory. But when the government in 1843 proclaimed one of his meetings,
and massed large bodies of police and soldiery for the occasion, O'Connell
issued a proclamation of his own commanding obedience to authority, and
was obeyed. From the moment it became clear that O'Connell was firmly
set against methods of violence, the movement lost its force. Hotter heads,
the members of the " Young Ireland " party, became infected with the spirit
of the international revolution, and embittered the last years of the great
leader. Gradually secret societies took the place of open agitation. O'Con-
nell died in Genoa, May 15, 1847, on his way to Rome, where his heart is
enshrined in the chapel of the Irish College. The very failure of his repeal
agitation is an honor to his character. His renown as one of the greatest
figures in Irish history rests securely on his achievement of Catholic
Emancipation.
Lives of O'Connell. — J. Cannon O'Bourke-Gladstone: Century Life. — McGee:
(O'C. and his Friends).— Lecky: (Leaders of Public Op.). — Hamilton : (Statesmen
Series). — Phillips: (O'C. the Patriot). — Baumstark; (Germ.): McCarthy: A. C. Q.
v. 14.— Fitzpatrick: Correspondence of O'Connell; The Liberator; Ireland and O'Connell:
D. R. '75, 4.— Young Ireland and O'C.: M. '81. 1. — Perry Fitzgerald: When George
IV. was King: M. '80. 2-3 (Aug., p. 12, Sept., p. 80; Oct., p. 153; Nov., p. 305; Dec., p.
453) '81. 1. (Jan., p. 1; Feb., p. 153). — McCarthy: Ireland since the Union; Hist, of Our
Own Times; An Outline of Irish Hist.— F. J. Mathew: Father Mathew. — Slr Ch. Gavan
Duffey: Bird's- Eye View of Irish Hist.; Young Ireland (1840-1850). — O'Grady: Hist,
of Ireland, The Survival of Ireland, A. C. Q. 3. — R. Barry O'Brien: The Irish Agra-
rian War, 1788-1830: M, '82.1.
BOOK III.
THE EUROPEAN REVOLUTION.
CHAPTER I.
THE REVOLUTION OF THE BARRICADES.
§1.
FIRST OUTBREAKS.
371. The Carbonari. — Notwithstanding the victories of the combined
royal Powers, the revolutionary spirit continued to smoulder in the under-
ground plottings of secret societies, which, bursting forth into frequent
eruptions, characterize the coming period of history in Europe. Foremost
among the plotters were the Carbonari. This society had originated among
the mountaineers of Calabria and the Abbruzzi, who resented the rule of
Murat and rallied for i he restoration of Ferdinand. To disguise their ob-
ject they assumed the name of Carbonari or charcoal burners, and designated
their meetings as Vendite or Vente, i. e., sales. Their meetings were dis
persed by Murat. After the restoration the more turbulent of these Car
bonari, disaffected or disappointed under the reigning government, formed
a new association which, -owing to its efficient management, soon spread its
ramifications into every part of Italy and Sicily. Its local Vendite obeyed
a central committee established in each State and called the Alta Vendita.
The members of each local society, divided into several grades, were for the
most part unknown' to each other, and known only to the heads of the
Vendita. All communications, as a rule delivered orally, were carried on
through the Alta Vendita. The candidates had to take an oath of secrecy
and blind obedience, and to give themselves up, body and soul, to the
organization and its leaders. Disloyalty was punished with assassination.
Political murder was a recognized method of action of this society. The
object which the Carbonari strove to realize was the regeneration of a
united Italy on the basis of the anti-Christian Revolution.
372. First Outbreak in Spain and Portugal, 182O. — It
was not in Italy, however, but in Spain, that the first rising against
(253)
254 THE REVOLUTION OF THE BARRICADES.
the restored order of things occurred. On his return from French
captivity Ferdinand VII. of Spain had first accepted then abolished
the revolutionary Constitution of 1812. But being a worthless and
despotic king he lost in a short time the esteem of his people by
arbitrary imprisonments, irresponsible rule, and private scandals. A
military insurrection at Cadiz spread with incredible rapidity through
Spain and forced the king in March, 1820, to establish a Parliament
elected by universal suffrage and once more to grant the Constitution
of 1812.
Portugal at the same time overthrew the English rule under the
unpopular Lord Beresford and adopted a similar Constitution. John
VI. who had fled to Brazil was recalled and ratified the Constitution.
Dom Pedro, the eldest son of John VI., remained in Brazil. Brazil had
been declared an Empire when the royal family in 1808 had fled from Lisbon.
In 1821 the Portuguese Chambers resolved to reduce Brazil again to the state
of a colony. Thereupon Dom Pedro placed himself at the head of the peo-
ple, declared Brazil independent of Portugal, and assumed the imperial title
as Dom Pedro I.
373. The Rising in Italy. — After the Congress of Vienna, Pius
VII. and the governments of Sardinia and Sicily had entered upon a
course of reconstruction. Cardinal Consalvi retained many, of the
useful reforms introduced by the French administration and added new
ones. But the proceedings of the governments were too slow to
satisfy the revolutionary party. The news of the Spanish Revolution
was the signal for the first outbreak of the Carbonari in 1820. The
rising began in the Kingdom of Naples, where the insurgents were
joined by the regular troops commanded by Carbonari officers, and
took possession of Naples. The King resigned in favor of his son,
the Duke of Calabria who, as Ferdinand II., swore to a Constitution
which had been borrowed from Spain. During the convulsion on the
mainland the Sicilian Carbonari made an attempt to effect the inde-
pendence of their island, but the new government of Naples brought
them to submission by the bombardment of Palermo. The only ris-
ing in the Papal States, at Civita Vecchia, was quashed by the papal
troops and the loyalty of the people.
374. Suppression of the Italian Revolt, 1821. — Meanwhile
the sovereigns of the Holy Alliance, Austria, Russia, and Prussia,
FIRST OUTBREAKS. 255
made preparations to counteract the disturbances of the South. In the
Congress of Troppau, 1820, and of Laybach, 1821, they placed an
Austrian army at the disposal of Ferdinand II. of Naples, whilst the
Congress of Verona, 1822, took steps to suppress the risings in Spain
and Greece. In southern Italy the revolutionary army vanished
before the approach of the Austrians, who occupied Naples ; the
old form of government was restored. Whilst Naples was being
pacified, a revolution broke out in Piedmont. The center of revolt
was the Vendita of Alessandria. Through the treachery of a portion
of the army the Carbonari obtained possession of the citadels of
Alessandria and Turin, and demanded the Spanish Constitution.
Victor Emmanuel I. abdicated in favor of his brother Charles Felix,
who assembled an army of loyal regiments and with the aid of the
Austrians routed the revolutionists at Novara. The King entered
Turin and the Austrians occupied the fortresses to prevent a repeti-
tion of the treachery which had given Alessandria and Turin into the
hands of the Carbonari.
375. Results. — The rising of the Carbonari put a stop to the useful
reforms inaugurated by the Italian governments, 'as these were now forced
to fight for their very existence in the face of a secret society which had
undermined the army and the administration. It had strengthened, how-
ever, the Austrian influence which it had- sought to destroy. Their defeat
in Italy drove them to France where they established their headquarters
and became an international society with the fixed purpose to revolutionize
France and make her the base of operation against other governments.
In the period of tranquillity which followed the revolution of 1820 and
1821, the government of Pius VII. was followed by the energetic Pontificate
of Leo XII. (1823-1829) and the short rule of Pius VIII. (1829-1830).
376. Defection of the Spanish Colonies in America. —
The restrictions on commerce, navigation and industry and on the
tenure of office which Spain had imposed on its colonies for its own
selfish interests, had reared a growing opposition to the mother
country. The expulsion of the Jesuits and the spread of Free-
masonry served only to loosen the ties of allegiance. The example
and growing prosperity of the United States further encouraged the
spirit of republicanism. Finally the French conquest of Spain gave
the signal to unfurl the standard of independence. Since 1810
colony after colony severed its connection with Spain. It was in
25(5 THE REVOLUTION OF THE BARRICADES.
vain that Spain endeavored to recover her colonies. The very troops
she had levied to send to America turned against the home govern-
ment and started the revolution of 1820 at Cadiz. The death blow
to Spanish dominion was, however, dealt in the decisive battle of
Aayacucho, 1824, by the Liberator, Bolivar. This South American
hero became Dictator of Columbia, Peru, Bolivia, the republics he
had founded, and by the energetic use of his power provoked fresh
insurrections. From these revolutions and counter-revolutions
emerged the following republics of South and Central America :
Buenos Ay res which formed the Argentine Republic ; La Plata,
Uruguay, Paraguay, Chili, Peru, Bolivia, Columbia, which in 1821
split into the separate States of Venezuela, New Granada (now
Columbia in the narrow sense), and Ecuador. Cuba and Porto Rico
alone remained to Spain.
Mexico was severed from Spain in 1821 by General Iturbide who
in the following year proclaimed himself Emperor. But rival
generals deposed him and changed Mexico into a Republic. Itur-
bide was executed in 1824.
The history of these States forms a long succession of civil wars, pro-
nunciarnentos, military insurrections, alternate persecutions of or recon-
ciliations with the Church,, all resulting in social demoralization and financial
disasters.
377. The Revolution Suppressed in Spain. — The Con-
gress of Verona had decreed to aid the royal cause in Spain. In
pursuance of this decree the Duke of Angouleme entered Spain in
1823. So disgusted were the people with the misgovernment of the
radicals and their warfare against religion, that the French were
hailed as liberators. In Madrid the people destroyed every vestige
of the revolutionary government. The Cortes, who had fled with
Ferdinand VII. to Cadiz, were seized and dispersed, whereupon the
King, freed from their influence, revoked the Constitution of 1812
and the decrees against the Church which had been extorted from
him. The French occupation lasted till 1827.
378. Portugal. — In Portugal the revolutionary Chamber de-
prived the King of nearly all his powers, expelled the Queen, the
Patriarch of Lisbon, the Archbishop of Praga, and made numerous
FIRST OUTBREAKS. 257
confiscations of ecclesiastical and private property. Dom Miguel,
the younger son of John VI., a high-souled Catholic in principles
and life, at the head of his loyal regiments opposed the anarchical
doings of the revolutionists, restored order, and thereby earned the
implacable hatred of the Freemasons. Traitors in collusion with
Dom Pedro I. of Brazil, prevailed upon the weak King to send the
Infante Dom Miguel on foreign travels. In 1824, John VI. returned
to Brazil, where he died two years later — probably by violence —
after appointing a regency controlled by Dom Pedro. It was Dom
Pedro's aim to secure the succession in Portugal to his daughter,
Maria da Gloria. But the people, exasperated by the crimes of the
secret societies, clamored for Dom Miguel. The Cortes in 1828
proclaimed him King in conformity with the Portuguese hereditary
right. The Church was then restored to her rights and possessions.
379. War of Grecian Independence, 1821-29. — In 1821,
an insurrection broke out in the East among the 'Christian subjects
of the Ottoman Porte. The secret societies of the Hetaries had
since 1814 prepared the ground and furnished the fighters. The
rising started in Moldavia and Wallachia under the Grecian leader
Ypsilanti. He was defeated, fled across the Austrian frontiers, and
was for six years detained in an Austrian prison. For whilst
the popular sympathy of all Europe was for the Greeks, the
members of the Holy Alliance, for the sake of consistency and
from mutual jealousy, opposed the movement although it was
essentially different from the revolutionary risings in Italy and
Spain. The uprising of the Greeks caused Moslem attacks upon
the Christians in Constantinople and other Turkish cities and
horrible barbarities in the island of Chios, where 20,000 Chris-
tians were massacred, 47,000 sold into slavery, and a population
of 100,000 reduced to 20,000. The Greek leader Canares retaliated
in kind and burnt a part of the Turkish fleet. Thanks to the
assistance of the Philo-hellenists of England, France, Germany, and
America, the Greek patriots were enabled not only to maintain
themselves in Morea, but to extend the insurrection to Middle
Greece, Thessaly, and most of the islands. The movement, however,
became seriously endangered, when Mehemet Ali of Egypt sent his
(adopted) son Ibrahim Pasha with an army to Morea to conquer it
17
258 THE REVOLUTION OF THE BARRICADES.
for the Sultan. Morea was frightfully devastated. The strong
fortress of Missolonghi fell in 1826 after a most heroic resistance.
Public opinion in western Europe at length compelled France and
England to take interest in the struggling nation. The aggressive
Nicholas I. of Russia, who had succeeded his brother Alexander I.
in 1825, concluded an alliance with the two western Powers. To
put an end to the atrocities committed by the Moslem in Greece, the
allied admirals upon their own responsibility attacked and nearly
annihilated the Turkish fleet at Navarino, 1827. Nicholas continued
the war alone, until Turkey, in 1829, conceded the independence of
Greece in the Peace of Adrianople. In 1830 the London Conference
of the Guardian Powers declared Greece an independent kingdom.
A Bavarian Prince was settled on the throne as Otto I., 1832-1867.
Ohev. O'Olery: Hist, of the Italian EcvoL, ch. III.-VI. pp. 109-144. —Reuben Par-
sons : The Carbonari, Studies V.— Chateaubriand : The Congress of Vienna (Memoirs). —
J. Mooney: The Xevol. in the Sicilies: A. 0. Q. v. 16. — J. Butt: Hist, of Italy.—
Wrightson: Hist, of Mod. Italy. — Gallenga: Hist, of Piedmont. — Memoirs of Metternich.
Vol. III. 1816-1829.— Loughnan: Prince Metternich: M. '81, 2 (Aug., p. 556); 3 (p. 17);
Ed. R. 81, 1; Q. R., 80, 1— For Spain: Alison: Hist, of Europe, 1815-52.— Walpole: Hist,
of Engl. — Baumsturk : Zur Spanischen Frage. — Balmes : Politische Schriften. —
Gams: Kirchengesch. Spaniens. — Briick : Die Geheim. Gesellsch. in Spanien. — Gen. B.
Witre: The Emanc. of South Am. — Brownell: North and South America. Mexico: see
works to Ch. XIV.— J. G. Macleod; Lord: The Greek RevoL— Alison Phillips: War
of Greek Independence. ~ Sergeant: Greece in the 19th Cent., 1821-27. — Macleod: The
Greek Revolution, M. 77, 1 (pp. 86, 203, 350, 435). Stephens : The Story of Portugal.
§ 2.
THE JULY REVOLUTION IN FRANCE.
38O. Louis XVIII., 1814-1824. —At his first restoration Louis XVIII. had
issued the *« Charte," which made France a constitutional, hereditary king-
dom. The Legislature consisted of two Chambers, the Peers being nomi-
nated by the King, the Deputies elected by the people. A portion of the lower
Chamber was to be annually renewed. A free press, responsible ministers
and irremovable judges were guaranteed by the Charte. Whilst Catholicism
was acknowledged as the religion of the State, dissenting denominations
enjoyed freedom of worship. The first years of the restoration were
marked by party strife between royalists of different grades, doctrinaires
who took the English Constitution for their model (Guizot), independents,
Bonapartists, and Republicans. The King, personally moderate, fond of
rest, accustomed to constitutional forms from his stay in England, exercised
little influence on the wrangling factions. His younger brother, the Count
THE JULY REVOLUTION IN FRANCE. 259
of Artois, was a strong Catholic and a staunch royalist, who wisely sought
the regeneration of France in the revival of Catholic faith and practice, but
less wisely in the restoration of the ancient regime. The first Chamber
elected by this party, decreed the exile of the regicides and other repressive
measures. Gradually the constitutional party, representing the wealthy
middle class, gained the ascendency in the Chamber, and successive minis-
tries worked in their interest. But behind this party and allied to it stood
the Revolution.
381. Murder of the Duke of Berry, 182O. — The secret
aims of the revolutionists transpired in the murder of the Duke of
Berry, son of the Count of Artois, by Louvel, a revolutionary fan-
atic. Berry was the hope of the Bourbon succession. Louvel's
crime, however, not only failed of its purpose, as a posthumous son
was born to the Duke a few months after his assassination, but it
turned public opinion in favor of royalism. The young Duke of
Bordeaux was everywhere hailed as the representative of legitimacy,
the child of Europe, the future Henry V. The next elections in
1823 returned an overwhelming royalist majority. The new Cham-
ber passed a septennial election law by which instead of the annual
renewal the entire Chamber of Deputies was to be chosen every
seventh year.
382. Succession of Charles X., 1824-183O. — Louis
XVIII. died in 1824, and was succeeded by his brother, the Count
of Artois. He was a popular King, and on his visits through the
country was everywhere received by the people with unfeigned
enthusiasm. His policy was characterized by his efforts to strengthen
the Church and the Crown. The vote of the Chamber of 1825,
appropriating 200,000,000 to indemnify the returned Emigrants for
their confiscated estates was a further step in the policy of the
restoration.
Whilst royalism ruled in the Chamber, in the administration and a great
part of the people, the Liberals, as the different factions opposed to the
Church and to the throne called themselves, were busy at work in the city,
the provinces, and the army. The Alta Vendita (Haute Vente) of the
Carbonari, which had its seat in Paris, numbered amongst its members
Louis Philip, Duke of Orleans, the son of Egalite", old Lafayette, Guizot,
and other liberal leaders. Thiers glorified in his history not only the
Revolution but even the Terror. Professional conspirators were spreading
260 THE REVOLUTION OF THE BARRICADES.
among the people cheap editions of Voltaire and Rousseau in hundred
thousands of copies. The public press was hired to serve the cause of
impiety and anarchy, so that Leo XII. found it necessary to brand its
anti- religious propaganda. The splendid revival of Catholicism in France
had exasperated the secret societies. "Down with the Jesuits" became
the political war cry of the Liberals. Pius VII. had restored the Society
of Jesus in the whole Church (1814). Now not only the members of the
order, but every practical Catholic in France was decried as a Jesuit.
383. The Approach of the Storm. — In 1827 two legions of
the National Guards publicly insulted the royal family. The act led to
the dissolution of the guards, which in its turn increased the activity
of the Liberals. The elections of 1828 returned a Liberal majority.
The ministry of Villele, the first of Charles X. , fell. The succeeding
ministry of Martignac was too liberal for the Royalists and too con-
servative for the Liberals. Aware that further concessions would
not be conducive to the welfare of France, Charles X. directed
Polignac, a stanch Catholic and Royalist, to form a new ministry.
Polignac's motto was : No more concessions. When the King in
1830 opened the session of the lower Chamber, 221 members sent in
a vote of want of confidence. Charles X. took up the gauntlet, and
dissolved the Chamber. At the time France was carrying on a desul-
tory war in Algiers. In the hope of quieting the agitation at home
by a military success abroad the King ordered a vigorous attack upon
Algiers. The pirate fortress fell, and with it fell forever Moslem
piracy and the enslavement of Christians in Algiers and along the
whole Barbary coast. But before the news arrived, the new elections
had returned an increased Liberal majority. As a last resource
Charles resolved upon a coup d'etat. It cost him his crown.
384. The Ordinances. —Basing his action on Art. 14 of the
Charte : « c The King makes the regulations and ordinances necessary
for the maintenanee of the laws and the safety of the State " Charles,
July 26, issued five ordinances, the principal of which abolished the
freedom of the press, dissolved the Chambers, and restricted the
right of suffrage to the landed proprietors.
385. The July Revolution, July 27-29, 183O. — The great
mass of the people remained indifferent. The protest of the jour-
THE JULY REVOLUTION IN FRANCE. 261
nalists fell flat. The few barricades that were attempted were easily
scattered. All the occurrences of July 27 did not ruffle the even
tenor of the city's life. But the experienced conspirators of the
Carbonari advised by Lafayette were feverishly active, and formed
revolutionary committees in every district. July 28 barricades rose
all over the city. As the troops were not in readiness or were badly
led, the insurgents invaded the city hall. On the following day the
street figh'ts continued with increased violence. Two regiments of
the line joined the insurrectionists. But when the Republican mob,
soldiers, students, laborers, and foreigners had stormed the Louvre,
the Archbishop's palace, and other public buildings, and forced the
regulars to retreat, then the bourgeoisie which favored a constitutional
monarchy of its own making, promptly organized a Provisional
Government, consisting of Lafitte, Casimir Perier, and Odillon
Barrot, and thus snatched the victory from the hands of the Repub-
licans. Lafayette was given the command of the National Guards.
Louis Philip, whom duty and honor in this hour of danger called
to the King's side, accepted the revolutionary appointment of
Lieutenant-General of France.
386. The July Monarchy. — During these days, the King,
who was staying in the palace of St. Cloud, could not be made to
believe the reality of the danger. When at last it dawned upon him,
he revoked the ordinances, but it was too late. Seeing the throne
was lost, he abdicated in favor of the Duke of Bordeaux and
recommended the boy to Louis Philip. Having promised Charles
X. and the foreign ambassadors to respect the rights of the legitimate
heir, Louis Philip went before the Chamber and, disregarding the
claim of the Prince and his own sacred pledges, simply announced
the King's unqualified abdication. This perfidy earned him the
crown. France entered upon a new phase, the July Monarchy under
a citizen King, who was allowed to reign but not to rule. In recog-
nition of the revolutionary origin of this elevation, Louis Philip
called himself King of the French. The Chamber of Deputies
abolished Article III. and changed the Charte in the direction of
popular sovereignty. The Chamber, the army and the administra-
tion were purged of legitimist members. Four ministers of
Charles X. were sentenced to life imprisonment.
262 THE REVOLUTION OF THE BARRICADES.
The courts of western Europe regarded the revolution as an internal
affair of France, and acknowledged Louis Philip, whilst Nicholas of Russia
withheld his recognition. Charles X. went first to England, then to Austria.
He died at Gorz in Styria, 1836. The Duke of Bordeaux subsequently
assumed the title of Count of Chambord.
Lamartine : The Restoration of Monarchy in France. — E. E. Crow : Hist, of the Reigns
of Louis XVIII. and Charles X. — Irabert de St. Amand : The Duchess of Angouleme and
the Two Restorations; Duchess of Berry, etc.; The Revol. of 1830. — Turnbull: Revol. of
1830. — Hone: Full Annals of the Revol. (July 25 -August 9, 1830).— J. Macdonnel:
France since the First Empire. — R. Mackenzie: The Nineteenth Century. — Marquis de
Villeneuve: La Congregation (1801-1830).
SPREAD OF THE JULY REVOLUTION.
3S7. Causes of the Belgian Revolution. — The July Revolution found
the Belgian people ripe for a change. The ill-assorted union of Belgium
and Holland effected by the Congress of Vienna had worked only harm on
the Belgians. Both Catholics and Liberals resented the imposition of the
language, the law and the national debt of the Dutch minority. The Catho-
lics, besides, had a grievance of their own ; they resented the persecution of
the Church and the suppression of Catholic education by their Dutch rulers,
and joyfully hailed the idea of a separation from Holland.
388. The Outbreak and its Results, 183O. — The insurrec-
tion, which had been fostered by French emissaries, broke out in
September at Brussels, and after the failure of the Prince of Orange
to reconquer the capital, spread over the whole country except Ant-
werp, which was kept in check by the fire of the citadel. A Pro-
visional Government proclaimed the separation of Belgium and
Holland. A National Congress passed the second Declaration of
Independence (November 8), the establishment of Belgium as a
Constitutional Kingdom (November 22), and the perpetual exclusion
of the House of Orange from the throne (November 24). The rep-
resentatives of the Five Great Powers assembled in the Conference
of London took up the Belgian question. France and England
demanded the recognition of the independence of Belgium. The
simultaneous outbreak of the Revolution at Warsaw induced the
Eastern Powers to acquiesce in the proposal. The Belgians in
1831 chose for their King Leopold of Saxe-Coburg who had refused
the crown of Greece. Though the King was a Protestant, the Catho-
SPREAD OF THE JULY REVOLUTION. 263
lies did not oppose his election, as the new Constitution forbade all
interference of the State in ecclesiastical affairs. The subsequent
history of Belgium proved that the independence of the Church does
in no way hamper the order, prosperity and strength of the State.
389. Settlement. — In spite of the recognition of Leopold I. of Belgium
and the regulation of the respective frontiers by the Conference of London,
William I. of Holland ventured to support his claims by an appeal to arms.
Twice he defeated Leopold, at Hasselt and at Louvain, but upon the
approach of a French army and an English fleet he rapidly withdrew. A
later attempt to annul the decrees of the London Conference had no better
result. An Anglo-French fleet blockaded the Dutch fleet in the Texel,
and a French army captured the citadel of Antwerp. In 1838 William
accepted the settlement of the Conference.
390. The Outbreak in the Russian Kingdom of Poland. — The despo-
tism of Prince Constantine, governor of Warsaw, made Poland a prolific
hot-bed of widespread conspiracies for separation from Russia and for
the restoration of the ancient Kingdom-Republic. Poland was cut off
from foreign aid. Austria and Prussia guarded their own portions of the
dismembered State. Louis Philip cared more for the recognition of Nicho-
las I. hitherto withheld than for the aspirations of a subjected nation.
Lord Palmerston, meddlesome enough in other countries, would have noth-
ing to do with Polish affairs. The insurrection broke out at Warsaw in an
attempt on Constantine's life. His flight left the capital, two fortresses, a
well equipped army and an organized government in the hands of the insur-
gents. But unfortunate divisions s,plit their ranks from the beginning. The
Whites or aristocratic party desired the old government of the nobles under
a personal union with Russia; the Reds or Democrats, an independent
republic. Clopicki was named dictator, and brought some order out of the
general confusion, but lost valuable time by negotiations with Russia, and
was finally compelled to make room for the Republicans. The Diet, in
January, 1831, declared the House of Romanow deposed in Poland. Prince
Chartoryski was chosen president, and Prince Radziwill appointed com-
mander-in-chief.
391. The War. — The Russians advanced under General Die-
bitch. Around Wavre and Grochow the Poles for seven continuous
days offered a fierce and destructive resistance to twice their number
of foes, but were at last forced to retreat to Praga. Several subse-
quent victories, however, enabled them to carry the insurrection into
Lithuania, Volhynia, and Podolia. In the bloody battle of Ostro-
lenka they received their first heavy blow, and retreated again to
264 THE REVOLUTION OF THE BARRICADES.
Praga unpursued, as the Russian army had to separate in order to
face the enemy in Lithuania. The cholera which for the first time
swept from Russia across Europe, seemed for a while to aid the
Polish cause; Diebitch and Prince Constantine were among its
victims. But General Paske witch, the new commander-in-chief,
marched upon Warsaw. Though the Poles fought witl? the courage
of despair, they disgraced their cause by factional massacres, and
brought about their own downfall. The capture of Warsaw in Sep-
tember, 1831, sealed the fate of Poland. The remaining Polish
armies saved themselves by crossing into Austria and Prussia, where
they were disarmed.
Europe was profoundly moved by the fall of Warsaw and the new Rus-
sian despotism. The Constitution granted by Alexander I. in 1815 was
annulled, and the kingdom of Poland changed into a Russian province.
The children of the fallen, imprisoned, or fugitive nobles captured by the
Cossacks, were transported to Russia, to be brought up as soldiers of the
Czar. Russia's settled policy henceforth tended to stamp out the national
spirit of the Poles by a steady system of Russiflcation and a remorseless
persecution of the Catholic Church.
392. The Rising in Central Italy The wave of the July
Revolution struck Italy in February, 1831. The day after the
accession of Gregory XVI. the revolt broke out in Modena, under
Menotti, the head of the Modenese Vendita. From Modena it
spread to Bologna, where the Republican Federation established its
Giunta, thence to Parma, Romagna, and the Umbrian Marches.
During the conclave the Roman Vendita had organized a conspiracy
for the overthrow of the Pontifical government, but it failed,
owing to the enthusiastic devotion of the citizens of Rome for the
new Pontiff. The popularity of Ferdinand II., " the darling of
Naples," likewise frustrated any hope of revolutionizing that king-
dom. An Austrian army marching into the affected districts made
short work of the insurrection. New outbreaks in 1832 led to the
temporary occupation of Bologna by the Austrians and of Ancona
by the French.
Among the conspirators of 1831 was Prince Louis Bonaparte, the son of
Louis of Holland and Hortense, who thus began as an initiated Carbonaro
the war against the Temporal Power, which he afterwards prosecuted as
Emperor of the French.
SPREAD OF THE JULY REVOLUTION. 265
393. Young Italy. — Mazzini now founded a new secret society, " Young
Italy," with headquarters at Marseilles. No one was admitted who had
passed the age of forty. Its aim was the establishment of an indivisible
Italian Republic. Its religion, like that of Mazzini, consisted of a vague
belief in the existence of God, a strong faith in the power of humanity and
fierce hatred of the Catholic Church. Its political means were " thought
and action," i. e., the literary propaganda of Mazzinianism, and incessant
attempts at insurrection. The movement was joined by Joseph Garibaldi,
the young captain of a Genoese brig. Hatched at the close of 1831, " Young
Italy" was in 1833 as strong as the old Carbonari.
Having secured the co-operation of the secret societies in Italy,
Germany and France, Mazzini planned a simultaneous outbreak in
these countries for 1833 and 1834. But the plot to invade Savoy.
Piedmont, and Lombardy and thence to spread the insurrection
southward, was discovered and frustrated by the government of
Sardinia. The uprising in Germany (Frankfort) was a farce ; two
military posts were overpowered for a few hours. Only in Lyons,
which swarmed with socialistic laborers, the rising assumed formid-
able proportions. It took General Aymor five days of hard fighting
to get the city under control. Undaunted by these failures Mazzini
transferred his headquarters to Geneva and reorganized his forces,
composed of political fugitives from many countries. From Geneva
he detailed a young Corsican, Antonio Gallenga, to assassinate King
Charles Albert, but the plot miscarried. With a new failure to
invade Savoy, the first epoch of Young Italy ended in defeat. Its
only result was to multiply repressive measures in Italy, Austria, and
Prussia.
The two principal leaders separated. Mazzini continued, first in Switzer-
land, since 1839 in London, to "weave the dark web of conspiracy and
assassination." Garibaldi launched into the revolutions of South America
and gathered around him the legion of Italian adventurers who formed
the nucleus of the later Garibaldians. In Italy the Moderates, like Gioberti
confined themselves to a literary crusade, advocating a confederation of
Italian States, while the men of action were waiting for a more favorable
opportunity. Gregory XVI. died in 1846, leaving the Papal States in a
nourishing condition of material prosperity.
For Belgium and Poland. — Alison, Fyffe, Walpole, Rambaud, Rose: A Cen-
tury of Continental Hist. 1780-1880. — MorfilL: The Story of Poland. — M'Swiney: The
Cath. Church in Poland Under the Russ. Governm. M. 76, 2-3. — R. Parsons : The
266 THE REVOLUTION OF THE BARRICADES.
Struggle of Polish Catholicity with Russian Orthodoxy, A C. Q. 9; 22. — Nordynski: Hist.
of the Late Polish Revol
For Italy.— Chev. O'Clery: The It. Rev., ch. IV.-V. pp. 144-187. — R. Parsons:
Mazziniand Young Italy , Pontificate of Gregory XVI.; Studies V. — Card. Wiseman:
Recollections of the Last Four Popes. — Garibaldi: Autobiogr. — Joseph Mazzini: His
Life, Writings and Political Principles: Parkinson: M. '75, 3.
THE JULY REVOLUTION IN PORTUGAL AND SPAIN.
394. Portugal. — The July Revolution produced a rich crop of
revolutionary movements in the Pyrenean peninsula. The legitimate
kingdom of Charles X. had lent its support to Dom Miguel and the
Catholics ; the citizen kingdom of Louis Philip transferred its support
to the Liberals and Freemasons. Dom Pedro I. had been forced in
Brazil to abdicate in favor of his son, Dom Pedro II., 1831. He
came to Europe to promote the claims of his daughter Maria da
Gloria, to the throne of Portugal, and succeeded in winning over
France and England to his cause. Having collected in the island of
Terceira a sufficient number of adherents, especially from the ranks
of Dom Miguel's enemies, he landed in Oporto which he was able to
hold for his daughter, 1832. The next year Dom Miguel's fleet was
defeated by the I^nglish under Napier, and Lisbon opened the gates
to Dom Pedro. The subjection of the country was completed in
1834. Dom Miguel abandoned his claims, and died in Germany
(Henbach) 1868.
Dom Pedro died in 1834. The accession of his daughter brought no
peace to the country. Revolutions and counter-revolutions followed each
other in quick succession. Neither the Queen nor the nobility nor the
people possessed any knowledge of constitutional government. The party
in power proscribed its opponents, whilst the party in opposition invari -
ably appealed to arms. Each successive government repudiated the finan-
cial arrangements of its predecessor, and Portuguese credit fell to the
lowest ebb. The era of civil wars came to a close in 1852. Maria da
Gloria was succeeded by her son Pedro. His brother Luis followed in 1861,
and Luis' son Charles I. in 1889.
In Brazil Dom Pedro II. was dethroned in 1889 and the South American
Empire changed into a republic.
395. Civil War in Spain, 1833-39. — In Spain the revolu-
tionary movement became mixed up with a civil war of succession.
THE JULY REVOLUTION IN PORTUGAL AND SPAIN. 267
The Bourbon succession in Spain was regulated by the Salic law.
According to this . law Don Carlos was the legitimate heir. But
under the influence of his second wife, the ambitious Christina of
Naples, Ferdinand VII. abolished the Salic law in favor of Chris-
tina's daughter Isabella without even informing his brother Don
Carlos. The dying Ferdinand appointed Christina regent for Isa-
bella, 1833. Don Carlc-s, who had withdrawn to Portugal, assumed
the title of Charles V. As the Catholics, "the apostolic party,"
supported the claims of Don Carlos, Christina sought the support
of the Liberals and Freemasons. Her minister Martinez de la Rosa
gave the country a constitutional government, the Estatuto Real or
Royal Ordinance of 1834. He concluded a quadruple alliance com-
prising Spain, Dom Pedro of Portugal, Palmerston and Louis
Philip, for the expulsion of Dom Miguel and, Don Carlos from
Portugal. The Carlist general Zumalacarregui displayed extra-
ordinary power and genius in organizing the mountaineers of Biscaya
into a disciplined army of 28,000 men, which for seven years held its
ground against the Christinos, whilst Cabrera fought in Catalonia
and Merino in Castile. Middle and Southern Spain held aloof.
Zumalacarregui fell in 1835. Don Carlos though high-minded and
virtuous, possessed little capacity for ruling. Without military
talent, but an adept in the art of burning and devastating, the Chris-
tino General Espartero imparted to the war a character of vandalism.
In 1839 Espartero became master of the rising, not by any feat of
arms, but by intrigues and the treachery of General Maroto, who
came over to his camp with twenty-one battalions. The Treaty of
Bergera, 1839, guaranteed to the Basque provinces their Fueros or
ancient liberties. Don Carlos and Cabrera passed into France. In
1845 Don Carlos abdicated in favor of his son Don Carlos. He died
in Trieste, 1855.
396. Further Revolutions in Spain. — Meanwhile the Christinos them-
selves had split into two parties, the Moderates and the Radicals (Progres -
sistos). The latter came to power in 1835. Whilst the Radical mob stormed
and burned monasteries and convents, massacred its inmates, and com-
mitted other brutalities worthy of the Reign of Terror, the ministers sup-
pressed the religious orders and declared all the monastic estates national
property. In Andalusia the guards revolted in 1836, arrested the Queen
Regent in her sleeping apartments, and forced upon her the Constitution of
268 THE REVOLUTION OF THE BARRICADES.
1812, which was exchanged for a moderate one in 1837. In the progress of
the revolution Christina, whose private life was a public scandal, was com -
pelled to abdicate, and Espartero made himself regent, 1840. With him
came pronunciamentos and insurrections of rival generals after the style
of the South American republics. In 1843 a fusion of Moderates and Re-
publicans overthrew him, and the Cortes declared Isabella II. of age. In
Spain as in Portugal the Liberal government carried out the first article of
the revolutionary creed: the oppression of the Church. It was only the
deep-rooted faith of the Spanish people which saved the nation from a
schism. With General Narvaez at the head of affairs, better days dawned
upon the distracted country. In 1845 he issued the third and the best Con-
stitution which Spain had seen within the last ten years. To his energetic
administration are due the few years of peace and prosperity which, though
not without many interruptions, Spain enjoyed from 1845 to 1868.
See Books to § 1. — Hennlngsen : A Twelve Months' Campaign urith Zumalacarregui. —
M. Burke Honan : The Court and Camp of Don Carlos.
§5.
ENGLAND AFTER THE JULY REVOLUTION.
397. Parliamentary Reform. — George IV. died in 1830.
His eldest surviving brother succeeded him as William IV. The
July Revolution gave a fresh impulse to the Parliamentary reform
which had been brewing for some time in the minds of the people.
The movement proceeded from the middle classes against the aris-
tocratic land owners who filled the two Houses of Parliament. As
an instance, there were fifty-six '* rotten boroughs " with either no
inhabitants (Old Sarum, Gatton), or with only a few, holding 143
seats in Parliament, whilst large cities of recent growth like Bir-
mingham, Manchester, and Leeds, were unrepresented. The reform
movement induced Wellington to resign. Lord John Russell's
Reform Bill of 1831, repeatedly thrown out by the Lords, but backed
by a violent agitation in the country, by threats of physical force, and
by fierce riots in Bristol, finally passed the Upper House in 1832.
By this first Reform Act 143 boroughs lost one or both members,
and the seats thus obtained were given to large towns, counties, or
new boroughs. A similar reform was extended to Ireland and Scot-
land. About this time the Whigs began to call themselves Liberals,
the Tories, Conservatives.
ENGLAND AFTER THE JULY REVOLUTION. 269
398. Abolition of Slavery, 1833. — The year 1833 saw the
abolition of slavery in the British colonies. The slave trade had
been abolished by England in 1807, condemned by the Congress of
Vienna in 18 15, and declared illegal by France in 1819. Philan-
thropists like Wilberforce, Clarkson, Buxton and others extended
the agitation from the question of slave trade to that of slavery itself
and brought it to a successful issue in 1833 ; 20,000,0002. were
voted to indemnify the slaveholders.
399. Accession of Queen Victoria, 1837-19O1. — WilliamlV.
died in 1837 and was succeeded by his niece, Princess Victoria, the
daughter of the Duke of Kent. Her dignity and grace won her
general popularity. In 1844 she married Prince Albert of Saxe-
Coburg, who enjoyed the title of Prince Consort but obtained no
official position. Yet by his personal accomplishments he proved
the wisest counsellor of his Queen and largely promoted education
and industrial science in England. The succession of Victoria
brought about the separation of Hanover from England. As the
Salic law excluded female succession in Hanover, the last surviving
brother of WilliamlV., Ernest August, Duke of Cumberland, became
King of Hanover.
400. The Rebellion, in Canada, 1837-39. — The first Par-
liament of Queen Victoria had to deal with a rebellion in Lower or
Western Canada. The government of the Canadas was in the hands
of a few powerful families. Each of the two Canadas had a separate
system of government consisting of a Governor or executive, a Legis-
lative Council whose members were appointed for life by the Crown,
and a representative Assembly chosen by the people. As it was, the
majority of the Legislative Council, " the British party" was con-
stantly thwarting the resolutions of the Assembly representing the
vast majority of the French population. Race and religion also
sharpened the opposition. The colonies, therefore, demanded that
the Legislative Council should be made elective and have a voice in
the disposal of the public money. To proclaim and remedy the
grievances of the colony, Mr. Louis Joseph Papineau, the highly
respected leader of the French inhabitants, held numerous meetings
and conventions. Thereupon the Governor issued warrants for the
270 THE REVOLUTION OF THE BARRICADES.
apprehension of many members of the popular Assembly on the
charge of high treason. The resistance offered to these arrests
finally burst into open rebellion, which was put down by the mili-
tary with considerable shedding of blood in Lower Canada. In
Upper Canada the rising was insignificant.
401. The Union. — The English Parliament, meanwhile, sus-
pended the Constitution of Lower Canada, and sent Lord Durham
to the colony to restore order. Lord Durham acted as dictator,
issuing amnesties, decrees of exile to Bermuda, threats of execution,
all with magnificent disregard of laws and precedents. His meas-
ures roused a storm of opposition in Parliament, and led to his
recall. Parliament, however, acted upon his report, and decreed
the union of the two provinces. The French inhabitants, at the
time prostrated by the rebellion, were unable to prevent the meas-
ure. The union gave to all Canada one Governor and one Legisla-
ture, the Upper House to be nominated by the Crown, the Lower
House elected by the people. French was abolished as the official
language. But the compact reorganization of the French voters
enabled them to bring about the repeal of the statute proscribing
the French language, to obtain their full share in the government,
and to maintain their separate Catholic schools and their splendid
Catholic establishment. French Canada, so lately in revolt, became
the basis of the Conservative party, whilst British Canada became
the stronghold of the Liberals.
402. The Chartist Movement. — The reformed Parliament labored in
the interests of the middle classes to whom it owed its origin. The poor and
laboring classes derived little or no benefit from its legislation. The new
poor-law, passed in 1834, by its regulations for the work-houses branded the
poor as outcasts. These places were commonly hotbeds of corruption and
immorality. Too frequently the religious treatment of poor Catholics, both
adults and children, in these establishments was infamous in practice,
though not sanctioned by law. The misery of the workingmen and their
families in the large industrial cities was frightful. Thousands of them
were forced to live in wretched quarters and damp cellars. In a great
meeting near Birmingham the workingmen sought redress in the form of a
petition. This People's Charter, as it was called, demanded annual Parlia-
ments, manhood suffrage, vote by ballot, abolition of the property qualiflca
tion in members of Parliament, salaries for members of the Commons, and
equal electoral districts. It was in many points the American system.
s
ENGLAND AFTER THE JULY REVOLUTION. 271
The petition was presented to Parliament in 1839. But the changes pro-
posed were too sudden and radical to be practical. Parliament refused to
even take the petition into consideration. The local riots whictf followed
its rejection, especially at Birmingham and Newport, were easily sup-
pressed, and the leaders after being sentenced to death were transported
for life, 1840.
403. Repeal of the Corn Laws, 1846. — One source of
suffering to the poor, however, was removed because it also injured
the trade of the middle classes : the exorbitant price of corn caused
by the high import duties. In 1838 an Anti-corn League was formed
under the able leadership of Richard Cobden and Johy. Bright.
Daniel O'Connell also joined the movement and became one of its
principal orators. The House of Lords, exclusively composed of
landowners, was the chief obstacle in the way of reform. Gradually,
however, all classes became convinced that without the repeal of the
corn laws the population, which was rapidly increasing by immigra-
tion, would be exposed to famine. This fear received a terrible
illustration by the Irish famine of 1845-47, caused by the failure of
the potato crop, the chief food of the poorer classes. The famine
strewed the high roads of Ireland with the dead and the dying, and
reduced its population from 8,000,000 to 5,000,000. Robert Peel
who had come into office in 1840 to maintain the corn laws, was the
very man who, convinced of the necessity of the measure, won
over a sufficient number of lords, to secure, after several fruitless
efforts, the repeal of the corn laws in 1846. But the Conservatives
did not forgive Robert Peel his change of front. Already during
the debate D 'Israeli, afterwards Lord Beaconsfield, had launched a
personal attack full of the fiercest invective, at the " traitor." This
philippic at once pushed the young statesman into prominence. On
the very day of Peel's triumph, June 25, a coercion bill, one of
those characteristic measures of the English Parliament which were
intended to legislate the starving Irishmen into submissive silence,
came up for the third reading. For once the most bitter Conserva-
tives joined their votes to those of O'ConnelPs party, to have their
revenge by overwhelming Robert Peel and his ministry. Lord John
Russell took his place with Palmerston for foreign affairs.
404. The Irish Famine. —In Ireland the famine lasted till 1847. There
were districts in which the people died by hundreds daily from famine-fever,
272 THE REVOLUTION OF THE BARRICADES.
dysentery and sheer starvation. The poor-houses were overcrowded.
Very many lay down on the pavement and died there. Girls and women
flocked tfc towns and broke the windows of shops merely to obtain prison-
food for a few days. The government oscillated between relief, experiments,
and coercion bills. The English people, however, made up for the failings
of their law -makers. In every larger city and town subscription lists were
opened and the most liberal contributions received. National relief associa-
tions were formed, all denominations taking part in the work of charity.
Relief gradually poured in from all countries. The United States detailed
war vessels to carry grain and other food to the starving people. The Irish
famine, in its consequences, led to the abolition of some of the worst
features of landlordism and turned a mighty stream of Irish immigration
towards North America.
TTrlght: Life and Reign of William IV. — On Reform Bill: Earl Grey's Corresp. with
William IV. — J. McCarthy: The Epoch of Reform, E. R. 67, 2. — Lives of Queen Vic-
toria by: Johnston (1892),Fawcett (1895), Arnold, (1896) , Holmes (ISd't). — Martin : Life of
the Prince Consort. — Gonner: The Early Hist, of Chartism 1836-39. — Bryce: Short
Hist, of the Canadian People. — J. C . Dent : The Story of the Upper Canada Rebellion. —
Bourlnot: Manual oftht Con$tit. Hist, of Canada. — Sir Rob. Peel by J. McCarthy; M.
L. Taylor; Walpole. — Morley: Life of Rich. Cobden. — 0. A. Vlnce: John Bright, E. R.
'82, 1.— B. B. O'Brien: Fifty Tears of Concession* to Ireland, 1831-81.— S. Gavan Duffy:
Four Years of Irish Hist. 1846-49; Young Ireland, 1840-50. — O'Brien : Great Famine in
Ireland and Retrospect (1845-95). — A. M. Sullivan: New Ireland. — B. Barry O'Brien:
The Irish Agrarian War, 1830-1880, M. '82, 1. — Rt. Rev. Spaldlng: Mission of the Irish
People. — Thdbaud, 8. J. : The Irish Race.
THE CATHOLIC REVIVAL ON THE CONTINENT.
4O5. Catholic Revival in France. — The Catholic revival in
France began in the reign of Louis XVIII., when Chateaubriand,
de Maistre, de Bonald fearlessly proclaimed the Catholic religion
and the Holy See as the only secure foundation on which to restore
civil society. In 1833 the learned Ozanam founded the Society of
St. Vincent of Paul. His idea was to oppose the reigning Voltair-
ianism by the service of God in the service of the poor, and to
create a means of reconciliation in the struggle between the classes
and the masses. His appeals found a mighty response among the
educated classes. In the course of time 7,000 members were per-
sonally visiting and aiding 20,000 poor in the city of Paris. Before
1848, 500 conferences or local organizations were working in
France, whilst the Society was firmly established in England,
Belgium, Spain, North America, and other countries. The Society
of the Propagation of the Faith founded at Lyons in 1822 counted
THE CATHOLIC REVIVAL ON THE CONTINENT. 273
700,000 members in 1841. The number of religious more than
doubled over what it had been before the outbreak of the Revolution.
Dominican and Jesuit and other orators Mke Frayssinous, Lacordaire,
Berryer, and Ravignan, filled the Cathedral of Notre Dame with
the elite of Parisian society. No country sent so many mission-
aries and martyrs into the heathen missions as France. Catholic
literature and journalism had their eminent representatives in Mon-
talembert, de Falloux, Ozanam, Louis Veuillot, and others. The
Catholic Circle under the patronage of Mgr. d'Affre, Archbishop of
Paris, and of many distinguished laymen, formed a center for Cath-
olic young men who came to Paris in search of higher education.
A brilliant array of Catholic deputies under the leadership of Mon-
talembert, defended the rights of the Church in the Chamber, whilst
the firmness of the bishops, foremost among them Cardinal de
Bonald, Archbishop of Lyons, resisted, on the whole successfully,
repeated attempts to revive Gallicanism in the seminaries.
406. Political and Religious State of Germany. — The political his-
tory of Germany almost down to the year 1848, is the history of monar-
chical reaction not only against revolutionary excesses but against the just
demands and rights of the people. The men who had roused the enthu-
siasm of the nation in the war of liberation had to make room for a tribe
of narrow-minded bureaucrats. Prominent patriots, like Joseph Goerres,
the greatest publicist of Germany, whom Napoleon had called the Fifth
Power of Europe, were subjected to the most contemptible forms of perse-
cution. The territorial assemblies established in the Congress of Vienna
were allowed no power or influence. The Diet of Frankfort became a
political machine in the hands of Austria and Prussia for the promotion of
their dynastic interests. The Catholic Church well-nigh banished from
public life, deprived of her freedom of action, her property, her monas-
teries and schools, betrayed by some of her own prelates and priests, and
paralyzed by the indifferentism of the masses, was allowed a precarious
existence as the handmaid of the State, a sort of higher police institution.
Especially in Prussia, the ministers of the crown in their aim of protestant -
izing its Catholic subjects, carried into every branch of the administration
the pernicious principle, that the King is the source of all rights, political
and religious, for Protestants and Catholics alike.
407. Beginning of the Revival. — Whilst the oppression of the Church
issued from the high places, the revival started from the very heart of the
people. In 1800 Count Leopold of Stolberg embraced the Catholic faith.
His sterling character and his great work, " The History of Religion,"
18
274 THE REVOLUTION OF THE BARRICADES.
attracted widespread attention to his conversion. Protestants of the high-
est standing in literature and art (Overbeck, Cornelius, later Frederic von
Schlegel, Gfrorer, etc.) followed his example. The unmeasured attacks
made on the Catholic Church and her new converts during the jubilee of
the Reformation, 1817, roused the Catholics from their torpor, and called
forth energetic refutations in books, pamphlets, and periodicals. Joseph
Goerres, with his powerful style and cutting irony, stood in the front ranks
of the defenders of the faith. The followers of the Romantic school in
Germany, like Ozanam in France, and Walter Scott in England, produced a
fairer and truer appreciation of the Catholic Middle Ages. But no event
had a greater influence on the Catholic revival of Germany than the " Koeln
affair "of 1837.
4O8. The Koeln Affair. — A cabinet order in force in Silesia
under which bhildren of mixed marriages were to be educated in the
religion of their father, was extended in 1825 to the Rhine provinces
and to Westphalia. The Catholic clergy refused to comply with
the order. At the request of the government the bishops asked for
instructions from the Holy See. Pius VIII., in an Apostolic Brief,
gave the only possible decision, that children of mixed marriages
were to be educated in thv^ Catholic religion, a decision which
Gregory XVI. confirmed. Thereupon Ferdinand of Spiegel, Arch-
bishop of Koeln, and three of his suffragans without any knowledge
on the part of the Holy See, entered into a secret conspiracy with
the Prussian government practically to ignore the Papal Brief.
The Bishop of Trier, one of the signers of the secret Convention,
repented on his death-bed and informed the Pope of the plot.
Minister Bunsen who had represented the government in this dis-
honest transaction, had the effrontery to deny the fact as an impos-
sibility. Archbishop Spiegel was succeeded by Clement Droste of
Vischering, a prelate of unimpeachable loyalty to his duty and his
Church. As soon as he discovered the secret Convention, he sent a
declaration to Berlin, that he would strictly carry out the Brief of
Pius VIII. The government now dropped the mask, and on Novem-
ber 20, 1837, arrested the fearless Archbishop with a great display
of military force and conveyed him to the fortress of Minden. He
was charged with violating his engagements with the government,
undermining the laws, and maintaining connections with two revolu-
tionary parties. The following year Archbishop Dunin of Gnesen
was arrested for the same fidelity to the laws of the Church, and
confined in the fortress of Colberg.
THE CATHOLIC REVIVAL ON THE CONTINENT. 275
4O9. The Triumph of Right. —The intense excitement caused
in Germany and in the entire Catholic world by the arrest of the
Archbishop was in itself a clear indication, how much public
Catholic sentiment had grown since the days of Napoleon. Greg-
ory XVI. in December, 1837, held a powerful allocution which was
received with enthusiasm by the Catholics of Europe and America.
The remaining two bishops who had signed the secret Convention,
withdrew their signatures. The Prussian government tried to justify
its measures, but the Holy See published documents which allowed
of no contradiction. The National Council of Baltimore sent words
of admiration and encouragement to the " new Confessors of the
Faith." Joseph Goerres in his " Athanasius " and his " Triarier "
triumphantly refuted the arguments of the government and of the
anti-Catholic press. The government was defeated on the whole line.
The Catholic practice as outlined in the Brief of Leo XII. was every-
where restored.
When the large-minded Frederic William IV. succeeded his father in
1840, the Archbishop of Gnesen, previously released, was at once allowed
to return to his see. The Archbishop of Koeln was restored to full lib-
erty and by a public letter of the King acquitted of all charges which
the former government had raised against him. To facilitate the work of
peace Gregory XVI. persuaded the Archbishop to accept the bishop of
Speier, afterwards Cardinal Geissel, as coadjutor and administrator of the
diocese with the right of succession, whilst Mgr. Droste remained Arch-
bishop ia right and fact. The venerable prelate by his work on " Peace
between Church and State," and Frederic William IV. by his generous gifts
for the restoration of the Cathedral of Koeln sealed the reconciliation. A
pilgrimage of 1,500,000 persons to the Holy Robe of Christ in the city of
Trier, 1844, was a splendid proof of the growing devotion of the people.
Fresh troubles arose, such as, Ronge's German- Catholic revolt, small in
numbers but strong in malice, the Protestant Alliance, new encroachments
on the rights of the Church by the officialdom of Prussia ; but the Catholics
were now prepared for effective resistance,, and the revival of 1837 bore its
fruit throughout the century.
O'Meara: Life and Works of Ozanam. — B. Parsons: Ozanam; Montalembert and the
Struggle for Freedom of Education in France, Studies V. — B. F. C. Costello, M. A. :
Fr. Ozanam (Cath. Truth Soc. Publications) ; An Anniversary 1833-'83 (Soc. of St.
Vincent of Paul). M. '83,2. — Wilstach: Montalembert. —Religious Revival in Germany:
W. Ward: Life of Card. Wiseman, v. I. — Pfulf: Card. Geissel. —Jos. Goerres: Athana-
tius; Die Triarier.— Church Histories, by Card. Hergenroether, Briick, Alzog. (Engl.).—
BrUck: Germ. Eccl. Hist, in the 19th Century (Germ.).
276 THE REVOLUTION OF THE BARRICADES.
§7.
THE HOMEWARD MOVEMENT IN ENGLAND.
410. The Oxford Movement. — The Church of England in the first three
decades of the century presented a picture of utter worldliness and corrup-
tion. Rationalism was undermining its teaching. The Liberal government
made its sees an object of political barter. This state of affairs induced a
number of Oxford professors, all learned men of high intellectual attain-
ments, to start a reform movement within the established church. They
hoped to be able by prayer, frequent communion, sermons and writings and
by the power of a good example to infuse a new life into the decaying estab-
lishment. The movement began under the leadership of Edward B. Pusey
in 1833, when John Newman issued the first " Tracts for the Times." (Pusey-
ites, Tractarians.) The Tractarians drew their inspiration from the works
of the ancient Fathers and the Lives of Catholic Saints. The move-
ment soon spread beyond the limits of the University and attracted the
attention of the whole country. Newman's lectures on the Via Media, begun
in 1835, sought a middle ground between the Papacy and Protestanism. By
1838 the leading Tractarians publicly condemned the Protestant Reformation.
411. The Bomeward Movement, 1839-45. — In 1839
Newman abandoned "the anti-Roman basis of the Via Media and
began to look towards Rome. The more advanced Tractarians
sought for a corporate reunion with Rome on the basis of mutual
concessions. In this state of mind Newman in 1841 published his
celebrated Tract No. 90, in which he endeavored to show that the
thirty-nine articles were capable of being reconciled with the
decrees of the Council of Trent. The Tract caused a tremendous
excitement throughout the country. A storm of protests and cen-
sures poured in from university authorities, Anglican bishops, and
political writers. At the request of the bishop of Oxford, Newman
discontinued the Tracts. He withdrew from the University and
retired to his living, St. Mary's, Littlemore. Two years later he
published a formal retraction of all the hard things which he had
said of the Church of Rome and resigned his living. With a num-
ber of friends he established at Littlemore a sort of religious com-
munity engaged in exercises of piety and literary labors.
The opposition to Tract No. 90 disrupted the Oxford movement into
two camps. Pusey and his adherents deprecated any union with the Cath-
olic Church. George W. Ward became the acknowledged leader of the
THE HOMEWARD MOVEMENT IN ENGLAND. 277
Homeward movement during Newman's voluntary seclusion. In this camp
the conviction daily grew that the idea of corporate reunion must give way
to that of simple submission to Home.
412. The Crisis, 1845. —In 1844 Ward published " the Ideal
of a Christian Church," in which Rome was practically acknowl-
edged as the divinely appointed guardian of religious truth. The
animus of the work was clearly outlined in the author's expressed
desire to see the English Church " repenting in sorrow and bitter-
ness of heart her great sin of the sixteenth century, and suing at
the feet of Rome for pardon and restoration." The "Ideal
Church " raised a second and still fiercer storm of opposition than
Tract No. 90. A convocation of over 1,100 university men, held
at the Sheldonian Theater on February 13, 1845, condemned select
passages of the "Ideal," and degraded Mr. Ward from his Uni-
versity degrees. The condemnation of Tract No. 90 was prevented
only by the veto of the Proctors.
413. Exodus of Tractarians. — The events just described
led to the first exodus of Tractarians from the Anglican Church in
1845. Ward, Newman, Frederic William Faber, Oakely, and
many more, made their submission to the Catholic Church, and were
confirmed by Bishop Wiseman. Newman's reception proved the
signal for large numbers to follow. Gradually 900 Tractarians
made their profession of the Catholic faith, and the stream of indi-
vidual conversions steadily increased. A number of neophytes
joined the various religious orders. In 1850 a decision of the Privy
Council, in opposition to the decision of the bishops, forced upon
the Anglican Church a clergyman (Mr. Gordon), who denied
baptismal regeneration. This measure and a powerful Pastoral of
Bishop Wiseman, led to a new accession of Tractarians to the Cath-
olic Church, including Archdeacon (afterwards Cardinal) Manning.
Later on the number of converts swelled to many thousands.
414. Establishment of the English Hierarchy. — There had
been, from the start, a marked coldness founded on differences of edu-
cation and traditions, between the old English Catholics and the Neo-
phytes. Many Catholics with whom the penal laws were yet a vivid
reminiscence, suspected the sincerity of the converts. But events
278 THE REVOLUTION OF THE BARRICADES.
soon happened which helped to draw together all who bore the Catho-
lic name. In September, 1850, Pius IX. created Nicholas Wise-
man, Cardinal and Archbishop of Westminster, erected eight suffragan
bishoprics with English titles and thus restored the Catholic hierar-
chy in England. The Vicars Apostolic who had since the Reforma-
tion received episcopal consecration, had borne foreign titles (in
partibus infidelium). As soon as the news arrived that the Pope
had distributed " English titles," the country began to resound with
angry protests against the " Papal aggression." Lord John Russell
in an inflammatory letter addressed to the bishop of Durham gave
point and direction to the agitation. The day after the letter ap-
peared, noisy demonstrations and 4t Guy Fawkes " processions were
held throughout the country. For a time effigies of the Pope and
of the Cardinal were carried about every day and burnt somewhere
and tumultuous meetings held to denounce the action of the Pope.
The Cardinal himself was hooted and stoned in the streets. Some-
thing like 7,000 of such meetings were held before the end of the
year. It showed, however, a distinct advance in public feeling since
the Gordon riots, that in all these noisy meetings no blood was shed
and no outrage committed against the Catholics. An appeal of
Cardinal Wiseman to the English people did much by its calm and
powerful reasoning to allay the storm and to obtain a hearing for the
other side. The ministers, however, thought it necessary to satisfy
the public clamor by some piece of legislation. Accordingly the
" Ecclesiastical Titles Bill " was introduced in Parliament in 1851.
It inflicted a penalty of 100Z. on persons assuming English titles and
invalidated their deeds. The bill considerably trimmed down be-
came a law after a six months' debate. The clause invalidating
deeds had been dropped. The penalty of 100L was retained but
never inflicted. The law was from the beginning to the end a dead
letter, and was quietly removed from the statute book twenty years
later under Gladstone's ministry.
415. Results. — The numerical increase of English Catholics was not the
only nor the chief result of the Catholic revival. The Oxford movement had
done much to dispel deep seated prejudices. The Catholic name, hitherto
hated or despised, began to be respected in all classes of society. When the
number of converts included men like Cardinals Newman and Manning, seven
members of the Privy Council, thirty -three Peers, eighty- two Commoners,
FRANCE AFTER THE JULY REVOLUTION. 279
1,051 members of the nobility, 154 representatives of the army and the
ministry of war, among them a field marshal, six generals and several
major-generals, twenty- nine representatives of the navy, among them seven
admirals, besides numerous clergymen, judges, barristers, doctors, authors,
etc., the Catholic Church secured a social standing in England as she had
never enjoyed since the days of Mary Tudor. Of greater importance was
the foundation of colleges, seminaries, schools, hospitals, and other charita-
ble or missionary institutions, the multiplication of religious orders, the
complete ecclesiastical organization of the country and the new and hearty
adherence of the Church in England to the Holy See under three successive
Cardinals, Wiseman, Manning, and Vaughan. This Catholic pulsation is
still attracting the attention of multitudes outside the Church to the highest
truths and instilling into whole masses of Englishmen religious beliefs,
devotions, and Catholic ideals which had been expelled from England by the
Protestant Revolution.
W. Ward : W. G. Ward and the Oxford Movement; W. O. Ward and the Cath. Revival;
Life of Card. Wiseman. — Wilfrid Wllberforce: W. O. Wardt D. R., '94, 3. — Cardinal
Newman: Apologia pro vita sua; Hist, of My Religious Opinions; Letters and Corre-
spondence (1890). — H. J. Jennings: Card. Newman, The Story of His Life. — R.
Parsons: The Oxford Movement, Studies V. — Heuser: Card. Newman,^A.. C. Q. 15.
Pmrcell : Life of Card. Manning. — K. Paul : Dr Ptisey, M. '94, 3. — W. G. Gorman :
Converts to Rome.— Robert Ornsby, M. A. : Memoirs of James Hope- Scott of Abbotsford.
§ 8.
FRANCE AFTER THE JULY REVOLUTION.
416. Internal State of the July Monarchy. — Louis Philip lacked the his-
torical right of the Bourbons, the plebiscite of the revolutionary govern-
ment, and the military glory of the Empire, elements which had strengthened
former governments. The Chamber was unpopular, because elected by a
small minority. The property qualification of the franchise was so high
that little more than 200,000 persons enjoyed the right of voting. The use
which the government made of 130,000 places at its disposal led to corrup-
tion. Accordingly the Chamber was constantly exposed to the outside
attacks of the different factions. Repeated revolts of Bonapartists and
Republicans, insurrections of 200,000 socialists and laborers in Lyons, a
rising of the Legitimists in the Vendee stirred up by the Duchess of Berry
indicated the precarious tenure of the crown. In 1832 a shot was fired at
the King, the first of the many unsuccessful attempts upon his life. The
worst of them was the explosion of an infernal machine in 1834 which killed
eighteen persons and wounded forty one, whilst the King and his sous were
saved only as by miracle. In 1842 the dynasty suffered a great loss in the
death, by a violent fall from his horse, of the Duke of Orleans, the King's
eldest son. Besides, Prince Louis Napoleon made two adventurous attempts
280 THE REVOLUTION OF THE BARRICADES.
to get himself proclaimed Emperor, the first at Strassburg (1836), which
led to his banishment to America; the second at Boulogne which made him
prisoner at Hani. In 1846 he contrived to escape from his prison in the
disguise of a mason. These attempts served to consolidate the Bonapartists
who had hitherto cooperated with the Republicans, into a distinct political
party.
Meanwhile the Socialists and Communists, Saint Simon, Constant, Louis
Blanc, Fourier, Proudhon, were carrying on their own pernicious propa-
ganda. They preached a science without religion, a family without mar-
riage, a State without government, a community of goods in which private
ownership was declared theft, and the complete overthrow of the existing
order.
417, Conquest of Algeria. — Algeria had been taken in the
last days of Charles X. Between 1830 and 1836 the occupation of
the province was alternately restricted and enlarged according to the
changing fortunes of the desultory warfare between the army of
occupation and Abd-el-Kader, the great chief of the Kabyles. The
Kabyles were a powerful Barbary tribe which, though Christian in
earlier times, had been forced by the conquering Arabs to accept the
Islam. General Bugeaud after the battle of Sikkah, 1836, infused
greater energy into the contest. In the campaign of 1841—42 Gen-
eral La Moriciere secured two-thirds of Oran, while General
Changarnier had equal success in Algeria. Marshal Bugeaud
accomplished the definite conquest of Algeria. Under his successor,
the Duke d'Aumale, Lamoriciere captured Abd-el-Kader in 1847,
and Marshal Randon organized the Grand Kabyly as a province of
France.
Unfortunately the policy of the French governments erected an insur-
mountable barrier between the French colonists and the native tribesmen
which made their conversion and civilization impossible. It was left to
Cardinal Lavigerie, at a later period, to break down this barrier and to open
Algeria and Northern and Central Africa to evangelization and civilization.
Abd el-Kader was released by Napoleon III. in 1852 and sent to Asia Minor.
418. Foreign Complications — The Eastern Question. —
Mehemet Ali, Viceroy of Egypt, the most powerful of the Sultan's
vassals, aided by the warlike qualities of his son, Ibrahim Pasha,
wrested Syria from Turkey, 1831-33. After a declaration of war by
Sultan Mahmoud, Ibrahim Pasha again won an overwhelming victory
at Nisibis on the Euphrates over the Turkish army, 1839. The
FRANCE AFTER THE JULY REVOLUTION. 281
death of Sultan Mahmoud In the same year was followed by the
treacherous surrender of the Turkish fleet to Egypt by its admiral.
The Viceroy of Egypt, relying on France, where he had a strong sup-
port in M. Thiers and his war party, demanded from the young
Sultan Abdul Medjid (1839-61), the hereditary investiture with all
the lands actually in his power. Without foreign aid Turkey was
lost. Under these circumstances, England, Austria, Russia, and
Prussia formed a Quadruple Alliance, excluding France from this
concert of Powers. The land and sea forces of the allies compelled
Mehemet Ali to give up his claims and to confine himself to Egypt,
whose possession, however, was made hereditary. A Convention to
this effect was signed in London. Thiers, the minister of Louis
Philip, suspected that England was bent upon driving Mehemet Ali
out of Egypt and keeping the country herself. His opposition to
the arrangement of the Quadruple Alliance threatened for a time a
European war. But the King of France and M. Guizot were in
favor of peace. Accordingly Thiers had to resign, Guizot formed a
new ministry and France signed the treaty of London, 1841.
Guizot remained at the head of affairs till the fall of Louis Philip.
419. The Revolution in Switzerland. — In 1846 the leaders
of the international Revolution were preparing for a new united effort
throughout Europe. It first broke out in Switzerland. This coun-
try, like England, was an asylum for revolutionary fugitives from
every land. Their secret plottings still more increased the radicalism
of a number of Swiss Cantons. The suppression of monastic orders
in Aargau and other high-handed measures against the Catholic
Church induced the Catholic Cantons to think of defensive measures.
Four Cantons, Uri, Schwyz, Unterwalden, and Zug had maintained
their Catholic governments. The votes of three other Cantons,
Luzern, Freiburg, and Upper Wallis ousted their radical governments
and elected Catholic magistrates. The excitement caused by these
steps in the radical Cantons increased when the government of
Luzern called the Jesuits into the country to conduct the higher
education. With the silent approval of the radical Cantons armed
bands of volunteers invaded Luzern to overthrow the Catholic
government. After two attacks had been successfully repulsed the
seven strictly Catholic Cantons formed the " Sonderbund " a
282 THE REVOLUTION OF THE BARRICADES.
separate confederation for the defense of their constitutional rights,
1846. The great Powers were fully aware that a victory over the
Sonderbund would be a victory over the cause of right and order.
But England's anti-Catholic policy prevented any interference in
favor of the Sonderbund. Thus violence prevailed over right. The
Catholic Cantons were defeated, and forced to accept anti-Catholic
magistrates. A Federative Council in 1848 at Bern greatly curtailed
the self-government of all the Swiss Cantons.
Other signs of an impending Revolution were not wanting. The secret
societies had never ceased to undermine the existing order of things,
though in France they had received a check in 1838. The Freemasons pub-
lished their " Orders of the Day " at Brussels, whence they were secretly
spread through France. In 1846 a general reorganization was effected and
preparatory steps for a general European outbreak were taken. In the
autumn of 1847, Germany witnessed a great Congress of European Free-
masonry, many of whose leaders took part in the events of 1848. Garibaldi
started from South America for Europe, Mazzini made ready to leave
London. Disturbances in Milan, outbreaks in Messina and Palermo, an
attempted insurrection in Calabria were but the preliminary rumblings of the
general European upheaval which began in Paris in the February days of
1848.
Gulzot : Memoirs to Illustrate the Hist, of My Own Time; Last Days of the Reign of
Louis Philip: — VValpole; Fyffe. — Abbott: Louis Philip. — The Monarchy of July, Q. R.
'88, 2.— The Conquest of Algiers, E. R. '89, 4.— Marshal Bugeaud, Duke of Isly, E. R. '83,
4,97, 1. — Paton: Hist, of the Egypt. Revol. — Cretlneau Joly: Hist, de Sonderbund.—
Ulrich: Der Biirgerkrieg in d. Schweiz. — Sir F. P. Adams and 0. D. Cunningham: The
Suriss Confederation.
THE FEBRUARY REVOLUTION IN FRANCE — THE SECOND REPUB-
LIC AND THE SECOND EMPIRE.
42O. The February Days, February 22-24, 1848. — The efforts of the
Liberals were ostensibly directed towards a reform of popular representa-
tion by a lowering of the property qualifications of the voters. Leaders of
different shades, Thiers, Lamartine, Arago, Louis Blanc, and others, had, to
all appearances, borrowed the English methods of political agitation, reform
banquets, speeches, processions, etc. But behind these demonstrations
stood the organized Revolution, the secret societies, the men of the
faubourgs, and the Socialists. A prohibition issued by the government
against a reform banquet led to a revolt, which became a revolution, and
ended in the flight of the King, and the proclamation of the Democratic
Republic.
THE FEBRUARY REVOLUTION IN FRANCE. 283
February 22 the people gathered in large numbers to take part in
the prohibited demonstration. No collision occurred because the
military remained quiet. The concentration of regulars and national
guards in the strategical points of the city on the morning of the
23d. told the people that the government had caught the alarm.
The secret committees made their arrangements. Towards the
evening barricades were thrown up, gunshops plundered, and — a
worse sign of disintegration — the national guards began to fraternize
with the people. Guizot resigned and made room for Thiers and
Odillen Barrot. Before the close of the day a collision occurred be-
tween the crowd and the military in which fifty of the people fell.
The bodies of the victims were put in wagons and drawn through the
streets to inflame the populace ; but Marshal Bugeaud assuming
command, quietly took the barricades and checked the riots. Next
morning, February 24, the new ministers ordered him to withdraw
the troops. Thereupon dense masses of insurgents, national guards,
armed workingmen and troops of the line fraternizing with the mob
rolled from all sides towards the Tuileries, captured on their way the
Palais Royal, massacred the guards, and destroyed all the property
belonging to the royal family. At the approach of the insurgent
people the King was persuaded to abdicate in favor of his grandson,
the Count of Paris. Louis Philip and his wife fled to England in
disguise as Mr. and Mrs. Smith ; other members of the family escaped
to Belgium.
421. The Democratic Republic. — A provisional government
was formed at the Hotel de Ville. Lamartine and others, who came
from the Chamber, never dreamt of a republic. In their mind a
future assembly was to determine the form of the government. But
the Republicans and Socialists supported by the people in arms
carried everything before them. Great and disagreeable was the
surprise of the bourgeoisie of Paris when the provisional government
proclaimed the Democratic Republic and summoned a Constituent
National Assembly to Paris, February 25. To satisfy the Socialists
the provisional government engaged to procure work for all citizens,
guaranteed the right of association to the workingmen, and decreed
that a permanent commission be established for the special purpose
of providing for the wants of the working classes. The Socialist
284 THE REVOLUTION OF THE BARRICADES.
Louis Blanc, a member of government, was appointed president, and
Mr. Albert, a workingman, vice-president of this Commission. The
provisional government also empowered the minister of public works
to open national workshops.
These national workshops were a semi -military organization with graded
ranks of salaried officers. Every workman enrolled received thirty sous of
daily wages from the public funds whether work was to be had or not. On
a single day (May 19), 87,000 persons were enrolled. A month later the
enrollment rose to 125,000 men, many of them idlers and agitators. The
enrolled men with their families represented 600,000 persons.
422. The "Days of June " 23-26. — The elections by man-
hood suffrage to the Constituent National Assembly resulted in a
conservative majority largely composed of Legitimists, Orleanists,
and Bonapartists, among them Prince Louis Napoleon himself. The
Republican watchword was Liberty, Equality, Fraternity ; the vic-
torious opponents rallied for Order, Family, Property. The first
important step of the Assembly was the dissolution of the national
workshops. This measure led to a most sanguinary insurrection of
the socialistic workingmen, which for four days filled the streets of
Paris with carnage. The Assembly appointed the Republican General
CavaignaC Dictator. Under him fought General Lamoriciere. The
insurgents were marshaled by leaders of military skill though no
one knew who they were. Over 16,000 fell dead or wounded, or
were driven into the Seine. Nearly 14,000 prisoners were taken, of
whom several thousand died by prison fever. Among the murdered
victims was Mgr. d'Affre, the venerable Archbishop of Paris, who
was shot by an insurgent from a window whilst mounting a barricade
to address the insurgents. The victorious Assembly declared Paris
in a state of siege, disarmed the workingmen, closed the 300 revo-
lutionary clubs and passed a law of deportation.
423. Louis Napoleon, President of the Republic. — In
the Assembly the debates on the Constitution were protracted for
months. They could not agree on the mode of electing the Presi-
dent of the Republic. It was finally determined that the presidential
term should be four years and that if no candidate should obtain a
majority of votes, the election should devolve to the Assembly. The
THE FEBRUARY REVOLUTION IN FRANCE. 285
Constitution of 1848 was proclaimed November 10. The general
elections returned Louis Napoleon by over 5,500,000 votes.
Napoleon owed his election to the peasantry of France, and to the fact
that the Legitimists and Orleanists had proposed no candidate of their own
for fear of weakening Napoleon's chances and thus throwing the election
into the Assembly. For the Assembly would have elected Cavaignac
in spite of his Republicanism on account of his services in quelling the
socialistic rebellion.
424. The Coup d'Btat of December 2, 1851. —The Constitution of 1848
never struck root in France. The feeling was general that the country had
been tricked into accepting a republic ; that only a monarchical government
could save France from new revolutions. Napoleon adroitly turned this
feeling to his account. In complicity with a number of close adherents, St.
Arnaud, Persigny, Major Fleury, de Maupas, Morny, he gradually concen-
trated the most reliable troops in and around Paris. On the night of De-
cember 1-2, 1851, there issued forth from the State printing office, guarded
by a military cordon, proclamations which dissolved the Assembly, pro-
posed a new Constitution, placed Paris and twelve surrounding depart-
ments utider martial law, and appealed to the army. On the following
morning letters of dismissal were handed to the members of government
who were not in the plot. The foremost generals of France, Cavaignac,
Bugeaud, Lamoriciere, Changarnier , etc., several leading statesmen,
among them Thiers, eighteen members of the Assembly, and a number of
leading Democrats, altogether seventy -eight persons of distinction, were
seized at a quarter past six and placed in confinement. Later in the day
the members of the Assembly, 220 deputies, upon their refusal to clear the
hall were carried off by the military to different fortresses. Another
armed force drove the judges of the Supreme Court from the bench because
they had impeached the President. The revolts which broke out in the
streets of Paris, December 2 and 4, were crushed with some shedding of
blood.
A Plebiscite of over 6,000,000 votes, according to reports, elected
Louis Napoleon president for ten years with almost monarchical
power and conferred upon him the right to issue a new Constitution.
425. The Second Empire, December 2, 1852. — Napoleon
lost no time in diverting his increase of power towards the accom-
plishment of his real aim, the restoration of the Napoleonic Empire.
He banished his principal opponents, revived the Constitution of the
First Empire, confiscated the appanages of the House of Orleans and
issued a decree compelling the members of the royal family to sell
286 THE REVOLUTION OF THE BARRICADES.
their landed estates in France. The Senate submitted the restora-
tion of the hereditary empire to the acceptance of the people, and
the people ratified the restoration with over 7,500,000 votes against
some 253,000. Napoleon III. was enthroned on the anniversary of
the coronation of Napoleon I. , December 2, 1852. All the European
Powers acknowledged the Second Empire which Napoleon pro-
claimed as an empire of peace. As he was desirous of gathering all
the conservative elements around his throne, the Church in France
entered upon a period of great prosperity and religious zeal. In
1853 Napoleon married Eugenie Montijo, the Spanish Countess of
Teba.
Guizot: France under Louis Philip. — Lamartine : Hist, of the Revol. of 1848. — C&nsl-
difcre : Secret Hist, of the Revol. of 1848. — Hodde : Secret Societies. — Marquis of Nor-
manby: A Year of Revol.— L. Blanc: Hist. Revelations. — Corkran : Hist, of the Constit.
Nat. Assembly from May, 1848. — Tenot: Paris in December, 1861. — Maupas: The
Story of the Coup d'Etat.'— Jerrold: Life of Napoleon III.
§10.
THE FEBRUARY REVOLUTION IN ITALY.
426. Pius IX. — In 1846 Maria Mastai Feretti came forth from
a conclave of forty-eight hours' duration as Pius IX. Troubled as
his Pontificate was destined to become, it was at the same time the
longest and one of the most glorious since the " years of St. Peter."
A month after his elevation a general amnesty opened Rome and the
Pontifical States to the political exiles. Pius IX. inaugurated a
series of reforms which were received with enthusiasm. He gave
the press greater freedom, constituted a Council of State composed
of one representative of each province, admitted laymen into the
ministry, and reorganized the old Civic Guards. The people were
given a voice in every department of the government. He finally
appointed a commission to draw up a Constitution for the Papal
States.
A great many of those who availed themselves of the amnesty, requited
the Pope's clemency with base ingratitude and treason. They at once
reorganized the secret societies and carried on a revolutionary propaganda
under the direction of Mazzini. Whilst noisily applauding every new
reform, they constantly excited the people for new and more radical con-
cessions. Ciceruacchio, a burly demagogue, stirred up the masses to dis-
THE FEBRUARY REVOLUTION IN ITALY. 287
orderly demonstrations. The Italian revolutionists at home and abroad
were in close relation not only with the democratic conspirators of other
countries, but also with Lord Palmerston who had his agents in Rome,
Turin, and Naples. Lord Minto, accredited to the Holy See, with a sublime
disdain of diplomatic formalities, made his residence the gathering place of
'the Italian radicals. Metternich, viewing the Papal reforms with marked
displeasure, forcibly occupied the city of Ferrara. By thus increasing
Italian exasperation against Austria, the most conservative statesman of
Europe worked into the hands of Mazzini and of the Revolution.
427. The Rising in Milan. — The February Revolution in
Paris was the signal for the long-prepared insurrection in Milan
(March 18), where Radetzki, the commander-in-chief of the Austrian
provinces, had his headquarters. For five days a desperate conflict
was maintained between the garrison and the population in the
streets. The insurgents were reinforced by the defection of the
purely Italian regiments of the garrison. Radetzki was finally
compelled to evacuate Milan and to withdraw to Verona. Milan
established a provisional government. Venice at once followed the
example of Milan and constituted herself a Republic.
' 428. War Between Austria and Italy. — The proceedings of
Milan and Venice induced Charles Albert to declare war against
Austria in order to prevent the establishment of a Republic in
revolted Lombardy and to ward off a rising in his own Kingdom.
His regular army amounted to 40,000 men. Volunteers flocked to
his standard from the different Italian States. Garibaldi joined
him with his Italian Legion gathered in South America, and Mazzini
arrived from London. Tuscany and Naples declared war jointly with
Piedmont. The Roman radicals clamored for the same measure.
But Pius IX., as the common father of Christendom, steadfastly re-
fused to go to war. His troops that were sent under General Durando,
to guard the frontiers, were strictly forbidden to cross the line, but
they disregarded the order of their, sovereign. As the whole country
was in revolt, it was easy for the Italians to take the Austrian fortress
of Peschiera and to follow Radetzki to the walls of Verona. But here
the tide turned. A reinforcement under General Nugent, a gallant
Irish veteran, swelled the Austrian army to 70,000 men. With
these Radetzki first recovered his communication with the rest of
Austria by conquering the Venetian mainland. He then crossed the
288 THE REVOLUTION OF THE BARRICADES.
Adige and advanced to Custozza where he inflicted a crushing defeat
on Charles Albert. Custozza decided the fate of Lombard}7. Ra-
detzki pursued the retreating Piedmontese whose volunteer battalions
were fast melting away to the very walls of Milan. To save his
army, Charles Albert evacuated the city, accompanied by the male-
dictions of the Milanese, while Radetzki entered through the oppo-
site gate. The King of Sardinia obtained an armistice and was glad
to retire behind the Ticino.
Notwithstanding these events, Garibaldi with his 4,000 volunteers of
Young Italy, loudly declared a *< war of the people " against Austria, but in
a few days his 4,000 Redshirts dwindled down to 800. The Italian situation
towards the end of 1848 may be summed up as follows : An armed truce
between- Austria and Sardinia kept the regular armies in check in Northern
Italy ; the Republic of Venice was confined to the city ; Austria occupied
Modena and Parma; secret societies, street murders, and brigandage were
reducing Tuscany and the Romagna to a state of anarchy ; the island of
Sicily, assisted by heavy cargoes of arms from England, was in successful
revolt against Naples and its King. England and France protected the
Sicilian insurgents against Ferdinand II. who had subdued a revolt in his
capital; Rome, the center of the Catholic world, was in the.throes of a
democratic Revolution.
429. The Revolution in Rome. — The Roman Parliament as
granted in the new Constitution was opened June 5. It contained
a strong party of radicals led by Sterbini and Lucien Bonaparte,
Prince of Canino. Its proceedings consisted of pompous harangues,
angry discussions, and little work, as it was domineered over by
the populace in the galleries under the engineering of the anarchical
Ciceruacchio. Rome was meanwhile fast filling with conspirators
from every State. Two weak ministries (Mamiani and Fabbri) suc-
cessively resigned. In September, Pius IX. called upon the ener-
getic Signor Rossi, former minister of Louis Philip at the Papal
court, to form a ministry. Rossi was resolved to carry out and
develop the policy of reform inaugurated by Pius IX., but above
all things to maintain the authority of the Pontifical government.
For this loyalty to Pius IX. the secret societies condemned him to
death. When Parliament reopened November 15, Rossi, whilst
mounting the steps to the Chamber, was assassinated in the midst
of a howling mob.
s
THE FEBRUARY REVOLUTION IN ITALY. 289
430. Flight of Pius IX. — On November 16, 20,000 people
gathered before the Papal residence at the Quirinal. They demanded
the promulgation of the Italian nationality, war against Austria and
a radical ministry. Pius IX. refused to give any answer before fteing
allowed to deliberate in entire freedom. Then the crowd began to
fire into the Quirinal and to storm the palace. The Pope's private
secretary, Mgr. Palma dropped dead, shot in the forehead. But the
Pope's Swiss guard stood firm and the mob failed to enter the
palace. Having drawn up artillery before the gates, the conspira-
tors sent in their ultimatum : if the Pope does not yield within an
hour, they will blow in the gates and massacre every one in the
palace except the Pope himself. Thereupon Pius IX. declared to
the foreign ambassadors that to avoid useless bloodshed he would
cede to force. " So we protest ; let your governments know it ; we
give way to violence only. All we concede is invalid, null, and
void." On the night of the 24th Pius IX., dressed as a simple
priest and accompanied by Count Spaur, the Bavarian ambassador
and his family, succeeded in escaping from revolutionary Rome.
Without mishap he arrived at Gaeta, in the territory of Naples,
where King Ferdinand and his Queen waited upon the august fugitive
to offer him their hospitality and the protection of the Kingdom.
431. Pius IX. in Gaeta — And here his fortitude and the ingratitude of his
enemies, most of whom were his beneficiaries, aroused universal sympathy.
From the rock of Gaeta Pius IX. issued three great appeals to the Christian
world. One the excommunication of the spoilers of the patrimony of the
Church ; another a protest to all Christian princes against the wrong that
had been done ; a third to the Episcopate and the faithful throughout the
world on the proposed definition of the Immaculate Conception. His
ippeal to the Catholic Episcopate met with a response testifying to a unan-
imity of devotion which struck friend and foe alike. The Catholic Powers,
), promptly responded to his appeal, and the plenipotentiaries of France,
tustria, Spain, and Naples met at Gaeta, March 20, 1849, and took up the
mse of the exiled Pontiff.
432. The Roman Republic. — Meanwhile the Revolution
spread rapidly through the Pontifical States, under the usual ter-
rorism of an unscrupulous minority. In Rome Galetti formed the
lical ministry demanded by the conspirators. The functions
the sovereign power were intrusted by the Chamber to a Giunta
19
290 THE REVOLUTION OF THE BARRICADES.
of Three. The Giunta dissolved the Parliament and summoned a
Constituent Assembly. From Gaeta the Pope forbade his subjects
to vote for this body, and so effective was his prohibition, that of
the 12,000 voters inscribed in Rome only 300 voted. The Assembly
thus chosen proclaimed the deposition of Pius IX. and the establish-
ment of a " pure democracy under the glorious appellation of the
Republic of Rome," February 5, 1849. Upon the news of Charles
Albert's defeat at Novara the Triumvirate handed over its powers to
Mazzini, who for a time ruled the city with almost unlimited
sway.
The Roman Republic adopted the methods of the first French Revo-
lution : war against the Church, massacres of priests, the substitution of
abandoned women for the Sisters of Charity in the hospitals melting of
bells into cannon, seizure of the gold and silver plate from churches and
palaces, issues of unlimited quantities of paper money. Most of the stolen
millions disappeared in the vortex of the Revolution without leaving a
trace. The blasphemous character of the Roman Revolution was sufficiently
indicated by the addresses of Armellini calling the people the only sov-
ereign, the true God; by placards affixed to churches: " Down with Christ,
eviva Barabbas! " ; by the sacrilegious festivities in which Mazzini with the
aid of excommunicated priests celebrated the triumph of the Republic of
Rome in St. Peter's Church, Mazzini himself occupying the Papal throne.
Chev. O'Clery: Hist, of the Ital. RevoL, Ch. XL, pp. 193-286; Lives of Pius IX. (see
ch. XIII. ^ § 8). —Maurice: The RevoL Movement in Italy, etc. — M&rq. Blddle-Cope:
The Holy See and the Ital. Liberals: M. 87. 1-2. — B. O'Reilly: Cesare Cantii and the
Neo-Guelphs of Italy: A. C. Q. v. 7. — The Italian Revolution, M. '75. 2.
§11.
THE DEFEAT OF THE ITALIAN REVOLUTION.
433. In Northern Italy — Battle of Novara, 1849. -
During the time of the armistice between Austria and Piedmont, the
radical party overthrew the more moderate ministry of Grioberti in
Piedmont. The revolutionary party now in power and considerably
strengthened by thousands of Italian,- Polish, and French fugitives,
again clamored for war with Austria. Charles Albert had to choose
between war or the loss of his crown. He preferred war. It lasted
only five days. On the resumption of hostilities, March 20,
Radetzki first baffled the enemy by his skillful movements, then
crossing the Ticino at Pavia, dealt the Piedmontese a severe blow at
THE DEFEAT OF THE ITALIAN REVOLUTION. 291
Mortara, and hopelessly defeated them in the brilliant action of
Novara. Charles Albert abdicated in favor of his son, Victor
Emmanuel II. On the 24th Victor Emmanuel concluded an armis-
tice with Radetzki, and then peace. Piedmont had to pay the
expenses of the war, disband her foreign troops, and withdraw her
fleet from the Adriatic. Charles Albert, one of the best rulers of
Piedmont, but too weak to cope with the international Revolution,
died four months after the disaster of Novara.
434. Genoa, Venice, and Sicily. — The humiliation of Piedmont encour-
aged Genoa to snap the bonds with which the Congress of Vienna had tied
it to the Kingdom of Sardinia, and to proclaim the Ligurian Republic.
General La Marmora put down the revolt ^April). In Sicily the insurgents
were offered Parliamentary independence by Ferdinand II. and urged, even
by the English and French ambassadors, to accept the generous proposals.
Rejecting the offer, they were forcibly reduced to submission by General
Filangieri who captured Catania and forced Palermo to capitulate (May).
The Florentines recalled Archduke Leopold. Venice, the last of the
revolted States in northern Italy, was reduced by the Austrians. Radetzki
was made Governor-General of the Austrian provinces in Italy. The meas-
ures of pacification adopted by the old hero — he was eighty-four years of
age when he conquered at Novara — were as mild and prudent as his cam-
paigns had been skillful and bold.
435. France and the Roman Republic. — Meanwhile the
hearts of Catholic Europe were burning with indignation at the out-
rages committed against the Holy Father. Louis Napoleon thought
it wise to yield to the growing Catholic sentiment of France, and
sent General Oudinot to the relief of the exiled Pontiff. Oudinot
landed at Civita Vecchia, gradually disarmed the Republican guards,
and issued a proclamation in support of Pius IX. A first attack
upon Rome with an insufficient force was repelled. Naples, Austria,
and Spain also responded to the appeal of the Pope. The Spanish
troops landed at Terracina. The Austrians occupied Bologna and
Ancona. But Oudinot's jealousy prevented any co-operation be-
tween the different nations. It was this fact and not any mythical
victories of Garibaldi which induced the Neapolitans to recross the
frontiers.
Napoleon's duplicity began to crop out when he sent M. de Lessepsto
Rome to negotiate with the Republicans. The result was a convention
292 THE REVOLUTION OF THE BARRICADES.
with Mazzini according to which the French troops, without entering
Rome, were to encamp in the neighborhood and a plebiscite was to decide
whether the Pope should be called back or not. Oudinot indignantly
rejected the disgraceful convention as an insult to France, and gave notice
that he would begin the attack of Rome, June 4th.
436. The Taking of Rome. — The siege of Rome began June
3. Mazzini relied less on Garibaldi and the Republican corps than
on a change of government in France. According to his secret
plottings a communistic outbreak in Paris, prearranged for June 13,
was to place Ledru Rollin at the head of affairs. Ledru Rollin
then would have ordered Oudinot to make common cause with the
Republicans instead of fighting them. The miserable failure of the
plot and the flight of Ledru Rollin destroyed Mazzini 's hopes, and
at the approach of danger he packed up the stolen treasures of
Rome and fled to London. On the 21st of June, the coronation day
of Pius IX., the French occupied the Janiculum. On June 29, St.
Peter's day, Oudinot stormed the high ground of Trastevere, which
gave him the command of the city of Rome. Garibaldi, accompanied
by Ciceruacchio, 4,000 foot and 500 horse, retreated into the
Appenines, where many of his followers turned banditti. At San
Marino he disbanded the remnants of his force. Oudinot sent
Colonel Neal to Gaeta to present the keys of Rome to Pius IX.
The Sovereign Pontiff returned in April the following year, and was
received by the people with great enthusiasm. With the aid of
Cardinal Antonelli, his Secretary of State for the rest of his Ponti-
ficate, Pius IX. began to heal the wounds which the international
Revolution had inflicted on the Papal States.
Chev. O'Clery: Ch. VII. pp. 287-370. — Marshal Radetzki: Caldwell: M., 1876,2;
Pfttlf: St. 42.
§ 12.
THE FEBRUARY REVOLUTION IN GERMANY AND AUSTRIA, 1848.
437. Extent of the Revolution, — The extent of the international con-
spiracy was indicated by the rapidity with which upon hearing of the Paris
revolution insurrections broke out in almost every European country. In
Belgium the King disarmed the Republican movement by openly declaring
his readiness to abdicate if the nation would demand it. There were
Republican risings in Southern Spain and street fights in Madrid. In
THE FEBRUARY REVOLUTION IN GERMANY AND AUSTRIA. 293
London a Chartist demonstration en masse was nipped in the bud. The
insurrection preached by Mitchel in Ireland and planned by " Young Ire-
land " and other secret societies was quelled before fairly matured, and the
leaders, O'Brien and Meagher, were transported. There were disturbances
in Sweden, and even in the Danube principalities. But in Austria and in
Germany the Revolution assumed most formidable proportions and prepared
the way for permanent changes.
438. Outbreak in Germany in March. — The pent-up indig-
nation of the people in Germany of being deprived of all political
liberty was quickened by Republican agitators and emissaries of the
lodges. The people assembled in mass meetings, demanded freedom
of the press, trial by jury, right of organization, a national guard,
and a German Parliament. A Liberal Chamber in Baden took the
lead in this reform movement. From Mannheim the movement
spread over Germany. Some governments granted these demands ;
the greater number, especially Prussia, denied them. King Ludwig
of Bavaria abdicated in favor of his son Maximilian. In many
States .the people armed without asking leave, forced unpopular
ministers to resign and improvised a preliminary Parliament at
Frankfort. A minority of Liberal statesmen and leaders urged the
King of Prussia to head a movement for national union. But
Frederic William IV. did not favor the idea, and rather entertained
the hope of mastering the Revolution by co-operation with Austria.
But Austria herself was soon to be shaken to her very foundations.
439. Outbreak in Austria, March. — The February Revolu-
tion had brought on a financial panic in Austria. Upon the motion
of Kossuth the estates of Hungary voted an address to Austria,
declaring the system of the Austrian government as the real
cause of the panic, and demanding a responsible ministry for
Hungary and a Constitution for every crown land of Austria.
Similar demands came 'from other provinces. In Vienna the
rabble stormed and demolished the House of Deputies. When
the soldiers fired on the crowds the citizens and students
armed and threw up barricades. Metternich, forced to resign,
escaped with difficulty from the fury of the populace (March 13—
15). On March 15 the Emperor consented to summon a Constituent
Assembly. The national guards and the Students' Legion formed a
294 THE REVOLUTION OF THE BARRICADES.
central committee for the defense of the rights of the people. The
demand of the ministers to dissolve the committee led to the second
insurrection, May 15. The Emperor fled to Innsbruck. As all the
available troops had been sent to Italy which was in full revolt, the
entire civil and military government of Vienna fell into the hands of
the University students, the National Guards and the laboring
classes, who organized a Committee of Public Safety.
440. The March Days in Berlin, 15-19. — The first outbreak
at Vienna reacted on Berlin. Disturbances began on March 15. On
the 18th the King promised to work for a regeneration of Germany
by popular representation. An immense mass of people surged
towards the palace ostensibly to thank the King. Provoked by the
outcries and insults hurled against them the soldiers fired two
shots. With the cry of treason the people scattered in every direc-
tion. In an incredibly short time the city was covered with bar-
ricades. A murderous fight ensued from street to street. The
incensed military, 14,000 strong with 36 cannon, gradually succeeded
though with great efforts in dispersing the barricades. Yet on the
morning of the 19th the troops upon an order of the King evac-
uated the city. The people were now masters of the situation.
Frederic William IV. was forced to stand bareheaded on the balcony
of his palace as the funeral procession of the men whom his soldiers
had killed at the barricades marched by. His brother William, who
later became Emperor, had to fly to England, the common refuge of
Louis Philip and Metternich and other statesmen. The King
granted all the popular demands. The prisons were opened. A
national guard was organized. For a time liberal ministries changed
in quick succession amidst scenes of growing anarchy.
441. The Frankfort Parliament. — From helpless Prussia
the German people turned their eyes to the National Assembly, which
had meanwhile convened at Frankfort. Its aim was to devise a
National Constitution which would harmonize the demands of the
people with the interests of the various governments. The Assembly
at Frankfort elected Archduke John of Austria Administrator of the
Empire with a responsible ministry of his own. The old Confederate
Diet recognized this provisional government and then dissolved.
THE HUNGARIAN REVOLUTION GENERAL PACIFICATION. 295
The majority of the members of the Assembly were Monarchists of
widely diverging opinions. The minority advocated a Republican
Confederation based on the sovereignty of the people. The
Assembly frittered away its time and talents in needless speech-
making because it could define its relations neither to the different
governments nor to the two Constituent Assemblies sitting at the same
time in Vienna and in Berlin.
The helplessness of the new National Administration at home and
abroad became apparent in the affair of Schleswig-Holstein. The two
duchies had risen against Denmark, March, 1848, formed a provisional
government, and sent deputies to Frankfort. Prussian troops under Gen-
eral Wrangel were sent to their aid and gained some successes against the
Danes. But the losses inflicted on German commerce by the Danish
blockade and the remonstrances of Russia and England induced Prussia, to
conclude a rather humiliating truce. The provisional government and the
Assembly of Frankfort in spite of their angry protests had to bow to the
accomplished fact. The truce created wide -spread dissatisfaction in Ger-
many. In Frankfort the people excited by democratic agitators made an
attempt to overthrow the Parliament and proclaim the Republic. Prince
Lichnowski and General Auerwald were murdered by the mob. St. Paul's
Church, where the sessions were held, was saved only by the arrival of troops
from Mainz. Thus both the Administrator and the Assembly gradually
lost their authority.
Alison ; Fyffe.— Rose : A Century of Continental Hist.— Count Hartlng : Genesis of the
Revol. in Austria.— W. H. Stiles: Austria, 1848-49.— Leger: Hist, of Austria- Hungary.—
Austria, 1848-49., E. R., '91, 4. — Maurice: Revol. Movement of 1848-49. — Mullet:
Political Hist, of Recent Times. — v. Sybel : The Founding of the German Empire. —
Gosch: Denmark and Germany since 1815. — MacLeod: The Various Nationalities of
the Austrian Domains: M. 78. 2.
§ 13.
THE HUNGARIAN REVOLUTION — GENERAL PACIFICATION.
442. Outbreak in Hungary. — The separate ministry which
the Emperor had granted to Hungary in the first crash of the
Revolution now organized with Count Bathyany as president. Kos-
suth became minister of finances. Assembled in the Diet of Pesth
and presided over by Archduke Stephen, the Hungarians began to
sever one after the other the bonds of union with Austria. On the
other hand they endeavored to tighten their hold on the Slavonic
296 THE REVOLUTION OF THE BARRICADES.
dependencies. But the Slavs of the Hungarian crown lands,
Dalmatia, Croatia, and Transilvania were unwilling to bear the Mag-
yar yoke. The court of Vienna could not but encourage the Sla-
vonian movement which looked upon the Magyars as rebels. Jella-
chich, Ban or governor of Croatia, marched against Pesth.
Archduke Stephen resigned. The Emperor who had returned to
Vienna sent Count Lemberg as Imperial Governor to Hungary.
But the mob murdered the Count as he was crossing the bridge to
Pesth. Thereupon the Emperor dissolved the Hungarian Diet and
appointed Jellachich commander-in-chief for Hungary. But the
Revolutionists got the upper hand. Jellachich was defeated by the
Honveds or national troops whom Kossuth had raised, and passed
into Austria.
443. Third Insurrection in Vienna — Ferdinand's Abdi-
cation — Francis Joseph I. — To prevent the imperial troops from
going to Hungary the revolutionary party broke out in most furious
riots in the streets of Vienna. Latour, the minister of war, was foully
murdered. The Emperor fled to Olmiitz. The garrison moved
outside the city, but held it in siege. At this juncture Windisch-
gratz, who had quelled the insurrection of Prague, marched upon
Vienna and was joined by Jellachich. During the bombardment of
the city an army of Honveds hastened to the relief, but was repulsed.
The following day, October 31, Vienna surrendered. The city was
placed under military control, and a number of democratic leaders
were shot (Robert Blum). In December Ferdinand abdicated in
favor of his nephew, Francis Joseph I. The Assembly was dis-
solved and a general Constitution, drawn up by the 'government,
was given to the monarchy. The only measure of permanent im-
portance passed by the Constituent Assembly was the abolition of
the remaining feudal burdens and the freedom of the soil granted in
return for a partial indemnification of the landed aristocracy. After
the peasants had obtained this point, they withdrew from the
revolutionary agitation.
444. Defeat of the Hungarian Revolution. — The Hun-
garian Diet refused to acknowledge Ferdinand's abdication. Win-
THE HUNGARIAN REVOLUTION GENERAL PACIFICATION. 297
dischgratz led an Austrian army into Hungary and occupied Pesth,
January, 1849. The Magyar government retired behind the Raab.
Under the dictatorship of Kossuth and the generalship of the Hun-
garians Gorgey and Klapka and the Poles Dembinski and Bern the
country displayed a surprising power of resistance, which con-
trasted strikingly with the blundering inability of Windischgratz.
Beaten in five important engagements, the Austrians had to evacu-
ate Hungary with the exception of Of en. On March 4, the General
Constitution for Austria was proclaimed at Olmiitz. It merged
Hungary completely with Austria and obliterated its ancient institu-
tions. Thereupon Kossuth issued a Declaration of Independence
and declared the Austrian dynasty deposed in Hungary. But whilst
political divisions and personal jealousies more and more divided the
Hungarian leaders, the Emperors of Austria and Russia agreed upon
a Russian intervention and a common plan of operation. The Rus-
sians under Riidiger and Paskewitch appeared in the field with over-
whelming numbers. Henceforth all the battles, with one exception,
were Hungarian defeats. General Haynau accomplished wonders of
daring and leadership, and alone won nearly all the Austrian victories.
In the confusion and discord heightened by these disasters Kossuth
laid down the chief power, and Gorgey, his successor, two days
later, surrendered to Riidiger with 25,000 men and 120 cannon on
the field of Vilagos (August 15, 1849). Other corps surrendered
unconditionally. Only Klapka, in the defense of Komorn, obtained
an honorable capitulation. Haynau held sanguinary and merciless
judgments at Pesth and Arad. The long roll of Hungarian leaders
condemned to death was headed by Count Bathyany. Andrassy,
later Prime Minister of Austria, escaped under sentence of death.
Kossuth and other fugitives found refuge, first in Turkey, afterwards
in England and America. The Hungarian Constitution of 1848
was abolished and Dalmatia, Croatia, and Transilvania separated
from the crown of St. Stephen. The galling memories of 1848
and 1849 were not obliterated until 1867.
445. Pacification in Prussia. — An insurrection in Prussian Poland
(Posen) was suppressed by force of arms as early as May 4, 1848. In
Berlin order was restored when General Wrangel, returning from Schleswii;
entered the capital at the head of 25,000 men. The city was placed under
298 THE REVOLUTION OF THE BARRICADES.
military law. The Prussian Constituent Assembly, dispersed by troops in
Berlin, was ordered to reconvene at Brandenberg fifty miles from Berlin and
there dissolved. The Constitution of December 5, 1848, drawn up by the
government and issued by the King, gave Prussia a Parliament of two
Chambers. The stringent election law of 1849 silenced the turbulent
classes.
446. End of the Frankfort Parliament. — The Assembly
of Frankfort finished the Constitution of the German Empire in
1849. But only smaller States were willing to accept it. The ques-
tion as to who should be elected Emperor rent the Parliament into
an Austrian and a Prussian faction. A delegation representing a
bare majority offered the imperial crown to the King of Prussia.
Frederic William publicly declared he would accept the crown only
with the free consent of all the German States, privately, however,
he held the Frankfort Assembly and its new crown in the utmost
contempt. Thereupon so many deputies left Frankfort or were
called off that the Parliament became a rump of radicals. The
seceders transferred their meetings to Stuttgart, where they had to
submit to a forcible dissolution. This failure of the new Constitu-
tion was seized upon by the agitators of the international Revolution
as a pretext for new insurrections in favor of a German Republic.
The May days of 1849 saw Republican insurrections in Saxony, the
Palatinate and Baden where the regulars went over to the revolu-
tionists. The revolt in Dresden was suppressed chiefly by Prussian
troops. At the head of 33,000 men, the Prince of Prussia vigorously
crushed the insurrection in the Rhine provinces by the capture of
Rastadt. Many of the leaders were shot, others escaped to Switzer-
land and North America (General Siegel, Karl Schurz).
447. Failure of a German Union. — Prussian statesmen now tried
another way of arriving at a German Union, this time to the exclusion of
Austria. Prussia concluded an alliance with Saxony and Hanover, and
some minor States. Austria^ on the ojher hand, supported by the Kings of
Bavaria and Wiirtemberg, and backed by the Emperor of Russia, demanded
the restoration of the German Confederacy of 1815. For a moment it
appeared as if the question of the German Union would lead to war between
Austria and Prussia (1849). But in a conference of the representatives of
the two Powers at Olmutz (1850) Prussia yielded to all the demands of
Austria. Schleswig-Holstein which had, unaided, continued its hopeless
THE HUNGARIAN REVOLUTION GENERAL PACIFICATION. 299
•war for independence, was handed back to Denmark. The Conference of
Dresden, 1851, re established the German Confederation of 1815.
448. The Catholic Church in Prussia. — The Catholic
Church in Germany and Austria emerged from the Revolution with
more power and freedom than she had enjoyed for a century. In
October, 1848, the German Episcopate for the first time in the
nineteenth century united for common action in the Conference of
Wiirzburg under the presidency of Archbishop Geissel. The gov-
ernments could not help recognizing in the Church a bulwark of law
and order. The absolute state as it had existed before 1848 was no
more. The fundamental laws which survived the Assemblies of
Frankfort and Berlin, guaranteed to the Catholic Church as to all
other denominations, the free management of her own ecclesiastical
affairs, and the independent possession and administration of the
funds destined for religious, educational, and charitable purposes.
Ecclesiastical elections and communication with Rome were freed
from the placet and the supervision of the State. In the manage-
ment of the schools a tolerable modus vivendi between the Church
and the State was found. The Right of Association called forth
numerous religious societies and opened Germany to the religious
orders. Driven from Switzerland the Jesuits founded a province in
Germany, and began their career of popular missions throughout
the country, which, while reviving the zeal of the Catholic masses,
prepared them for fresh attacks, that twenty years later culminated
in the Culturkampf .
449. The Austrian Concordat, 1855. — In 1850 Emperor
Francis Joseph completed the abrogation of the persecuting code of
Joseph II. and sealed the abrogation five years later by a Con-
cordat, in which the rights of the Holy See were fully recognized.
It provided for free communication between the Austrian hierarchy
and the Holy See, between bishops and people, and between religious
Orders and their superiors. The clergy obtained the necessary
facility for inspecting the schools and superintending religious in-
struction. The Church secured the right of condemning bad books,
while the government pledged itself to prohibit their publication.
The seminaries were placed solely under the bishops. The right of
300 THE RE VOLUTION OF THE BARRICADES.
the Church to hold ecclesiastical property was asserted, and some
of the property of which the Josephine system had deprived the
Church was restored.
Gorgey: My Life and Acts in Hungary, 1848-49. — Klapka: War of Indep. in Hun-
gary.— Pragay: Hungarian Revol. — Vambery: Story of Hungary. — Wegg-Prosser;
Kossuth: M. '82,3. — Hogan: The Hung. Struggle for National Independence: M. '86,1.
J. McCarthy : American Influence on the Democratic Movement in Europe, A. C. Q. v. 5. —
W. 8. Lilly: A Century of Revolution. — See preceding section.
THE REVOLUTION OF THE BARRICADES. 301
THE HOUSE OF BRAGANZA IN PORTUGAL.
John IV.,
1640-56.
Alphonso VI., Pedro II.,
deposed 1668. 1668-1706.
John V.,
1706-1750.
Joseph Eraanuel, Pedro III.,
1777. 1777-1786.
1
Maria Fraucisca,
1786-1806 (demented;
regent I John VI.).
t \ 4
John VI., 1816-1826.
In Brazil
1808-22.
Pedro IV., Dora Miguel,
In Brazil: 1828-1834.
Pedro I.,
1822
r
In Brazil: In Spain:
Pedro II., Maria da Gloria,
1831-1889. 1834-53.
(expelled.)
Pedro V., Luis,
1853-1861. 1861-1889.
Charles I.,
1889-X.
302
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CHAPTER II.
THE REVOLUTION OF THE CABINETS.
§1.
THE CRIMEAN WAR AND ITALY.
450. Change of Policy in Italy. — The accession of Victor Emmanuel II.
marked a new era in the history of Piedmont. It brought about the tri-
umph of the whole liberal programme of Church persecution ; the passage
of an anti-Catholic education law, the expulsion of the Jesuits, the violation
of the property rights and immunities of the clergy, attacks upon the Papal
jurisdiction, and the imprisonment and exile of archbishops and bishops.
The policy received its finishing touch when Count Camillo de Cavour in
November, 1852, began his eventful career as Prime Minister of Piedmont.
He accepted the office after Victor Emmanuel had pledged himself to allow
him a free hand in dealing with the Holy See. A wholesale suppression of
monasteries and the reduction of the Episcopate to one-fourth of its former
standing, completed the transformation of Catholic Piedmont.
The aim which Cavour pursued was the expulsion of Austria from
Italy, the dethronement of the Italian sovereigns, and the destruc-
tion of the temporal power of the Holy See for the purpose of creat-
ing a united kingdom of Italy under the liberal rule of the House
of Savoy. In order to realize this plan, he had to win for the little
Kingdom of Sardinia admittance to the Councils of the great Powers
of Europe. He gained his point by taking part in the Crimean war.
451. Causes of the Crimean War. — In France Napoleon
undertook to strengthen his imperial position by gradually curtail-
ing popular liberties and replacing the representative by a personal
government. In order to divert the attention of the French people
from home affairs he thought it best to occupy them with the glory
and the advantages of a foreign war. He picked his first quarrel
with Emperor Nicholas who had refused to address him as
4 'brother." The protectorate of France over the Latin Church in
(311)
312 THE REVOLUTION OF THE CABINETS.
Palestine afforded an opportunity to attack the Russian protectorate
over the Greeks. Napoleon obtained a decree from the Sultan
which restricted the power of the Greeks at the Holy Places. On
the other hand Nicholas was dreaming of a partition of Turkey, and
made proposals to this effect first to England then to France.
Both Powers refused to consider the plan whilst Austria checked his
advance into Turkey through Montenegro. Nicholas then demanded
at Constantinople that the protection of all the Greek subjects of
the Sultan should be given over to him, and this being also refused
he marched his troops into Moldavia and Wallachia. This move-
ment brought the fleets of England and France to the Hellespont.
Turkey declared war in 1853. Whilst the Turkish troops under
Osman Pasha won a victory over the Russians, the Russian fleet
sailed forth from Sebastopol, the stronghold of the Crimea, and
destroyed the Turkish fleet at Sinope. Thereupon France and
England, closely allied, declared war against Russia, 1854.
452. The Campaign in the Crimea, 1854. — Russia being
unable to hold the Danube Principalities they were with Turkish
permission occupied by Austria. The allies made Sebastopol,
Russia's naval arsenal in the Black Sea, the object of their attack ;
30,000 French commanded by Marshal St. Arnaud (later by Canrobert
and Pellissier), 27,000 English led by Lord Raglan (later by
General Simpson), and 7,000 Turks, disembarked in the Crimea
about twenty miles north of Sebastopol. The allies forded the
river Alma in the face of a Russian army awaiting them. But mis-
management and cholera delayed the actual siege. Sebastopol was
defended by 25,000 marines under the resourceful command of
General Todleben, an engineer of great genius. The voluntary
sinking of seven men-of-war lay the Russians barred any approach
from the sea side and General Mentchicow with the regular army
occupied a plateau outside the city. Two battles were fought, at
Balaclava, where the Russians inflicted great loss on the English
(charge of the Light Brigade) and at Inkermann, where the English
were saved and the Russians defeated by the timely arrival of the
French. The slow progress of the siege compelled the allies to
winter in the Crimea. Unprepared as they were they suffered
extreme hardship.
THE CRIMEAN WAR AND ITALY. 313
463. Sardinia Joins the Allies. — Negotiations were carried on during
winter and spring. But the proposals for peace made by Austria and
Prussia were rejected by Russia. Thereupon Austria joined the allies, but
receiving no support from Prussia abstained from actual interference. To
obtain voice and standing in the deliberations of the Great Powers, Cavour
now joined the alliance of France and England, and sent 15,000 men under
General La Marmora to the Crimea.
»
454. The Fall of Sebastopol, 1855. — During the summer
of 1855 the siege of Sebastopol was pushed on. The French did
nearly all the effective fighting. In August they defeated the Rus-
sians who had crossed the Tchernaya. In October they stormed
the Malacoff Tower. The English took the Radan but lost it again.
The retreat of the Russians to the northern part of the fortress
opened the city of Sebastopol to the allies. All parties desired
peace. The success, such as it was, saved the honor of the allies.
Russia was consoled for her loss by the capture of Kars in Armenia.
The representatives of Russia, Turkey, France, England, Austria,
and Sardinia, met in Paris, 1856. Prussia was admitted at the last
hour. Cavour succeeded, notwithstanding Austria's protest, in
entering the Congress of Paris on the same level as the representa-
tives of the Great Powers.
455. Peace of Paris, 1856. — Russia had to draw back her
frontier a few miles from the lower Danube, to restore Kars, and to
renounce her protectorate over the Christians of Turkey and the
Danube Principalities. She had also to promise to build no arsenals
and not to keep more ships in the Black Sea than Turkey. The
Porte pledged herself to treat the Christians within her dominions
on a level with the Mohammedan population. The Western Powers
restored to Russia Sebastopol minus its docks and fortifications and
a few other places on the Black Sea captured by the allies.
The Congress also issued the following "Declaration of Paris": 1.
Privateering is and remains abolished. 2. The neutral flag covers enemies'
goods with the exception of contraband of war. 3. Neutral goods, except
contraband of war, are not liable to capture under an enemy's flag. 4.
Blockades, to be binding, must be effective — that is to say, maintained by
a force really sufficient to prevent access to the coast of the enemy. All the
Powers, except the United States, Spain, and Mexico, subsequently signed
the Declaration.
314 THE REVOLUTION OF THE CABINETS.
After peace had been secured, Cavour succeeded in his object of bring-
ing before the Congress his own views upon the States of Italy. With
utter disregard of international law and right the internal affairs of the
Papal States and the Italian sovereignties were discussed, although no rep-
resentative of these States was present, with a view of clearing the way for
subsequent schemes of aggression. In public discussions and private con-
versations, in notes and memorandums, Cavour urged the granting^of a sep-
arate administration for Lombardy and Venetia and of liberal Constitutions
'for Modena, Parma, and Tuscany, by their respective sovereigns. He
charged the Pontifical government with incapacity and oppression, and
demanded that the Romagna and the Legations be at least administratively
separated from the Papal States. As to Naples he demanded an immediate
and full amnesty to the exiles who were plotting against Ferdinand II. in
London, Paris, and Turin. Cavour was sufficiently assured, when he left
Paris, that in provoking a war with Austria he would have the support of
France and England.
Chev. O'Clery: The Making of Italy, Ch. I. — Teeling: The House of Savoy: M. '98. 3.—
Kinglake: The Invasion of the Crimea. — Dr. Russell: British Expedition to the Crimea. —
S. Walpole: Foreign Relations. — Mazade: Life of Cavour. — De la Rive: Le Comte de
Cavour.
§2.
WAR OF FRANCE AND SARDINIA WITH AUSTRIA, 1859.
456. Napoleon and Cavour Against Austria. — After the
Congress of Paris war with Austria became the subject of long nego-
tiations between Napoleon and Cavour. The independence of Italy
was a cherished idea of the Emperor of the French. " The Con-
spirator of Forli," as Pius IX. called Napoleon, had fought for it
in the Revolution of 1831. Cavour's pleadings with Napoleon were
materially advanced by an unexpected event. On the evening of
January 14, 1858, a daring though unsuccessful attempt was made
to assassinate the Emperor and the Empress as they entered the
opera house. The murderous plot carried out by Italian hands was
prepared in England under the control of Felice Orsini, a fugitive of
the Roman Revolution. The Orsini bombs served as a reminder
to Napoleon that by his oath to the Carbonari he had foresworn
himself to the Italian Revolution. Accordingly, during the summer
of the same year, in a hurried interview at Plombberes, Napoleon and
Cavour came to an agreement on the following points : War with
Austria, the formation of an Italian Kingdom of about 11.000,000
souls and the cession of Savoy and Nice to France.
WAR OF FRANCE AND SARDINIA WITH AUSTRIA. 315
457. War Declared. — On New Year's day, 1859, a few sharp words ad-
dressed by Napoleon to the Austrian ambassador gave Europe the first inti-
mation of the coming storm. Cavour had pushed forward his armaments,
fortified Alessandria and created a marine arsenal at Spezzia. His embassies
at the Italian courts were as many centers of conspiracy. In March the
National Italian Society through its Vice- President, Garibaldi, issued in-
structions to the secret societies of Lombardy and Venetia for an insurrec-
tion to take place upon the outbreak of the war. In April Victor Emmanuel
personally bestowed on Garibaldi the command of the Italian free corps
This act induced Austria to send an ultimatum to Turin demanding the
disarmament of Piedmont within three days. The Chambers, hastily sum-
moned for the purpose, conferred dictatorial powers on the King, and sus-
pended the Constitution and the liberty of the press for the time of the war,
while French troops poured into the country by land and sea. The con-
servative ministry of Derby in England, then in power, refused co-operation
with Napoleon, it being too apparent that the affair was but a wanton provo-
cation of Cavour.
458. Battle of Magenta. — The incapacity of the counsellors
at Vienna and the vacillating conduct of Gyulay, the Austrian com-
mander, made the campaign a failure from the outset. Gyulay
crossed the Ticino. The battle of Montebello was but an Austrian
reconnoissance in force to obtain information. After an obstinate
resistance the Austrians were driven back. Garibaldi entered Lom-
bardy and kept throughout the campaign on the left, and a little in
advance of the allies, along the spurs of the Alps. The two days
fighting at Palestro was the only engagement in which the Italians,
five to one, did most of the fighting. When the allies assumed the
offensive, Gyulay recrossed the Ticino and joined the forces of Clam
Gallas, near Magenta. The French crossed almost at the same time.
The chief fighting was done by Canrobert and MacMahon according
to a plan drawn up by Napoleon. Victor Emmanuel and his army,
who had been assigned the somewhat subordinate task of supporting
MacMahon, were not even near the field. The possession of the
village at Magenta was disputed with desperate courage ; its final
storming by the French decided the battle which gave Lombardy to
the allies.
459. Battle of Solferino, June 24. — To insure the posses-
sion of Milan it was necessary to take Malignano. In the struggle
for this place 8,000 Austrians offered 36,000 French the most
316 THE REVOLUTION OF THE CABINETS.
\
hotly contested resistance of the war. Numbers won, however, and
the entire Austrian army withdrew behind the Adda. The Emperor
of Austria now assumed the supreme command of his armies in Italy
and massed his troops around Solferino. One hundred and fifty
thousand men on either side were engaged in this very sanguinary
battle. From the outset all the unity of plan and action was upon
the side of the French. On the Austrian side only Benedeck held his
ground throughout the battle against the twofold superior army of Vic-
tor Emmanuel. With tears of vexation he received the Emperor's
command to join the general retreat, after the Austrian center hud
been broken by MacMahon's corps and the Imperial Guards. The
total loss of the Austriaus in dead, wounded, and prisoners, was
21,900, that of the allies 16,300 men. The loss of the battle was
due not to the Austrian soldiers but to the blunders of the Imperial
staff.
Napoleon and Victor Emmanuel entered Milan. Here Napoleon addressed
a proclamation to the Italians to rally round Victor Emmanuel and to free
Italy from the Po to the Adriatic. And indeed Florence had already
accomplished her revolution. The Grand Duke had sought an asylum in the
camp of the Austrians. The government of Modena had melted away. The
Duchess of Parma had released her subjects from their allegiance. The
Court of Turin sent its representatives to the revolted States to prepare them
for annexation. The Austrians, after Magenta, evacuated Bologna which
they had occupied for ten years, and immediately the Romagna joined the
revolutionary movement.
46O. The Peace of Villafranca and Zurich, July 11 ;
November 1O. — After these terrible losses Austria was anxious
for Peace, Napoleon equally so. His success had been dearly
bought. His position on the Mincio, in the face of the Quadri-
lateral— the strong Austrian fortresses of Peschiera, Verona, Mantua
and Legnano — was by no means impregnable. Germany began to
be alarmed at the progress of the French arms. Public opinion in
Catholic France loudly -condemned a policy which threatened the
extinction of the Papal States. Besides, both Emperors seem to
have been appalled by the frightful carnage of Solferino. Napoleon
III. accordingly arranged a meeting with Francis Joseph I. in
the village of Villafranca, in which the latter was completely duped
by Napoleon III. who boasted of an alliance with Prussia that
v
THE ITALIAN ANNEXATIONISTS AND ROMAN QUESTION. 317
did not exist. Thus without consulting Victor Emmanuel or
Cavour, Napoleon settled the preliminaries of peace : Cession of
Lombardy (save Mantua and Peschiera) to the King of Sardinia ;
Venetia to remain under the crown of Austria ; return of the Grand
Duke of Tuscany and the Duke of Modena to their principalities ;
creation of an Italian Confederacy under the presidency of the Pope.
On this basis the definite treaty was signed by the plenipotentiaries
at Zurich. As the event proved, the peace of Zurich settled nothing
but the boundary line between Austria and Piedmont.
Having stopped midway in the execution of the plans arranged at Plom-
bieres and proclaimed at Milan, Napoleon for the time refrained from
claiming Savoy and Nice. Cavour resigned in apparent disgust to save his
popularity with the Liberals who were furious at the Peace of Villafranca;
but he remained, as before, the soul of the Italian agitation.
Chev. O'Ulery : The Making of Italy, ch. II.-VII., pp. 20-117. — Arivabene: Italy under
Victor Emmanuel. — Bossoli: The War in Italy. —Hunt: Hist, of Italy. — Adams : Great
Campaigns. — Kossuth : Memoirs of My Exile. — Lives of Cavour. — Count Orsi : Recol-
lections of the Last Half Century (to Napoleon III.). — Garibaldi and the Revol. in Italy:
A. C. Q. v. 7. — Pachtler: Secret Warfare of Freemasonry ag. Church and State. — A. J.
Th^baud : Freemasonry, A. C. Q. v. 6.
THE ITALIAN ANNEXATIONS AND THE ROMAN QUESTION.
461. State of the Papal Government. — The discontent manifested
during the Italian war in the Papal provinces sprang from the agitation of
the Carbonari, Young Italy, and Cavour's agents, not from a defective ad-
ministration. The charges of Papal mal- administration made by Cavour,
and spread by the Liberal press of Europe, were refuted by M. de Raynoval
in an official report written solely for the information of the French
government. The taxes in the Papal States were lighter than in most
European countries. A Roman paid on the average 22 francs where a
Frenchman paid 45. The government was not in the hands of the priests,
as charged. In all the 18 provinces of the Papal territory there were but
fifteen priests holding office in the government. Among the 5 000 admin-
istrative officials in Rome, there were only ninety-five ecclesiastics. The
provinces that were placed entirely under lay administration complained
of discrimination practiced, against them by the exclusion of ecciesiastics.
The codes of procedure in civil, criminal, and commercial cases were found
upon investigation by French jurists to be above criticism. Numerous
public works had been executed by Pius IX., such as the drainage of the
marshes, the building of railways, telegraphs, steamers on the Tiber.
Agriculture was encouraged. The Papal States were prosperous and had
318 THE REVOLUTION OF THE CABINETS.
more resources for relieving unavoidable misery than any other European
State. When Pius IX. in 1857 made a progress of four months through his
dominions he was everywhere received with genuine enthusiasm.
462. State of the Revolted Provinces. — The revolutionary
party in the revolted provinces went on organizing provisional gov-
ernments and appointing dictators, as if no Peace of Zurich existed.
Farini extended his dictatorship from Modena to Parma and the Papal
territory of Bologna, forming a provisional State under the old Latin
name of Emilia. The new governments sent envoys to Turin, Paris,
and London to work for annexation to Piedmont. After her reverses
Austria could only protest against these proceedings. Prussia was
beginning to think of her own aggrandizement. England, where
Russell and Palmerston* replaced the Conservative ministry of Derby,
went straight over to the Italian camp. Lord John Russell had
formally pledged the English Liberals to the support of the Italian
Revolution. His cabinet, in its sectarian hatred of the Papacy, sus-
pended the laws of England and the international laws of Europe to
place money and men at the disposal of Cavour and Garibaldi and
to hold direct communications with the enemy's headquarters against
the King of Naples with whom England was at peace.
463. Pius IX. and Napoleon III. — Napoleon meanwhile
kept his eyes on Savoy and Nice. In the place of Venetia the central
States of Italy including part of the Papal territory were to satisfy
for the present the aspirations of the Italian party. On December
31, 1859, Napoleon personally wrote to Pius IX. asking him to cede
the Romagna to Victor Emmanuel. The Pope's answer, published
to the Catholic world in the Encyclical of January 19, 1860, was
the celebrated non possumus. " We declared to the Emperor, we
could not yield up that which was not ours. We could not abdicate
the said provinces without violating the solemn oaths by which we
are bound." Thereupon Napoleon opened his direct campaign
against the Holy See by suppressing the ' ' Univers ' ' of Louis Veuil-
lot for publishing the Papal letter and by putting an end to the
liberty of the Catholic press.
464. The Annexations. — Two days after the Encyclical,
Cavour became again Prime Minister. In March he signed the ces-
THE ITALIAN ANNEX ATIONISTS AND ROMAN QUESTION. 319
sion of Savoy and Nice, the cradle of the Savoy Dynasty, to France.
He then at once proceeded to the annexation of Central Italy by
inaugurating the farce of a plebiscite in Tuscany and Emilia. The
first so-called National Parliament meeting at Turin put the seal to
the " accomplished fact."
" The annexation of the Romagna was the first definite accomplished act
in the spoliation of the Holy See. On March 29 Pius IX. promulgated the
bull which, without naming any individual, excommunicated all who had
borne a part in the annexation of the Legations. The new Kingdom of
Italy began its career under the ban of the highest censures of the Church."
465. The Invasion of Sicily. — Meanwhile Garibaldi gath-
ered a band of 1,000 followers, sailed from G-enoa for Sicily, and
landed at Marsala. Persano, the admiral of the Sardinian fleet,
received orders from Cavour to furnish supplies' and afford protec-
tion to Garibaldi's expedition, but also to prevent any Republican
scheme on the part of the freebooter. Numbers of Sicilian rebels
joined the leader of the Redshirts. By the battles of Catalafimi,
Milazzo, Palermo, and Messina, Garibaldi became master and dic-
tator of Sicily.
466. Invasion of the Kingdom of Naples. — In August
Garibaldi landed on the southern coast of Calabria. The army, the
navy, and the administration of the Kingdom of Naples was under-
mined by secret societies, or won over to Italian unity by Cavour 's
agents. The Sardinian fleet secretly supplied the revolutionary com-
mittees with arms and men. Under these circumstances Garibaldi's
campaign was a mere military promenade. General Briganti at the
head of 10,000 troops, allowed him to occupy Reggio. His own
ranks shot the treacherous general as a villain. General Ghio, his
successor, led the Neapolitan army into a trap and surrendered,
infantry, cavalry, and artillery, to a handful of Calabrese. After
protesting against the lawless invasion, the betrayed King, Francis
II., son and successor to Ferdinand II., left the capital September
6, accompanied by his family and the foreign ambassadors, to join
the main army which had concentrated on the river Volturno.
Naples being thus abandoned was readily entered by Garibaldi.
Elated by his easy success he thought of nothing less than to con-
320 THE REVOLUTION OF THE CABINETS.
quer the Papal States and Venetia, and to summon Victor Emmanuel
to Rome to be crowned King of Italy. But Cavour had already
taken measures to carry out. his own plan without the aid of his
Republican ally and tool.
467. Invasion of the Papal States. — As early as August
31, Cavour wrote to Persano: " An insurrectionary movement will
break out in the (Papal) .provinces from the 8th to the 12th of
September. Whether it is suppressed or not, we shall intervene."
Napoleon, on a visit to his new Italian provinces, gave his approval
to the plan at Chambery. The " insurrection," so confidently pre-
dicted by Cavour, consisting in an invasion by Garibaldian bands
who had a few skirmishes with the Papal police, was magnified by
the liberal press of Europe into a spontaneous rising of the people,
and furnished Cavour the desired pretext of curtly summoning Car-
dinal Antonelli " to disarm those corps, the existence o'f which is a
continual menace to Italian tranquillity." Before he received an
answer from the Papal court, the Sardinian troops, 70,000 men
under Fanti-and Cialdini, crossed the frontiers of the Papal States
without a declaration of war.
The " menace to Italiau tranquillity " was a small Papal army of 15,000 men
as against 120..000 Italian veterans backed by the power of Napoleon III.
General Lamoricikre, the hero of Algeria, had responded to the call of
Pius IX. to organize an army of volunteers for the defense of the Patrimony
of St. Peter. The best names of Austria, France, Belgium, Ireland and
Canada, were represented in this Catholic army. Lamoriciere's plan of
resistance was to concentrate a force at Ancona and hold out there as long
as possible in the hope of some Catholic power coming to his assistance.
He was confirmed in this hope by a treacherous dispatch which Napoleon,
September 10, sent to the French ambassador at Rome, announcing that he
would oppose by force an invasion of Papal territory by Piedmont. As a
matter of fact the Catholic Powers protested and withdrew their represent-
atives from Turin, but did no more. Palrnerston attempted a positive
apology for the outrage.
468. The Campaign of Castelfidardo. — The capture of
Perugia and the fall of Spoleto ended the campaign in Umbria.
Cialdini established himself with 28,000 men on the hills of Castel-
fidardo, to the southwest of Ancona, barring the one road* by which
s
THE ITALIAN ANNEX ATIONISTS AND ROMAN QUESTION. 321
Lamoriciere and Pimodan were endeavoring to reach Ancona. The
battle of Castelfidardo, September 18, was a most heroic effort
in which the chivalrous sons of almost every Catholic country laid
down their lives for Pius IX. They were not vanquished but over-
whelmed by numbers. Pimodan fell fighting after receiving the
fourth bullet in his body. Of the 5,000 men who had marched out
of Loretto in the morning, hardly 2,000 returned, the enemy not -
daring to pursue them. The following day they capitulated on
honorable terms. Lamoriciere with a small escort had succeeded
in reaching Ancona where he assumed command.
469. The Fall of Ancona. — The Sardinian fleet arrived before
Ancona on the very day of Castelfidardo,, and forthwith began the
bombardment. For nine days the garrison defended with undimin-
ished vigor harbor and city against the united land and naval forces
of the kingdom of Sardinia. But the blowing up of the light-house
fort by a stray shell sank the great chain which barred the harbor,
and left the city at the mercy of Persano's fleet. Lamoriciere
ordered the white flag of truce to be hoisted on walls and citadel,
and opened negotiations for surrender with Persano. Yet the brutal
Cialdini in the face of Persano's indignant protest, kept up for
twelve hours a murderous and senseless bombardment. The capitu-
lation was signed September 29. Lamoriciere returned to France
where he died in 1865. The annexation of Umbria and the Marches
was completed by the usual farce of a plebiscite.
470. Naples Invaded from the North. — Victor Emmanuel
assumed the command of the army in October and invaded the
kingdom of Naples to deprive Francis I. of his kingdom and to put
an end to the dictatorship of Garibaldi, who had just won a victory
rer the Neapolitan troops on the Volturno. Capua fell into the hands
the invaders. Francis II. and his army retired to the strong
)rtress of Gaeta. Annexation in the usual form — votes cast in
gleam of fixed bayonets — followed of course. At Teano Gari-
ildi greeted Victor Emmanuel as King of Italy. The meeting
ided the campaign of Garibaldi, for a few days afterwards the King
nth studied contempt disbanded the followers of Garibaldi who had
lone his work in the South.
21
322 THE REVOLUTION OF THE CABINETS.
471. The Fall of Gaeta, 1861. — The siege of Gaeta began
November 4. From the first day of the siege to the last the young
King was the soul of the defense, whilst the Queen was indefatigable
in the care of the sick and the wounded. The ingenuity and resource
which Col. Afanto di Rivera displayed during the siege earned him
a European reputation. For over three months the besiegers made
little impression on the fortress. But on February 5, the great
magazine at Graeta exploded, probably by a treasonable act. The
wide-spread destruction caused by the disaster made the fortress
untenable. The capitulation, negotiated under a murderous fire
from the Piedmontese batteries, was signed February 13, 1861. On
the 14th the King and Queen of Naples departed in a French cor-
vette for Rome where Pius IX. repaid the hospitality which he him-
self had received at Gaeta in the days of his exile. The fall of
Messina, March 13, and of Civitella, March 20, completed the con-
quest of Southern Italy. On the day after the fall of Gaeta the
Chamber of Deputies at Turin voted the law which made Victor
Emmanuel King of Italy by the grace of the Revolution.
Chev. O'Clery: ch. VL-XIIL, pp. 87-270.— Captain Forbes: Campaign of Garibaldi
in the Two Sicilies. — George Goldie: The Papal Volunteers, D. R. 57 (vol. 47 Old
Series). — Persano's Diary. — Ch. Gamier: Memoire sur le Royaume des deux Sidles,
Paris, 1866. — Abb6 Pugeois: Le Gen. La Moriciere. — Dicey : Memoirs of Cavour.—
'McCarthy: Garibaldi and the Rev. in Italy, A. C. Q., 7. — Loughnan: Garibaldi, M. '82,
2.— Lives of Cavour, Garibaldi, Lord J. Russell. — Pierre de la Gorce : L'Histoire du
Second Empire.
THE KINGDOM OF ITALY AND THE ROMAN QUESTION.
472. " Brigandage " in Naples. — As early as October, 1860, a patriotic
movement began in favor of Francis II. in the Abbruzzi mountains and
spread rapidly through the kingdom. After the fall of Gaeta it remained
dormant for a few months, but again burst forth in the autumn not as a
local struggle but as a national movement. The name " Brigandage " was
attached to it by the invaders in order to throw odium on tha rising of the
royalists. For over four years sixty battalions amounting to 120,000 men
were required to hold the kingdom subject to Victor Emmanuel. Sixteen
towns numbering 50,000 inhabitants situated in seven provinces were sacked
and burned within fourteen months by the Piedmontese. From May, 1861,
to February, 1863, over 7,000 persons were shot, killed in battle, or made
prisoners. The draconic measures adopted for the suppression of the rising
THE KINGDOM OF ITALY AND THE ROMAN QUESTION. 323
were: shooting with or without trial all persons taken with arms ; impris-
onment without trial of suspects, death or imprisonment for working in
the fields without a passport, for carrying to the field work more food than
required for one meal — in some places for storing food in one's house for
more than one day. The Neapolitan prisons contained in 1863, according to
the lowest estimate, about 20,000 untried political prisoners. Prisons able
to accommodate 600 persons were crammed with 1,200 and 1,300 persons.
Catholic bishops and priests were insultingly confined with the lowest
criminals. Lord Henry Lennox declared in the English Parliament from
personal observation, that the condition of the tortured in Dante's Inferno
alone could give an idea of what he had seen in one of these prisons.
The political movement died put in the summer of 1864, but to this day
the South of Italy is held in check by the northern regiments of the Italian
army. Thus the sham plebiscite of 1860 brought only misery and anarchy
to Southern Italy.
473. The Roman Question. — Cavour's next move was
towards obtaining the rest of the Patrimony of St. Peter with the
city of Rome by negotiations with the Holy Father himself. These
negotiations were hopeless, for Pius IX. was inflexible in questions
of right and justice. The Roman Question was formally raised in
the Parliament at Turin, March 25, 1862, by the motion that the
Chamber of Deputies should declare Rome the capital of Italy. In
his speech Cavour based this demand on ' c the absolute neces-
sity for Italy of possessing Rome as her capital." The spirit-
ual independence and dignity of the Pope would find its guarantee
in the principles of liberty to be made an integral part of the Con-
stitution of the new Italian Kingdom. " A free Church in a free
State ' ' should be henceforth Italy's policy. The resolution declaring
Rome the capital of Italy was carried March 27. In less than
three months after making the final spoliation of the Church a law
of Italy, Cavour was no more. He died June 6, leaving it to
Ricasoli to carry out his policy.
474. The Church and the Spoliation. — Since 1859 Pius
IX. never ceased to inculcate in his Apostolical Letters and
public allocutions the necessity of the temporal sovereignty of
the Holy See for the freedom and independence of the supreme
spiritual authority. The bishops of the Catholic world taught
the same truth in their Councils and Pastoral letters. The
324 THE REVOLUTION OF THE CABINETS.
most solemn manifestation of this kind took place in 1862,
when 800 Cardinals, Archbishops and Bishops — 265 of them
present at Rome — solemnly voiced the necessity of the Pope's
temporal sovereignty. " We acknowledge," said the prelates in
their address to the Pope, " the civil principality of the Holy See as
necessary in the present order of human society for the good
and free government of the Church and of souls." The Catholic
laity responded by national conventions, numerous protests against
the usurpation of the Papal provinces and by generous contribu-
tions of money and men for the defense of the remaining Pontifical
government.
475. The Affair of Aspramonte, 1862. —Whilst the Cabinet of Turin
was urging Napoleon to withdraw his troops, which had occupied Rome
and a few other places since 1849, Garibaldi established a drilling camp in
Sicily and then crossed over to Calabria. The government, after some
hesitation, thought it prudent to stop the enterprise. Troops of the line, in
a short but hot skirmish, disarmed the volunteers and wounded and captured
Garibaldi. Although Ratazzi, then prime minister, amnestied the captive
leader, his ministry fell under the furious outcries of the Mazzinians.
476. The September Convention of 1864. — The Kingdom
of Italy received a new provisional capital in consequence of the
September Convention. On the one hand Victor Emmanuel desired
the French troops of occupation withdrawn from Rome. On the
other hand the French Catholics by their energetic protests compelled
the Emperor to'desist from open persecution of the Holy See. The
result was a compromise arranged without consulting the Pope.
France was to withdraw her troops from the Papal territory within
two years. Italy pledged herself not to attack the Papal territory,
nor to allow an attack from without, and to permit the organization
of a small Papal army. A secret clause made the execution of the
Convention dependent on the transfer within six months of its date
of the Italian capital to a place to be determined by Victor
Emmanuel. When it became known in Turin, that Florence was to
be the capital of Italy, the indignation of the people knew no bounds.
The crowded streets resounded with cries of : " Down with the
ministers! Turin or Rome! " The interference of the armed
police and the military resulted in the massacre of over 150 unarmed
THE KINGDOM OF ITALY AND THE ROMAN QUESTION. 325
men, women, and children. The King was compelled to dismiss the
ministry of Minghetti who had concluded the treaty. Thus began
the ministry of General La Marmora, the most important since
Cavour's. The Radicals began to perceive that Florence would be
but a station on the way to Rome, and the Parliament, meeting in
October, approved the Convention and the transfer of the capital to
Florence.
477. A New Ally. — La Marmora's political aim was to extri-
cate the cabinet of Florence from its dependence on the court of
Paris, and to substitute Prussia for France as the chief ally of
Italy. The increasing tension between Prussia and Austria gave
him the desired opportunity.
In Prussia Frederic William IV. had died in 1861. His brother, since
1857 Prince-Regent, ascended the throne as King William I., and at once
began a reform of the Prussian army. Being strongly opposed by two
successive Prussian Chambers, -the King called in von Bismarck, the man
of "blood and iron " as president of the ministry. His first care was the
army. With the aid of a reorganized army Prussia was to be made supreme
in Germany. To gain this end he needed a war with Austria. But the
new King and his whole family were opposed to this project. Bismarck
calculated that the best means of embroiling the two monarchs in mutual
disputes would be an alliance between them for the purpose of interfering
in the affairs of Schleswig-Holstein. He fully avowed all these aims and
ideas in his secret dispatches to La Marmora. The Schleswig-Holstein
affair had the following origin.
478. Schleswig-Holstein Affair. — When Christian IX. suc-
ceeded to the throne of Denmark in 1863, he accepted a Constitution
which incorporated Schleswig with Denmark. An incorporation of
Schleswig was clearly excluded by the agreement of 1852 between
Austria, Prussia, and Denmark. Bismarck induced King William
to conclude an alliance with Austria against Denmark. The allied
Powers demanded a repeal of the new Constitution. Upon Den-
mark's refusal an Austro-Prussian army advanced into Schleswig,
1864, whilst the troops of the German Confederation occupied Hoi-
stein. In a few months the allies accomplished the conquest of
Schleswig, the greater part of Jutland, and the island of Alsen.
These misfortunes induced Christian IX. to sue for the Peace of
Vienna, in which he got back the province of Jutland, but agreed
326 THE REVOLUTION OF THE CABINETS.
to recognize whatever disposition the monarchs would make of the
Duchies of Schleswig, Holstein, and Lauenburg.
479. The Treaty of Gastein. — Bismarck's foresight began
soon to be verified. The joint administration of the Duchies by
Austria and Prussia led to endless bickerings and wretched quarrels
between the two Powers, which were only temporarily settled by the
Treaty of Gastein. By this treaty the sovereignty over the Duchies
remained vested in the two Powers jointly, .but Austria was to
administer Holstein, and Prussia Schleswig. As to Lauenburg,
Austria ceded her claims such as they were to Prussia for a money
indemnification, and Prussia joined the Duchy to the crown. The
Treaty of Gastein was to last until a final settlement of the state of
the Duchies should be reached.
480. The Alliance of Prussia and Italy. — The Treaty of
Gastein could not avert the war which Bismarck was resolved to
bring about at any cost. The two Powers could not come to a final
settlement. Austria desired to strengthen the German Confederacy
of which she ^as still the virtual head, by uniting Schleswig-Hol-
stein with the Confederacy as a sovereign State under a native
prince. She therefore supported the popular movement in favor of
the Duke of Augustenburg. Bismarck, on the other hand, wanted
Schleswig-Holstein for Prussia, and vigorously suppressed the move-
ment. To intensify the friction, Prussia came forward with a pro-
posal to reorganize the German Confederacy in such a manner as to
destroy Austria's preponderance in Germany. It was under these
circumstances that Bismarck and La Marmora arranged a secret
offensive and defensive treaty of alliance. Italy bound herself to
declare war against Austria immediately after Prussia should have
taken the initiative. In the peace to be made by both parties jointly,
Austria was to cede Venetia to Italy and an equivalent to Prussia.
481. The Rupture. — Napoleon III., who was friendly to both
Italy and Prussia, proposed a European Congress to avert the
impending war. It failed in consequence of Austria's refusal to
have any change of boundaries submitted to the Congress. Austria
then convoked the estates of Holstein. Prussia declared this convo-
THE WAR OF 1866. 327
cation a breach of the Treaty of Gastein, and her troops invaded
Holstein. Thereupon the Diet of the German Confederation, upon
the motion of Austria, decreed the mobilization of the Confederate
Army, with the exclusion, of course, of the Prussian contingents .
The consequence of these measures was the secession of Prussia
from the Confederation, and war in Germany, Austria, and Italy.
Chev. O'Clery, Ch. XIV.-XIX., pp. 271-380. — Melena: Garibaldi, Autobiography. —
Colonel Chambers: Garibaldi and Italian- Unity. — Ch. Gamier: Le Royaume des deux
Sidles; Official Documents During the War of the Brigandage. — Card. Manning:
The Temporal Sovereignty of the Holy See. — Ming, S. J: The same. — Mgr. Besson:
Life of de Merode, Minister of Pius IX. — Rev. L. Maglione: The Vatican and the King-
dom of Italy. — Powell : Two Tears in the Pontifical Zouaves. — Lady Herbert Lea :
Rome the Capital of Italy. M. '82, 1.— Lives of Pius IX. (see § 8). — Memoirs of La
Marmora (Un po piu di luce; Ein wenig mehr Licht — A Little More Light). — Gosch:
Denmark and Germany since 1815. — Forbes: William of Germany. — C. Law: Prince
Bismarck.
THE WAR OF 1866.
482. Opening of the War. — Austria's army concentrated at Olmiitz
numbered 240,000 men under General Denedeck. The Prussian forces di-
vided into five armies amounted to 326,000 under the chief command of
William I., with General von Moltke as chief of staff. The Crown Prince
Frederic William commanded the Silesian army (115,000 men) and Prince
Frederic Charles the army of Lusatia (93,000 men). When the Diet mobi-
lized the Confederate army under the command of Prince Charles of
Bavaria, Prussia called upon the Kings of Saxony and Hanover and the
Elector of Hesse to form a new confederation under the leadership of
Prussia. Upon their refusal the Prussians occupied the whole of Saxony
and invaded Hanover and Hesse. The Elector of Hesse was conveyed as a
prisoner to the fortress of Stettin. King George of Hanover retreated
southward to join the Bavarians. But the Prussians prevented the junction
of the Confederate armies and forced the Hanoverians to capitulate at Lan-
gensalza. They then defeated the rest of the Confederate troops in a series
of successful engagements, and occupied the principal cities of middle and
southern Germany.
483. Campaign of Custozza. — Victor Emmanuel had an army
of 200,000 men in the field against the 70,000 under Archduke
Albert. This was all that Austria could spare for Italy. Garibaldi
commanded 36,000 volunteers but was easily kept in check at the foot
of the Alps by a few Austrian battalions and the volunteer corps of
Tyrolese riflemen. The Austrians concentrated their main army
328 THE REVOLUTION OF THE CABINETS.
behind Verona. La Marmora crossed the. Mincio, June 23, and
occupied the plain of Villafranca. The following day his army
advanced with little order or method towards the heights near Pes-
chiera, without knowing that they were in front of the Archduke's
main army. La Marmora, utterly unprepared for a battle, and
unable to communicate with several of his divisions, suffered the
great defeat of Custozza. Though still doubly outnumbering the
victors, the Italian army, demoralized by the hopeless inefficiency at
headquarters, recrossed the Mincio during the night. On the morn-
ing of June 25, there was not an Italian soldier on Austrian ground.
Italy's salvation came from the Prussian victories in Bohemia.
484. The Battle of Sadowa, July 3. — The occupation of
Saxony had opened the way for the invasion of Bohemia, the chief
seat of the war. The armies of the two Prussian Princes entered
Bohemia without resistance. A third army followed the Saxons
retreating from their own country to join the Austrians. Before the
decisive battle was fought several Austrian corps had been defeated
in detail. Numbers, arms, and organization were against Benedeck.
The muzzle-loaders could not compete with the new Prussian needle-
guns. Only Trautenau was an Austrian victory. The die was cast
at Sadowa, nine days after Custozza. The Austrians in their strong
position, with the fortress of Koenigsgratz and the Elbe in their
rear, successfully withstood the Prussian assaults in the fore-
noon; but in the afternoon the Silesian army arrived, gained the
flank and the rear of the Austrians and secured to Prussia a com-
plete victory. The Austrians re treated to wards Olmiitz. The Prus-
sians occupied Prague and Briinn and advanced to the neighbor-
hood of Vienna. An army corps was detailed for Hungary where
Bismarck's agents had prepared a revolutionary outbreak. At this
juncture a truce was affected through the mediation of Napoleon
and preliminaries of peace were signed July*22. Francis Joseph
ceded Venetia to Napoleon to be handed over to Italy.
485. Naval Battle of Llssa. — Admiral Persano, meanwhile,
had lain quietly at Ancona with his large fleet. Public indignation
and a sharp command of the King's Council " to do something "
induced him to sail with twenty-nine battle-ships — eleven of them
THE WAR OF 1866. 329
ironclads — to the coast of Dalmatia, and take possession of the
island of Lissa, on July 20. The Austrian squadron under Teg-
ethoff sent to the relief of Lissa was far inferior in numbers and
armament, and consisted chiefly of old wooden vessels. Tegethoff' s
short order to his captains was to ram away at everything they
saw painted " gray." True to his command the Austrians rushed
in among the Italian ironclads. Tegethoff himself sunk the iron-
clad " King of Italy " with 400 men in a minute's time. The other
ironclads in trying to avoid the Austrian bows broke their ranks and
were driven hither and thither at the enemy's will. When the fleets
separated, Tegethoff, followed by his squadron in well ordered line,
passed through the heart of the Italian fleet and took up his posi-
tion in front of Lissa, whose rescue he had accomplished. Persano
sailed back to Ancona. He was subsequently deprived of his rank
and decorations and dismissed with dishonor from the service.
486. Peace of Prague and of Vienna. — In the Peace of
Prague with Prussia, the Emperor of Austria consented to the
reorganization of Germany without Austria, to the annexations made
by Prussia, and to the cession of Venetia to Italy. Austria had to pay
$15,000,000 for the cost of the war. In the Peace of Vienna with
Italy Austria acknowledged the Kingdom of Italy with which Venetia
was united. The Iron Crown of Lombardy was delivered to the
representative of Victor Emmanuel. The annexations by Prussia of
Schleswig-Holstein, Hanover, Hesse, Nassau, and the free city of
Frankfort increased the territory of the monarchy from 110,000 to
140,000 square miles, and its population from 19,000,000 to
23,500,000 inhabitants.
487. North German Confederation, — The federative union of North
Germany arranged by treaties between Prussia, Saxony, and the other States
north of the Main was a new creation, independent of the old Confedera-
tion. The Federative Government consisted of the Federative Council
(Bundesrath) and the Diet (Reichstag;. The members of the Bundesrath
represent the federated States and their ruling princes, and deliberate under
the presidency of the Chancellor. The King of Prussia, as President of
the Federation, represents the League in its international relations, declares
war, concludes peace, accredits its ambassadors and controls the army and
navy with the consent of the Bundesrath. As member of the Bundesrath
he can be outvoted like any other prince. The people are represented in
the Reichstag, and elect its members by direct manhood suffrage. The
330 THE REVOLUTION OF THE CABINETS.
Bundesrath and the Reichstag do not form an upper and a lower house, but
are independent bodies. Proposals which receive a majority of votes in
the Council and in the Diet, become laws without ratification by the King
President, who signs the law but has no veto power. The relation of the
southern States to the North German Confederation was that of an offensive
and defensive alliance, a tariff union, and, in case )f war, of military sub-
ordination to the King of Prussia.
488. Results of the War in Austria. — The general dissatisfaction in
Austria caused by the military defeat in Bohemia lifted the Liberal Party
into power. The reorganization of the Empire was intrusted to a foreigner,
Count Ferdinand of Beust, who had been minister of foreign affairs in
Saxony. He undertook the transformation of the Habsburg monarchy into
a modern constitutional State, and the reconciliation of Hungary with
Austria and the Habsburg dynasty. Since 1849 Hungary had been ruled by
German and Czech officials. Beust came to an understanding with the
liberal Hungarian leaders, Francis Deak and Count Andrassy, which
acknowledged the separate national existence of Hungary. Centralized
Austria gave way to the dual Austro-Hungarian monarchy. The federation
of the two equal States (Cisleithania and Transleithania, from the river
Leitha below Vienna) was to be renewed every ten years. The two States
were united in personal union, the Emperor of Austria being at the same
time the King of Hungary. Each of the States received its own Constitu-
tion, government, Parliament, and ministry. The two Parliaments annually
choose a delegation of sixty members each, to legislate in matters of foreign
policy, military administration, and imperial finance. The delegations
meet alternately in Vienna and Pesth in separate houses. The three im-
perial ministers of the Chancellary, War, Finance, are responsible only to
the Delegations, not to the Parliaments.
489. The New Policy. — Beust's reorganization of Cisleithania was
unfortunate for the internal peace and prosperity of Austria. The Protest-
ant minister of a Catholic country destroyed the influence of the clergy
on education, especially in the elementary schools, and introduced the
system of " neutral " or unsectarian instruction in the whole country.
He tore up the Concordat with the Holy See, and joined the enemies of the
Temporal Power. He still more increased the already numerous army of
officials, and obliged every servant of the State to become a promoter of
religious, political, and capitalistic liberalism. He finally disgusted every
Austrian patriot by his servility to Prussia which he left as a legacy to his
liberal successors.
Chev. O'Clery: ch. XX., pp. 381-403. Campaign of 1866 in Germany, Staff edition,
transl. by Wright and Hozier. — Capt. Hozier: The Seven Weeks' War. - Sir A. Malet:
The Overthrow of the German Confederation. — Dicey: Battlefields of 1S66. — Simon:
William I. and his Reign; The Treaties of 1856 and 1867, E. R. 71, 1. — Atheridge: Ct.
von Beust, D. R. 87, 3.— Baron H. de Worms: Memoirs of Ferd. Count von Beust.
NEW ITALIAN AGGRESSIONS. 331
§6.
NEW ITALIAN AGGRESSIONS — THE PONTIFICATE OF PIUS IX.
490. The Garibaldian Raid of 1867. — The cession of Venice completed
another stage in the making of Italy. In accordance with the September
Convention Mgr. Merode and General Kanzler, successive ministers of war
to Pius IX., organized a small but well- equipped and ably- officered army of
13,000 men, partly Italians, partly Papal Zouaves or volunteers from every
Catholic country. The sole object of this force was to protect the Papal
States against Garibaldian attacks. Pius IX. had nothing to fear from his
subjects, they were thoroughly loyal both in the country and in Rome ; and
to provide for an army able to cope with an Italian invasion, his resources
were inadequate. The French army of occupation evacuated Rome Decem-
ber 12, 1866. At once Ratazzi, La Marmora's successor, concocted a new
scheme to get possession of Rome. Garibaldi was to enter the Papal terri-
tory. A pretext thus being furnished, the Italian army was to march upon
Rome "to restore order and protect the Sovereign Pontiff." The revolu-
tionary machine was set in motion, committees were formed, arms collected,
volunteers enrolled throughout Italy. The government furnished 181,000
cartridges, free passes on the railroads, and troops of the line disguised as
Garibaldians. At the same time it publicly condemned in terms of righteous
indignation a movement which it superintended in secret. Thus was
brought about the invasion of the Papal States by 10-12,000 Garibaldians in
1867.
491. The Roman Insurrection and its Effects. — The
Roman insurrection, the chief hope of Ratazzi, proved an utter
failure. The cowardly blowing up of a portion of the Serristori
barracks and a number of local fights which lasted less than half an
hour and failed at all points, were the only incidents of this insur-
rection of October 22. On the morning of October 23 Ratazzi
resigned. Menabrea took his place October 27, just after Napoleon,
in consequence of the violation of the September Convention, had
sent a fleet from Toulon to the Papal States. Acting on Mena-
brea's advice, Victor Emmanuel issued a proclamation in which he
condemned the Garibaldian invasion in the name of the laws of
honor and of international treaties. The proclamation was hardly
issued, when a turbulent demonstration of the Party of Action
before the royal palace extorted a promise from the King to throw
laws, honor and international treaties to the winds and to march upon
Rome if the French would occupy the city. The humiliation of
Victor Emmanuel was complete.
332 THE REVOLUTION OF THE CABINETS.
492. The Battle of Mentana. — When Garibaldi heard that
the insurrection in Rome had failed he concentrated his troops in
the neighborhood of the Eternal City. The day after his arrival
before the walls, the French landed at Civita Vecchia. The landing
had two effects. Fifty thousand Italian troops of the line crossed
the Papal frontiers, and annexed four towns to the Kingdom of
Italy. Garibaldi withdrew from Rome and took position at Men-
tana. General Kanzler with 3,000 men followed- by 2,000 French
under Polhes, marched against Garibaldi. From the morning of
November 3, till 3 o'clock in the afternoon, the 3,000 Papal vol-
unteers advanced step by step a.gainst 10,000 Garibaldian veterans ;
after 3 they were assisted by the French. The Revolutionists suf-
fered a crushing defeat. Garibaldi fled before the battle was over.
He lost 2,600, killed, wounded, and prisoners. The rest of his
army hurried across the borders. The regular army of Italy immedi-
ately withdrew from the four ' ' annexed ' ' towns and from the Papal
territory.
The news of Mentana was received with an outburst of joy throughout
the Catholic world. Catholic sentiment in France showed so united a
front that Napoleon thought it wise to declare through his minister, Rou-
her : " That Italy shall not get possession of Rome and of the actual pon-
tifical territory. Never will France endure such an outrage upon her honor
and upon Catholicity." In less than three years Napoleon III. broke his
pledges and completed the betrayal of the Holy See.
493. Pontificate of Pius IX., 1846-78. —The Pontificate of Pius IX.
was the longest on record, and one of the most memorable in history.
This great Pontiff re-established the .Catholic Hierarchies in England and
Holland, and the Latin Patriarchate in Palestine, erected nearly 200 new sees,
concluded concordats with nearly all the Christian States of the two hemi-
spheres, and in numerous allocutions and encyclicals defended the rights of
the Church. The three greatest acts of his Pontificate are the definition of
the Immaculate Conception, December 8, 1854, the Syllabus of 1864, a col-
lection of propositions which condemn the errors of the age, and the
Vatican Council, December 8, 1869 — July, 1870.
494. The Vatican Council. — In 1867 Pius IX. indicated his intention
of summoning a General Council. The announcement at once excited the
animosity of the so-called liberal Catholics who had protested against the
Syllabus. They feared lest the Council might define Papal Infallibility as a
dogma, though it was not summoned for that purpose. The denial of Papal
NEW ITALIAN AGGRESSIONS. 333
infallibility, an heirloom of Gallicauism and Jansenism, was the chief doc-
trinal error in our times, because it struck at the validity of the Pontifical
acts of the last 300 years, weakened the effects of Papal decisions in the
present, and endangered the very root of faith^ An organized opposition
against the Council, headed by Mgr. Dupanloup, Bishop of Orleans, sprang
up within the Church and was loudly applauded by the entire anti-Catholic
press. But in spite of this opposition and the obstacles which secular gov-
ernments threw in its way, the Vatican Council was solemnly opened by
Pius IX. in the first public session, December 8, 1869, made its profession
of the Tridentiqe faith in the second session, January 6, 1870, and, in the
first dogmatic Constitution, defined the Supernatural Order and condemned
the opposing errors in the third, April 24.
495. Papal Infallibility. — The hopes of liberal Catholics,
Protestants and unbelievers received the first check when some 500
Bishops petitioned the Holy See to permit the proposal and definition
of Papal Infallibility. The Fathers of the Council were practically
a unit as to the doctrine itself. But a minority comprising one-
sixth of the Council was opposed to the opportuneness of the
definition. It was a mere question of expediency. After full and
fair deliberation the dogma was defined in the fourth public session
July 18, 1870, by 533 votes against 2. Fifty-five bishops of the
opposition had previously left Rome with Papal permission ; 200
bishops who had not been present at the Council at once sent in
their adhesion. All the bishops of the opposition accepted the
definition as an article of faith. Heretical opposition remained con-
fined to a small number of Professors (Dr. Dollinger, etc.) and
laymen. The breaking out 'of the Franco-German war led to a sus-
pension of the Vatican Council. With the Definition, the principle
of authority was reasserted in the most solemn way. The Syllabus
and the Vatican Council pointed out the only safe way to a regenera-
tion of society.
Chev. O'Clery: ch. XXI-XXIL, pp. 404-463. Mooney: Pius IX. and the Revol., A. C.
Q., 17. — Margotti : Victories of the Church in the first Decade of Pius IX. (Ital.).— R.
Parsons: The Pontificate of Pius IX.; Rationalism; The Vatican Council; Studies, V.—
Card. Manning: The Vatican Council and its Definitions. — Collectio Lacensis. — Beau-
clerk: The Vatican Council, M. '91, 1. — Fessler: Das Vatic. Condi. — Lives of Pius IX.
by: Brennan; Graziani (Sketches of Life and Times) , Hassard ; Dawson (Pius IX. and
his Times'); Maguire; Wills; O'Reilly; HUlscamp. — G. F. Dillon: The War of Anti-
christ with the Church and Christian Civilization.
334 THE REVOLUTION OF THE CABINETS.
§ 7.
CAUSES OF THE FRANCO-GERMAN WAR.
496. The Luxemburg Question. — Napoleon III. committed his greatest
political mistake when he sacrificed Austria to Prussia in 1866, and he was
soon to rue it. After the battle of Sadowa a war party sprang up in France
that clamored for a restoration of the left bank of the Rhine. The idea
that the Rhine was the natural boundary of France had been kept alive by
statesmen, historians, poets, and the daily press since the fall of Napoleon I.
Napoleon III. negotiated with the court of Berlin for a change of frontiers
on the Rhine which would restore the balance of power rudely disturbed by
the increase of Prussian territory. But by his usual policy of promises,
deceits, reckless denials, and bold assertions Bismarck simply dallied with
Napoleon and his diplomatic agents. The Emperor's demands finally
dwindled down to the desire of purchasing the Grand Duchy of Luxemburg
from Holland. But Luxemburg was garrisoned at the time by Prussian
troops. The London Conference of 1867 prevented the outbreak of hostili-
ties by a compromise. Luxemburg was declared neutral, Prussia withdrew
her troops and the fortifications were razed.
497. Internal Troubles in France. — The general elections of 1869 fore-
shadowed the approach of a new revolution. Whilst the rural population
gave the government a good majority, the large cities, especially Paris and
Lyons elected radical men who were violently opposed both to Napoleon's
personal government and to his dynasty. The Emperor tortured by disease
and in consequence inert of mind wavered between the system of personal
rule represented by Rouher and the moderate liberalism represented by
Ollivier. Rouher finally resigned and Ollivier formed a ministry of his own
party. The license of the press brought into play the most slanderous and
blasphemous pens of the atheistic and communistic Revolution. The govern-
ment took reprisals and filled the prisons with journalists and declaimers.
A new liberal Constitution submitted by Ollivier and ratified by over
7,000,000 votes had no effect upon the fermentation of the revolutionary
parties. It was an ominous sign that even in the army 50,000 had voted
with the cities in the negative. To divert attention from internal troubles
the Emperor's advisers urged him to involve the country in a dispute with
Prussia. Napoleon was strongly averse to a war; Bismarck, on the contrary,
hailed with joy the opportunity for a new conquest.
498. Revolution in Spain, 1868-7O. — In 1868 a revolution
broke out in Spain. The defeat of the royal troops at Alcolea
drove Queen Isabella to France. The whole country declared in
favor of the Revolution, thanks to the arbitrary measures of the
CAUSES OF THE FRANCO-GERMAN WAR. 335
ministers and the ill-repute of the Queen. A provisional govern-
ment deposed the Bourbons from the throne and summoned a con-
stituent meeting of the Cortes. The majority of the Cortes decided
against a strong Republican minority for a constitutional monarchy.
Marshal Serrano was appointed Governor-Regent, while General
Prim cast about for a new King at the different courts of Europe.
After many failures Prim offered the Spanish crown to Prince Leopold
of Hohenzollern, a relative of the King of Prussia. As the Prince
soon after withdrew from the candidacy, the crown of Spain was
finally accepted by Amadeo I., the second son of Victor Emmanuel.
499. The Hohenzollern Incident. — The acceptance of the
Spanish crown by the Prince of Hohenzollern created intense sur-
prise and anger in Paris because the negotiations between Spain and
Prussia had been kept secret from the French ambassadors. To
have the Hohenzollern north and south was too much for the French
people. Public opinion and the press declared the scheme with one
voice a challenge of Bismarck to France. It was such in fact, for
Bismarck was resolved to force a war upon France, while her military
state was, as he well knew, weak and disorganized. By his hasty,
undiplomatic proceedings the Duke of Grammont played into the
hands of his wary enemy. He informed the Prussian ambassador in
Paris that France ' ' would not tolerate any Prussian Prince upon the
Spanish throne." The Republicans .and Socialists fanned the war-
like excitement to bring about the fall of Napoleon. Benedetti,
the French ambassador to Prussia, was instructed to obtain from the
King a declaration that ' ' the royal government does not approve the
candidacy of the Prince of Hohenzollern, and orders him to with-
draw his determination taken without the King's permission." The
King could not truthfully make this statement and would not issue
an order. The Prince of Hohenzollern, however, voluntarily and
formally renounced his candidature. Thereupon Benedetti was
ordered to demand an assurance from the King that he would never
sanction a revival of the candidature. The answer was, the King
approves the withdrawal of the Prince ; he can do no more. A new
audience to Benedetti was courteously denied by the King, but the
denial insultingly telegraphed to foreign courts by Bismarck. The
French declaration of war followed at once (July 19). Napoleon's
336 THE REVOLUTION OF THE CABINETS.
declaration that France was not making war upon Germany but only
upon Prussia, was met by King William's declaration that Germany
was waging war not against the French people, but against their
Emperor, and by the general mobilization of the northern and
southern armies*
500. The Armies. — The Prussian army Was splendidly organized, and
its officers were provided with all the topographical details necessary for a
campaign in France. The total strength of the North German army in-
clusive of some 190,000 Landwehr, was 750,000, that of the southern army
100,000 men. The right wing commanded by Steinmetz stood at Cobleuz;
the center under Prince Frederic Charles at Mainz, the left wing under
Crown Prince Frederic William at Mannheim. King William I. was com-
mander-in-chief and the great strategist, General von Moltke, chief of the
general staff.
France was practically unprepared, the military administration in con-
fusion, the fortresses ill-provisioned. Of the 350,000 troops of the line and
the 100,000 gardes mobiles on paper, the eight army corps sent to the front
numbered only 220,000, and these were not fully equipped. A reserve army
of 300,000 was in course of formation. Napoleon was commander-in-chief,
Marshal Leboeuf chief of the general staff. Marshal MacMahou stood at
Strassburg, Marshal Bazaine at Metz. Napoleon committed the regency to
the Empress before taking command.
501. State of Italy. — The earlier months of 1870 had been
signalized in Italy by the appearance of Garibaldian bands and the
violent language of the radical press. The Vatican Council then in
session was exciting the resentment of the Liberals all over Europe.
Even Austria turned against the Holy See, and Beust betrayed his
anger by advocating a change in the September Convention which
would allow Italian troops to occupy Rome with the consent of
Austria and France. The Hohenzollern incident stimulated the zeal
of the Party of Action. On July 17, the streets of Florence re-
sounded to the cries of the Revolutionists : ' ' To Rome ! Down with
France! Hurrah for neutrality! " On the 18th the infallibility of
the Pope was proclaimed in the Council ; on the 19th war was
declared in Paris. With the declaration came Napoleon's resolve to
sacrifice Rome and to withdraw his troops from the Papal States in
order thereby to secure the support of Italy and Austria.
502. Evacuation of Italy and First French Disasters. —
The evacuation of Italy began July 31. The greater part of the
SEDAN AND ROME. 337
infantry and artillery left on August 4th, the day on which France
was losing her first battle at Weissenburg. General Dumont and
the rest of the infantry left Civita Vecchia on August 6, the day of
Woerth and Forbach. At Woerth MacMahon with only 45,000
men against the Crown Prince's 130,000, made a most gallant
defense, but was forced to fall back upon Chalons. The battle of
Forbach drove the main imperial army in full retreat upon Metz.
Three days later the ministry of Ollivier and Grammont fell.
Napoleon transferred the chief command from himself to Bazaine,
and Leboeuf withdrew from the head of the staff. All hope for
Italian and Austrian assistance was now gone.
Chev. O'Clery, ch. XXIII., pp. 464-479. — Napoleon III., Lives by: Forbes (1898);
Frazer (1897) ; Imbert de St. Amand (Louis Napol. and Mile, de Montijo; Nap. III.
and His Court); Jerrold; Lano (1895); E. R. '96. 4. — Loughnan: Reminiscences of the
Second Empire (on Maupas' Papers}, M. '83. 2, 84, 2. — Secret Papers of the Sec. Empire,
E. R. '86, 1.
§8.
SEDAN AND ROME.
503. The Campaign of Gravelotte. — Bazaine's plan was
to join the remnants of MacMahon 's command and the new army
which was being formed in the strongly fortified camp of Chalons.
To prevent this junction the Prussians fought the next three battles
in the neighborhood of Metz, at Neuilly, Vionville, and Gravelotte
(August 14, 16, 18). At Gravelotte, King William at the head of
180,000 and 822 cannon, won, after eight hours hard fighting, a
decisive victory over 140,000 French, supported by 550 cannon ;
13,000 Frenchmen, and 19,000 Prussians fell in this bloody
encounter. These battles cut the French forces in two and enabled
the Prussians to surround the main army in and about Metz, which
lacked sufficient provisions for so great an army.
504. Sedan, September 1. — On the morrow of Gravelotte
the King of Prusssia and General Moltke made for Paris, leaving a
formidable army under the Prince Frederick Charles to invest Metz.
MacMahon, misled by reckless orders from Palikao, the new minister
of war, instead of falling back upon Paris attempted to reach Metz,
whilst Bazaine tried to break through the German lines and join
22
338 THE REVOLUTION OF THE CABINETS.
MacMahon. Seeing the impossibility of reaching Metz, MacMahon,
accompanied by Napoleon III., concentrated his troops at Sedan.
Having no idea of the nearness of the enemy, they camped in a
valley surrounded by hills, a veritable death-trap. The Germans
meanwhile, outnumbering the 140,000 French by fully 110,000
men, approached from different sides, and planted their batteries
upon all the surrounding hills without rousing the suspicion of the
French. The battle became one of artillery, a simple massacre.
The French army fought with heroic, but unavailing bravery.
Three times on that fatal day it changed its commander. Mac-
Mahon wounded in the morning gave up the command to Ducrot ;
Ducrot, also disabled, transferred it to Wimpffen. At three o'clock
French resistance was exhausted. Napoleon ordered the white flag
to be hoisted, and placed his sword into the hands of William I.
505. Fall of the Second Empire. — The following morning Napoleon
drove to the Prussian lines. The capitulation of the French army was
signed by Moltke and Wimpffen. As prisoner of war Napoleon referred the
question of peace to the regent. In a personal interview William I.
assigned Wilhelmshohe near Cassel as residence to the fallen Emperor.
On September 4, the Chambers overthrew the Empire and pro-
claimed the Third Republic. The new government of the National
Defense was a pure creation of the mob. General Trochu accepted
the presidency and the governorship of Paris, Jules Favre became
minister of Foreign Affairs and Gambetta of the Interior. The
Empress and the Prince Imperial fled to England. Of the French
army 10,000 men who had crossed the frontiers were disarmed in
Belgium ; 84,000 men were marched into Germany as prisoners of
war. The German armies not needed for the siege of Metz con-
verged towards Paris. Henceforth all the German military opera-
tions had the object of preventing any attempt to raise the siege of
Paris, whilst the object of all the French operations outside of Metz
was the raising of the siege of Paris.
506. Waiting for Rome. — As long as the fortune of France was hang-
ing ia the balance, the Italian cabinet negotiated with both France and
Prussia. Napoleon gave up all opposition to the taking of Rome. Prussia,
too, gave a formal permission to the cabinet of Florence to march upon
Rome, as the price for Italian neutrality. In public the government pre-
s
SEDAN AND ROME. 339
served its apparent policy of strictly adhering to the September Convention.
Visconti Venosta declared in the name of Victor Emmanuel; " The obliga-
tion which Italy has undertaken neither to attack the Pontifical frontiers nor
to permit it to be attacked, even if it were not enforced by treaties, would
still be enforced by other sanctions, provided by the ordinary law of nations,
and the general political relations of States." But in proportion as the
hopes of France vanished the real intentions of the government were
revealed by the massing of troops along the northern and southern bound-
aries of the Papal States. To the European cabinets the Italian govern-
ment spoke of a mardli to Rome to preserve order and prevent a revolution.
To the Catholic Italians it proclaimed its intention of preserving the free-
dom and authority of the Pope. Pius IX. himself was plied with arguments
to allow a peaceful occupation of his territory. After the battle of Sedan
Victor Emmanuel wrote a brazen-faced letter to the Pope in which he asked
the Head of "Christendom to surrender those States. Pius' refusal to com-
mit perjury and injustice, coupled with a dignified and pathetic rebuke of
the royal aggressor, extorted the admiration even of the enemies of the
Temporal Power.
5O7. The Sacrilege of 187O. — On September 11, Cadoma
with 80,000 men invaded the Papal States. The 13,000 volunteers
of General Kanzler were the only defense which Pius could oppose.
They had orders to hold their ground against Garibaldian bands but
to fall back upon Rome before the regular army. The Italians
marched in five divisions by different routes from the North and
the South until they united under the walls of Rome. Wherever
they left a garrison they gathered, together the few Liberals they
found in the town, organized Giuntas and voted " loyal addresses "
to Victor Emmanuel. On September 19, 60,000 Italians with 100
guns encircled Rome. There were skirmishes around the city, and
a few shots exchanged from the walls. Rome within was perfectly
quiet ; not a single attempt was made to show sympathy with the
invaders. Immense crowds nocked around Pius IX. wherever he
appeared in public. The three summonses to surrender, sent by
General Cadorna, were respectfully but firmly declined. Early in
the morning of September 20 the Papal officers and soldiers received
Holy Communion. At 5 o'clock a furious bombardment began,
first mainly directed against the walls. Later the Garibaldians
under Bixio sent their shells into the city, fired houses and hospitals,
and aimed at the Vatican. The attacks were everywhere met by
stubborn resistance. After four hours fighting the wall at the
340 THE REVOLUTION OF THE CABINETS.
Porta Pia began to crumble. And when at 10 o'clock the Italian
columns advanced upon the open breach, a Pontifical dragoon
brought the order to display the white flag. The evening before
Pius IX. to prevent unnecessary shedding of blood, had ordered
General Kanzler to open negotiations for surrender, as soon as a
breach should have been made.
508. The Capitulation. — As soon as the white flag was dis-
played not another shot was fired by the defenders, whilst the
Italians at the Porta Pia violated the truce by firing upon and
brutally assailing the heroes of Mentana, who stood with grounded
arms defenseless before them, and Bixio continued for another half
hour to throw his shells into the city. By the capitulation the
Papal army agreeing to leave Rome on September 21 was awarded
the honors of war. The subsequent brutal treatment of the gallant
volunteers, and the long and cruel imprisonment of Italians and
foreigners who had served the Holy See, was a most dishonorable
breach of the agreements made at the capitulation of Rome. •
509. The Plebiscite of October 2. — The occupation of Rome was fol-
lowed by days of frightful disorder, caused by the hordes of Revolutionists
which invaded the city. On the 27th the Italians took possession of the
Castle of St. Angelo, and from that day the Pope was confined within the
bounds of the Vatican. Preparations for the plebiscite were made by daily
arrests of Papal officials and sympathizers, and by striking out great num-
bers of respectable names from the voting lists. The latter measure was
quite unnecessary as Pius IX. had forbidden Catholics to take part in the
plebiscite. The number of votes for annexation was swelled by convicts
released from prison, boys under legal age, foreigners of every country of
Europe, "patriots" of Italy shipped to Rome at government expense, and
by allowing everybody to vote as often as he liked. A Belgian sculptor to
test the working of the plebiscite, voted twenty- two times without once
being challenged. By such means 40,831 votes were rolled up for annexation
against forty-six cast against it. The same methods were adopted in the
provinces. Monte San Giovanni, e. g., which counted fifty-six voters,
recorded 900 votes for annexation.
510. The Italians in Borne, 18 7O. — On the day of the
Plebiscite, Pius IX. published his solemn protest against the law-
less occupation of Rome which deprived him of the freedom neces-
sary for the proper government of the Church. Since that day the
THE NEW GERMAN EMPIRE. 341
Vicar of Christ is practically a prisoner in his own palace. The
Italian government after the conquest faithfully carried out the pro-
gramme of the anti-Catholic Revolution. Religious orders sup-
pressed, the Roman College seized, churches turned into cavalry
stables, priests drafted into the army, the patrimonies of ecclesi-
astical institutions squandered, episcopal sees left vacant, citizens
and peasants weighed down with impossible taxes, national bank-
ruptcy imminent in spite of gigantic robberies ; a military and naval
establishment far beyond the capacity of the country saddled on the
nation, and the impoverished people crying for bread — these are
the natural fruits of the crime of 1870.
Pius IX. outlived Victor Emmanuel as he had outlived Napoleon
III. (d. 1873, at Chiselhurst in England). Victor Emmanuel died
January 9, 1878, and was succeeded by his son Humbert. A saintly
death closed the great Pontiff's life of trials, sufferings and
triumphs, February, 1878. Before the enemies of the Church had
time to concert any hostile plans of action, the Cardinals had
assembled at the Vatican and had chosen as Supreme Pontiff Cardi-
nal Pecci, the Archbishop of Perugia. He assumed the name of
Leo XIII. ; a name now honored not only within the Catholic Church,
but throughout the civilized world.
Chev. O'Clery. ch. XXIII.-XXV., pp. 480-641. — Count Henry d'Ideville — Wegg-
Prosser: Rome and Her Captors; The Piedmontese in Rome. — Henry Formby: The
Italian Occupation of the City of Rome, A. C. Q,, v. 1. — Browne: The Italian Occu-
pation of Rome, 1870-91, M. '91, 3. —Michael: Zusammenhang zwischen d. 18 July and
20 September, 1870, I. Th. Z., 1892. — W. O'C. Morris: The Campaign of Sedan; Moltke —
Hooper: Campaign of Sedan. — Busch : Bismarck in the Franco German War.— Hogan:
Marshal MacMahon, A. C. Q., 19. — Marshal Canrobert, E. R., 96, 1.
§ 9.
THE NEW GERMAN EMPIRE.
511. Fall of Metz. — The investment of Paris was completed
On September 19. After a futile attempt to obtain peace without
territorial sacrifice the government of the National Defense estab-
lished a delegation or branch government at Tours. Gambetta who
escaped from Paris in a balloon, was placed at its head as dictator.
With indefatigable energy the delegation undertook to organize two
provincial armies, the army of the Loire and the army of the North.
342 THE REVOLUTION OF THE CABINETS.
The Prussians, meanwhile, had continued to advance. Toul and
Strassburg fell in September, Orleans and other cities in October.
But all those disasters palled before the decisive catastrophe, the
fall of Metz, where provisions had given out October 21. October
27, Marshal Bazaine surrendered the town and its forts, 1,300 guns
and all the material of war, 173,000 French soldiers became prisoners
of war; 3,000 officers were liberated on parole, and 20,000 sick
remained in the conquered town ; 200,000 German soldiers were thus
set free to attack the untried levies of the provinces.
512. Attempts to Relieve Paris. — A part of the army of Metz was sent
to assist in the siege of Paris. Another part under Manteuffel defeated the
French levies of the North at Amiens (November 27) . The defeated army
recovered itself and made several attempts to gain the road to Paris, but
was finally defeated at St. Quentin ( January 19).
Frederic Charles with the main force released at Metz marched against the
army of the Loire. This army had defeated the Germans under Gen. von der
Tann and recovered Orleans, the first real French success in the war. It was
now advancing upon Paris to co-operate with a great sortie which had been
planned for November 30. Frederic Charles first stopped its advance upon
Paris, then by a series of victorious engagements around Orleans (December
2-4) he cut the army of the Loire in two, recaptured Orleans, and finally
almost annihilated the southern army near Mans (January 12).
As a last desperate means of saving Paris Gambe-tta resolved to throw
140,000 men under Bourbaki across Alsace into Germany. The Germans
under Werder took up a very strong position near Belfort. Bourbaki 's
forces, though superior in numbers and unquestionably brave, but young,
untried, badly fed, and imperfectly armed, stornled for three days the German
entrenchments; but they were finally repelled and driven to seek refuge in
the neutral territory of Switzerland.
513. Capitulation of Paris, January 28, 1871. — Mean-
while the deadly embrace of the Prussian siege had drawn closer and
closer around Paris. The army of the capital exhausted its strength
in unavailing sorties. The great sortie of November 30 in which
Trochu and Ducrot won two important positions from the Germans,
failed in the end through the non-appearance of the army of the Loire.
The last great sortie with 100,000 men (January) was repulsed with
heavy losses. With the defeat of Bourbaki all hope of relief
vanished. Paris was in a state of famine ; over 40,000 persons had
already succumbed to the privations of the siege. Nothing remained
THE NEW GERMAN EMPIRE. 343
but to capitulate. The terms were signed January 28. All the
forts with their munitions of war were surrendered. The artillery on
the city walls was dismounted. The troops in Paris as prisoners of
war were disarmed, save 12,000 men necessary to maintain public
order. At the request of Jules Favre the national guards also were
kept under arms to counteract imperialist designs. The city had to
pay a war contribution of 200,000,000 francs. A truce afforded
the time for the election and the meeting of a National Assembly
which was to decide the question of peace or war. The new
Assembly met at Bordeaux September 12, and elected Thiers head
of the Executive Department. It became his painful task to arrange
the preliminaries of peace with the inexorable chancellor of the Ger-
man Empire. The terms provided the cession of Alsace with the
exception of Belfort, and German Lorraine with Metz andThionville,
in all 4,700 square miles with one and a half million inhabitants,
and the payment by France of a war indemnity of five milliards of
francs in three years, to be secured in the meantime by a German
occupation of French territorty. The preliminaries were ratified in
the definitive Peace of Frankfort, May 10, 1871.
514. The German Empire, January 8, 1871. — The German
Empire was the outcome of the victories in the French war. The
initiative was taken by Crown Prince Frederic. After the battle of
Woerth he advised the Kings of Southern Germany, that a sufficient
force was in the field ' ' to coerce those who might resist the proposal
of a German Empire." The next step was an agreement at Ver-
sailles by which the four Southern States of Germany formally
joined the North German Confederacy. Thereupon Prince Bismarck
asked the King of Bavaria to propose a revival of the imperial title
to the rest of the German princes, with a hint that in his default
others might be found to advance the proposal ; the Diet too would
be willing to put the motion. The King of Bavaria in his letter of
November 30 to King William at Versailles expressed his confidence,
that the President of the German Confederacy in his new dignity
would exercise his rights in the name of the whole German Union
and its princes, and formally proposed that the President of the
Confederacy should assume the title of German Emperor. After
all the sovereign States and the three free cities had signified their
344 THE REVOLUTION OF THE CABINETS.
approval, the title of German Emperor was conferred on William I.
and his successors in the palace of Louis XIV. at Versailles, January
18, 1871.
The new German Empire has no legal connection with the old Roman
Empire of the German Nation. Hence the time from 1806-1871 was not an
interregnum. The Empire is merely a continuation of the North German
Confederacy extended, under a new name, to the southern States. The
Constitution of the Empire is essentially that of the Confederacy adopted
in 1867 and confers no power on the Emperor which he had not already as
President of the Confederation. William I., in his unassuming way, re-
peatedly declared that he had no other wish than to be the commander-in-
chief of the Confederation and the first among equals. The assumption by
the Emperor of powers not contained in the Constitution belongs to a later
period.
W. O'C. Morris: The War of 1870-71 after Sedan. — Franco- German War, Staff edi-
tion. — Moltke; Hozier: Franco- German War. Also: E. R. '86, 4; '90, 1. — Broglle: An
Ambassador of the Vanquished. — Malleson : The Refounding of the German Empire,
1848-71.— v. Sybel: Founding of the Germ. Emp. by William I. — H. Clarke: The
Government of the National Defense. — S. Denis : Histoire Contemporaine : La Chute de
V Empire. Le Government de la Defense Nationale. L'Assembiee Nationale. Federal
Constitution of Germany, transl. and ed. by Jones.
• §10.
THE THIRD REPUBLIC IN FRANCE.
515. Outlook in Paris — The suicidal policy of Jules Favre
in keeping the national guard under arms for party purposes began
to bear its fruit as soon as Paris was evacuated by the German
troops. These guards whose ranks were swelled by Socialists and
Communists of all nations, amounted to nearly 100,000 men. They
had concealed and appropriated a powerful artillery under pretext
of saving it from the Prussians. The attempt of the government to
repossess themselves of the cannon led to a general uprising of the
Red Republicans and Communists. What was worse, a great num-
ber of regular troops joined the insurgents and murdered the two
generals, LeCompte and Thomas. The government which had its
seat at Versailles, withdrew the loyal regiments from the capital.
They were accompanied and followed by crowds of respectable
inhabitants. In the city the Central Committee of the National
Guards summoned the people to elect members to a socialistic
THE THIRD REPUBLIC IN FRANCE. 345
Commune into whose hands they intended to resign their self-
assumed powers. The Commune was proclaimed March 28. It
declared the authority of Thiers' government and of the National
Assembly at Versailles "null and void." Then began a reign of
terror inaugurated by a section of the Commune called the " Inter-
nationale; " churches and banks were plundered all over the city.
Mgr. Darboy, the Archbishop of Paris, and 200 other ecclesiastics
and prominent citizens, were thrown into prison as " hostages.'*
The German authorities still holding Versailles, allowed the prison-
ers of Sedan and Metz to reinforce MacMahon's army to the number
of 150,000 men. In all other regards they maintained strict
neutrality.
516. Second Siege of Paris. — The second siege of Paris, this
time Frenchmen against Frenchmen, began April 8. A sortie of
the insurgents was repulsed, and the prompt execution of two lead-
ers of the Commune (Duval and Flourens) added fuel to the revo-
lutionary violence in Paris. The bombardment of the forts and of
the city was directed from the parallels which the Germans had con-
structed. By May 8th all the outworks of the Communards were
taken. On May 21 the assailants drove the defenders from the
walls at the gate of St. Cloud, and MacMahon, apprized by a
Parisian of the unguarded condition of the gate, entered the city.
For the next seven days pandemonium reigned in Paris. The Com-
munards, mad with despair, were resolved that if the Commune was
to perish the city must share its fate.
Bands of men and women armed with petroleum cans ran hither and
thither, firing public buildings or private houses, or seized batches of
victims to be hurried off to death. The Tuileries, the Palais Koyal, the
buildings of the ministry and other palaces were delivered to -the flames by
these " Petroleurs and Petroleuses." The Versailles troops pressed on
from street to street, across barricades and burning squares, eager to save
the hostages. But they were too late. Archbishop Darboy, President
Bonjean, and four companions were shot by the Communards on May 24,
and forty-three hostages, priests, Jesuits, and soldiers on May 26,
The Cemetery of Pere la Chaise was the scene of the final struggle.
No quarter was given. Of the leaders of the Commune many had
fallen in the strife, as many as were caught were shot on the spot.
346 THE REVOLUTION OF THE CABINETS.
Some 40-50,000 Socialists were captured. Of these 10,000 were
set free without trial ; others were shot en masse ; the rest were
reserved for trial, and later on sentenced to imprisonment, trans-
portation, or death.
517. The Third Republic. — The Assembly which had been
elected to decide the question of peace or war stood two-thirds for a
monarchy; but they were divided into Legitimists, Orleanists, and
Bonapartists. By combining their votes, however, they succeeded
in bringing about the resignation of Thiers and the election of the
monarchist MacMahon in 1873. The Count of Paris, the heir of the
Orleans family, offered to relinquish his claim to the throne, if the
Count of Chambord, who represented the direct Bourbon line, would
accept the tricolor, the emblem of the revolutionary monarchy. But
the fusion of Orleanists and Legitimists was frustrated by Chambord 's
life-long refusal to enter into any compact with the Revolution, and
France fell back upon the Republic with MacMahon as President.
The Constitution of 1875 gave France a Chamber of Deputies elected
by manhood suffrage and a Senate of 300 members. Seventy-five life-
Senators were elected by the National Assembly, and after its dis-
solution by the Senate itself, the -rest of the Senate by electoral
colleges. The executive power was placed in the hands of the Pres-
ident to be chosen by the Senate and the Chamber for seven years
and re-eligible. He was to be surrounded by a responsible ministry,
and wielded almost all the powers of a constitutional monarch, but
could be impeached by the Chamber at the bar of the Senate for high
treason. The division of the monarchical party and the alertness
of the Republicans increased, in every new election, the Republican
majority, which gradually glided down to the radicalism of late
years.
Lamazon: The Parit Commune; Hist. Documents. — G. Vesinler: Hist, of the Com-
mune of Paris. — G. O. Lissagaray : Hist, of the Commune of 1871. — Berthal: Communists
of Paris. — Leighton: Paris Under the Commune. — Knight: Days Before the. Commune,
M. '79, 2, 3. — The Commune of Paris, E. R. 71, 4. — A. G. Knight: The Prisons of Paris
Under the Commune; Distinguished Incendiaries of the Commune, M. '79. 3. — Marshal
MacMahon's Government of France: D. R. '73, 4.— Ch. Chesnelong: La Campagne Mo-
narchique d' October, 1873, see also D. R. '96, 2. — The Fall of the Due de Broglie and the
Crisis in France: D. R. '74, 3.— A Modern Cath. Prince (Count of Chambord): M. '85, 2.
THE REVOLUTION OF THE CABINETS.
347
THE HOUSE OF SAVOY,
Emmanuel Philibert, d. 1580.
Charles Emmanuel I.,
d 1680.
Victor Am
d.
adeus I., Thomas,
1637. ancestor of the side-
line of CARIGNAN.
Francis Hyacinth, Charles
d. 1638. d.
Emmanuel II.,
1675.
Victor Am
King of <S
King of Sard
adeus II., Emrnanut
icily, 1713.
inia, 1720-30.
•1 Thilibert,
Charles Emi
1730
nanuel III.,
-1773.
Victor Amadeus III %
1773 1 -1796.
Charles Emmanuel I V. , Victor Emmanuel I , ' Charles Felix,
abdicated 1802. restored 1815, 1821-1831.
abdicated 1821.
Charles Albert. 1831,
abdicated
1849.
VICTOR EMMANUEL II.,
since 1861 King of Italy,
1849
-1878.
UMBERTO (HUMBERT),
1878-1900
VICTOR EMMANUEL III.,
1900-X.
348
THE REVOLUTION OF THEN CABINETS.
THE REVOLUTION OF THE CABINETS.
349
350
THE REVOLUTION OF THE CABINETS.
THE REVOLUTION OF THE CABINETS.
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CHAPTER III.
THE CIVIL WAR IN THE UNITED STATES AND ITS
CAUSES.
THE SLAVERY QUESTION.
518. Slave Laws. — The slavery question was the pivot on
which the fate of the Union turned for decades. The system as it
legally existed in the Southern States, was opposed to the first
principles of the natural law. A slave was only " a chattel per-
sonal, to all intents and purposes whatsoever." (Laws of S. C.)
"Personal property consists of specific articles, such as slaves,
working beasts, animals of any kind etc." (Md.) Not only were
human beings bought and sold -like cattle, leased, seized for debt,
bequeathed by will, but a harmless negro could be forcibly seized at
the will of his master or by process of law, and mercilessly separated
from wife and children for the rest of his life. Only in Louisiana
the slave was fixed to the soil. The innocence and virtue of younger
slaves had no legal protection . A white father could sell his colored
children at pleasure.
519. Treatment Allowed by Law. — The coarsest food,
clothing and lodgings was all that the owner was bound to provide
for his slaves.. He could hold them to labor for fifteen hours a day
in summer and fourteen in winter, whilst convicted felons in the
same States could be held to work only for nine and eight hours
respectively. A convention of slave holders held in South Carolina,
came to the conclusion that it was more profitable in cotton-raising
States to use up the slaves in seven years, than to care for their
health, as the supply could be cheaply replenished from slave-
breeding States. For offenses committed slaves could with impunity
be loaded with iron, confined in dungeons, whipped till the blood
streamed from their wounds, beaten to any extent short of death or
(355)
356 THE CIVIL WAR IN THE UNITED STATES.
dismemberment, by the sole authority of the master. Fugitive slaves
were pursued with blood hounds, starved whilst hiding in swamps,
and most cruelly abused when captured. In Tennessee and Georgia
a master was not prosecuted if a slave died under correction. In
South Carolina the murder of a slave was punishable by a fine of
7001. or seven years imprisonment. If a slave was killed in the heat
of passion or by undue correction the penalty was $500 or imprison-
ment not exceeding six months. Cutting out the tongue, or pulling
out the eyes of a slave, or burning him or depriving him of a limb
was punishable by a fine of 1001. Although these and a few other
similar laws were passed to afford some protection to a slave's life,
they were practically illusory, because it was universal slave law,
that the testimony of a colored person, bond or free, could not be
admitted in any court.
52O. Education and Social Position of the Negro. — The
education of the negro, free or slave, was strictly forbidden under
legal penalties. White persons, others than the masters, who taught
slaves to spell, read and write, were fined from $100 to $500, or
imprisoned for six months and upward at the discretion of the
court. Free colored teachers, male or female, were visited with
whippings from 26 to 59 stripes on the bare back, or fines, or both.
Free negroes were liable to be reduced to slavery at any moment by
the legal presumption that every black man is a slave. The free
negro could not testify in his own behalf. Manumitted negroes and
their free children were often kidnaped in the North. They could
be rescued only at great expense, by sending white witnesses a jour-
ney of 500 or 1,000 miles. This presumption worked so wickedly
in several slave States that manumitted and free persons of color
could be arrested at any time and advertised as runaway slaves. No
owner appearing, the jailer was directed to sell them at public
auction to cover the expenses of imprisonment. The capital itself
was constantly the scene of slave auctions and chain gangs of negroes
being conveyed to the South. Some of the worst slave laws were
passed in colonial days, others after the establishment of the Union.
The brighter side of slavery is thus described by H. E. Scudder: "There
were good masters who cared for their slaves. They gave them clothing
THE SLAVERY QUESTION. 357
and houses, and gardens in which to raise vegetables. They amused them-
selves with the little children in play with their own families. They took
care of them when they grew sick and old. They encouraged the slaves
also in going to church and frequently gave them religious instruction.
But they carefully kept books and papers out of the hands of the blacks.
They did not think it wise to give them schools. For the most part the
slaves were an idle, easy-going people. They were affectionate and warmly
attached to their masters and mistresses if these were kind to them. They
had their holidays, and when Christmas came, they nocked to the great
house to receive their presents." The slaves of humane and Christian
families, of Catholic households, of clergymen, and religious communities
enjoyed a better lot than after emancipation. But the kindness with which
good masters treated their slaves could not palliate the iniquity of the
system as based on the public laws.
521. Effects of Slavery. — Slavery was the real reason of the backward-
ness of the South in population and wealth as compared with the North.
The prosperity of the North was based on free and intelligent labor. The
farmer and workingman labored for a purpose, for his children for the
future. In the South the rich man did not need to work; he gave his time
to politics, to literature, to social enjoyment. Slaves worked only under
compulsion, slowly, carelessly, and stupidly. They had nothing to gain by
industry and economy. The poor whites, the great majority of the white
population, did not wish to work. They grew up in the belief that work was
a disgrace, a sign of slavery. Thus they became a shiftless and thriftless
portion of the community.
522. Slavery in the Constitution. — Negro slavery had been
a part of the colonial policy of Great Britain. The first Continental
Congress, 1774, in its opposition to the mother country, declared that
no more slaves should be imported. This law remained unchallenged
"for two years. But when the original draft of the Declaration of
Independence was presented to Congress in 1776, Jefferson's arraign-
ment of George III. for having forbidden to restrain " the execrable
commerce," was stricken out at the request of the slave States.
This was the first concession of independent America to the slave
interest. In the Articles of Confederation, 1778, the topic of
slavery was carefully evaded. The foremost statesmen of Virginia,
Washington, Lee, Henry, Madison, as well as many of the largest
planters, were opposed to the continuance of slavery, but saw no
practical way for effecting an immediate change. The Convention
of 1787, whilst excluding the name of slavery from the Constitution,
admitted nevertheless three important provisions in its favor.
358 THE CIVIL WAR IN THE UNITED STATES.
•
Art. I., Sec. 2: Representatives shall be apportioned by adding to the
whole number of free persons, three-fifths of " all other persons " (slaves,).
The result of this clause was not that the rights and interests of the slaves
were represented in Congress, but that the vote of one slaveholder owning
fifty slaves became of as much weight in Congress as the votes of thirty
freemen. For this reason the free states wanted the importation of slaves
stopped. This demand led to the compromise of Art. I., Sec. 9. The im-
portation of " such persons as any of the States now existing shall think
proper to admit " (slaves) shall not be prohibited by Congress prior to the
year 1808. The third compromise was contained in Art. IV., Sec. 2: No
"person held to service or labor" (slaves) in one State under the laws
thereof, escaping into another, shall in consequence of any law or regulation
therein, be discharged from such service or labor, but shall be delivered up
on claim of the party to whom such service or labor may be due." This
clause led to the passage of two cruel fugitive -slave laws.
By these clauses the Constitution of the United States fully
acknowledged slavery as an institution to be dealt with by the indi-
vidual States themselves. In the South, slave labor was deemed
profitable and was retained and jealously guarded by legislation.
In the North, where slavery was unpopular, the work of abolition
had begun immediately after the War of Independence and was now
gradually brought to completion. In the Northwestern Territory,
i. e., the vast tract west of Pennsylvania and north of the Ohio river,
not yet organized into States, slavery was forever inhibited by the
great Congressional Ordinance of 1787.
Von Hoist: Constitutional Hist, of the U. S., vol. I. — Wilson: Rise and Fall of the Slave
Power. — Hildreth : Despotism in America. — Stroud : Sketch of Laws Eclating to Slavery. —
Calrnes : The Slave Power. — Clarke : Anti -slavery Days. — McDougall : Fugitive Slaves.—
Douglas: Life and Times by Himself. — Sneede: Memorials of a Southern Planter.—
McMaster; Scudder; Johnston: Histories of the U. S.
§2.
THE MISSOURI COMPROMISE.
523. Proslavery Feeling Increasing in the South. — The
institution of slavery in the Southern States received a powerful
impulse by the cotton gin (gin engine), which Ely Whitney invented
in 1793 for the separation of the seed from the cotton. This con-
trivance quadrupled the efficiency of slave labor, gave a mighty
stimulus to the raising and exportation of cotton, filled New England
with spinning mills, and did more than anything else to fasten
slavery on the United States for the next seventy years. In the
THE MISSOURI COMPROMISE. 359
twenty years following the invention the growing demand of slave
labor in the Gulf States trebled the price of slaves, and made slave
breeding a profitable business in Virginia. Up to December 31,
1807, slave labor could still be procured by importation. But in
1808 the law prohibiting the importation of slavery from abroad
went into effect. Again the spirit of compromise destroyed the
beneficent action of the law, as far as negroes smuggled into the
States under foreign flags were concerned. For whilst the importers
forfeited the right of buying and selling slaves illegally imported,
and were heavily punished — on paper — the States and territorial
courts were allowed to sell such negroes as slaves for the benefit of
the public treasury. The slave hunt on the African coast went on as
before and from 13,000 to 15,000 negroes were annually imported into
the Southern States with scarcely any forfeitures under the law of
1807. The law of 1819 which declared the foreign slave trade to
be piracy was hardly more effective. The internal slave trade with
its center in Washington constantly assumed greater dimensions and
more shocking forms.
524. Admission of New States. — The slavery question had an important
bearing on the admission of new States into the Union. The Northern
States with their growing population steadily increased the number of con-
gressional votes. To maintain a balance of power, at least in the Senate,
the South required the same number of States as the North. Hence it
became the*policy of the Senate to couple the admission of a white State
with that of a black State and vice versa. When Kentucky applied for
admission into the Union as a slave State, the Senate insisted on the
simultaneous admission of Vermont. Accordingly Vermont was admitted
as a free State in 1791, Kentucky which had still to make its Constitution in
1792. Tennessee followed in 1796, Louisiana in 1810, Mississippi in 1817
and Alabama in 1819, as slave States, whilst Ohio, admitted in 1802, Indiana,
1817, and Illinois 1818, adhered to the fundamental Ordinance of 1787, and
adopted free State Constitutions. Thus in 1819 there were eleven free
States and eleven slave States in the Union. The petition of Missouri for
admission in 1819 raised the question what should be done with the Louisi-
ana purchase, the vast country beyond the Mississippi. The North main-
tained that slavery should not be further extended because it was wrong.
The South maintained that slavery was right and that the further extension
of slavery was for the South a question of self-preservation.
525. The Missouri Question, 1817-23. — The angry and
stubborn contest about the admission took place in the ' ' era of good
360 THE CIVIL WAR IN THE UNITED STATES.
feeling " as Monroe's administration is termed. The collapse of
the Federal party had left the political field to the Republicans who
now began to be called Democrats. The petition of Missouri came
up in 1818. The slave-holders of Missouri demanded a slave State
Constitution. A Northern member (N. Y.) moved an amendment
that the further introduction of slavery should be prohibited in the
new State, and that all colored children born in Missouri should
become free at the age of twenty-five. Though the proposition was
fiercely resisted by the South, it passed the House of Representatives,
1819. But the bill was sent back by the Senate with the anti-slavery
amendment struck out. Neither of the Houses gave way and no
decision was reached.
526. The Missouri Compromise, 182O. — In the new Con-
gress which met in 1819 the opponents of the Missouri " limitation "
were aided by Maine's application for statehood. The majority of
the Senate coupled the admission of Maine as a free State with the
admission of Missouri without any limitation as to slavery. In the
lower House a new amendment was brought in to make the prohibi-
tion of slavery 4 ' absolute and irrevocable ; ' ' but it failed to
receive a majority of votes. The whole country was in a state of
feverish excitement. The close of the session drew near with little
hope for an agreement. At the last moment the North weakened,
and agreed to a compromise proposed by Henry Clay of Kentucky.
This Missouri Compromise (1) admitted Maine as a free, and Mis-
souri as a slave State. (2) Decreed that a prolongation of the
Southern boundary line of Missouri, i. e., the parallel of 36° 30'
should divide the Louisiana Purchase into two parts, and that all
the territory north of this line except Missouri, should be free soil.
It was silently implied that all the territory south of this line, in-
cluding Florida, which had just been acquired from Spain (1819),
might become slave soil. The next sixteen years no more States
were admitted. The Missouri Compromise divided, by a fixed law
and a geographical line, the North and the South into two rival sec-
tions. The party history of the United States since 1820 became
the history of the slavery question.
527. The Slave Power. — The number of slave-holders was only about
400,000 as against the 5,000,000 of free whites in the South. Yet as only
STATE SOVEREIGNTY AND NULLIFICATION. 361
slave-holders had a chance of election to State legislatures, governorships,
and to Congress, the slave power, by its compact unity, its threats of
secession and the support which it received for party reasons from the
Northern Democrats, won the victory in all the Congressional battles con-
nected with the interests of slavery.
McMaster: Hist, of the People of the United States, v. IV. ch. 39; School Hist, of the
U. S.— Historical Significance of the Missouri Compromise (Report American Hist. Assoc.,
1893, pp. 251-297) .— Quincy : Life of Josiah Quincy. — O. Schurz : Henry Clay.— C. Colton :
Life, Corresp. and Speeches of H. Clay. — H. Greeley: American Conflict, T. 1.
§ 3.
STATE SOVEREIGNTY AND NULLIFICATION.
528. The National View of the Constitution. — Besides
slavery a second question of principle lay at the bottom of the diffi-
culties which led to the great Civil War. After the adoption of the
Constitution in 1787 both parties, Federalists and Republicans, pro-
fessed their attachment to the Union and the Constitution. But
gradually two conflicting schools of interpretation began to divide
Northern and Southern politicians. The Union school always held,
that the United States is a Commonwealth and its Constitution the
organic and fundamental law of the land, adopted not by the States,
but by the people of the whole country in its aggregate capacity.
This view had its strongest support in the wording of the Constitution
itself: " We, the people of the United States, do ordain and establish
this Constitution." The government has the power to act directly
by its own legislative, judicial, and executive machinery upon every
individual of the country. The States are directly denied the great
attributes of sovereignty. " No State shall coin money or pass laws
impairing the obligations of contracts, or maintain armies and navies
or grant letters of marque, or titles of nobility or make treaties with
foreign powers," etc. The only act of high treason recognized in the
Constitution is the taking up of arms against the Union. " This
Constitution and the laws made in pursuance thereof shall be the
supreme law of the land, anything in the Constitution or laws of a
State to the contrary notwithstanding." The Constitution was rati-
fied not by the States as such but by conventions of delegates,
convened especially for this purpose within each State.
362 THE CIVIL WAR IN THE UNITED STATES.
529. State Sovereignty. — According to the theory of State
Sovereignty developed by the Democrats, especially by Jefferson and
Madison, the United States are a Confederation of sovereign States,
a copartnership of commonwealths, which, by a mutual contract,
whilst retaining the exclusive guardianship of their domestic affairs,
have ceded to the Federal Government the exclusive control of their
international and interstate relations. In this theory the Constitu-
tion was not an organic law but a contract. The Federal Govern-
ment was the creature of the States. The powers were delegated and
could be withdrawn, the Union could be dissolved 'by the States or
even by one State.
t
530. The Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions. — This
theory was for the first time publicly asserted in the Virginia and
Kentucky Resolutions of 1798 and 1799. They were drawn up in the
respective State legislatures against two temporary laws of Congress
passed during the troubles with France, and were sent to the differ-
ent States. The Alien Act restricted the naturalization of foreigners
and empowered the President for two years to send aliens out of the
country. As a matter of fact he never did so. The Sedition Act
decreed fines and imprisonment for all persons found guilty of hav-
ing spoken, written, or acted seditiously against the Union Govern-
ment, and was smartly enforced. The Virginia Resolutions drawn
up by Jefferson, and the Kentucky Resolutions drawn up by Madi-
son, agree in declaring that the Constitution of the United States is a
contract to which each State is a party, and that the two laws were
unconstitutional^ They disagree in the means to be adopted against
alleged encroachments of the central government. The Virginia
Resolutions asserted in rather vague language, that the States had,
within their limits, the right of interposing, if Congress exercised
powers not granted by the said compact. The Kentucky Resolu-
tions declared, that whenever the general government assumed undele-
gated powers, its acts are " unauthoritative, void, and of no force,"
and asserted for each State the right of deciding, whether a law of
Congress is constitutional or not, and of applying remedies against it.
The Resolutions were received with disfavor by the public. Seven
States declared that the Alien and Sedition Acts were constitutional.
The rest ignored the Resolutions. The following year (1799) Ken-
STATE SOVEREIGNTY AND NULLIFICATION. 363
tucky declared that a State had the right of nullifying a United
States law which it thought to be illegal. Thus the adherents of
State Sovereignty claimed rights for the States, which the Constitu-
tion had reserved to the Supreme Court. The great significance of
the Resolutions lay in the fact, that they were never officially chal-
lenged, withdrawn or recalled, but were left on record ready for
future use.
531. Split of the Democratic Party. — The unity of the Democratic
party which prevailed in the election of Monroe, broke up with his refusal
to accept a third term. In 1824 five presidential candidates were in the
field : Andrew Jackson of Tennessee, John Quincy Adams of Massachusetts,
Henry Clay of Kentucky, and John C. Calhoun of South Carolina were
nominated by various assemblies; W. H. Crawford by a congressional
caucus. Jackson received the greatest number of votes, but no majority.
Accordingly the election was thrown into Congress, which chose the states-
man John Quincy Adams (1825-29). The adherents of Jackson were greatly
disappointed, and the Democratic party split into three factions: (a) The
National Republicans, also called '* Adams or administration men." They
advocated a protective tariff and internal improvements (roads, canals, etc.)
at national expense, (b) The Democratic Republicans or " Jackson men "
cared little for protection and improvements, (c) A third, the anti-
Masonic party, owed its origin to the murder of Mr. Morgan, a Freemason,
who had threatened to publish the secrets of the order. In 1828, Jackson,
the bluff and irritable Indian fighter, the idol of the people, was trium-
phantly elected (1829-1837"). He was the most original figure in the line of
presidents. With Jackson the politician presidents entered the White
House. He introduced and vigorously applied the principle: "To the
victor belong the spoils."
532. New Differences Between the North and the
South. — The great industrial development which followed the
second war with England widened the gap between the free and the
slave States. In the North cities grew up, canals were dug, rail-
road and steamboat lines opened and industries of every sort estab-
lished. Naturally these rising industries clamored for the protection
of a high tariff. In the South the planters cared nothing for cities,
industries and public improvements, worked their rice, tobacco and
cotton plantations with slave labor, and being only consumers, con-
sidered the high tariff policy of the North as injurious to their inter-
ests. Disregarding the opposition of the Southern members, the
364 THE CIVIL WAR IN THE UNITED STATES.
representatives of the Middle and Western States, under the leader-
ship of Henry Clay, passed the tariff of 1824. Loud and bitter
were the protests of the South, when this tariff was raised still
higher in 1828.
533. Nullification. — Calhoun, the able and eloquent leader of
the South, urged the meeting of a State convention in South Carolina
to decide in what manner the tariff acts should be declared ' ' null
and void " within the limits of the State. The agitation in the
South assumed so menacing a tone that Congress thought it expe-
dient to lower the tariff in 1832. The measure, however, was far
from pacifying South Carolina, which opposed the principle of tariff
protection in any shape. Accordingly a State convention was called
which declared the tariffs of 1828 and 1832 null and void in South
Carolina, and forbade the people to pay the duties. This Act of
South Carolina " nullifying " a general law of Congress, was a
direct attack upon the Constitution of the United States. Calhoun
resigned his position as vice-president, and was at once returned by
his State to the Senate. When Congress met in December, 1832,
Jackson asked for powers to collect the tariff duties by force of
arms. Harris, the Governor of South Carolina, declared that if this
force bill would become a law, his State would leave the Union. It
was on this question that the famous oratorical duel took place in the
Senate between Calhoun, who asserted, and Webster, who denied, the
right of nullification and secession. Henry Clay, alarmed at the
prospect of a civil war, slipped in as mediator between the wrangling
parties. He proposed an annual reduction in the tariff until in 1842
the duty on imported goods should be equal to twenty per cent of
their value. This compromise tariff satisfied the parties, and South
Carolina repealed the ordinance of nullification. The danger of a
civil war was adjourned to a future period.
Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions, Alien, Sedition, and other Acts (1894). — McMaster
Hist., etc., v. II.— Motley: Causes of the Civil War. — Von Hoist, v. I.— Wilson: Division
and Reunion (Epochs of Am. Hist.) 1829-89. — Houston: A Critical Study of Nullification
in South Carolina. — Rhodes : Hist, of the U. S.— Randall ; Schouler: Life of Jefferson. —
Morse; Seward: Life of John Quincy Adams. — Madison's Works, v. 4. — Rives: Hist, oj
the Life and Times of Madison ; Lives of Jackson (Parton), Clay, Calhoun (Von Hoist),
Webster (Lodge).
THE ANNEXATION OF TEXAS .* THE SLAVERY QUESTION. 365
THE ANNEXATION OF TEXAS, AND THE SLAVERY QUESTION.
534. Jackson — Harrison — Tyler. — Political animosity and the clamor
of the people and of the State banks prompted Jackson to destroy the United
States Bank by vetoing a new charter (1832) and by withdrawing the gov-
ernment deposits from its vaults (1833). The consequences were the estab-
lishment of a great number of State banks — sound and unsound (wild cat
banks) — a period of furious speculation especially in land, and the financial
panic of 1837 with its countless failures and widespread misery. The con-
tinuation of the panic cast a shadow on the Democratic administration of
Martin Van Buren (1837-41), and contributed to his defeat for re-election in
1840. He was opposed by the Whigs, as the National Republicans called
themselves since 1834, and by the Anti- slavery Party, who for the first time
put a candidate in the field. A wave of popular enthusiasm carried William
N. Harrison the Whig candidate into the White House. Harrison, however,
died a month after his inauguration, and Vice-President John Tyler, a
Democrat at heart, took his place (1841-45).
535. Annexation of Texas. — Since the admission of Missouri
two other States had joined the Union, the slave State, Arkansas, and
the free State, Michigan. The balance of power in the Senate was
still intact but could not long remain so. For south of the line
36° 30' Florida was the only territory left which could be turned into
a slave State, whilst north of the line a vast country was ready for
increasing the free State system. Under these circumstances the
Southern statesmen cast their eyes on the immense territory of Texas
which lay south of the line and was suitable for slavery. Texas,
however, belonged to the Republic of Mexico. Like other Spanish
States in America, Mexico, in 1827, had abolished slavery in all its
dominions. The American slaveholders who had entered Texas,
defied the law of the land which they occupied, and finally rebelled
against the government of Mexico in 1853. The rebels, amply sup-
ported by the United States, defeated Santa Anna, the President of
Mexico, in 1836 (at San Jacinto) and set up the independent
Republic of Texas. Whilst the United States, England, France, and
Belgium recognized the new State, Mexico refused to acknowledge
its independence. Texas now applied for admission into the Union.
The Free Soil parties opposed the annexation because slavery existed
36<> THE CIVIL WAR IN THE UNITED STATES.
in Texas. Thereupon Tyler surprised the Senate in 1844 with a
treaty of annexation secretly concluded with the authorities of
Texas. The Senate rejected the treaty, but the Democrats at once
adopted the annexation of Texas as a party measure. To disarm
the opposition of the growing anti-slavery parties, they coupled the
annexation of Texas with the acquisition of Oregon which was free
soil territory. On this platform they elected their candidate, James
V. Polk, 1845—49. The annexation of Texas was accomplished in
1845 by a joint resolution of Congress. Two slave States were now
admitted into the Union, Florida in March, and the organized portion
of Texas in December, 1845. Four other States were to be carved
out of the remaining territory of Texas. The line of the Missouri
Compromise was to regulate the admission or exclusion of slavery.
The admission of Iowa in 1846 and of Wisconsin in 1848 restored
the senatorial equilibrium.
Oregon was then the territory comprising all the country from the Rocky
mountains to the Pacific. The coast line stretched as far north as Russian
Alaska. The northern part, however, was an object of dispute between the
United States and England. The American claims were exploration and
settlement. Pending the dispute Oregon was jointly occupied by both
Powers. The Democratic platform called for the acquisition of all Oregon,
but England refused to be excluded from the Pacific seaboard. A treaty
with England finally established the present boundary line in 184G. The
American part of Oregon was organized as a free territory in 1848.
536. The War with Mexico. — The annexation of Texas led
to war between Mexico and the United States. Texas claimed that
the Rio Grande formed its western boundary line, and President
Polk adopted the claim. Mexico maintained that the river Nueces
marked the boundary. Polk ordered General Zachary Taylor to
cross the Nueces and to advance to the Rio Grande. The Mexicans
crossed the Rio Grande and attacked the Americans. Thereupon
Congress decreed that war existed by the act of Mexico. Polk
called for 50,000 volunteers and appointed General Winfield Scott
commander-in-chief . Taylor after a number of successful engage-
ments reached Saltillo and defeated Santa Anna in the bloody battle
of Buena Vista (February, 1847). Whilst Taylor was winning
victories in northeastern Mexico Colonel Stephen W. Kearney con-
THE ANNEXATION OF TEXAS I THE SLAVERY QUESTION. 367
quered New Mexico and proclaimed it to be United States property.
From Santa Fe he started to seize California but on arriving found
the work already accomplished. Commodore Stockton and his fleej,
and Fremont, " the Pathfinder," of the United States army, had
combined their forces when the news of the war reached them and
now held California for the United States.
Meanwhile General Scott, reinforced by 10,000 of Taylor's men,
had landed in Vera Cruz in March, and began his memorable march
to Mexico over the road first traversed by Cortez. Whilst he took
town after town and won an uninterrupted series of small victories,
his army by losses in the field and by disease dwindled down to
6,000 men with whom he triumphantly entered Mexico, September,
1847.
537. The Peace of Guadaloupe Hidalgo, 1848. — In the
Peace of Guadaloupe Hidalgo, Mexico gave up to the United States
522,568 square miles comprising Texas, New Mexico, and California,
and received $15,000,000 in return. By a supplementary treaty the
United States obtained in 1853 an additional tract of 45,535 square
miles from the Rio Grande to the Gulf of California, for which it
paid $10,000,000.
•
538. The Wilmot Proviso. — The acquisition of this immense
territory raised the slavery question anew. The opponents of
slavery demanded that it should remain free soil. As early as 1846
David Wilmot of Pennsylvania had moved that the money necessary
to indemnify Mexico should be granted, provided that all the Mex-
ican acquisitions should be free soil (Wilmot Proviso). The slave
power insisted that the entire territory should be open to slavery.
The refusal of both Whigs and Democrats to speak out on the ques-
tjon led to the formation of the Free Soil party. It was joined by
many Democrats and Whigs who favored the Wilmot Proviso.
Their motto was: free soil, free speech, free labor, and free men.
539. Development of the Abolition Party. — The different parties,
ranged either against the extension or the existence of slavery, grew
out of the opposition to the Missouri Compromise. The original Aboli
tion party was founded by William Lloyd Garrison in 1831. It numbered
among its members Wendell Phillips, the friend of Daniel O'Connell.
368 THE CIVIL WAR IN THE UNITED STATES.
The Garrisonians refused to vote under the Constitution which was to
them "a covenant with death and an agreement with hell," because it per-
mitted slavery at all. They worked for a dissolution of the Union and
other extreme revolutionary measures. Other leaders like John Quincy
Adams, John P. Hale, Salmon P. Chase, Charles Sumner, W. N. Seward,
opposed the extension of slavery by constitutional means. In 1833 the
American Anti-Slavery Society was organized and entered the field of
national politics. Whilst they allowed each State the exclusive right of
regulating slavery within its borders, they petitioned Congress to abolish
slavery in all the Territories and in the District of Columbia, to admit no
new slave States, and to suppress interstate slave trade. The means they
employed were organization, meetings and a literary propaganda.
54O. Pro-slavery Parties and their Tactics. — The anti- slavery agita-
tion was opposed, apart from the Southern slave power, by professional
politicians of the Democratic and Whig parties in the North, office-seekers,
men like Webster and Everett who dreaded a Southern secession and the
dissolution of the Union, preachers who feared a disruption of the churches,
merchants who were alarmed over their business interests, conservative
men of all pa- ties who were shocked at the extravagance of language
employed by the Abolitionists, and who rightly opposed the revolutionary
radicalism of the Garrisonians in other questions. The contest was
embittered by extreme measures resorted to by the advocates of slavery.
Anti- slavery literature was taken from the mails and burned with the
approval of the Postmaster- General. Congress suppressed the Right of
Petition by the " gag rule " (1836-44). Partisans of the lower class broke
up public meetings, destroyed schools for free negro children, smashed the
presses of the anti- slavery societies, and resorted even to political murder.
The formation of the Free Soil party sufficiency weakened the
Democrats to play the election into the hands of the Whigs, who
elected Z. Taylor, President, and Millard Fillmore, Vice-President,
1848. Slavery extension henceforth became the burning question
in American politics.
Von Hoist: Const. Hist., v. II. — Benton: Thirty Years' View. — Greeley: History of
the Struggle for Slavery Extension. — Bancroft : Hist, of the Pacific States. — Williams:
Sam Houston and the War of Independence in Texas. — Ladd : Hist, of the War with
Mexico. — Mansfield: Hist, of the Mex. War. — Howard: Gen. Taylor. — Scott: Memoirs,
by himself. —Curtis: Life of D. Webster. — Sumner: A. Jackson as a Public Man.— Lives
of J. Q. Adams, H, Clay, Calhoun.— Shepard: M. Van Buren. — Johnson : Garrison and
Hi* Times.— W. Lloyd Garrison, by his children. — Lives of Wendell Phillips: Austin
(-Life and Times); Martyn (Am. Reformers). — James G. Birney and His Times.
THE VICTORY OF THE SLAVE POWER. 369
THE VICTORY OF THE SLAVE POWER.
541. The Compromises of 185O. — Taylor was hardly inaug-
urated when Calhoun issued a manifesto signed by all the Southern
members of Congress. This document, supplemented by several
State resolutions (Virginia, Tennessee, South Carolina), demanded
a more stringent fugitive slave law, cessation of the anti-slavery agi-
tation, the retention of both slavery and the slave trade in the Dis-
trict of Columbia, and the opening of all the Territories to slavery.
In South Carolina the demands were accompanied by threats of a
" Southern Confederacy." All the Northern State legislatures,
save Iowa, asserted the right of Congress to exclude slavery from
the Territories, and instructed their Congressmen to vote for the
abolition of slavery and of the slave trade in the District of Colum-
bia. An unforeseen event precipitated the struggle. The discovery
of gold in California, 1848, caused a rush of immigrants from the
East in 1849. To establish a government, the " forty-niners " drew
up a free state Constitution and applied for admission into the Union.
So bitter was the feeling on both sides that in 1850 a breaking up
of the Union seemed imminent. But Henry Clay, " the great Com-
promiser," succeeded in postponing the crisis for ten. years longer
by his " Compromises of 1850." To appease the North, California
was admitted as a free State, and the slave trade was abolished in
the District of Columbia. To appease the South, slavery was
retained in the District, territorial governments were organized for
New Mexico and Utah without any restriction on slavery, and a
stringent fugitive slave law was enacted, which exposed both escaped
slaves and free negroes to capture without trial by anyone who
claimed them.
Whilst the Compromises of 1850 strengthened the slave power in the
South, they increased the opposition to slavery in the North. The invasion
of the Northern States by " slave-catchers " and " man-hunters " did more
than anything else to turn the opponents of slavery extension into open
enemies of slavery itself. Popular feeling found its expression in " Uncle
Tom's Cabin."
24
370 THE CIVIL WAR IN THE UNITED STATES.
542. The Kansas-Nebraska Bill. — During. the next ten years
the slave power won new victories. It elected Franklin Pierce in
1852 and James Buchanan in 1856. Though Northerners, they were
more submissive to the slaveholders than Southern men like Zachary
Taylor. Before Pierce was many months in office the " irrepressible
conflict" broke out anew. The proposed organization of two new
Territories, Kansas and Nebraska, furnished the occasion. Both Ter-
ritories were free soil under the Missouri Compromise. But Senator
Stephen A. Douglas of Illinois, who introduced the Kansas-Nebraska
bill, added a clause expressly repealing the Missouri Compromise and
opening the country north of 36° 30' to slavery. The people of
these Territories were to be left free to adopt a free soil or slave soil
Constitution, when the time of a State organization should arrive.
This scheme of Douglas was called Popular Sovereignty. The bill
passed and was signed by President Pierce, 1854.
543. The Kansas Fight. — This law led to the formation of a new and
exclusively Northern party, the present Republican party, which united all
the anti-slavery elements, and was joined by disaffected Democrats and
Whigs Kansas became the battle-ground of the two parties. As soon as
the Territory was opened for settlement, slaveholders of Missouri rushed
into Kansas, located claims, founded Lecompton, Atchison, and other pro-
slavery towns, and held the region along the Missouri river. Whenever an
election was to be held, the Missourians crossed into Kansas, took posses-
sion of the polls, voted down the free state men and returned triumphantly.
By these illegal elections they obtained a delegate for Congress in 1854, a
pro-slavery government in 1855, and the Lecompton slavery Constitution in
1857. On the other hand the New England Emigrant Society, founded in
1855 to plant a free State in Kansas, sent its settlers into the Territory.
They occupied the region south of the Kansas river, founded Topeka and
other free towns, established an anti- slavery government, and passed the
Topeka Free Soil Constitution of 1857. For a time anarchy and civil war was
the order of the day. The constant influx of settlers from the North and
Northwest gave the Free Soilers an overwhelming majority, and they applied
to Washington for recognition. Buchanan ignored them, recognized the Le-
compton government, and urged Congress to admit Kansas as a slave State.
The project was defeated by the opposition of Douglas and the Northern
Democrats. In 1858 the slaveholders of Kansas gave up the fight as lost.
Kansas remained a Territory till 1861.
544. Dred Scott Decision, 1857. — Meanwhile the slave
power had scored another point by the celebrated Dred Scott Deois-
THE VICTORY OF THE SLAVE POWER. 371
ion of the Supreme Court. A slave by the name of Dred Scott had
been taken by his master to Illinois and Minnesota, and thence back
to Missouri. Here he applied for his freedom on the plea that his
residence on free soil entitled him to emancipation, and obtained a
favorable decision. Upon appeal of his master, Justice Taney
handed down the decision, that Dred Scott could not sue in the
United States court, because an African by descent could not be a
citizen ; as slave he was mere chattel, a black man had no rights
which white men were bound to respect ; Congress could as little shut
out slave property from the Territories as it could shut out horses and
cows ; finally, that the Missouri Compromise, being unconstitutional,
was null and void. This was Taney 's judicial pronouncement and
it expressed the legal views of the great majority of slaveholders.
His personal feelings Taney had shown before by emancipating his
own slaves. The decision opened the free Territories of Oregon,
Washington and Minnesota to slavery, increased the recklessness of
the slave power, rent the Democratic party in two, and prepared the
victory of the Republicans who were more than ever determined to
stop the extension of slavery into the Territories.
The excitement was increased by the Lincoln-Douglas debates in 1858,
and John Brown's raid into Virginia, 1859. Stephen A. Douglas and Abra-
ham Lincoln were the Illinois candidates for the United States Senatorship.
The questions publicly discussed by them were Popular Sovereignty, the
Dred Scott decision, and slavery extension to the Territories. Lincoln was
defeated in the election, but his great speeches won for him a national
reputation.
John Brown, who had been a fighting Abolitionist in the Kansas struggle,
conceived the plan of stirring up a slave insurrection. He invaded Virginia
with about twenty followers and seized and held for a few hours the United
States Arsenal at Harper's Ferry. But no slaves flocked to his standard and
the daring adventurer was captured and executed by the State of Virginia.
The money for Brown's undertaking had been furnished by a small secret
committee of ardent Abolitionists at Boston. But public opinion in the
South held the Republican party responsible for Brown's invasion.
545. The Election of Abraham Lincoln, I860. —The dis-
ruption of the Democratic party took place at the national conven-
tion at Charleston and its adjourned session in Baltimore. The
majority in Baltimore nominated Stephen A. Douglas of Illinois on
his platform of Popular Sovereignty modified by concessions to the
372 THE CIVIL WAR IN THE UNITED STATES.
slave power. For the Vice-presidency H. V. Johnson of Georgia,
a violent advocate of secession, was nominated to secure the Southern
vote. This double-dealing policy was far from appeasing the slave
power, and the seceders of Charleston and Baltimore nominated
John C. Breckinridge of Kentucky on a platform fully indorsing the
Dred Scott decision and calling for further rulings in the same
spirit. The Republicans met at Chicago and nominated Abraham
Lincoln. Their platform repudiated the Dred Scott decision against
the Southern Democrats, insisted on the free soil character of the
Territories against the Northern Democrats, but denied all sympathy
with any kind of interference with slavery in the States where it
lawfully existed.
Nothing shows better the growth of Northern sentiment against the
extension of slavery than the number of votes cast for anti-slavery candi-
dates. The Liberty party formed in 1 840 was the first to set up a presidential
candidate, J. G. Birney. He received first 7,000, four years later 60,000
votes. The Free Soil party in 1848 registered 270,000 votes. The Repub-
licans raised the number of votes in 1856 to 1,340,000 votes, and elected
their candidate in 1860 by a popular vote of 1,800,000.
Von Hoist: Const. Hist., v. III. IV. — Rhodes' Hist. U. S. from the Compromise of
I860. — Wilson : Rise and Fall. — McMaster : With the Fathers. — Schurz's Clay. — Morse,
Nicolay, and Hay: Life of Lincoln. — Tarbell : Early Life of A. Lincoln (1896).—
Tremain : Slavery in the District of Columbia. — Howard : Rept. of Decision and Opinions
in the Dred Scott Case; Extracts from Decision, etc. (1896). —Edwards, Hart and
Armung : Chief Justice Taney.
§ 6.
CATHOLICS AND NATIONAL PARTIES.
546. The Catholic Hierarchy. — Whilst the slavery question
with its kindred interests was the chief issue which divided the peo-
ple of the United States, the religious question which originated in
the opposition of a fanatical section of the people against the Church,
made itself felt throughout the period. From small beginnings the
Catholic Church had gradually developed into a great power in the
land. In colonial times the Catholic Missions of Maryland and
Pennsylvania, where Catholics enjoyed some measure of toleration,
had been administered by Fathers of the Society of Jesus under the
jurisdiction of the Vicar Apostolic of London. This jurisdiction
CATHOLICS AND NATIONAL PARTIES. 373
ended by an official act of Pius VI. Upon the urgent representa-
tion of Benjamin Franklin, then minister to France, the Pope
appointed the most prominent of the former Jesuits, Rev. John
Carroll, " Superior of the Mission and Vicar Apostolic in the thirteen
United States of North America," 1774. There were then 15,000
Catholics in Maryland, among them 3,000 negro slaves, 7,000 in
Pennsylvania and perhaps a few thousand scattered in the rest of
the States who were utterly deprived of all religious ministry. The
Peace of Paris, 1783, and the free exercise of religion guaranteed in
the Constitution of the United States, drew increasing numbers of
Catholics to the Republic. Hence Pius VI. formally established the
American Hierarchy in 1789 by appointing John Carroll first bishop
of Baltimore. His diocese comprised the whole of the United States.
After the cession of Louisiana by France (1803), Right Rev. John
Carroll became, moreover, administrator of Louisiana. In 1808
the diocese of Baltimore was divided and John Carroll made Arch-
bishop of the See of Baltimore, with the bishops of Boston, New
York, Philadelphia, and Bardstown as suffragans. With this event
began the rapid development of the Catholic Church in the United
States.
One archbishop and five bishops (three being absent) represented the
Church in the first Provincial Council of Baltimore (1829), the first held in
the nineteenth century, and the first in any English-speaking country since
the Reformation. The first Plenary Council of Baltimore, 1852, was com-
posed of six archbishops and twenty-seven bishops. Forty-nine prelates
sat among the Fathers of the Vatican Council, whilst the third Plenary
Council, 1884, saw thirteen archbishops, sixty bishops, seven mitred abbots,
and the superiors of twenty- three religious orders within the walls of the
Baltimore Cathedral.
547. Nativism. — From the beginning of the Catholic establish-
ment throughout the history of the Union there existed a party,
which, under the pretext of defending American institutions, carried
on a warfare, sometimes open, sometimes secret, against the Catholic
Church. The French Revolution and the Irish Insurrection drove
thousands upon thousands of Irishmen and Frenchmen — among
them a number of eminent priests — to the United States. Unneces-
sarily alarmed at this immigration the native Americans succeeded,
1798, in changing the term of residence preceding naturalization to
374 THE CIVIL WAR IN THE UNITED STATES.
fourteen years. When the Republicans (Democrats) came into
power, they reduced the term to five years. The fact that immi-
grants and Catholics found fairer treatment at the hands of the
Democratic party than of any other, explains the affiliation of Cath-
olics with this party before the Civil War, and their advocacy of
slavery as a party measure.
548. Causes of the First Outbreaks in the Thirties. — Whilst there
was no sign of hostility towards Catholics for nearly a generation, a series
of European events revived the anti-Catholic and anti-foreign feeling in
America.
(a) The formation of the Holy Alliance, its suppression of the revo-
lutionary movements in Italy and Spain, its desire to reduce the revolted
Spanish colonies in America which led to the proclamation of the Monroe
doctrine, the Vienna lectures of the great German scholar and convert
Frederic von Schlegel, in which he pictured America as the revolutionary
school for Europe, and the foundation of the St. Leopold Society in
Austria, Hungary, Italy, and France, for the purpose of establishing mis-
sions in the United States, were persistently misinterpreted as so many
attempts of the Catholic Powers to destroy the free institutions of America.
(b; The decade was the period, when bishops, cathedrals, sisters of
charity, sisters of mercy, convents, Catholic seminaries, colleges and
schools, orphan asylums, and newspapers devoted to the faith, made their
appearance in every great city, where within the memory of men all such
institutions had been proscribed.
(c) This growth of the Catholic Church coincided with a period in which
political agitation, turbulence, and riots, were the order of the day.
Bigots of the worst type incited the imagination of the Protestants with
tales of horror fathered upon the Catholics. In these days of excitement
the Church of Rome was everywhere assailed from pulpit and platform.
In New York St. Mary's Church was plundered and burned by incendiaries,
and the Ursuline convent of Charlestown, Mass., given to the flames by
the mob.
549. The Native American Party. — In the decade of 1830-
40 more than 500,000 Europeans landed in New York alone. The
number, though small in comparison with later arrivals, was very
large for that time. Unfortunately, many immigrants aired their
old-world antipathies in the new. Irishmen and Scotchmen, Cath-
olics and Orangemen, paraded and fought in the large cities of the
United States and Canada. Moreover, the Catholics had two real
grievances connected with the public school system, which they
endeavored to remedy at the polls. Conscience obliged them to
CATHOLICS AND NATIONAL PARTIES. 375
maintain their own parochial schools, whilst for the maintenance of
the public schools the State forced them to pay a second tax.
Accordingly they demanded that a share in the educational funds
should be granted to them, and that in public schools the Protestant
bible should not be forced on Catholic children. The latter demand
was complied with in the course of time ; but Catholics never
obtained justice in the matter of double taxation. Whilst these
questions were agitated the- cry again rose : Twenty-one years of
residence before citizenship. As the Democrats and the Whigs in
their party platforms indorsed the cause of the immigrants, the
Nativists and bigots, in a State convention of Louisiana, 1841,
formed a new party, the Native American party. Its principles
were : Twenty -one years of residence ; no officials but native Amer-
icans ; no union of Church and State ; keep the bible in the schools ;
oppose the encroachments of Popery. The successes of the party
were only local in New Orleans, St. Louis, Philadelphia, New York,
New Jersey, etc. ; but the party caused the dreadful riots of May
and July in Philadelphia, where many lives were lost, and the semi-
nary, churches, convents, and dwellings inhabited by Catholics were
looted and burned. The authorities on the whole sided with the
rioters, whilst many fair-minded Americans, here and elsewhere,
boldly stepped forward in defense of the Catholics. A repetition of
similar scenes in New York was prevented by the firmness of Bishop
Hughes, the champion of Catholic education, and the Catholics of
New York, who publicly declared that if the laws of the State would
not protect their lives and property, they would know how to defend
themselves. The declaration cowed the bigots into submission.
The collapse of the party was as rapid as its rise. Whilst the Native
Americans elected six representatives to the Twenty ninth Congress, not
one of them found a seat in the Thirty- lirst. Before the end of the decade
there was a complete lull in the anti-Catholic excitement.
55O. New Attacks Upon Catholics. — The Nativist and anti-Catholic
elements again joined forces in 1852, and allied themselves with the fugitive
German and Italian revolutionists of 1848 and 1849. The ex-Carmelite
*• Father " Gavazzi, the Mazzinian apostate of the defeated Italian revolu-
tion, transferred his crusade of hatred and sirife to the United States. When
the Papal Nuncio, Mgr. Gaetano Bedini, landed in New York (1852) Gavazzi
put himself at the head of the movement against Bedini, traveled over the
376 THE CIVIL WAR IN THE UNITED STATES.
country, arid made charges li which no rational man ever for a moment
believed and which were soon proved to be utterly false." In his progress
through the country the Nuncio was insulted, abused, burned in effigy,
mobbed, and threatened with assassination. The government at Washington
which had an accredited minister at the court of Pius IX. showed utter indif-
ference to the acts of violence committed toward a diplomatic representa-
tive of the Holy See. In New England the anti-Catholic agitation was
started at Boston by a street preacher who styled himself the Angel Gabriel.
Wherever he went he raised the mob against the Catholic churches and
people. In May the crowd attacked the Irish settlement at Chelsea and
the Bellingham Catholic church. In June the Catholic church at Coburg
was burned; July 3, an armed mob expelled a peaceful Catholic population
from their homes at Manchester; July 4, the Catholic church at Dorchester
was blown up with gunpowder; July 5, the Angel Gabriel led in the sacking
and destruction of the church at Bath, etc., etc.
551. Know-No thingism. — During this excitement the Supreme
Order of the Star Spangled Banner, a net work of secret societies
founded in 1852 somewhere in New York, began its insidious career.
Owing to their extreme reticence, its members were called Know-
nothings. It was greatly strengthened by European revolutionists
and certain elements of the Whig party disrupted by the Kansas-
Nebraska bill. The cardinal principles of the order were: 1. That
no foreigners should be naturalized under twenty-one years of resi-
dence. 2. That the Catholic religion was a danger to the country.
3. That the Protestant bible should be the foundation of all common
school education. The power of the order consisted in its secret
management of the elections baffling all the calculations of the poli-
ticians. In 1854 the Know-nothings carried the elections in Massa-
chusetts, Delaware, and -partly New York. In 1855 it secured the
legislature of Maryland and all but carried the 'States of Virginia,
Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, and Texas. In the North
the uprising against the Catholics was sweeping ; the governors and
legislatures of New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Con-
necticut, New York, Kentucky, and California were Know-nothings.
This success encouraged the Grand Council of the order to enter
the presidential campaign, and to nominate Millard Fillmore. But
internal dissensions disrupted the many-colored party, and the new
Republicanism swept Know-nothingism out of the North. Of 296
presidential electors the anti-Catholic party secured only eight and
SECESSION. 377
sent twenty Representatives and five Senators to Congress. Two
years later not one Native American came from any State north of
the Potomac, save Maryland, where the anti-Catholic party existed
three years longer, drew to itself all the ruffians in and around Balti-
more, attacked and mobbed the first Northern regiment marching
to the front and made the city the most lawless of the Union.
552. Change of Peeling. — A remarkable change in the attitude of the
government took place under Lincoln's administration. The one man who
was most bitterly hated by the Know-nothings, Archbishop Hughes of New
York, not only enjoyed the full confidence of the President and the admin-
istration, but was sent to Europe on an extraordinary diplomatic mission to
explain the state of affairs in America to the governments of France,
Spain, and the Holy See. With the civil war the allegiance of Catholics to
one political party ceased. After the war a trace of Know-nothingism
showed itself in the Ku-klux-klan and the Whitecap organizations which
terrorized the South since reconstruction days, whilst in the North the
methods of Know-nothings have been revived by the A. P. A. or American
Protective Association of 1894.
McMaster. The Riotous Career of the Know-nothings: Forum, July, 1894, p. 513.—
Th. A. Becker, D. D.r Secret Societies in the U. S. — J. G. Shea: Hist, of the Cath.
Church in the U. £., 4 volumes (including Colonial Times.— Other Histories by O'Gor-
man; John O'Kane Murray; Macleod (Rom. Cath. in Nortn Am. ) ; Conry, etc.— Know-
nothingism in Kentucky, Cath. World '37. — Hon. B. J. Webb: Century of Catholicity in
Kentucky. — Hassard; Brown; J Hughes, Archb. of N. Y. — J. L. Spalding: Life of the
Most Rev. M. J. Spalding, D. D., Archbishop of Baltimore. — Harper : The Church and
the Constitution of the U. S., A. C. Q , v. 9. — J. G. Shea: The Cath. Church in American
Hist., Cath. World, A. C. Q., 1. — Progress of the C. Ch. in the U. S. from the First Pro-
vinical to the Third Plen. Council, A. C. Q., v. 9.
§7.
SECESSION.
553. Secession. — The election of Lincoln led to the secession
of the Southern States from the Union. The South believed that the
election of Lincoln meant the abolition of slavery, though neither
Lincoln nor the Republican party save a small minority of extreme
Abolitionists, harbored such an intention. South Carolina was the
first to declare herself a " sovereign, free, and independent " State.
Before February, 1861, Mississippi, Florida, Alabama, Georgia,
Louisiana, and Texas joined South Carolina, established at Mont-
gomery, Ala., " The Confederate States of America " and elected Jef-
ferson Davis and Alexander H. Stephens provisional President and
378 THE CIVIL WAR IN THE UNITED STATES.
Vice-president. The Constitution adopted was, on the whole, that of
the United States except that it carefully guarded slavery and forbade
a protective tariff. Many Southerners hoped that the act of secession
would force their slavery views on the North and thus enable them
to rejoin the Union. These seven cotton States formed the first area
of secession. They were divided from the free States by a belt of
wavering border States. Compromises were attempted but failed.
Buchanan did nothing to stop the secession. Secession was wrong,
he said, but he had no power to coerce seceded States. The sece-
ders made good use of this inactivity. The United States soldiers
who refused to join the movement were disarmed, and the forts,
arsenals, dock yards, custom houses, mints, and other property of
the United States, seized by the authorities in revolt. Southern
officers of the army and navy resigned and offered their swords and
services to the Confederacy. The South stood united, the North
was divided and full of sympathizers with the South. Department
officials reported every step of the government to. the Confederate
authorities. It was under these circumstances that President
Lincoln was inaugurated March 4, 1861.
554. Abraham Lincoln. — Abraham Lincoln came from a poor family.
He worked hard with his hands when a young man, but he was a passionate
reader and took no interest in money-making. At twenty- eight he began to
practice law, threw himself with keen zest into the political contests of the
day, and was elected to the legislature of Illinois and to Congress. In pri-
vate life h£ was a man of most kindly feeling and full of quaint humor. In
his inauguration speech from the steps of the Capitol he clearly announced
his policy: " I have no purpose, directly or indirectly, to interfere with the
institution of slavery where it exists. I consider the Union is unbroken,
and to the extent of my ability I shall take care that the laws of the Union
shall be faithfully executed in all the States. In doing this — there shall be
no bloodshed unless it shall be forced upon the national authority." He
finally announced his intention to occupy the property and places belonging
to the government. In conformity with this announcement he ordered men
and supplies to be sent to Fort Sumter at Charleston. Thereupon General
Beauregard, under the authority of the Governor of South Carolina, bom-
barded Fort Sumter for thirty-five hours. When food and powder were
exhausted and the fort stood in flames, Major Anderson surrendered April
14, 1861, and was allowed to embark for New York with all the honors of
war. Soon after the Confederacy formally declared war against the United
States. The European Powers, on the whole, sympathized with the South,
and recognized the Confederacy as a belligerent, but not as an independent
SECESSION. 379
Power. Hence while slavery was at the root of the trouble, the civil war
was really waged on the one hand to maintain, on the other to prevent, the
Act of Secession. It was a war for the preservation of the Union.
555. War Preparations. — The bombardment of Fort Sumter
united the loyal States to common action and put an end to the hesi-
tation of the border States. Arkansas, North Carolina, Tennessee,
and Virginia joined the Confederacy. Forty-eight western counties
of Virginia, however, remained loyal and formed the new State of
West Virginia (admitted in 1863). The northern border States,
Delaware, Maryland, Kentucky, and Missouri remained in the Union,
though many secessionists from these States joined the Confederate
army. The Southern government transferred its capitol to Rich-
mond. President Lincoln called for 75,000 volunteers to serve for
three months. Many more instantly responded to the call. New
summonses for a three years' service raised the effective strength of
the Union army to 183,500 men under the general command of Win-
field Scott. The Union army was distributed along a line of 2,000
miles passing through northern Virginia along the Potomac, across
Kentucky, Missouri, the Indian Territory, to New Mexico. Jeffer-
son Davis called upon the Confederate States for volunteers and
soon regiments were hurried to the Potomac from the North and the
South.
556. Character of the War. — The war that followed exhibited three
groups of military operations, (a) The great conflicts were waged in the
States bordering East and West on the Alleghany mountains, especially in
the narrow territory lying between the two rival capitals, Washington and
Richmond, (b) In the West the possession of the Mississippi river was a
primary object with the North, partly to cut off Western supplies from the
South, partly to have a basis of operation into the interior of the Confed-
eracy, (c) Most of the minor hostilities were waged on the outskirts of
the Confederacy, and consisted in lodgments on the coast to enforce the
blockade of the Southern ports. With a few exceptions, the offensive was
the Northern share of the struggle, the defensive the Southern.
King: Turning on the Light; Buchanan's Administration (1895). — Herndon ; Schurz:
Lincoln. — Chittenden: Recollections of Pres. Lincoln and His Administration. — Confed-
erate States : Ordinances of Secession, etc. (1893). — Nicolay : Outbreak of the Rebellion. —
Davis: Rise and Fallofthe Confederate Government. — Dodge U. S. A. : A Bird's- Eye View
of Our Civil War (compact and nnpartisan).— Crawford: Genesis of the Civil War;
Story of Sumter. — Pollard: Life of Jeff. Davis; Memoirs, by his Wife (1890). — Scharf :
Hist, of the Confederate States.
380 THE CIVIL WAR IN THE UNITED STATES.
THE CIVIL WAR.
557. Bull Run and Wilson's Creek, 1861. — In Northern
Virginia the Union General McDowell faced General Beauregard.
The popular cry of the North : " On to Richmond ! ' ' induced Scott
to order an attack. This first great battle of Bull Run (July 21),
ended with the defeat and headlong rout of the Union army. The
battle taught the North Americans the necessity of discipline.
General McClellan, a splendid organizer, but slow and cautious in
the field, was appointed to replace Scott. He was put in personal
command on the Potomac, and spent the rest of the year and the
following spring in drilling his army. In the West, too, the first
hard-fought battle at Wilson's Creek, Missouri (August), was a
Union defeat. A new call for 500,000 volunteers was issued.
558. The Opening of the Mississippi, 1862-63. — (a. ) The
Western forces were commanded by General Halleck, Union com-
mander, and General Albert Sidney Johnston, Confederate. Under
Halleck General Thomas drove the Confederates out of Eastern Ken-
tucky (January, 1862). In February Commodore Foote captured
Fort Henry on the Tennessee, and Ulysses S. Grant Fort Donelson
on the Cumberland. These victories broke the line of the Confed-
erates, who withdrew to Corinth, Mississippi. Grant encountered
them in the bloody battle of Pittsburg Landing or Shiloh (April
6-7). The fall of General Johnston and the timely arrival of Buell
turned the Confederate victory into a defeat. Halleck now took
personal command, and Corinth fell towards the end of May.
Halleck then went to Washington to assume the chief command as
McClellan 's successor.
(b.) Two other divisions had meanwhile descended the Mis-
sissippi. The one under Curtis on the western bank of the river
first drove the Confederates under Van Dorn and Price out of Mis-
souri, and then defeated them in the desperate battle at Pea
Ridge, Arkansas (March 6-8). Before the end of the year the
entire western bank was in the hands of the Union forces.
(c.) The third division under Pope came down the great river with
THE CIVIL WAR. 381
Foote's gunboats and joined Grant's forces. The result was the
fall of Memphis (June 6). These successes pushed the Union front
eastward to a line passing through Memphis and Corinth to Chatta-
nooga.
(d.) Whilst Grant and Foote opened the upper course of the Mis-
sissippi, Farragut entered the Mississippi from below, passed the
forts of New Orleans under a dreadful fire, destroyed the Confed-
erate fleet, and took the city (April 24—25). General Benjamin
Butler then entered and held it with 15,000 men.
(e.) To break the Northern line stretching from Memphis to Chat-
tanooga, General Bragg rushed across Tennessee and raided Kentucky,
whilst Price and Van Dorn prepared to attack Corinth from luka
and Holly Springs. Grant detailed General Rosecrans to deal with
the enemy. Rosecrans first drove Price into the camp of Van Dorn
(September 19), and subsequently routed both at Corinth (October
4). Four days later Bragg was defeated by Buell at Perryville in
Kentucky and driven South. Grant now marched down the eastern
bank of the Mississippi against Vicksburg. Once more Bragg
undertook a raiding expedition to the North. But Rosecrans, who
had been raised to the command of the Army of the Tennessee,
defeated him in the battle of Murfreesboro, one of the most mur-
derous in the whole war (December 31-January 2, 1863). No
further attempt was made to recover Kentucky. I^osecrans
remained at Murfreesboro till summer.
The situation in the West at the end of 1862 was this. The entire west-
ern bank of the Mississippi was in the hands of the United States. To the
east of the river the Confederate line crossed Northern Alabama and Mis-
sissippi, touched the river at Vicksburg and Port Hudson, the only fortified
places of the Confederacy on the eastern bank, and thence deviated east-
ward to the Gulf.
(f.) In April, 1863, Grant set about to« reduce Vicksburg. Its
position on a steep bluff 200 feet above the river made it well-
nigh unassailable. After crossing and recrossing the river and
defeating the Confederate Generals Joe Johnston and Pemberton in
three battles, Grant laid siege to Vicksburg for seven weeks and
starved it into surrender (July 4). The fall of Vicksburg and, five
days later, of Fort Hudson, opened the Mississippi from source to
mouth and cut the Confederacy in two.
382 THE CIVIL WAR IN THE UNITED STATES.
559. McClellaii's Peninsular Campaign against Rich-
mond. — In the East the real campaign began in spring, 1862.
The government desired the army of the Potomac to operate between
Washington and Richmond. But the ground was intersected with
rivers and numerous other obstacles. McClellan insisted on moving
up the peninsula formed by the York and the James rivers. A
compromise led to a threefold disposition of the troops. Fremont
and Banks with a small army were to guard Washington against an
attack from the Shenandoah Valley. McDowell was to march from
Washington to Richmond. McClellan was to move up the Peninsula
and join McDowell. But three brilliant Confederate Generals, Joe
Johnston, Stonewall Jackson, and Robert Lee, spoiled the plan.
(a.) Johnston met McClellan at the lower end of the Peninsula,
forced him to besiege Yorktown and Williamsburg, and to fight his
way to White House Landing, whence McClellan turned in a south-
westerly direction to the Chickahominy river to wait for McDowell.
(b. ) Meanwhile Stonewall Jackson had come down the Shenandoah
Valley and defeated the Union troops in five battles within thirty-four
days, whereupon he joined the army at Richmond. The government,
alarmed at these reverses, recalled McDowell to protect the capital.
(c.) McClellan, instead of being able to join McDowell, found
Richmond reinforced by Stonewall Jackson, and Johnston still lying in
his path. Johnston, however, wounded in the fighting before Rich-
mond, had to be replaced by Lee. Lee in the seven days' battles in
front of Richmond (June 25, July 1), stood his ground and com-
pelled McClellan to retreat to Harrison's Landing. In August the
Union army returned to the Potomac. It was during McClellan 's
stay at Harrison Landing, that Halleck was called to the chief com-
mand, and a new army, the Army of Virginia, was organized under
General Pope. This army took up its position along the Rappa-
hannock and Rapidan rivers and beyond to the Shenandoah Valley.
560. Lee's Raid into Maryland. — McClellan's retreat to the
Potomac opened a way to Lee to invade Maryland. Lee first
defeated Banks at Cedar Creek, then routed Pope on the old field
of Bull Run, crossed the Potomac and entered Maryland. Pope
had meanwhile joined McClellan near Washington. Both overtook
Lee at Antietam Creek, where a great battle was fought September
THE OVERTHROW OF THE CONFEDERACY. 383
14. It was so far a Northern victory as Lee found it necessary to
recross the Potomac. The cautious McClellan was now superseded
by the fiery Burnside in the command of the Army of the Potomac.
Burnside met Lee and Jackson at Fredericksburg but was defeated
with dreadful slaughter December 13. Thus at the end of 1862 the
two hostile armies stood again in the old position, the Union army
in front of Washington, the Confederate army in front of Richmond.
Burnside made place for Hooker.
561. Chancellorsville and Gettysburg. — Hooker took the
initiative in 1863 and moved agains.t Lee only to be defeated with
heavy loss at Chancellorsville (May 2—3) and to lose his command.
The Confederates suffered perhaps a greater loss by the fall of Stone-
wall Jackson, Lee's right arm. Lee once more hurried across the
Potomac, past Washington, through Maryland into Pennsylvania.
He was hotly pursued by the Union army, now commanded by
George G. Meade, and brought to a stand at Gettysburg. Here
the greatest battle in the war was fought July 1-3. Lee, in the
advantage for two days, was beaten on the third, and returned to
Virginia, where he remained unmolested for the rest of the year.
Gettysburg was the turning-point in the Eastern campaign.
Dodge: Bird's- Eye View.— Force: Fort Henry to Corinth. — Green : The Mississippi.—
Mahan: Farragut. — Webb : The Peninsula; McClellan's Own Story . — Ropes : The
Army under Pope. — Palfrey : Antietam and Fredericksburg. — Cist : Army of the, Cum-
berland. — Bickham : Rosecrans' Campaign, 1863. — Doubleday : Chancellorsville and
Gettysburg; Gettysburg Made Plain. — Hamlin : B. of Chancellorsville (1896). — Drake:
B. of Gettysburg (1892); Vicksburg and Gettysburg, E. R., 83, 4.— (Southern View). —
Pollard: First Year of the War; The Lost Cause. — Johnston : Life of A. S. Johnston —
J. E. Johnston: Military Operations. — Hughes: Gen. Johnston (1893) — Randolph: Life
of Stonewall Jackson. — Gen. Jackson, Life and Letters, by his Wife (1892). — Lives of Lee.
§ 9-
THE OVERTHROW OF THE CONFEDERACY.
562. Movements in the West, 1863, Chickamauga and
Chattanooga. — (a.) The feeling of relief caused in the North by
the victory of Gettysburg was yet increased the following day by the
news of the fall of Vicksburg, July 4 (cf. p. 381, f.). Whilst Grant
was still besieging Vicksburg, Rosecrans left his headquarters at
Murfreesboro, and by a series of skillful strategic movements pushed
Bragg out of his important position at Chattanooga across the
384 THE CIVIL WAR IN THE UNITED STATES.
Chickamauga Creek, where Bragg received reinforcements from Lee.
Here a murderous two days' battle took place September 19-20, in
which the army of Rosecrans was defeated. Rosecrans fled back to
Chattanooga, whilst General Thomas stood his ground, covered the
retreat, and earned the title of " The Rock of Chickamauga." Bragg
then strongly fortified the heights around Chattanooga, especially
the high Lookout Mountain and Missionary Ridge, besieged the city
for close upon two months, and nearly reduced it to starvation.
(b.) Grant, now one of the most prominent generals of the North,
was sent to relieve Chattanooga, and to take command in place of
Rosecrans retired. He was reinforced by Sherman, Sheridan,
Thomas, Hooker, and a number of other generals in whom he con-
fided. The sudden and irresistible assaults of the Union troops, No-
vember 23—25, swept the enemy from Lookout Mountain, Missionary
Ridge, etc., and saved Chattanooga. Braggs' army retreated to
Dalton, where he was relieved by Joe Johnston. The result of the
year's Western campaign was, that the Confederates were driven
back from Uie Mississippi into the mountains of Georgia. Dalton
and Richmond were now the only Confederate centers of resistance.
563. Marching through Georgia. — The campaign of 1864
opened with Grant holding the chief command of the Union forces as
4 ' Lieutenant-General ' ' and in personal command of the army of the
Potdmac, whilst Sherman commanded the army of the Cumberland
at Chattanooga. The two leaders agreed on a plan. Grant was to
deal with Lee, Sherman to march to the Atlantic, and to cut the
Confederacy in two fr*om Northwest to Southeast, both operations to
begin on May 4. Sherman having united the armies of the Cumber-
land, the Mississippi, the Tennessee, and the Ohio, started on the
appointed day on his march against Johnston, drove him out of Dal-
ton, and painfully worked his way through the mountains of Georgia
towards Atlanta, constantly faced by the Confederates in Johnston's
masterly retreat. As Sherman had everywhere to detail guards for
the protection of the only railroad that brought him supplies, John-
ston by his adroit maneuvering had so far weakened Sherman's
army as to be ready to meet him with equal forces, when he was
recalled by Jefferson Davis and replaced by Hood. This blunder of
the Southern President at once altered the character of the campaign.
THE OVERTHROW OF THE CONFEDERACY. 385
Hood made three furious attacks upon Sherman, but was each time
defeated and finally abandoned Atlanta in order to draw Sherman
northward. But Sherman sent General Pope after Hood into Tennes-
see, burned Atlanta, and proceeded on his march to the sea. In four
parallel columns covering a belt of sixty miles, Sherman cut, raided,
and burned a wide swath through Georgia from Atlanta to Savannah.
He stormed Savannah in the middle of December, about the same
time when Pope annihilated Hood's army at Nashville. Great was
the surprise of Lincoln and the whole North, when Christmas eve
brought news of Sherman, who for months had completely disap-
peared from view. After a stay of two months Sherman began his
northward march through South Carolina into North Carolina.
Again he was preceded by Johnston whom Jefferson Davis after the
disaster of Nashville had placed in command of a new army. Sher-
man, however, safely reached Goldsboro, N. C., in March, 1865.
564. Grant's Campaign at Richmond and Petersburg. —
Meanwhile Grant, too, had opened the campaign May 4, 1864. He
crossed the Rapidan, entered the Wilderness, a vast tract of densely
wooded country, and, constantly hammering away at Lee, shifted
his ground to Spottsylvania Courthouse, to Cold Harbor, around
the forts of Richmond, losing 60,000 men in four weeks without
inflicting corresponding loss on the enemy, and finally sat down
before Petersburg which was connected with Richmond by field
works. The siege of Petersburg cost Grant 40,000 more. The
siege lasted till spring, 1865, and prevented Lee from interfering in
the West and the South.
In July, Lee sent General Early to make a diversion towards Wash-
ington with 20,000 cavalry. Twice Early dashed down the Shenandoah
Valley; the first time he came within six miles of Washington; the second
time he entered Pennsylvania and burned Chambersburg. These raids led
to Grant's order to lay waste the Shenandoah Valley. Sheridan carried out
the task and defeated Early at Winchester (September 19) a month later.
During Sheridan's absence, Early attacked the camp at Cedar Creek and
defeated the Union army. Sheridan heard the booming of the cannon
at Winchester, started with forty followers for the camp, rallied the fugi-
tives and turned the victory of the enemy into a rout (Sheridan's Hide).
565. Lee's Surrender, April 9, 1865. — In 1865 Lee's
situation became desperate. Every seaport of the Confederacy was
25
386 THE CIVIL WAR IN THE UNITED STATES.
in Union hands. Through Sherman's return Grant could dispose of
125,000 men against Lee's 60,000. The Union lines were drawn
closer and closer around Richmond and Petersburg. Lee's last
plan was to forsake Richmond, to join Johnston and to rush to the
Alleghany Mountains in order to obtain better terms for the Con-
federacy. On April 2 and 3 he evacuated Richmond and Peters-
burg which were occupied by detachments of United States troops.
Mismanagement on the part of the Confederate authorities left Lee
without provisions. He was followed by Grant's main army and sur-
rounded at Appomattox Courthouse, seventy-five miles west of
Richmond. Here the greatest soldier of America surrendered to
U. S. Grant April 6. Grant treated the Confederate army with
due generosity. Neither Lee nor his officers were required to give
up their swords. Each officer had to give his parole for himself
and his respective command not to take up arms against the United
States until properly exchanged. The men in the ranks were allowed
to keep their horses for farm work. Johnston surrendered to Sher-
man April 16. The other Confederate Generals followed. Their
soldiers were dismissed with free rations and conveyance under sub-
stantially the same parole. The fugitive Jefferson Davis was made
prisoner by the Union cavalry in Georgia. He was confined in For-
tress Monroe for two years and then discharged on bail without
further trial (d. 1889). Not one soldier of the Confederacy was im-
prisoned ; not one political leader executed. Their punishment con-
sisted in temporary political disabilities. In an incredibly short time,
the two vast armies of the North and of the South quietly dispersed to
their homes and resumed the pacific occupations of private life. No
act of lawlessness is on record to stain the repute of either army
after the surrender. It was left to a small band of Southern con-
spirators headed by John Wilkes Booth to cut off, by foul assassina-
tion, the life of President Lincoln, who had well deserved of his
country (April 14, 1865).
566. Naval Warfare, 1861-65. — (a.) The American navy, which at the
outbreak of the war numbered thirteen available vessels out of ninety laid
up or scattered abroad, grew in the course of the conflict into a fleet of 700
vessels, among them sixty ironclads, manned by 50,000 sailors. The task
accomplished by this fleet was the blockade of 1,900 miles of sea-coast, the
capture of every seaport and fort scattered along this estuary, the opening
of the Mississippi and other rivers, and the destruction of the Confederate
THE OVERTHROW OF THE CONFEDERACY. 387
cruisers. In the earlier period of the war blockade-running became a
lucrative business. English goods first shipped to the West Indies, were
run into Wilmington, N. C., and cotton run out; 1,504 blockade runners were
captured or destroyed during the war.
(b.) The use of ironclads in this war (Merrimac, Monitor, etc.) revolu-
tionized naval warfare, as no wooden vessel could resist them. It forced all
the maritime nations to build new navies.
(c.) Whilst the blockade destroyed Southern trade, the Confederacy em-
ployed "Commerce Destroyers" like the " Sumter," the " Florida" the
" Alabama," and the " Shenandoah " — the latter three built in England,—
to destroy American commerce on the high seas. " The Sumter " was run into
Gibraltar, and sold to escape capture. The " Florida " was captured in the
Brazilian port of Bahia, by a violation .of neutral waters, and when re-
claimed, sunk by an " unforeseen accident " at Hampton Roads. The "Ala-
bama "was sunk in the English Channel by the Kearsarge (1864), Only
the <4 Shenandoah" escaped to England at the end of the war. An inter-
national arbitration board sitting at Geneva, 1872, obliged England to pay
$15,500,000 for the damage inflicted by these cruisers.
567. Statistics. — The actual enlistments in the North, during the war,
were 2,780,000 men, among them 80,000 negro soldiers. The regular army,
however, never exceeded 67,000 men; the rest were volunteers. The South
enlisted about 1,300,000 men. The forces in the field were about equal, for
the North had to detail one-half of its men to garrison duty. The propor-
tion to the military population was, in the North, four men out of nine ; in
the South, nine men out of ten. The losses from all causes amounted to
half a million in the North, and nearly as many in the South. The cost of
the war to the Union as far as ascertainable, was $3,400,000,000. In addition
to the regular pay, the nation paid to the soldiers $300,000,000 in bounties,
and will have paid, when the last veteran dies, $3,700,000,000 in pensions,
making about $8,000 for every man who died in the war or survived. This
sum, however, represents enormous frauds in obtaining and distributing
the pensions, of which large sums never reached the soldiers, or reached
undeserving subjects.
Cox : Atlanta; The March to the Sea. — Pond : The Shenandoah in 1864. — Humphrey :
Virginia Campaign; Camp, of 1864-65. —Grant: Personal Memoirs. — Porter : Campaigns
•with Grant (1897) ; Lives by Brooks (1897) ; Church ('97) ; Wilson, ('97), E. R., '69, 1. —
F. Lee: Lee.— Pollard: Lee and His Lieutenants. — White : Lee and the Southern Confed-
eracy. — R. Lee and the Civil War, E. R., 73, 2.— Copp6e: Gen. Thomas Sherman,' Letters,
Memoirs (1891 j. — Bowman and Irwin : Sherman andhis Campaigns.— Headly : Facing the
Enemy. — Davis : Gen. Sheridan; Sheridan: Personal Memoirs — Lincoln, by Schurz;
Dana (L. and his Cabinet) ; Coffin (1892) ; Morse (1893); Brooks (1896); Rutherford:
(Ploughboy, Statesman, and Patriot)', Harris: Assassination. — D. M. de Witt: Judicial
Murder of Mary E. Surrat.
General Histories of the War. — Dodge ; Comte de Paris; Ropes (1894) ; Mahan
(Critical Hist.); Seward (Diplom. Hist.); Porter- Naval History. — Pollard's Works;
Southern Hist, of the War. — Scharf : Hist, of the Confederate States Navy; Johnson and
Buell : Battles and Leaders in the Civil War.
388 THE CIVIL WAR IN THE UNITED STATES.
§ 10.
THE END OF SLAVERY.
568. Thirteenth Amendment. — As early as January 1, 1863,
President Lincoln as commander-in-chief of the army issued a
proclamation setting free the slaves of all those persons who were
engaged in war with the government of the United States. This
partial emancipation, which was a mere war measure, did not
apply either to the loyal slave States nor the Territories reconquered
by the Union army. To complete the work of emancipation, a
measure now plainly necessary for the peace of the United States,
Congress in February, 1865, sent out the Thirteenth Amendment to
the Constitution, which abolished slavery forever in the United States.
The constitutional three-fourths of all the States — twenty-seven of
the thirty-six States then in the Union — ratified the amendment.
Sixteen of the ratifying States were free and eleven slave States.
The amendment was formally proclaimed December 18, 1865.
569. Presidential Reconstruction. — With the collapse of
the Confederacy all civil government in the South came to an end.
To re-establish the laws of the United States was therefore the first
duty of President and Congress. Lincoln's death left the question
unsolved in the hands of Andrew Johnson, who, as Vice-president,
followed Lincoln in office. Johnson at once set about to solve the
problem without consulting Congress. He appointed provisional
governors for the seceded States. The governors summoned State
conventions which in their turn annulled the ordinances of secession,
repudiated the Confederate debts, abolished slavery in their
respective States, and ratified the Thirteenth Amendment. Before
the end of 1865 all the seceded States had their organized govern-
ments and were recognized by the President.
570. Congressional Reconstruction — The Fourteenth
Amendment. — If the new legislatures of the South had stopped
with these measures, difficulties might have been avoided. But ten
out of eleven legislatures deemed it necessary for the protection of
the landowners to enact laws which were considered by the North
as introducing a new form of involuntary servitude, if not actual
THE END OF SLAVERY. 389
slavery. Colored persons who could not be forced to work as
slaves, were to be forced as vagrants, apprentices, or paupers. Ten-
nessee alone had respected the liberty of the freedmen. Accordingly
when Congress met in December, 1865, it ignored the President's
work and refused seats to the senators and representatives of the
seceded States. Only Tennessee was admitted in March, 18G6.
The following June Congress passed the Fourteenth Amendment by
which the colored freedmen were made citizens both of their respect-
ive States and of the United States. The ratification of this amend-
ment by the Southern States was made a condition of their read-
mittance to Congress. Meanwhile the ten unreconstructed States
were placed under military government. North and South Carolina,
Florida, Alabama, Louisiana, and Arkansas submitted and were
readmitted to the Union, 1868. By their accession the Fourteenth
Amendment became part of the Constitution.
All the measures connected with Congressional Reconstruction were
passed over the veto of President Johnson, who was credited with the in-
tention of impeding the work by the removal of officials favoring it.
Acco.dingly Congress in 1867 passed the Tenure of Office Act which
reduced the President's power ( f removal to a power of suspension depend-
ent in its operation on the Senate's approval. Johnson's disregard of this
law led to his impeachment for " high crimes and misdemeanors." He
was, however, acquitted in the Senate by a majority of one vote.
571. Kml of Reconstruction. — *Many of the Southern whites
were still unpardoned, and therefore deprived of the right of voting.
Others, and among them the most influential men, had either left, or
took no part in a reconstruction under military rule. The colored
freedmen had been given the ballot before they were educated in the
duties of citizenship. They were ignorant, timid, and easily influ-
enced. This state of affairs induced a swarm of " carpet-baggers,"
political adventurers without conscience and patriotism from the
North, to invade the Southern States. They filled the minds of the
negroes with suspicions against their former masters and alarm at
the possible revival of slavery, obtained the control of the negro
vote, and got themselves elected governors, State legislators, and
congressmen. These powers they abused in passing bad laws and
high taxes, and in plundering the States for their personal benefit.
The Southern property owners, on the other hand, tried all manners
390 THE CIVIL WAR IN THE UNITED STATES.
of bribery and intimidation to prevent the negroes from voting.
They finally organized a secret society, the Ku-klux-klan, whose
members rode out at night, and whipped, maimed, and even mur-
dered negroes, carpet-baggers, and " scalawags," as Southern whites
were called who voted with the negroes. Hence the Fifteenth
Amendment which forbade the United States or any State, to pre-
vent any person from voting because of his race, color, or previous
condition of servitude, 1870. The same year the last of the South-
ern States, Georgia, Mississippi, Texas, and Virginia, were read-
mitted into the Union.
Whilst Reconstruction succeeded in making free men of the negroes, it
failed in making them voters. Gradually the original white population
wrested political power from the hands of Northern adventurers. Since
1877 all the Southern States had control of their State governments. Nor
has Reconstruction succeeded in wiping out the social ostracism maintained
by the whites against the colored population of the South.
Wilson : Rise and Fall of the Slave Power. — Blaine : Twenty Years in Congress. —
Barnes: Hist, of the 39th Congress. — Bryce: American Commonwealth.
General Works for Consultation on the Period — Narrative and Critical Hist,
of America (by different authors). — Andrew: Manual of the Constitution. —Wheeler:
Hist, of Congress. — Van Santvoord: Chief Justices of the U. St. — A. Johnston: Hist, of
Am. Politics. — M'Kee : National Platforms of all Parties — Stamvood : Hist, of Presi-
dential Elections. — W. G. Dice: American State and Am. Statesmen. — Johnston: Amer-
ican Orations. — American Commomveallh Series (Hist, of the Single States, by diff.
authors). — G. du Bois: Suj)pression of the Slave Trade in the U. St., 1638-1870.—
Soley: The Wars of the U. St., 1789-1850; Treaties and Conventions between the United
States and Other Countries (ed. 1889).
§H.
MEXICO AND THE UNITED STATES.
572. Mexico Invaded. — Whilst the United States were in the
throes of a civil war, great changes took place in the neighboring
Republic of Mexico. In the quick succession of revolutions and
counter-revolutions — the chronic evil of Mexico since its defection
from Spain — the liberal leader, Benito Juarez, in 186 L obtained
possession of the capital. In addition to the usual measures of
Masonic governments, suppression of the monasteries, spoliation of
the Church, expulsion of prominent bishops, he also repudiated the
treaty obligations with foreign Powers contracted by his predecessors.
This brought him in conflict with England, France, and Spain.
MEXICO AND THE UNITED STATES. 391
The three Powers concluded the Treaty of London, 1861, which
contemplated the seizure of Mexican custom houses to make good
foreign claims, but no interference in the internal affairs of Mexico.
Accordingly, the allied Powers sent an armed expedition to Mexico
which occupied Vera Cruz and the fort of Juan de Ulloa, December,
1861, and January, 1862. Shortly after reinforcements arrived -from
France, accompanied by the exiled Mexican General Almonte, who
had concerted plans with Napoleon III. for changing Mexico into
an Empire, and securing the throne to Archduke Maximilian of
Austria. Juarez demanded the re-embarkation of Almonte and his
companions. On this demand the representatives of the allied
Powers disagreed. The Count of Saligny, Napoleon's representa-
tive, proposed an immediate advance upon Mexico. The English
and Spanish representatives adhered to the clause of non-inter-
ference, and withdrew from the undertaking. Saligny thereupon
declared war against the government of Juarez.
573. Napoleon III. and the United States. — The aim of Napoleon
was clearly expressed in his instructions of July 3, 1862, to General Forey:
•* It is our interest that the Republic of the United States may be powerful
and prosperous, but by no means that she should take all the Gulf of Mexico,
and hence command the West Indies as well as South America, and be the
sole dispenser of the products of the New World." " If, on the contrary,
a stable government be constituted in Mexico with the assistance of France,
we shall have restored to the Latin race, on the other side of the ocean, its
strength and its prestige ; we shall have guaranteed security to our colonies
of the West Indies and those of Spain ; we shall have established our benefi-
cent influence in the center of America." On the other hand, the United
States appealed to the Monroe Doctrine, and from time to time protested
against the French undertaking. The Monroe Doctrine was a Declaration
issued by President Monroe in 1823 against a new Russian settlement in the
North, and against the suspected interference of the Holy Alliance in the
affairs of South America. It declared that, whilst the United States would
not meddle in the political affairs of Europe, the American continents were
no longer open to colonization by European powers, and that European gov-
ernments must not extend their system to any part of North or South
America. Napoleon, however, cared little for the Monroe Doctrine, being
satisfied that the United States, were going to pieces, and that the Southern
Confederacy would be his friend and ally.
574. The Empire of Mexico. — The first attack of the French
upon Puebla, 1862, failed, and postponed the campaign for a year.
392 THE CIVIL WAR IN THE UNITED STATES.
The arrival of 25,000 reinforcement enabled General Forey to de-
stroy the Republican forces, to take Puebla, and to enter the city of
Mexico, 1863. A Junta was formed which established a regency
composed of three excellent men, Archbishop La Bastida, and the
Generals Almonte and Salas. An assembly of 250 notables voted
for a hereditary Empire under a Catholic prince, and offered the
crown to Archduke Ferdinand Maximilian of Austria, the Emperor's
brother. Maximilian, then staying at the castle of Miramar,
refused to accept the throne on that vote alone, and answered the
envoys that he would only do so when the vote of the Notables
would be confirmed by the nation. To bring about this result,
Napoleon placed the reins of power in Mexico into the stronger
hands of Bazaine. Within six weeks, Bazaine defeated by rapid
and well concerted blows four Mexican generals, who had rallied
the scattered Republican forces, and added the greater part of the
country to the projected Empire. The people within the radius of
the French occupation ratified the vote of the Notables with the
same resignation with which they had voted through forty years of
civil war for any of the victorious presidential candidates. These
ratifications of the Mexican municipalities were placed before Maxi-
milian and judged by European jurists to be the expression of the
national will. Thereupon Maximilian accepted the proffered crown,
and arrived with Empress Carlotte in Mexico, June, 1864.
575. Maximilian's Policy. — The Emperor and Empress in a tour
through the country were everywhere received with sincere enthusiasm,
especially by the Catholic population. They regarded him as the savior of
the country from interminable revolutions. But the fond illusion was soon
dispelled. As Marshal Bazaine had done before him, Maximilian, too»
undertook to reconcile the Liberals at the expense of the Church. He re-
tained the spoliation laws of Juarez, introduced the Placet, banished religion
from the schools, and carrying out the Masonic programme, forced the Papal
Nuncio to leave Mexico. Jealousies between Mexicans and foreigners at
the court, in the army and in the administration added to the dissatisfaction.
In setting aside the leaders of the party to whom he owed the throne, he
estranged his strongest adherents without winning over any important
adhesions from the Liberals. Under the erroneous impression that the
government of Juarez had left the territory, he issued the famous law of
October 3, 1865, which ordered the court-martialing of all bands of guer-
rilleros taken in arms. The law was executed in very few cases as Maxi-
milian never refused a pardon ; and it was subsequently repealed. But it
MEXICO AND THE UNITED STATES. 393
greatly increased the number of his Mexican enemies, and estranged General
Bazaine, whose court-martials were regularly canceled.
576. Napoleon III. and the United States. — The surren-
der of Lee and the collapse of the Confederacy brought new dangers
to the Empire. A number of Southern generals and large and small
bands of armed Confederates with men and artillery passed over the
frontiers, became naturalized under the Empire and established
colonies. On the other hand many ex-soldiers of the Union army
enlisted in the ranks of Juarez, whose position was daily growing
stronger. Under these circumstances, the United States sent a per-
emptory note to Napoleon to withdraw the French troops from
Mexico. In view of Austria's intention to replace the French by
Austrian troops, Secretary Seward declared that the intervention of
any European power in the affairs of Mexico would henceforth be
considered by the government as a casus belli (April 28, 1865).
To give emphasis to these demands, General Sheridan was sent to
the Rio Grande with 60,000 veterans. Napoleon finally gave way to
the pressure. May 31, 1866, he forced a new treaty on Maximilian
by which the Mexican Empire lost one-half of its revenues, and the
support of the French army promised for six years was to cease
November 1, 1867. A journey of Empress Carlotte to the Tuileries
brought no relief. Maximilian, who ere this had made preparations
to leave Mexico, now changed his mind. He obtained evidence
that Napoleon III. was in accord with the United States government,
and with the Liberal leaders. He withdrew to Orizaba, threw him-
self into the arms of the Conservative party, and pledged himself to
reinstate the persecuted clergy and to return to the Church its con-
fiscated property. In a proclamation he announced his intention of
returning to the capital and convoking a Congress to ascertain the
feelings of the nation at large. On the very day when the proclama-
tion was issued, General Sherman with three American commission-
ers arrived at Vera Cruz. Their mission was to restore in concert
with the Tuileries the Mexican Republic and President Juarez. At
the same time Napoleon, in violation of his latest treaty, ordered the
immediate departure of the foreign troops.
577. The Fall of Maximilian, 1867. — The evacuation took
place early in 1867. The retreat of the French army was closely
394 THE CIVIL WAR IN THE UNITED STATES.
followed by the advance of the Liberals, who in a short time reduced
the Empire to the Peninsula of Yucatan and the cities of Vera Cruz,
Puebla, Queretaro, and Mexico. The Mexican army and the few
Austrian and Belgian regiments still at Maximilian's disposal were
outnumbered by the enemy and thinned by desertion. Whilst Por-
firio Diaz, later Juarez' successor in the presidency, stormed Puebla
and proceeded to the siege of Mexico, Maximilian made his last stand
in Queretaro. The siege lasted sixty-eight days. On May 15,
Colonel Lopez, in whom Maximilian implicitly confided, and on whom
he had bestowed unlimited favors, secretly introduced the enemy
into the forts, and sold the Emperor, his generals and his army into
captivity for 2,000 doubloons. With Juarez Maximilian's execution
was a foregone conclusion, which no appeals of foreign diplomacy
could change.
The trial was a mockery of justice. It was held under the sanguinary
and unconstitutional "law" of January 25, 1862, a mere manifesto of
Juarez against the interventionists. The charges of usurpation, filibus-
tering, complicity with the French, and the laws of October 3^ 1865, were
absurd in the case of a ruler who had come into the country unarmed and
invited by the nation. Three days were granted to prepare the defense, and
twenty-four hours for the trial. The court-martial, composed of young
subaltern officers, was held on the stage of a theater where Maximilian re-
fused to appear. During the few days intervening between the sentence
and the execution, Maximilian twice received the sacraments. He was
executed July 19, 1867, the anniversary of the day on which Iturbide, the
first Emperor of Mexico, had been executed in 1824. Vice Admiral Teget-
hoff, the victor of Lissa, conveyed the remains of Maximilian to Austria.
Before the catastrophe Empress Carlotte had been stricken with insanity.
From the moment Maximilian had resolved to stand for better or worse by
those who had remained faithful to his fallen fortunes, his words and acts
were noble, his death worthy of his ancestors. ,
Bancroft: Hist, of Mexico. — Hale: Story of Mexico. — Histories of Napoleon III.—
Taylor: Maximilian and Carlotta. — Gaulot: Reve d' Empire: La verite sur VExp&di-
tion du Mexique. — Chynoweth : Fall of Maximilian. — K6ratry : Rise and Fall of Max. —
Salm-Salm : My Diary in Mexico. — Schroeder : Fall of Maximilian's Empire. — Lummis:
Awakening of a Nation: Mexico of To-day. (1898.)
THE CIVIL WAR IN THE UNITED STATES.
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CHAPTER IV.
OUR OWN TIMES.
§ i.
THE GREAT POWERS.
578. Great Britain.-1- In the second half of the century England
continued the work of political reform begun in the first. Various
acts of Parliament abolished abuses in the civil service, in army
appointments, in popular elections, introduced the ballot and gave
greater protection to sailors, employees, workingmen and debtors.
Popular representation in Parliament was vastly extended in favor
of the working classes by Disraeli's Reform Act of 1867 (second R.
A.) which added 1,000,000 to the number of voters, and in favor
of the agricultural classes, by Gladstone's Reform Act of 1885
(third R. A.) which increased the voting population by 2,000,000.
579. The Irish Question. — In his first Prime Ministry (1868-74) Mr.
Gladstone conferred two important benefits on Ireland. By the disestab-
lishment and disendowment of the Irish Church (1868), he freed the Catho-
lics from the burden of Anglicanism and by the Irish Land Act (1870), he
liberated the tenants from the worst features of landlord tyranny. Towards
the end of his administration and during the ministry of Lord Beaconsfield
two movements were set on foot in Ireland, the Home Rule agitation which
sought self-government for Ireland by lawful means, and the Land League
which, allied with secret societies, resorted to questionable and even violent
measures to replace landlordism with its barbarous evictions by a system
of peasant proprietorship. Mr. Parnell led in both movements. When Mr.
Gladstone entered upon his second Premiership (1880-85), his strong
coercive measures, the imprisonment of Parnell and other Irish leaders and
the suppression of the Land League made matters worse. In 1882 England
was startled by the murder of Lord Frederick Cavendish, Chief Secretary
of Ireland, and Mr. Burke, permanent Under-secretary, in Phoenix Park,
Dublin. By voting with the Conservatives the Irish members forced Glad-
stone's resignation. He was succeeded by Lord Salisbury, June, 1885. —
February, 1886. When Gladstone again took office the same year (February-
August), he completely reversed his policy of coercion, became reconciled
(400)
THE GREAT POWERS. 401
with the Irish Nationalists and introduced the Irish Home Rule Bill
inclusive of an Irish Parliament. It was defeated by a split in the
Liberal Party. Mr. Chamberlain, Mr. Bright, and other English leaders,
who assumed the name of Liberal Unionists, resented any attempt to
interfere with the supremacy of the British Parliament. The result was a
Parliament of Conservatives and Liberal Unionists and the second Premier-
ship of Lord Salisbury (1886-92). The elections of 1892 once more placed
Gladstone at the helm. The Irish Home Rule Bill passed the House of
Commons, but was thrown out in the House of Lords by a vote of more
than ten to one. Thereupon Gladstone at the age of eighty-four resigned,
and the Liberal party, deprived of his splendid leadership and weakened by
internal dissensions, had to retire from the field, 1895. Mr. Gladstone died
May 19, 1898. An Irish Local Government Bill, drawn up by the Conserva-
tive Ministry in 1898, was approved by the House of Lords.
The England of to-day is the foremost Power of the world. Its
sway extends over a territory of 12,000,000 square miles, almost a
quarter of the surface of the globe ; 390,000,000 inhabitants, more
than a fourth of all mankind, are subject to the nominal rule of
Victoria, Queen of Great Britain, and since 1877 Empress of India.
Her reign of sixty-two years is the longest in the history of England.
Great Britain's power was put to a severe test by the second Boer
war in South Africa (see § 3).
58O. Germany. — Imperial Germany has steadily maintained a
policy of peace under its three first Emperors. Till 1877 William I.
was supported in his peace policy by Francis Joseph I. of Austria
and Alexander II. of Russia (alliance of the Three Emperors). \But
the Turco-Russian war of 1877 which gave Bosnia and Herzogowina
to Austria caused an estrangement between Austria and Russia. To
secure herself on her Russian frontiers, Austria concluded an
alliance with Prussia for peace and mutual defense in case either
Power should be attacked by Russia (1879). This league became
the Triple Alliance by the accession of the Kingdom of Italy,
(1882). Germany relies for her protection against external foes on
her military organization, which enables her at the approach of any
danger to put 2,000,000 drilled, disciplined, and well-equipped men
into the field, and by calling out all the reserves to raise this number
to 5,000,000. During this long period of peace and armed security
Germany has turned her attention to the development of her internal
26
402 OUR OWN TIMES.
resources. By her policy of protection and of industrial, commer-
cial and colonial expansion, by her African possessions and the new
trade in the East, she has become a rival of England. But behind
all this industrial and military greatness looms up the specter of
widespread, organized Socialism. There were but two Socialists in
the Reichstag of 1872 ; there were fifty-four in 1898. The 340,000
socialistic votes of 1874 have swelled to 2,120,000 in 1898, out-
numbering the adherents of any other political party. This growth
of Socialism in the German Empire with the tendency of its ad-
herents to co-operate with the socialists of other countries, is one
of the problems now confronting Europe.
The Baltic Canal which joins the Bay of Kiel with the Elbe river was
opened in 1891. The great work enables the German navy to pass from the
Baltic to the North Sea through exclusively German territory.
581. Austria. — Externally at peace Austria is internally con-
vulsed by the race and language question of her rival nationalities.
The predominance of the German method of government and cen-
tralization was broken in Hungary by the establishment of the Dual
Monarchy. The perplexing problem in Cisleithania is whether it is to
be German or Slav ; is it to be a centralized State in which the German
law, language and government have the ascendency ; or is it to
break up into a number of semi-independent provinces ruled by the
nationality predominating in each? Practically the Poles have
obtained home rule in Galicia whilst the Czechs are incessantly agi-
tating for home rule in Bohemia. The Poles and Czechs present a
united front in Parliament, whilst the Germans are split up into
numerous factions. Hence the extraordinary scenes of disorder and
turbulence of late years, which disgraced the Parliaments at Vienna
and Pesth.
The new Pan-German Party agitates for a union of German Austria with
Prussia. Its most radical wing, however, whose war cry is : Away from
Rome — is too small and irreligious to gain the sympathy of any consider-
able number of Austrians.
The general popularity of the kindly Emperor and the sympathy of all
classes for his personal afflictions — the loss of the Crown Prince and the
assassination of the Empress — has preserved the loyalty of the people, but
THE GREAT POWERS. 403
troubled days may await the successor of Francis Joseph I. A union of all
the Catholic parties for placing the higher interests of religion and country
above mere national questions seems to be the best, if not the only means
for Austria's regeneration.
582. Russia. — Alexander II. inaugurated a new era in Russia by
the memorable decree of 1861, which emancipated 24,700,000 serfs
of the crown, and 22,500,000 serfs of the nobility. The former
previously enjoj^ed a considerable measure of personal liberty, the
latter fared little better than slaves. This decree which detached
the serfs from the soil and raised them to the ranks of citizens, did
not produce the desired contentment. It was bitterly resented by
the nobility, it fell short of the desires of the new freemen, and its
application in some places met with resistance and bloodshed. The
universities and new colleges which another imperial decree threw
open to the humbler classes became, in the course of time, hotbeds
of political agitation, because hosts of graduates found themselves
shut out from official or civil employment by the privileged classes.
The opposition which the Czar encountered cooled his ardor for new
reforms ; he even withdrew some of those previously granted. This
policy of reaction called forth " Nihilism," one of the most ferocious
movements of the nineteenth century. The Nihilists, «a secret
society chiefly recruited from the unemployed, educated classes
without faith or religion, men and women who had an absolute con-
tempt for death, made political murder a tenet of their creed.
They engaged in a war to the knife with the officialdom of Russia
and the secret police which tracked and hunted them like wild
beasts. Assassinations of prominent men followed in quick succes-
sion. In 1879 the Nihilist Executive Committee served upon the
Czar his sentence of death. The dynamite explosion in the Winter
Palace, 1880, which killed or mangled a hundred soldiers, was
destined for the imperial family. In 1881 the assassins at length
succeeded in striking down Alexander II. by a bomb on the very
day (March 13) he had chosen for the publication of a Con-
stitution.
Alexander III. (1881-94) withdrew the Constitution and returned
to the traditional policy of absolutism. The terrorism exercised by
the Nihilists delayed his coronation for nearly two years. Their
404 OUR OWN TIMES.
incessant attempts upon his life sapped his health. He died at the
age of hardly fifty years, a victim of nervous anxiety and fear.
His reign was marked by a persecution, both official and popular, of the
Jews, which drove 300,000 into foreign countries.
Nicholas II. made himself popular by discarding all armed protection and
freely mingling with the people at his marriage feast with Princess Alix of
Hesse (1894). Nihilism became silent for the time. The abolition of one-
half of the land tax, a comprehensive amnesty to political offenders, a
number of administrative reforms and above all the general Peace Congress,
which he succeeded in gathering at the Hague, are to be considered as the
Czar's personal acts, whilst the recent decrees for the Russiflcation of Fin-
land rather go to the account of the Old Russian clique, which is still powerful
at the court of Petersburg. The influence of Russia both in Europe and in
the East is greater than at any previous period, and is likely to increase in
the future.
583. Prance. — The history of the Third Republic is one of external
impotence and internal scandals. The Franco -Prussian War left France
politically effaced. The only relief from complete isolation is the Franco-
Russian alliance, presumed to have been arranged between Nicholas
II. and President Faure. The internal scandals are faithfully reflected in
the presidential changes and the rapid succession of the cabinets since
1873. President Gre"vy (1873-79), the successor of Marshal MacMahon,
was forced by the Chamber to resign, because he tried to shield against the
action of the courts, his son-in-law, Mr. Wilson, and his corrupt associates,
who had enriched themselves by the sale of decorations and army appoint-
ments.
During the administration of Sadi Carnot (1879-94), who was a grandson
of the Minister of War in the Reign of Terror, General Boulanger convulsed
French politics by uniting the disaffected parties in a bold attempt to revise
the Constitution and dissolve the Chamber. His flight to England, when sum-
moned before the High Court of Justice, and his subsequent suicide in Bel-
gium, put an end to the agitation. The Panama scandal caused still greater
commotion. The Panama Canal Company, under the presidency of M. de
Lesseps, failed in 1892 after spending 280,000,000 francs to little purpose.
Tens of thousands of subscribers especially among the laboring classes were
ruined. Ministers of State, high officials, Deputies of the Chamber, leading
newspapers, were involved in the enormous peculations unearthed by the
courts. The renown of de Lesseps as builder of the Suez Canal could not
save him from being condemned on his death-bed to five years' imprison-
ment. In the elections of 1893, Socialism and Anarchy unfurled their flag.
A reign of terror, an " epidemic of bombs," broke out in the spring of 1894,
both in the capital and in the departments. A bomb was thrown at the
President of the Chamber in open session. The sanguinary movement
THE GREAT POWERS. 405
culminated in the assassination of Sadi Carnot, who was stabbed by an
Anarchist.
The next President, Casimir Perier (1894) , had to step down after a few
months on account of his connection with well-known corruptionists.
Under him and his successor M. Faure (1894-99) the latest national scandal,
the Dreyfus case, involving the judicial reputation of the military tribunals,
came to the surface. In 1894 Captain Dreyfus, a Jewish staff officer, was
sentenced by a secret court-martial to degradation and transportation for life
on the charge of selling military secrets to foreigners.
The ll affair" has rent France into a Jewish and anti-Jewish camp, into
partisans of the army and partisans of the civil power, into Revisionists
and anti-Revisionists. The last court martial in the case, held at Rennes,
1899, declared Dreyfus guilty "with extenuating circumstances" and sen-
tenced him to imprisonment for 10 years. The sentence was, however, re-
mitted by President Loubet.
584. Italy. — The state of Italy was never darker and the outlook
upon the future more discouraging than at the present time. The
Kingdom of Italy, hardly emerged from her wars of aggression and
sacrilege, and ambitious to play the role of a great Power, was, like
stronger States, seized with the fe.ver of colonial expansion. She
first reached out for Tunis, but was forestalled in the seizure by
France, 1881. This snub drove Italy into the Triple Alliance. She
next attempted to seize the western shore of the Red Sea with Mas-
sowah as the outlet of the entire Abyssinian trade, and forthwith
Abyssinia was declared an Italian Protectorate. South Somali
(1889), Eritrea (1890), the Somali coast (1893) and Tigre (1895)
were conquered in costly wars. Gradually the invaders encountered
the slow but desperate resistance of Menelek, the Negus (ruler) of
Abyssinia. In 1895 General Baratieri suffered a terrible check at
Amba Alaghi, and March 1, 1896, his forces were crushed by the
Negus at Adowa. In the humiliating peace of Adis Adeba, 1896,
Italy recognized the absolute independence of Abyssinia, and restored
nearly all her conquests.
From the year 1892, when Crispi and Bismarck joined hands in the Triple
Alliance, the new kingdom saw her deficit growing larger every year, her
foreign trade and agriculiure ruined, and bankruptcy and famine at her
door. Italy's public debt of 3,000 millions in 1861 had risen in 1890,
to 13,000 millions, and with the debts of communes and individuals to
22,000 million francs.. In 1890 Italy spent 520,000,000 francs on her army
alone, or 86,000,000 more than Parliament voted for the entire military
budget of the British Empire.
406 OUR OWN TIMES.
The annual deficit amounted to 250-300 millions and more. Such expenses
have to be covered by the taxes. Accordingly a respectable artisan family
which would have to pay eighty -seven francs of taxes in England, has to
pay 565 francs in Italy. The decrease in the foreign trade is best illustrated
by the article of wine. In 1888 Italy still exported wine to the value of
1,030,471 francs, in 1890 only for 278,363 francs; 1879 registered 700 bank-
ruptcies; 1889, 4,400. Public credit is shaken by bank scandals in which
Masonic ministers and deputies are deeply involved. Agriculture as well as
commerce has withered under the blighting pressure of the tax-gatherer.
On a revenue of one -thousand millions agricultural Italy pays 300,000,000
in direct taxation, without taking into account taxes on salt, cattle, and
indirect duties. The result is widespread misery and impoverishment. In
4,774 communes (towns and villages), only the well-to-do families can
afford to eat meat. In 3.650 communes, beef is never used. In Sardinia,
where an epidemic of brigandage has broken out, people eat a hard bread
made of ground acorns, for want of wheat. Thousands upon thousands of
beggared Italians leave their homes for foreign parts, especially North and
South America. In 1898 bread and tax riots broke out from Milan to
Naples and Palermo. In Milan alone several hundred persons were killed
in the street fights and over 1,000 wounded. If the fact is added, that the
new Kingdom is made up of provinces antagonistic in ideas, customs, his-
tory, local traditions and idioms it is not too much to say that the survival of
the Kingdom of Italy is a problem yet to be solved.
585. Spain and the United States. — In Spain, Prince Amadeo, Duke of
Aosta, who had accepted the crown of Spain after the retirement of Leopold
of Hohenzollern, was unable to conciliate the warring factions, and to rule the
country. Whilst the North was disturbed by Carlist hostilities a*nd the
South by Republican risings, Amadeo abdicated in 1873. Then followed the
Republican dictatorship of Senor Castelar (1873), the military dictatorship
of Marshal Serrano (1874), and the Proclamation of Marshal Campos which
recalled the Bourbons to the throne in the person of Alphonso XII., the
son of Queen Isabella (1875-85) . The new and latest Constitution gave to
Spain a Congress of 432 deputies chosen by manhood suffrage and a Senate
of 360 members divided into three classes : (a) Senators in their own right
(members of the royal family, archbishops, highest State officials), (b)
Senators named by the Sovereign for life, (c) Senators chosen by elec-
toral bodies. Whilst granting liberty of conscience and of private worship,
the Constitution maintains Catholicism as the religion of the State. The
Carlist risings were suppressed under the new King and with them the
fueros or privileges of the Basque provinces. During Alphonso's reign
grew up the two chief parties of the present time, the Conservatives led by
Canovas del Castillo until his assassination by an Anarchist (1897), and the
Liberals, led by Senor Sagasta.
586. Cuba. — Under the regency of the Queen-Mother Christina for
Alphonso XIII., Spain's difficulties with the United States about Cuba came
THE GREAT POWERS. 407
to a head and led to the Spanish-American war of 1898. Cuba and Porto
Rico were the only Spanish possessions left in America after the defection
of the Spanish colonies. At the time of the emancipation of Texas
Cuba became an object of vehement desire to the Southern slave power.
President Polk offered $100,000,000 to Spain for the possession of Cuba.
Spain promptly declined the offer. '* What, however, could not be bought,
it was determined to steal," and filibustering movements and expeditions
became the order of the day.
In 1854 President Pierce ordered the United States ministers at the courts
of London, Paris, and Madrid to meet in some European city and confer on
the acquisition of Cuba. The result was the Ostend Manifesto, declaring
that the United States would never enjoy repose and security " as long as
Cuba is not embraced within its boundaries." The Manifesto received the
indorsement of President Pierce and his administration, and the approval
of the National Democratic Convention of 1856 and 1860. The Civil War
called the attention of the nation to weightier matters.
From 1868 an organized revolt, fostered by the professional agitators of
the Spanish-American Republics, devastated Cuba for ten years. The
smoldering embers broke out anew in 1895, at a period when riots, rebel-
lions, and hideous anarchist outrages were distracting Spain, and the Phil-
ippine islands were in a state of revolt. Three successive governor-gen-
erals, Marshal Campos, General Weyler and General Blanco, were unable
to suppress the insurrection in Cuba, secretly assisted by American money
and Cuban filibustering expeditions equipped in American harbors. In
1896 the revenue officers captured seven filibusters and intercepted two
expeditions. Others escaped their attention. Resolutions to recognize the
Cubans as belligerents passed by both Houses, failed to obtain the assent
of the executive. Upon diplomatic representations by the United States,
Spain at length granted autonomy to Cuba and Porto Rico. The autono-
mous government under the new Constitution was installed January 1,
1898. Then came the blowing up of the Maine in the harbor of Havana,
February 15, 1898. The event was pounced upon by sensationalists in the
press and the tribune to inflame the minds of the people against Spain,
though Spanish complicity has never been officially asserted or proved.
The later offer of Spain to submit the question to an international tribunal
of arbitration was declined by the administration. The mediation of Leo
XIII. and the joint note of the six European Powers in the interests of
peace were of no avail in the then existing state of public opinion.
587. The Spanish-American War, Peace of Paris, 1898.—
The immediate cause of the war was the declaration of the two
Houses of Congress, April 18, 1898, that the people of the island of
Cuba are and of a right ought to be free and independent ; especially
the second and third clauses, demanding that the government of
408 OUR OWN TIMES.
Spain at once relinquish its authority and government in the island of
Cuba and withdraw its land and naval forces from Cuba and Cuban
waters, and empowering the President to use the entire land and
naval forces of the United States to carry these resolutions into
effect. The fourth clause promises to leave the government and con-
trol of the island, after its pacification, to its people. The battle of
Manila Bay and the destruction of the Spanish fleet by Commodore
(now Admiral) Dewey, May 1 ; the capture of El Caney and the
storming of San Juan hills, July 1 ; the destruction of Cervera's fleet
by Commodore Schley, July 3 ; the surrender of Santiago and
Eastern Cuba, July 14 ; the signing of the Peace Protocol, August
12, and the storming of Manila the day after the signing are matters
of recent memory. In the Peace of Paris (ratified 1899), Art. I.,
Spain relinquishes all claim of sovereignty over and title to Cuba.
Art. II. Spain cedes to the United States the island of Porto Rico
(and other West India islands), and the island of Guam in the
Marianas or Ladrones ; Art. III. Spain cedes to the United States
the archipelago known as the Philippine Islands. The United States
will pay Spain the sum of $20,000,000.
The occupation of the Philippines led, in the beginning of February, 1899,
to a new war between the United States troops and their former allies
against Spain, the Philippino army, of Aguinaldo, partly armed and equipped
by the Americans themselves. The Philippiuos are fighting for independence.
They base their claims on former promises made by the United States agents
and on the actual possession of the greater part of the Archipelago outside
of Manila, before the conclusion of peace. The Americans fight for sover-
eignty acquired, they say, by the treaty with Spain and the payment of
$20,000,000. Their strongest plea is the necessity of preserving the islands
from a state of spoliation and anarchy on the part of the natives.
The problem which confronts the United States to-day is the
existence of the Republic of Washington, Jefferson, and Lincoln, its
future adherence to the Declaration of Independence and the Ameri-
can Constitution. In this view both the Imperialists and anti-
Imperialists substantially agree. The Imperialists repudiate the
limitations which the Declaration of Independence, the Constitu-
tion, and Washington's Farewell Address placed on American
policy. Their contention is that the Union has outgrown the Declar-
THE EASTERN QUESTION. 409
ation of Independence and the Constitution. The anti-Imperialists
maintain, to use the words of a scholar and a Churchman, that:
" We stand at the parting of the ways. It is not yet too late to
turn from the way which leads through war and conquest to impe-
rialism, to standing armies, to alliances with foreign powers, and
finally to the disruption of the Union itself." (Bishop Spalding at
Chicago).
Duruy-Grosvenor : A General History of the World, pp. 678-90 (Great Britain);
600-607 (German Empire) ; 616-623 ( Austria- Hungary ); 623-635 (Russia) ; 587-699 (France) ;
612-615 (Italy), 669-677 and 707-716 (Spain and the U. 8.) — Dr. R. Gneist: The English
Parliament in its Transformations. — J. Murdoch: History of Const. Reform in Great
Britain and Ireland. — G. B. Smith: The Prime Ministers of Queen Victoria. — A. M.
Sullivan : New Ireland. — Chas. Law : The German Emperor, William I. — A. Leroy-
Beaulieu: The Empire of the Czars. — E. Noble: The Russian Revolt. — Stepniak:
Underground 'Russia. — A. de G..: The Internal Condition of Russia; A. C. Q. v. 4.— Assas-
sination of Alexander II.; A. C. Q. v. 6. — G. Goldie: The French Republic under Dyna-
mite, M. '83, 1. — Duncombe- Jewell : The Present State of Politics in France; M. 96, 3. —
A. Gallenga: Italy, Present and Future.— J. A. C. Colclough: The Financial Situation
in Italy, M. '91, 1.— Wentworth Webster: Spain. — Meyrick : Church in Spain (1892);
Congressional and Other U. St. Documents; Text of the Treaty of Peace. — Hon. William
Henry Fleming: A Question of National Honor; Conservative Review, May ,1899.
THE EASTERN QUESTION.
588. Three Phases of the Eastern Question. — The
Eastern Question has three distinct phases : the Eastern Question in
Europe, Asia Minor, and Egypt ; the Eastern Question in Central
Asia where England and Russia confront each other, and the Eastern
Question in the Pacific. The general causes underlying the Eastern
Question are the political jealousies of the Great Powers and the
feverish craving of all the exporting nations for colonial and com-
mercial expansion.
589. The Eastern Question at the Head of the Mediterranean. — The pe
culiar creed, institutions, intellectual stagnation and moral corruption, which
condemn Turkey to inevitable decay and bring her in constant friction with
the Western Christian civilization ; the many promises, as often broken as
made, of the Porte to afford fair treatment to its Christian subjects; Russia's
hereditary policy to extend its conquests to the Golden Horn and found a
Panslavistic state; the policy of England, the traditional champion of
Turkey, to baffle the designs of Russia; and the inability of the European
410 OUR *OWN TIMES.
" Concert of Powers" to agree upon the distribution of the Turkish in-
heritance : these are the principal facts which underlie the Eastern Question
in the countries surrounding the eastern Mediterranean.
59O. Causes of the War, 1877-1878. — In the Congress of Paris (1856) the
Powers had restrained Russia from constructing fortifications and maintain-
ing a navy in the Black Sea. They had also exacted pledges of the Sultan
to grant equal rights to his Christian and Turkish subjects, but had waived
the question of interfering in Turkish internal affairs and seeing the proin-
mises fulfilled. In 1871 Alexander II. announced to Europe that he no longer
held himself bound by the Treaty of Paris. The Porte, on the other hand,
relying on the dissensions of the Powers, had continued to harass the
Christians. In 1858 a massacre of Christians, including the consuls of
France and England, at Djeddah in Arabia, was stopped only by the bom-
bardment of the city. In 1860 the Druse's of the mountains and the Bedouins
of the deserts, assisted by thousands of Turkish regulars, fell upon the
Christians of Syria. The streets of Damascus flowed with Christian blood.
Hundreds of Christian villages were destroyed and many thousand Chris-
tians murdered. A French army of occupation had to restore the peace, and
a Christian governor of the Libanon to maintain it. While general
massacres ceased for a time, the domestic oppression of the Christians con-
tinued. In 1875 an insurrection broke out in Bosnia and Herzogowina.
Bulgaria followed suit. Turkish fanaticism retaliated by murdering the
consuls of Germany and France at Salonica. Then came the "Bulgarian
Horrors " in which more than 20,000 Christians were massacred with grew-
some barbarity. In self - protection Servia under Prince Milan and Monte -
negro under Prince Nikita took up arms. In the struggle that ensued
Montenegro came forth victorious, but Servia was defeated. All the while
European diplomacy was busy in deliberating and sending notes and mem-
orandums to the Sultan. But Turkey, backed by England, remained defiant.
It did, indeed, renew its promises, in a conference of all jthe Ambassadors
of the Powers, to treat Christian and Turk alike, but would give no guarantee
of fulfillment.
Finally Alexander II., unable to find an ally, and strongly urged on by
popular sentiment,, declared war against Turkey, 1877. In the course of
these troubles Sultan Abd-ul-Aziz (1861-76), a spendthrift ruler who squan-
dered colossal sums on buildings and pleasures, was dethroned and mur-
dered by conspirators. His nephew and successor, Mourad, lost his reason
after a short reign, and his brother, Abdul Hamid, the present Sultan,
succeeded him (1876-X).
591. The Busso-Turkish War, 1877-78. — The war was
carried on in the Turkish dominion of both Asia and Europe. After
a failure to hold Kars which had been taken in a first invasion of
THE EASTERN QUESTION. 411
Turkish Asia, the Russians routed the Moslem forces under Mukhtar
in the second invasion, stormed Kars, advanced to Erzerum and
opened the road to Constantinople through Asia Minor.
In Europe the campaign began with the Russian occupation of the
Dobrudsha, i. e., the peninsulas formed by the Danube at its mouths.
In June Alexander II. crossed the Danube at ShistOva. In July,
Nicopolis fell, surrendering 7,000 prisoners. General Gourko
seized the important Shipka Pass in the Balkans. All the Turk-
ish efforts to regain the pass were fruitless. Plevna, the next
point of attack, was defended with unexpected bravery. The siege,
conducted by General Todleben, the defender of Sebastopol, lasted
four months. December 10th Osman Pasha surrendered with
44,000 men. In a brilliant winter campaign the Russians forced
the Balkans in three places, defeated the Turks wherever they met
them, took Sofia and effected a junction at Adrianople, whence they
advanced to the sea of Marmora, January 31, 1878. Whilst Great
Britain was chafing at the Russian successes and preparing for war,
Grand Duke Nicholas advanced to San Stefano within seven miles
of Constantinople, and forced Turkey to sign the Peace of San
Stefano. With consternation Austria beheld her own Slavonic
frontiers bounded by other Slav States under Russian influence, and
England foreboded in the treaty the virtual extinction of Turkey.
To avoid greater complications, Russia consented to submit the
treaty to a Congress in Berlin.
592. The Congress of Berlin, 1878. — The Congress opened
June 13th. The three most prominent statesmen of this diplomatic
assembly were Prince Bismarck, the presiding officer, Prince Gortcha-
cow, Chancellor of Russia, and Lord Beaconsfield, Prime Minister of
England. The modification of the Treaty of San Stefano as
affected by the Congress was a diplomatic defeat of Russia.
(1.) Montenegro retained, whilst Servia and Roumania obtained
their independence from Turkey, but their new acquisitions, as by
Treaty of San Stefano, were considerably diminished (Roumania,
formerly Moldavia and Wallachia).
(2.) The great State of Bulgaria as mapped out at San Stefano
was reduced in size and divided into two States : (a) the autono-
412 OUR OWN TIMES.
mous Principality of Bulgaria between the Danube and the Balkans
including Sophia, tributary to the Sultan, but ruled by her own
Prince (Alexander of Battenberg, 1879 ; Prince Ferdinand of Saxe-
Coburg-Gotha, 1886). (b) The province of " Eastern Roumelia "
depending directly on the Sultan, but administered by a Christian
Governor-General .
(3) The military and civil administration of Bosnia and Herzogo-
wina was assigned to Austria, which thereby gained direct influence
over Montenegro and Servia.
(4) Russia retained Kars, Batoum and Ardaghan.
(5) Turkey was advised but not bound by treaty obligation to
cede a part of Thessaly and Epirus to Greece, which she never did.
In consequence of a secret alliance between England and Turkey,
concluded a few days before the opening of the Congress, the Sultan
handed over the island of Cyprus to England. To quiet the sus-
ceptibility of the French nation aroused by this transfer, England
allowed France a free hand in Tunis.
593. The Rising in Crete and the Greco -Turkish War, 1897. — The
Congress of Berlin did not solve the Eastern question. The years 1894-96
saw the Armenian massacres which, in their horrors and the appalling num-
ber of victims, far exceeded the atrocities committed in the Arabian, Syrian,
and Bulgarian massacres. No Power stirred to hinder this war of extermi-
nation of a Christian people. In the island of Crete Turkish misrule had
produced seven insurrections since 1868, which were so far successful that
in 1897 the Christian Cretans held the greater part of the island and made
bold to proclaim their voluntary annexation to Greece. Prince George, the
younger son of George I., second king of Greece (1863-X), came with a tor-
pedo flotilla, and Colonel Vassos with 1,500 men to aid the islanders. But
the Concert of Christian Powers, Austria, France, Germany, Great Britain,
Italy, and even Russia, hastened with their ironclads to bombard their
Christian brethren, both Greek and Cretan, into subjection to Turkey, whilst
the Ottoman Porte declared war against Greece. The overwhelming num-
ber of Turkish regulars under Edhem Pasha easily defeated Prince
Constantine's small and poorly equipped army.
In their fear of a general conflagration the Powers held down
the Balkan States, which sympathized with Greece, and lent their
moral support to the Turk. Greece had to cede a portion of her
northern territory and to pay $20,000,000 to Turkey. To guarantee
N
THE EASTERN QUESTION. 413
payment the Powers assumed the international control of the Greek
finances. Induced by fresh Turkish insolences in Crete, the Powers
finally compelled the Sultan to withdraw the Turkish troops from the
island and to recognize Prince George as Governor-General of Crete.
He landed and assumed office in 1899.
594. Egypt. — Egypt had become practically independent of the Sultan
under Mehemet Ali (see pp. 280-81). But the financial extravagance of his
successors, the Khedives, and the opening of the Suez Canal, had brought the
country first under the joint financial control of France and England, and
subsequently under the exclusive political control of England. Smarting
under this foreign domination, Colonel Arabi Pasha raised the cry of " Egypt
for the Egyptians " and gathered a strong following around him. An English
fleet bombarded Alexandria whilst the infuriated Mohammedans massacred
2,000 Europeans in the city (July 12-14, 1882). The capture of Alexandria
and the defeat of Arabi Pasha ended in the permanent British occupation of
Egypt.
Two years before this occupation another enemy had risen against Egypt
in the South. Mohammed Achmet had raised the standard of the Prophet in
the Soudan and proclaimed himself the Mahdi or Savior who was to reunite
Islam. He defeated army after army of Egyptian or Anglo -Egyptian troops,
took Khartoum and slew the adventurous Major-General Gordon who had
been sent to extricate the Egyptian garrisons in the Soudan. No further
attempt against the Soudan was made till 1898, when Great Britain sent a
new expedition up the Nile under Gen. Kitchener. He succeeded, 1899, in
inflicting the crushing defeat of Omdurman on the latest Mahdi and in secur-
ing to all appearance the conquest of the Soudan. As a French expedition
under Captain Marchand had reached Fashoda about the same time, the two
Powers concluded a treaty which regulated the boundaries of England and
France in the region of the Nile sources.
595. The Eastern Question in Central Asia. — The Eastern
Question in Central Asia grows out of the steady and irresistible
approach both of Russia from Siberia, and Great Britain from East
India, so that these two mightiest Powers must soon face each other
in Central Asia. The Russian advance began under Catharine II.
Russian arms gradually penetrated into and beyond the Caucasus,
annexed the kingdom of Georgia, subdued the Circassians, and
formed, south of the Caucasus, a military government of eight
provinces of which Tiflis is the center. And as both the Black and
Caspian Seas belong to Russia, her forces can easily take the road
414 OUR OWN TIMES.
either to Constantinople or to Teheran, the capital of Persia. And
Persia is the way to India. Whilst Russia was thus pushing on-
ward, Great Britain, through her East India Company, was com-
pleting the subjection of the 200,000,000 inhabitants of India.
From Deccan and the Valley of the Ganges they conquered the sea
coast of Burmah, made Assam tributary, seized Singapore and Mal-
acca and converted the Bay of Bengal into an English Sea (1793-
1826).
Two great Afghan cities, Herat and Cabul, command the com-
munication between Persia and India. To gain a pass to the valley
of the Ganges, Czar Nicholas I., engaged the forces of the Shah of
Persia, his ally, to besiege Herat. But before the arrival of the
Persian army, the English had gained entrance into the city and
forced the Persians to abandon the enterprise (1838). The following
year a Russian army perished in an expedition against Khiva, another
mountain highway to India. But Great Britain likewise failed in
gaining a foothold in Afghanistan. Her troops had hardly taken
possession of Candahar when a general insurrection of the natives
annihilated her army of 15,000 English soldiers (1839-40). After
inflicting a severe punishment on the Afghans, the English voluntarily
withdrew* from the dangerous country to pursue their conquests in
other directions. They ascended the Indus, annexed the Punjaub
or country of the Five Rivers, inhabited by the warlike Sikhs, took
Cashmere and Lahore, and by 1848 had full control of the whole
course of the Indus.
When the Shah of Persia made a new attempt to seize Herat, England,
by the war of 1857-60, forced him to evacuate the Afghan stronghold. In
consequence of a great Indian mutiny which broke out at the same time
(1857-1858), and in which the revolting Sepoys and the English victors dis-
played equal ferocity, the government of East India was transferred from
the Company to the Crown (1858).
As Russia later conquered Bokhara, Khokan and Khiva (1873-
75) Afghanistan alone with its precarious independence separates the
English and the Russian possessions in Central Asia.
596. The Eastern Question in the Far East and the
Pacific. — Whilst the causes of the Eastern question in Europe
THE EASTERN QUESTION. 415
and Central Asia date back to previous centuries, the question of
the Far East is peculiar to contemporary history. It is based on the
colonial or expansion policy of the Great Powers, by which countries
not yet " occupied " by Europeans or Americans are divided among
them either by international agreement or by force of arms, in most
cases without the knowledge or consent of the peoples annexed.
During the last fifty years Great Britain has taken possession of
3,600,000 square miles, France 3,200,000 and Russia and Germany
over 1,200,000 square miles each of territory outside of Europe.
The greatest bone of contention is China with its 400,000,000
inhabitants.
597. China. — China, originally governed by a succession of obscure
dynasties, was conquered in the thirteenth Century by the Mongols under
Jenghis Khan. His grandson Kublai Khan founded the Yen Dynasty and
adopted Chinese customs, but introduced Indian Buddhism into China,
1279. A national revolution overthrew the foreign rule and enthroned the
Chinese Ming Dynasty, 1368-1644. The Ming dynasty in its turn was
ousted.by the Mantchu Tartars who gave to the Celestial Empire the present
Tsin Dynasty.
Christianity was introduced into China, if not by the Apostle St. Thomas,
unquestionably by Nestorian missionaries six centuries later. In the thir-
teenth and fourteenth centuries monks and friars made their way to Cathay
(China) on the track of Marco Polo who lived seventeen years at the court of
Kublai Khan In the sixteenth century the Jesuits acquired great influence
by their scientific and astronomical services. Several members of the Ming
Dynasty were baptized (Empress Helena, etc.). The Emperor Kanghi by
an edict issued in 1692 permitted the introduction of Christianity in the
whole Empire and greatly favored the work of the missionaries of all
orders, who founded Christian communities in all parts of the land. On
the other hand frequent persecutions produced a rich harvest of Christian
martyrs.
598. China in the Nineteenth Century. — The Opium War of
1840-42 may be considered as the first serious attack upon the integ-
rity of China. It was waged by England on behalf of the Bengalese
opium planters who smuggled their deleterious drug into China at a
yearly profit of ^several million dollars. The Chinese authorities act-
ing upon their undoubted right ordered $10,000,000 worth of opium
to be thrown into the sea. England declared war and easily de-
feated the Chinese forces. The Treaty of Nanking ceded Hong-
416 OUR OWN TIMES.
Kong to England and opened five Chinese ports to British commerce
and to the smuggling of opium, though both treaty Powers had
declared the trade illicit.
A second war of England in alliance with France, 1857-1860, pro-
voked by the overbearing policy of Lord Palmerston. resulted in the
capture of Canton, the Chinese defeat atPalikao, and the storming of
Pekin. The Treaty signed in the Chinese capital granted access to
the interior under certain restrictions to French and English sub-
jects, toleration of Christianity, and resident embassadors at Pekin.
England also acquired the Peninsula of Kan-Lung opposite Hong-
Kong.
599, Contemporary Developments. — The advance in Tur-
kestan, Siberia, and Manchuria (1860), and the completion of the
Transiberian Railroad have brought the West, the North, and the
Northwest of China within the easy grasp of Russia, and its newly
projected railway to Pekin will lead it into the heart of the Celestial
Empire. In the South 383,000 square miles of territory have become
French by the annexation of Cochin-China ( 1861), Cambodia ( 1862),
Tonking (1884), and part of Siam (1893-96). Japan, which since
1853 has gradually adopted the material progress, the grasping
policy, and the commercial liberalism of modern Europe and Amer-
ica, forced upon China the war of 1894. Victorious by land and
sea, it annexed the large island of Formosa and refrained from the
annexation of northeastern China only on the protest of Russia,
Germany, and France. In 1897 the Russians obtained Port Arthur
and Talien Wan, the British Wei-Hai-Wei and the Germans, Kiao-
chau, whilst in 1899 even bankrupt Italy stretched forth its hands
for the Bay of San-Mun and surrounding territory.
China herself is helpless. Inhabited by millions who look upon all Euro-
peans as devils and blindly ready to furnish them numerous pretexts or
causes for interference; internally undermined by dynastic factions and
secret societies, constantly scoured by Istrge bands of rebels and bandits ;
many provinces administered by incapable or corrupt mai|darins; the impe-
rial court divided against itself and incessantly worried by the clashing
demands of Russia, Great Britain, and France, — the Celestial Empire is
likely to fall a prey to the Western Powers as soon as they can agree among
themselves about the division of the spoils. (See § 4. The War in China.)
THE EASTERN QUESTION. 417
600. Oceania. — The fate which is threatening China has already over-
taken the tens of thousands of islands scattered in the Pacific and South
Seas. With the exception of the Tonga Islands, still independent but cov-
eted by both England and Germany, and the Samoan group under the tripar-
tite protectorate of Germany, England, and United States, all the rest worth
having are held by England, France, Germany, and the Netherlands. Spain
lately ceded her colonial possessions in the Pacific to other Powers, the
Philippines to the United States in the Peace of Paris (1898), and the Caro-
lines, the Marianas or Ladrones (save Guam), and the Palaos or Peleus to
Germany by diplomatic agreement (1899).
601. Africa. — In 1848 less than 400,000 square miles of the Africari coast
were occupied by straggling European colonies. The interior of Africa was
almost unknown before the explorations of Livingstone and Stanley. In
1900 only four minor independent States were left: Morocco, Abyssinia, the
Orange Free State of the Boers or descendants of the original Dutch settlers
of South Africa, and the impecunious Negro Republic of Liberia under
American protection. To these may be added the Boers' Republic of South
Africa in the Transvaal, though England claims over it a sort of suzerainty
in foreign affairs. All the rest of Africa has been divided among the great
nations .in an incredibly short time — practically between the Berlin Confer-
ence of 1884 and the Anglo-French Convention of 1889, by which the respect-
ive boundaries on the Upper Nile were defined. Two -fifths of Africa are in
British hands and comprise Egypt, the eastern Soudan, the Niger territory
to the westward, East and South Africa separated only by a small stretch
of German territory — an area of about 3,400,000 square miles with 45,000,-
000 inhabitants. France and Germany combined hold about a third of
Africa. France possesses Algiers, Tunis, the western Soudan, the French
Congo region and Madagascar, altogether about 1,300,000 square miles and
10,000,000 inhabitants. The German possessions in eastern, western and
southwestern Africa with the Cameroon region, 1,200,000 square miles with
10,000,000 inhabitants, are widely scattered but serve to block the progress
of England and France. The Congo Free State, 900,000 square miles, with
32,000,000 inhabitants, was placed by the Berlin Conference under the sover-
eignty of the King of Belgium. Portugal is on the point of selling its pos-
sessions to England and Germany; Spain still maintains a protectorate over
the gold coast south of Morocco and a few islands, Turkey its sovereignty
over Tripoli, and Italy a slight foothold on the Red Sea.
The growing concentration of capital in the hands of a few and
the threatening attitude of the laboring classes has of late intensified
the race for colonial possessions. The governments of manufactur-
ing and exporting countries are everywhere on the lookout for
27
418 OUR OWN TIMES.
markets, i. e., consumers, to procure work and wages for their own
populations.
I. (Russia and Turkey, etc.). — Durny-Grosvenor: General Hist, of the World, pp.
15, 518-531, 627-661, 691-700. — Archibald J. Dunn: The Else and Decay of the Rule of
Islam ( Part IV., The Eastern Question). — L. de la Garde de Dieu : Historic de VIslamisme
(Last Chapter: Present Policy of Turkey). — W. Denton : The Christians of Turkey; see
also M. '77, 1 ; D. R. '79, 2.
(The Eastern Question).— Duke of Argyll: The Eastern Question; St. Claire —
Brophy (Twelve Years' Study of) ; M, '80, 2, p. 126. — B. Archdekan-Cody: The Koran
and the E. Q., M. '87, 1.
(The War, etc.). — E. Oilier: Cassell's III. Hist, of the Russo- Turkish War. — V. Baker :
The War in Bulgaria. — F. V. Greene : The Russian Army and its Campaign in Turkey. —
Claczko-Talt: The Two Chancellors, Prince Gortchacoff and Prince Bismarck. — Sir E.
Hertslet: The Map of Europe by Treaty.
(The Principalities). — Wm. Miller: The Balkans (Story of Nations' Series) . — E. L.
Clark : The Races of European Turkey . — A. J. Evans : Through Bosnia and Herzogo*
wina. — W. Denton, M. A.: Servia and the Servians. — E. M. Clerke: The Slav States of
the Balkans: D. R. '86, 1.
(Greece).— Sergeant: Greece in the Nineteenth Century 1821-1897.— Bikelas-Bute:
Seven Essays on Christian Greece (Last four on Modern Greece).
(Egypt). — Cameron : Egypt in the 19th Century (1898). — Lives of Gordon by: Forbes;
Boulger; Gordon; E. M. Clerke, D. R. '97,4.— Why Gordon Perished (by a war corre-
spondent). — Lugard: England and France in the Nile Valley (1895). — Father Ohr-
walder: Ten Years' Captivity in the Mahdi's Camp (1892). — Slatin: Fire and Sword in
the Soudan, 1879-95.
II. (Central Asia). — Vambery : The Coming Struggle for India.— F. von Hellwaldr
The Russians in Central Asia. — J. Button: Central Asia. —Marvin: The Russians at
the Gates of Herat. — J. W. Kaye : Hist, of the War in Afghanistan; A Hist, of the
Sepoy War in India; also D. R. "ft. — Afghanistan: D. R. '79. 4. — T. R. E. Holmes:
Hist, of the Ind. Mutiny. — Sir Arthur T. Phayre : Hist, of Burma. — The Punjaub and
Northwest Frontier of India, by an old Pnnjaubee. — Fr. Drew : The Northern Barrier
of India.
III. Problem of the Par East. — Curzon (1894); Fenollosa (1896); Chirol (1896);
Brandt (Ostasiatische Fragen; 1897).— Histories of China; Boulger (1881-84); Short Hist.
(1893) ; Wells (1897) ; E. M. Clerke, D. R. '86, 4. — Histories of Japan: Dept. of Educa-
tion (1893); Knapp (1897) (Feudal and Modern); Murray: Story of the Nat. Series,
189 f^ Van Bergen (Story of 1897).— The China- Japan War; Vladimir (1896); Du
Boulay, (Epitome). — Landor: Corea (1895).
* a.
THE WAR IN SOUTH AFRICA.
6O2. Causes— Early History. — South Africa was discovered by the
Portuguese. s Vasco da Gama seems to have been the first to land at the Cape
of Good Hope. In the progress of his journey he gave the name to Natal,
because he landed there on the day of our Lord's nativity. Down to 1652
the Cape was a place of call for vessels of all nationalities in* their voyages
to or from the East Indies. In 1652 it was taken possession of by Dutch
pioneers under the authority of the Dutch East India Company. For a cen-
THE WAR IN SOUTH AFRICA. 419
tury and a half the Dutch colony, sometimes warring, sometimes treating
with the native Hottentots, made a slow but steady progress, until the
English took possession in 1796. They were authorized to do so by the
Prince of Orange, then a fugitive in England before the republican troops of
France. For a time the Dutch and English settlers lived in peace. But when
the British government in 1833 emancipated all the slaves of the colony, the
Dutch settlers or Boers, exasperated by the measure, struck out with all their
household goods into the interior (the Great Trek) and founded an inde-
pendent colony in Natal. The British forces followed them to Natal, fought
them, and made their young republic an English possession. Again the
Boers lc trekked " northward and founded the Orange Free State. In 1848
British troops took possession of the Orange Free State whilst the leading
Boers fled across the Vaal river and began to organize the Transvaal Repub-
lic. The British rule over the Orange Free State was, however, relinquished
after a few years as too costly and ineffective.
603. The First Boer War. — When in 1877 the Transvaal Republic was
beset with internal and external difficulties, the English flag was hoisted
in the Transvaal and the republic annexed to the English crown. But 1880
the Boers rose, established a government of their own, defeated the troops
sent against them from Cape Colony in several engagements, and won the
victory of Majuba Hill. The negotiations carried on by Paul Kruger, the
clever diplomatist of the Transvaal, with the British government, led to the
re-establishment of the Boer republic, now called South African Republic,
under the suzerainty of Her Majesty. (Treaty of Pretoria, 1881.) Difficult-
ies and frictions between the two nationalities, however, continued to keep
the country in a state of dissatisfaction. Accordingly in 1884 at the request
of the Boers the Treaty of London was substituted for the Treaty of, Pre-
toria. In this convention the word suzerainty, though not formally with-
drawn, was dropped. The only clause bearing on the relation between the
Boer government and that of Great Britain was Article 4 : The South
African Republic will conclude no treaty or engagement with any State or
nation other than the Orange Free State, until the same has been approved
by Her Majesty the Queen.
604. Industrial and Political Causes. — The gold discoveries on the Rand
(Witwatersrand — White Waters Ridge), 1884, brought an army of adven-
turers from almost every country of the two hemispheres to the South Afri-
can Republic. The government in 1886 organized for these foreigners or
Uitlanders the county and town of Johannesburg. The rapid increase of
this foreign, chiefly British, population, which in 1890 already outnumbered
the Boer population, induced the Transvaal government to place stringent
conditions, fifteen years of residence, on their naturalization, in order not to
be outvoted by a floating foreign population. The taxes were high but not
420 OUR OWN TIMES.
unfair under the circumstances. The Uitlanders complained that they were
not receiving an equivalent for the taxes paid, in the way of protection and
improvements, clamored for the immediate franchise and representation in
the Volksraad or legislature of the Republic, and kept the Rand in a state
of continual political agitation. The gold industry was entirely in their
hands, whilst the Boers continued to follow their agricultural pursuits out-
side the Rand.
Meanwhile the powerful British South Africa Company was called into
existence by Cecil Rhodes, Premier of Cape Colony, to serve as an instru-
ment of his far-reaching ambition. A royal charter gave it imperial powers.
Its vast territory, comprising Mashonaland, Matabeleland, and northern
Zambesia, received the name Rhodesia. Cecil Rhodes made himself the
imperialist leader of South Africa, and marshaled behind him all the capital-
istic interests of the British South Africa Company, the De Beers Consoli-
dated Mines, and the gold fields of South Africa. The Boer republics stood
in the way of his dream of a confederation of British South Africa. Under
these circumstances the Uitlanders of Johannesburg appealed to the sym-
pathy of the Rhodesians.
6O5. The Jameson Raid. — A number of prominent Uitlanders
entered into a conspiracy with Cecil Rhodes and his right hand, Dr.
Jameson, to obtain by force what could not be obtained by petition.
The result was the Jameson raid. It failed because preparations
were not complete, and because at the last hour the councils of the
conspirators were divided. Jameson wanted the rising to be made
in favor of the British flag ; the Uitlanders in favor of a republic
comprising all the elements of the population. Nevertheless Jame-
son with 500 officers and troops of the Chartered Company en-
tered the Transvaal territory, December 29. But hasty Boer
levies intercepted their march, defeated them with heavy losses,
and forced them to surrender on New Year's Day, 1896. Fifty
leaders of Johannesburg were placed under arrest. President
Kruger handed over Jameson and his officers to the British govern-
ment. Four conspirators of Johannesburg were sentenced to death
in Pretoria, but the sentence was soon after commuted into heavy
fines. Jameson and four of his confederates were found guilty in
London and punished with imprisonment from five to fifteen months.
Cecil Rhodes, under the weight of his responsibility, resigned the
Premiership of Cape Colony, and his directorship of the British
South Africa Company.
THE WAR IN SOUTH AFRICA. 421
606. Parliament and the Jameson Raid. — The Boer authorities were
naturally impatient for some action on the part of the British government.
Accordingly a committee of the House of Commons was appointed to in-
quire into the origin and circumstances of the raid. The proceedings of
this committee were either an open confession of unwillingness to go to the
bottom of the business, or a suggestion that somebody had to be shielded.
Mr. Rhodes was kept under examination for four days, contradicted himself
in his principal statement, and was unaccountably permitted at once to depart
with impunity to South Af rica, though his full responsibility was amply proved
by Sir Graham Bower, secretary to the High Commissioner at the Cape.
The High Commissioner himself was not examined, though in possession of
valuable information. The colonial office succeeded in concealing its own
documents. Mr. Rhodes' solicitor, called upon to produce the telegrams
which had passed between Cecil Rhodes and himself, was allowed to treat
the committee with defiance and to pass unchecked. Those who were in-
terested in keeping secret the true history of the raid were entirely suc-
cessful.
607. Contentions of the Parties to Justify the War. — The extreme British
view, advanced after the outbreak of the war, has been that a Boer con-
spiracy had been forming for a number of years to drive the English out of
South Africa, and to form an independent State including Natal and Cape
Colony. That no such conspiracy existed before the Jameson Raid, is plain
from the fact that in January, 1896, the strength of the State artillery was
only nine officers and 100 men with a reserve of fifty men. The later enor-
mous armament was acquired from England, France, Germany and Belgium
after and on account of the Jameson Maid* The theory of an organized con-
spiracy at the opening of the war is amply refuted by the attitude of the
South African Dutch. For when the Boer successes were at their highest,
the Dutch could have swept the whole colony from end to end, had they
risen in Cape Colony and Natal. But with the exception of a few hundred
rebels on the frontier, the Dutch population of Cape Colony and Natal
remained passive and peaceful.
The extreme Boer view is that the war was the result of a deliberate plot
of Joseph Chamberlain, Cecil Rhodes, and their financial allies to conquer
the country and to make all southern Africa a British dependency. The
Boers we~e firmly convinced of it, and it was this conviction which in-
duced the Orange Free State under President Steyn to ally itself with the
Transvaal though it had no direct interest in the nominal quarrel.
608. Negotiations, 1896-1899. — The elements of the nominal quarrel
were the grievances of franchise, the revived claim of British suzerainty and
the proposal of arbitration. The negotiations were carried on by Chamber-
* Report of the British Intelligence Office in June, 1899.
422 OUR OWN TIMES.
lain and Sir Alfred Milner, the new High Commissioner at the Cape, on the one
hand, and the Boer government on the other. The Boer government pro-
posed international arbitration concerning the pending difficulties under the
auspices of the President of the Swiss Eepublic. Chamberlain thus denned
his position: " Her Majesty holds towards the South African Republic the
relation of a suzerain — and it would be incompatible with that position to
submit to arbitration." The Boers answered that the bilateral treaty of
1884, in which they had been recognized as a free contracting party, had
made an end to British suzerainty. As to the more liberal franchise to be
granted to the Uitlanders, the demand was coupled with the impossible con-
dition, that British subjects should enjoy it without giving up their allegiance
to the crown. The Boers were willing to make reasonable concessions, but
Sir Alfred Milner cabled a demand for extreme measures, and the press
urged that the concessions should be rejected. At the end of the negotia-
tion in 1899 the question stood thus : The British government was offered,
on the part of the Uitlanders, a five years franchise (a reduction of 10 years
of residence) on condition of withdrawing the claim of suzerainty, or a
seven year franchise with suzerainty, all other questions to be submitted to
arbitration. England's refusal to accept either one or the other of these
propositions gave the Boers strong grounds for believing that it was deter-
mined upon conquest. Certain it is that from the moment war was begun, the
British government never admitted a suggestion that the conflict could be
settled in any other way than by the annexation of both States. As early as
June, 1899, a definite plan of campaign was laid before the English ministry
by which the subjugation of* the two republics was to be effected by Novem-
ber of that year. This belief of the Boers was strengthened by the concen-
tration of the available English forces on the Natal border, and the knowledge
that an army corps was ready to sail from England.
6O9. The Campaign in Natal, October, 1899 -Febru-
ary, 19OO. — The war began October 11, the date set in the Boer
ultimatum. The troops of the Transvaal and of the Orange Free
State invaded Natal and northern Cape Colony. Another Boer army
under General Cronje passed the western border, laid siege to Mafe-
king, and soon after to Kimberley and its diamond mines, where
Cecil Rhodes was among the besieged citizens. The English suffered
their first defeat at Talana Hill (near Glencoe and Dundee) ; the
Boers at Landslaagte. Further fighting resulted in the siege of
Ladysmith where General White with 9-10,000 troops was penned up
from October 30 to February 28 by the forces of Joubert, Christian
de Wet and Botha. The first regular operations of the British cam-
paign were conducted on three lines : from Durban in Natal towards
THE WAR IN SOUTH AFRICA. 423
Lady smith, from Cape Town toward Kimberley under General Lord
Methuen, and from Port Elizabeth towards the northern Cape dis-
tricts occupied by the Boers. General Buller, commander-in-chief,
personally led the British forces in Natal. In attempting to cross
the Tugela and to relieve Ladysmith he suffered successive defeats
and severe losses at Colenso (Dec. 15), Spion Kop (Feb. 23-24)
and other points. The withdrawal of reinforcements for Cronje
weakened the Boer commanders to such an extent that Joubert with-
drew the rest across the border. The British entered Ladysmith
February 28. \
Joubert, who had been injured during the siege, died March 27 and was
succeeded by Botha as commander-in-chief.
610. The Campaign in the West. — General Methuen
marching to the relief of Kimberley was successful in his first two
battles, at Belmont and Enslin, where the comparatively small force
of the Boers under Delarey had to give way to overwhelming num-
bers. But the withering fire of the Boers retarded his advance on the
Modder river November 27 and put a halt to his further progress at
Magersfontein. At Magersfontein 700 Highlanders of the Black
Watch (Dec. 9) were mowed down in a few minutes. The British
losses in these two actions approached 2,000 men, whilst the Boers
lost 336 in killed and wounded.
The central column, 3,000 men, under General Gatacre, dispatched toward
northern Cape Colony, suffered another disaster at Stromberg (Dec. 10).
Gatacre intended to surprise the Boers but was himself surprised and lost
728 men of whom 632 were prisoners. The whole Boer force under Olivier
amounted to 750 men.
611. The Decisive Campaign. — With the victory of Spion Kop
the tide of Boer success reached its highest point. The ebb began
when Field Marshal Lord Roberts, the new commander-in-chief, with
Lord Kitchener as chief of staff, took the field. They had an army
of 200,000 men at their disposal. On February 9th the commander-
in-chief arrived at the Modder River. On February 15 General
French raised the siege of Kimberley, whilst General Cronje hastily
retreated in the direction of Bloemfontein. He was overtaken by
424 OUR OWN TIMES.
the British, 40,000 strong, in a bend of the Modder River near
Paardeburg, and sustained for a full week the terrible bombardment
of the British batteries, his wounded uncared for and his dead
lying unburied under the tropical sun. When his ammunition gave
out Cronje with less than 4,000 men and five cannon surrendered,
February 27. The heroic general with his family and the prisoners
of war were removed to St. Helena. Cronje's surrender and the
withdrawal from Lady smith decided the fate of the Boer republics.
612. Guerrilla Warfare. — After some more fighting Lord Roberts entered
Bloemfontein March 13, where he allowed a- necessary rest to his exhausted
troops. He then continued his northward advance, and entered Kroonstadt,
whither the Free State government had retreated, May 12. Johannesburg
surrendered May 31, and Pretoria June 5. The siege of Mafeking, for seven
months heroically defended by Col. Baden-Powell, had been raised on May 17.
The Orange Free State was annexed to the Crown by proclamation May 21,
and the Transvaal October 25. President Kruger retired to Holland. The
spirit of the Boers remained unbroken, and small, mobile commandos scat-
tered over the vast area of their country, made the task of the British gen-
erals one of extreme difficulty to the end of the war. The Boer resistance
centered chiefly in Louis Botha in the eastern Transvaal, Delarey in the
western, and De Wet in the eastern Free State, whilst Kritzinger, before his
capture and execution, was the principal leader south of the Orange river.
The English had about 270,000 men in the field. The dead from all causes
amounted to 22,069. About 80,000 were sent home invalided, butrthe great
majority of these were able to return to their regiments either in South
Africa or elsewhere. The English estimates of the Boer forces in the field
vary between 62,000 (Conan Doyle) and 80,000 men, the latter estimate
accounting for 10,000 casualties, 42,000 prisoners, and 18,000 surrenders at
the conclusion of peace.
613. The Peace of Pretoria, 19O2. — During February,
1901, negotiations for peace were opened between Lord Kitchener
and General Botha. They failed because the Boers refused to sac-
rifice their allies, the Cape rebels. The successful negotiations were
opened in the spring of 1902, and led to the Peace of Pretoria,
signed May 31. The principal terms were : (a) That the Boers sur-
render their independence, acknowledge the sovereignty of Edward
VII., and deliver all their arms and munitions of war ; (b) that all
prisoners be brought back as soon as possible to South Africa with-
out loss of liberty or property ; that no action be taken against
THE WAR IN SOUTH AFRICA. 425
them, except where they were guilty of breaches of the rules of war ;
(c) that Dutch be taught in the schools if desired by the parents,
and used in the courts if necessary ; (d) that military occupation be
withdrawn as soon as possible and self-government substituted ; (e)
that no tax be levied on the Transvaal to pay the cost of the war, and
the sum of $15,000,000 be provided for restocking the Boer farms.
In a separate statement made by Mr. Balfour in the House of Com-
mons it was announced that the Cape rebels will be subject to trial'
under the laws of the respective colonies, but no death penalty will
be inflicted and the punishment of the rank and file will be limited
to disfranchisement for life.
614. Northern Africa. — In the Soudan the nineteen years' war with the
Mahdists or Dervishes was finished by the Egyptian troops under Sir Fran-
cis Wingate in the the battle of El Duem on the White Nile (November, 1899).
It gave to the victors the camp and stores of the enemy, nearly 10,000
prisoners, and the dead body of the Khalifa Abdullah, his son, and most of
his Emirs. The capture of Osman Digna a few weeks later removed the last
dangerous chief from the field. (See No. 594) this vol.)
615. Famine and Plague in East India. — Whilst South Africa was being
devastated by the Boer War, a large portion of East India was in the grip of
famine and pestilence. The famine of 1900, greater in its intensity than any
previous visitation of the kind, resulted from the absolute failure of two
successive harvests; 417,000 square miles, with a population of 54,000,000
persons, were affected. In the presidency of Bombay people were dying
right and left. Cattle were perishing by the millions. Similar conditions
prevailed in the central provinces and in the Punjaub. About six million
persons were provided for by being placed on relief work.
Books for Consultation: An Important Source: Great Britain, Papers by
Command. — J. N. Larned : Hist . of Ready Reference, vol. 6 ; South Africa. — Conan
Doyle: The Cause and Conduct [of the War (1902).— Baron [von Hubner: Through the
British Empire (1886). — Brown: Story of South Africa (1895) . — Bryce : Impressions of
South Africa (1898) . — Fitzpatrick : Transvaal From Within (1899).— Younghusband:
South Africa of To- Day (1899). — Cloete: Great Boer Trek (1899) . — Keltic : Partition of
Africa (1893) . — Garret and Edward : Story of an African Crisis (1897) . — Britain and the
Boers; Both Sides of the African Question. — Sydney — Brooks : England and the Trans-
vaal.— A Diplomat: A Vindication of the Boers. — Dr. F. V. Engelenburg: A Transvaal
View of the South African Question. — Wilmot : Story of the Expansion of South Africa
(1895) . — C. P. Lucas : History of South Africa to the Jameson Raid (1899) . — W. T. Stead :
Scandal of the South African Committee (1899) . — F. R. Statham : Paul Kruger and His
Times. — Numerous other references to Works and Periodicals are found in Cotgreave :
The Transvaal and South Africa; Contents- Subject- Index to General and Periodical
Literature. (The latter contains 230 references to the History of South Africa.)
426 OUR OWN TIMES.
EUROPE, AMERICA, AND THE FAR EAST.
616. Dynastic and Other Changes. — In Italy King Humbert
on the point of returning home from a public distribution of athletic
prizes at Monza, was shot dead by the anarchist Gaetano Bresci
July 29, 1900. He was succeeded by his son Victor Emmanuel III.,
who from the outset declared his intention of continuing the sacrileg-
ious policy of his father and grandfather. On January 22, 1901,
England lost her venerable queen, Victoria, who for 64 years had
occupied the English throne, and had given their rulers to Great
Britain, Germany, Prussia, Greece and Roumania.
The Prince of Wales succeeded her as Edward VII. He was the last king
of England who, much against his will, had to declare that: " The in-
vocation or adoration of the Virgin Mary, or any other saint, and the
Sacrifice of the Mass, as they are now used in the Church of Rome,
are superstitious and idolatrous." Nothing within the law could avert
the making of the declaration. For by the act, passed under William
and Mary, the declaration must be made by the sovereign on the first
day of meeting his Parliament, or else at the coronation, whichever
shall first happen. But the king took care that the insult should at
least be inaudible where it could offend, by whispering the offensive
words in the ear of the chancellor. The angry protests of the Catholic
peers, the Canadian Parliament, and the representatives of the 12,000,000
Catholics, pouring in from every part of the Empire, and the determination
of the privy council led to an elimination of the offensive features, which
will render impossible any future repetition of the stupid declaration.
Analogous changes took place in the United States of America.
Whilst President McKinley was receiving in the Temple of Music
on the grounds of the Pan-American Exposition at Buffalo, N. Y., he
was mortally wounded by two shots fired by the anarchist Czol-
gosz. After lingering for a few days, he died September 14, 1901.
The Vice-president, Theodore Roosevelt, was immediately sum-
moned to Buffalo and took the oath of office as President of the
United States. McKinley 's amiability in private life and his chiv-
alrous devotion to an invalid wife endeared him to the American
people. As a statesman he had not the power of character which
EUROPE, AMERICA, AND THE FAR EAST. 427
moulds events but rather the adroitness which adapts itself to their
course.
The change of ruler in the kingdom of Spain was not accompanied
by scenes of death or violence. On May 17, 1902, the Queen-
Regent Maria Christina laid down the power which she had been
called upon to assume in the days of her widowhood, whilst her son,
King Alfonso XIII, took the oath of government in the Cortes and
was solemnly enthroned in the church of St. Francis, in the presence
of the Archbishop of Toledo, the prelates of Spain and an enthusias-
tic people.
The solemn coronation of Edward VII was to take place on the 26th of
June. Two days before, the king was struck down by a sudden illness
which rendered a surgical operation necessary. His recovery, however, was
so regular and satisfactory, that the coronation ceremonies could be held,
though with diminished splendor, on August 9, 1902.
617. Causes of the Rising in China. — (a) The great anti-foreign and
anti-Christian rising in China was originally due to the seizure of Chinese
ports by European Powers (see No. 599). The aggression of the western
nations led by Germany in partitioning the coast line of China, with undefined
claims to the land in its rear, awaked a feeling of deep resentment, especially
among the old national party.
(b) Two parties were contending for supremacy at the Chinese court
towards the end of the nineteenth century. The reform party sought the
purification of the civil and military service, education on European lines,
the opening of mines and railways under Chinese control, and full tolera-
tion to all forms of religion. But in September, 1898, the old conservative
party rallied around the Dowager-Empress, removed the progressive officials,
and put ignorant, bigoted and anti-foreign officials in their places.
(c) The anti-foreign policy was emphasized by the palace revolution of Jan-
uary, 1900, in which the Dowager-Empress, for many years the regent and
afterward the self-appointed deputy of the Emperor, pushed aside the young
monarch Kwang-Su as a nonentity and proclaimed a new successor in the
person of Pu-Tsing, the son of Prince Tuan. Kwang-Su sympathized with
the progressive party in China, whilst Prince Tuan was the head of the
secret society known as the Great Sword and the Boxers.
(d) The Boxers were a secret society akin to the Freemasons. They
were fanatical enemies of all Christians and all foreigners and their innova-
tions. Since the beginning of 1900 the Boxer organization in the northern
provinces increased tenfold in numbers and were supported not only by the
local Mandarins, but the Dowager-Empress, Prince Tuan, Prince Ching and
other members of the imperial House. They organized riots, first in the
428 OUR OWN TIMES.
provinces then in Pekin itself. They destroyed churches, seminaries, con-
vents and chapels, burnt the dwellings of the native Christians, murdered
bishops and priests, foreign and native Christians, and sold their children
into slavery. In the province of Chi-li alone 20,000 Christians were massacred
in little more than six months.
(d) Catholic missions and missionaries had only so far an indirect share
in the hostility of the Chinese to all foreigners, as the European governments
exploited Catholic missions and missionaries for their own political ends and
caused the Chinese pagans to look upon the advent of Christianity and the
approach of foreign aggression in the light of cause and effect.
618. The Rising. — The anti-missionary outbreaks, increasing
piracy, and other sighs of growing disorder, began in 1898, increased
the following year, and called forth demands for indemnity or pun-
ishment from the governments affected. In March, 1900, the min-
isters of the United States, Germany, Italy, France, and England,
residing at Pekin, demanded from the Tsung-li Yamen, or imperial
council, the suppression of the Boxers. No satisfaction being given,
European war vessels were ordered to Taku, and a few hundred men,
British, American, Italian, Russian and Japanese guards, were sent
to Pekin to protect the Legations. The situation in the capital became
extremely threatening. Thereupon a composite force of 2,000 men
from the warships at Taku were dispatched to Pekin under Admiral
Seymour. But after hard fighting with increasing bodies of Chinese,
Boxers and regulars, he was compelled to retreat with great loss. He
was relieved by a second composite force of Russians and other allies
which gradually rose to 20,000 men. On June 17 the Taku forts
opened fire on the allied ships in the Peiho, but were stormed by
forces of the European Powers the same evening (June 17). Mean-
while 40,000 Chinese troops gathered in and around Pekin, and cut
off communication with Tientsin.
619. The Siege of the Foreign Legations. — The siege of the Legations
began in the early days of June and kept the civilized world in suspense till
August 14. The entire foreign quarter had to trust for its defense to 18
officers and 389 men of eight nationalities, reinforced by a number of volun-
teers and native Christians. Nearly the whole European population was
gathered in the, British Legation, whilst the other Legations were used as
points of defense by the military of the Europeans. On June 11 Mr. Sug-
yiama, the chancellor of the Japanese Legation, was murdered. On the 20th
Baron von Ketteler, the German ambassador, whilst on his way to the Yame'n,
EUROPE, AMERICA, AND THE FAR EAST. 429
was assassinated by an imperial officer. Whilst the hastily fortified positions
were plied with shot and shell under orders of the Chinese government,
horrible massacres and mutilations of thousands of Christians, the burning
of cathedrals and churches, of Chinese palaces, libraries and temples, occurred
in other parts of the city.
Outside of the Legations between 2,000 and 3,000 persons — priests, nuns,
and 2,500 fugitive Christians — were saved in the Peitang cathedral. The
bishop, Mgr. Favier, who months before had in vain warned the French min-
ister of the coming storm, had in time purchased arms, ammunition and
provisions to defend his cathedral.
620. The Taking of Tientsin and Pekin. — Whilst Boxers
and regulars were besieging the Legations, t other Chinese troops
shelled the foreign quarters of Tientsin and thus forced the ajlies
to attack the walled city. After ten days of heavy fighting the
city was captured by the allied forces under the command of the
Russian Admiral Alexieff ; 74 guns fell into the hands of the victors.
Having secured the rear, an international army of 18, 000 men, among
them 5,000 Americans under General Chaffee, started for the relief of
the Legations, marching on both sides of the river Peiho, Aug. 4th.
The same week the Kaiser filled the office of commander-in-chief of
the allies by the appointment, with the consent of the Powers, of the
Count of Waldersee. Fighting their way through large numbers of
Chinese at Pei-tsang, and Yang-Tsun, the army of relief entered
Pekin, August 14. The city was divided into districts which were
severally assigned to the troops of the different nationalities. Before
the allies entered, the Empress and the court had fled to Tai-Yuen-
Fu.
In various detachments the allied forces then undertook punitive ex-
peditions in different directions, including the bombardment of the Peitang
forts, the destruction of Liang Hsian, an expedition to Poa-ting-fu, where a
great massacre of Christians had taken place under the authority of the
local officials, and to other places as far as the Chinese walls.
621. Russia and Manchuria. — During the eventful month of
July the Boxer rising spread in Manchuria. At Mukden the cathe-
dral was burnt with the remains of the martyred bishop, priests,
nuns and over 1,000 native Christians. The insurgents crossed
the Russian frontiers, destroyed part of the Transiberian railway
430 OUR OWN TIMES.
and bombarded Blagovestshciisk on the river Amur. The Russians,
however, by seizing Aygun succeeded in obtaining control of both
banks of the Amur. The wholesale massacres of Chinese reported
from the scene of action were not ordered by the Russian govern-
ment but were the result of a frenzy of terror which had seized the
Russian population. Gradually the government of St. Petersburg
placed an army of 220,000 men on the frontiers, purged all Man-
churia of rebel hordes and, whilst disavowing any annexation of
Chinese territory, announced its intention of keeping control of the
country till all dangers threatening the peace of Manchuria and the
safety of the Siberian Railway were removed.
622. Peace Negotiations and Peace, 19O1. — In October an agreement
was announced between England and Germany, by which two cardinal points
were established in regard to their Chinese policy; the " open door " and the
integrity of the Chinese Empire. By the first article it was declared a mat-
ter of joint and permanent interest, that the Chinese ports should remain
free and open to the trade of all nations ; by the second the two Powers
pledged themselves not to make use of the existing complications to obtain
any territorial advantages in China. The assertion of these principles,
accepted by the rest of the Powers, paved the way to a common understand-
ing as to the terms of peace to be imposed on China. The following were
the terms agreed upon December 24, 1900: (1) An imperial prince to go to
Berlin and express regret at the assassination of Baron von Ketteler. (2)
Severest punishment for certain officials, and suspension for five years of
official examinations in those cities where foreigners had been massacred
or cruelly treated. (3) Reparation to Japan for the murder of Sugiyama,
the Chancellor. (4) An expiatory monument in every foreign cemetery
which had been desecrated. (5) Prohibition of the importation of arms
and of materials used exclusively for the manufacture of arms and ammu-
nition. (6) Payment of equitable indemnities. (7) Right to maintain a per-
manent Legation guard and to put the diplomatic quarter in a defensible
position. (8) Destruction of forts which might obstruct free communica-
tion between Pekin and the sea. (9) Right to occupy certain points with
military forces between Pekin and the sea. (10) Publication for two years
of an imperial decree embodying a perpetual prohibition of anti-foreign
societies under penalty of death, and ordering the punishment of officials in
the event of a renewal of anti-foreign disturbances. (11) China to negotiate
amendments to the treaties of commerce and navigation. (12) China to
determine the reform of the Department of public affairs and to modify
court ceremonials regarding the reception of foreign representatives. In
conclusion it was declared that the occupation of Pekin and of the Province
THE UNITED STATES AND THE FILIPINOS. 431
of Chi-li would be maintained until the Chinese government had complied
with these conditions to the satisfaction of the Powers. Prince Ching and
Li Hung Chang on behalf of China agreed to the conditions imposed and
asked for a conference. On September 4, 1901, Prince Chun, on behalf of
his brother, the Emperor Kwaug-Su, presented to the German Emperor at
Potsdam a letter of regret for the murder of Baron von Ketteler. At the
same time the Peace Protocol was signed at Pekin in the presence of all the
ministers of the European Powers and the Chinese plenipotentiaries. It
was agreed that Pekin should be evacuated on September 17 and Chi-li on
September 22. The Chinese court was again installed in the Forbidden City
of Pekin, January 73 1902.
623. The Anglo Japanese Alliance, 19O2. — On January 30, 1902, a
treaty was concluded between England and Japan, with the object of assur-
ing the status quo, the general peace, and the " open door " in the Far East.
This treaty will work as an offensive and defensive allian'ce, if either of the
allies is obliged to go to war with two Powers in defense of interests com-
mon to both. If attacked by only one Power, the other will observe
neutrality. France and Russia in a common note of March 22 approved of
the general object of the treaty, but added, that if their interests were
menaced by a third Power or a renewal of the disturbances in China, they
would reserve it to themselves to consider means for securing their protec-
tion. These statements in combination with new anti-Christian and anti-
foreign outbreaks both in Chi-li and in Honan, make it probable that the
question of the Far East is yet far from being finally settled.
Books for Consultation. — Great Britain; Parliamentary Publications,' Papers by
Command; China. — Kang Yen Wei: The Reform of China and the Revolution of 1898;
Contemporary Review, Aug., 1899. — The Empress- Regent of China; Blackwood's Maga-
zine, Nov., 1898.— United States 66th Congress, 1 Sess. House Document No. 547 (open
door pledges). — Pekin Correspondences of the London Times. — Chronicle of the London
Tablet. — Robert Hart: The Pekin Legations; Fortnightly Review, Nov., 1900. — E. J-
Dillon: The Chinese Wolf and the European Lamb; Contemp. Rev., Jan., 1901.— U. St.
Secretary of War, Annual Reports. — Larned History for Ready Reference: vol. 6,
pp. 76-144.
§5.
THE UNITED STATES AND THE FILIPINOS.
624. The War. — The war in the Philippine Islands assumed the nature of
guerrilla warfare. There were 2,561 engagements with the enemy, more or
less serious, between February 4th, 1899, the date of the Battle of Manila,
and April 30, 1902, fixed as the virtual downfall of the insurrection. The
larger proportion of these fights were attacks from ambush on the American
troops or skirmishes in which only small detachments took part. The
432 OUR OWN TIMES.
number of troops transported to the Philippines up to July, 1902, was 4,135
officers, and 123,000 men. The casualties of the American army may be
summarized as follows: Deaths from all causes, 139 officers and 4,016 en-
listed men. Among these 1,005 fell in battle; 10 officers and 72 enlisted
men committed suicide. Wounded, 190 officers and 2, 707 men. Aguinaldo,
for years the accepted leader of the insurgents, was captured in March, 1901,
near Castiguran, by Colonel Funston. The Maccabebe scouts who arrested
him pretended to be insurgents and offered to deliver the colonel to the
Filipinos. The ruse was successful and Aguinaldo with his entire staff fell
into the hands of the Americans, and soon after swore allegiance to the
authority of the United States. On July 4th, President Roosevelt declared
by proclamation the restoration of peace in the Philippines, placed the
islands under civil control and extended a general amnesty to the former
insurgents.
That excesses contrary to civilized warfare were often committed by the
Filipinos and in some cases at least by the Americans is proved. But the
contradictory reports from Manila and the fragmentary statements made by
government officials render it impossible to write the real history of the
Filipino War.* It is to the credit of President Roosevelt that he ordered
a strict investigation, and punished the guilty.
625. The Friars. — Among the problems confronting the United States
in the re-ordering of society in the Philippines, the most important is that of
the Religious Orders and their relations to the native races. On the one hand
is the cry for their banishment and spoliation ; on the other, the difficulty, or
rather impossibility, of filling their places, as there are, roughly speaking,
5,000,000 Catholics dependent on their ministrations. Lovers of justice
and friends of the Church demand their retention. The past record of the
Friars is a glorious one. The Philippines owe their exceptional prosperity,
compared with that of other Spanish colonies, to the administration of the
Friars. The relatively high stage of advancement reached by the Filipinos
is entirely the work of the Religious Orders. Thus, 242 towns, including
Manila and Cebu, were founded by the Augustinians alone. (See vol. II.,
nos. 407 and 408.) Very few of the Friars proved unworthy of their voca-
tion, in spite of the calumnies raised against them by irresponsible writers
* A case in point is the communication made by the Secretary of War to the Senate,
February 14, 1902. When the employmentof the " water-cure," the executions ordered
by Major Waller, the order of General Smith to kill all above ten years and to make
Samar a howling wilderness, and other atrocities were within the official cognizance
of the Department, the Secretary said: "The war in the Philippines has been con-
ducted by the American army with scrupulous regard for the rules of civilized warfare,
with careful and genuine consideration for the prisoners and the noncombatants, with
self -restraint and humanity never surpassed if ever equaled in any conflict, worthy only
of praise and reflecting credit upon the American people."
THE UNITED STATES AND THE FILIPINOS. 433
and Philippine Commissions. From the beginning of the American occupa-
tion they were sincerely in favor of it. Not one of them has been incrimin-
ated for want of loyalty to the new order of things. The Orders who
possess no landed estates, and who are not interfered with by the new gov-
ernment, are the Jesuits, the Lazarists, and a few Dominicans and Capuchins.
The four Orders that possess landed estates are the Dominicans, the Fran-
ciscans, the Augustinians and the Recollects. The titles to their properties
are unassailable, the best titles in the Archipelago ; their estates were law-
fully acquired, used for the best interests of the people, and guarded by treaty
rights. Article 8 of the Treaty of Paris says : " And it is hereby declared
that the relinquishment or cession, as the case may be, to which the preced-
ing paragraph refers, cannot in any respect impair the property or rights which
by law belong to the peaceable possession of property of all kinds * * *
public or private establishments, ecclesiastical or civic bodies^ or any other
associations having legal capacity to acquire and possess property in the
aforesaid territories renounced or ceded." The accumulated wealth of the
four Orders mentioned is by no means exorbitant; it does not amount to
over $ 20,000,000. The revenues were devoted to build and maintain colleges
and seminaries to train missionaries for their field of labors, to erect magni-
ficent churches and convents which were at the same time hospices for
strangers and travelers, as there were no hotels, to contribute largely toward
every public work, to keep model farms to teach the people the art of agri-
culture and to maintain granaries which in time of distress were always put
at the disposal of the people.
626. "The Enemies of the Friars. — Although several causes contributed
to the Tagal rising of 1896, such as the raising of the capitation tax by the
Spanish government from 1 to 12 dollars, political aspirations for independ-
ence, agrarian demands for a distribution of public and private lands,
opposition to the Church by the Masonic government of Spain, yet the chief
cause was the revolutionary propaganda of secret societies. The founda-
tion of the first Masonic lodge in Manila took place about 1860. Five other
lodges followed during the next ten years. At first intended only for Span-
iards and Europeans, the brotherhood was quickly extended to the natives
and half-castes. As in all European lodges, hostility to the Religious Or-
ders furnished a common ground of action. But as the views of the native
party became more revolutionary, the Spaniards withdrew and more radical
societies took the place of the original lodges. One of these was the Liga
Filipina, the first article in whose programme was the expulsion of the
Friars and the confiscation of their property. A lower stratum of society
was reached by the formidable " Katipunan" or union, a secret association
organized on the lines of the Carbonari (see III. no. 371) with its triple
K K K for its symbol, and its terribble oaths signed with the blood of the
members. Recruited among the Creoles and Mestizos and led by a number
434 OUR OWN TIMES.
of able and influential men, it had a membership variously estimated at from
10,000 to 50,000 members in the Tagal insurrection. Not the Catholic peo-
ple in the Philippines but the Katipunan and its followers and dupes, a very
small minority of the people, are the inveterate enemies of the Friars.*
What gave it additional strength was the jealousy of the native priests and
the support'of those foreign commercial interests, that desire to exploit the
resources of the Archipelago for their own selfish ends.
627. The American Policy. — From the very beginning of the American
occupation the authorities in the islands seemed to act as if they held the
Philippines only for purposes of exploitation and of robbing seven million
Catholics of their faith. Officers of the United States, with honorable ex-
ceptions, permitted the desecration and robbing of numerous churches by
the soldiers, employed every means to impede the exercise of ecclesiastical
jurisdiction, encouraged the people not to pay rent for ecclesiastical prop-
erties, allowed and encouraged the press, otherwise strictly censured, to
attack the hierarchy and especially the religious, and imposed a school system
on the Filipinos against their wish, which widely opens the door to Protest-
ant proselytism. It was the invariable policy of the American officials to
put civil authority into the hands of the insurrectos, the representatives of
the Katipunan, with the result that almost every province had to be con-
quered several times. In the report of the Civil Commission the testimony
of the Archbishop of Manila, and of the Superiors of the Orders received
scant notice ; the most respectable class of the laity, professional gentlemen,
merchants and landowners, most of whom would have testified in favor
of the Friars, were not summoned at all ; it was the Katipunan witnesses
before the Philippine Commission who demanded the expulsion of the Friars
on the force of charges which the Roman authorities, with full information
of the real state of things, characterized as " partly false, partly exagger-
ated and partly inexact. "
628. The Mission of Governor Taft to Rome. — "To
reach at least a basis of negotiation along lines which will be satis-
factory to " the ecclesiastical Superiors at Rome, " and to the Philip-
pine government," President Roosevelt intrusted Governor Taft of
the Philippines with a mission to the Vatican. He received his
* When, on July 13, 1902, the bishop, priests and people of the diocese of Grand
Rapids drew up a protest, in which they said in favor of the Friars: " Whereas, the
Friars their pastors, as a class are unjustly maligned and are threatened with expul-
sion and the spoliation of their property, " they received the following answer: Ma-
nila, July 17.— Bishop Richter, Grand Rapids, Mich.: Centre. Catolico, representing
one and a half million Catholics, give thanks for protest to President Roosevelt
demanding protection Catholic interests Philippines. Filipino Catholics desire Friars.
Signed, The President.
THE UNITED STATES AND THE FILIPINOS. 435
formal instructions on May 9th, 1902, from Elihu Root, Secretary of
War. The first, third, fourth and fifth clauses clearly and officially
define the attitude of the government toward the Church in the
Philippine Islands. Art. 1. * * * the complete separation of
Church and State * * * is imperative wherever American juris-
diction extends, and no modification or shading thereof can be a
subject of discussion.
Article 3 bases the demand for the withdrawal of the Friars no
longer on the former accusations against them, but simply on a view
of their political relations to some of the people : " By reason of
the separation (of Church and State) the religious orders can no
longer perform in behalf of the State the duties in relation to public
instruction and public charities formerly resting upon them, and the
power which they formerly exercised, through their relations to the
civil government, being now withdrawn, they find themselves the
objects of such hostility on the part of their tenantry against them
as landlords, and on the part of the people of the parishes against
them as representatives of the former government, that they are no
longer capable of serving any useful purpose for the Church."
Article 4. It is the wish of our government in case Congress shall
grant authority, that the titles of the religious orders to the large
tracts of the agricultural lands which they now hold, shall be ex-
tinguished, but that full and fair compensation shall be made
therefor.
Article 5. It is not, however, deemed to be for the interests of the
people that * * * a fund should thereby be* created to be used
for the attempted restoration of the friars to the parishes from which
they are now separated, with the consequent disturbance of law
and order."
The negotiations carried on in the eternal city between Governor
Taft and a commission of five Cardinals led to a mutual understand-
ing between the Vatican and the American government regarding a
basis upon which the negotiations should be continued in Manila be-
tween an Apostolic Delegate and the Governor of the Archipelago.
As a preliminary Cardinal Rampolla is to send to the Philippine
government four lists indicating (1) the property considered to be-
long to the Religious Orders ; (2) the ecclesiastical buildings occu-
436 OUR OWN TIMES.
pied by the troops with indications of the damage and compensation
therefor ; (3) the property before considered Spanish crown lands
which it is desired the American government should transfer to the
Church, though Washington will grant such transfers only on con-
dition that a satisfactory agreement be reached on all other questions ;
(4) the charitable and educational institutions which the Vatican
desires to be considered as belonging to the Church. As to the
Religious Orders the Holy See will give clear and precise instructions
to the Friars to occupy themselves with religion only, abstaining en-
tirely from politics. It proposes to introduce, little by little, ecclesi-
astics of other nationalities, especially Americans. In a final note
presented to the American Commissioner Cardinal Ra^mpolla says :
I am happy to assure you that the Holy See has learned with the
liveliest satisfaction the high consideration in which Mr. Root in the
name of the government of the United States, holds the fitness of the
measures which the Vatican, independently of the solution of any
economic question, designed taking to ameliorate the religious situa-
tion in the archipelago and to co-operate in the pacification of the
people under American sovereignty. These declarations of Mr.
Root do honor to the deep political wisdom of the government of the
United States which knows how to appreciate the happy influence of
the Holy See for the religious and civil elevation of the people,
especially Catholics.
With equal satisfaction the Pontiff has taken into account the as-
surance of Secretary Root that the American authorities in the Phil-
ippines and at Washington will put forth all possible efforts to
maintain the good understanding happily established with the
authorities of the Catholic Church. On his part the Pontiff will
not fail to give the Apostolic Delegate, soon to be sent to the Philip-
pines, the most precise instructions according to my former notes.
The Holy See does not doubt that mutual confidence, combined
with the action of its representative and that of the American gov-
ernment, will easily produce a happy solution of the pending ques-
tions, inaugurating for that noble country a new era of peace and
true progress. ' '
Marshal: History of the Christ. Missions. — B. J. Anide: The Story of the Philippines. —
Daupri er : Account of the Philippines. — Mr. Sawyer : The Inhabitants of the Philippines. —
s
CHURCH AND STATE. 437
Bryan J. Clinch: American Quarterly Review, vol. 24,— Die Philippinen unter Spani-
scher Herrschaft; Die Bevdlkerung der Philippinen und die Ursachen des Aufstandes; Die
Katholischen Missionen, 1897, pp. 1, 28, 73, 99.— The Religious Orders and the Future of the
Philippines: London Tablet, March 2, 1901. — The Friars Must Stay; The Messenger
Monthly Magazine, Aug., 1902.
§6.
CHURCH AND STATE.
629. Causes of the Culturkampf In Germany — The Franco-German
War had hardly terminated when Prince Bismarck inaugurated a religious
persecution, called the Culturkampf (Conflict of Culture) which had for its
avowed aim the annihilation of the Catholic Church in Prussia. The National
Evangelical Church was filled with dismay at the growth of the Catholic
Church in the last thirty years. On the other hand Protestants, Liberals,
and Freethinkers vaunted the Prussian victories over Austria and France as
a distinct triumph of Protestantism over Catholicism. Flushed with his
recent successes Prince Bismarck maintained that the complete unity of the
German Empire demanded the nationalization of the Catholic Church and
her subjection to the State. He first entertained the vain hope of winning
over the German Episcopate to his way of thinking. But badly disappointed
by their loyal submission to the Vatican decrees he resorted to force. To
carry out his ideas the ultra-liberal Dr. Falk was made minister of public
worship. From Prussia the conflict spread to other German States and to
Switzerland.
C3O. Preliminary Laws and Measures. — In 1871 the
Catholic section of the ministry of worship was suppressed and pulpit
utterances were placed under State surveillance. The expulsion of
the Jesuits (1872) and of the so-called affiliated Congregations
(Redemptorists, Christian Brothers, Lazarists, Sisters of the Sacred
Heart), 1873, from the Empire, and the establishment of a State
dictatorship over all schools, and the banishment of all religious
Orders from Prussia, not only struck at the rights of individuals and
associations, but infringed upon the fundamental laws of the Prus-
sian Constitution. To remove this objection and to clear the ground
for still more drastic legislation, Articles 15, 16, and 18, which
guaranteed the rights of the Catholic Church, were first altered, and
later in the conflict simply annulled. The alleged change of the
Church by the proclamation of Papal infallibility had to serve as a
reason for this sweeping measure. All Catholic Seminaries were
438 OUR OWN TIMES.
closed and the students required to attend the courses of philosophy,
literature and history in the State universities and to pass State ex-
aminations. On the other hand, the government protected apostate
and excommunicated clergymen (Old Catholics), and deprived
the Catholics of a number of churches in favor of the new
sect.
The attitude of the government as well as the determined resistance of
the Catholics were thus characterized by the leaders : " Whatever we shall
do," said Bismarck, " be assured of this, that we shall never go to Canossa."
" We hear," replied Windthorst, " that it is to be a question of war to the
knife against us; we on our part are desirous of peace, but if you insist
upon war, why, then you shall have it." And, in reality, bishops, clergy
and people rose as one man for their faith. Every new measure of religious
tyranny was met by the protests of the clergy, jointly or individually, and
by the passive but effective condemnation of the laity. Under the magnifi-
cent leadership of Mallinckrodt, Windthorst, Schorlemer-Alst, the Reichens-
pergers, etc., and their worthy successors, the Centre party, by increasing
its force in every election, finally obtained the balance of power in the Reich-
stag, and by its fearless enunciation of clearly-defined principles of law and
truth and by its wonderful cohesion in all questions of religion, became and
still is the admiration of the world and the champion defender of the
Church in Germany. In this noble struggle Pius IX. never ceased to en-
courage the German Catholics by his apostolic word.
631. Pius IX. and William I. — Heretofore William I. had
not been in favor of the Culturkampf , whilst the Empress strongly
opposed it. But the ministers found a means of poisoning the
Emperor's mind by distorting the Christmas Allocution of Pius IX.,
1873. " In Germany," said the Holy Father, " men seek to uproot
the Church from her very foundation ; * * * men who are en-
tirely ignorant of her principles arrogate to themselves the power of
defining both the dogmas and the rights of the Church." The words
were telegraphed over the land with the malicious insinuation:
11 Considerations for His Majesty forbid our rendering the full sense
of the words into German." Newspapers which rent this veil of
hypocrisy by publishing the full text were prosecuted by the govern-
ment. By such means the Emperor was made to believe that his
majesty and the honor of the nation were assailed by the Holy See
and he withdrew his opposition to the Culturkampf.
CHURCH AND STATE. 439
632. The May Laws. — The notorious laws, passed for several
years in the month of May, suppressed every free exercise of Papal
jurisdiction in Germany, prevented the authorities of the Church
from punishing disobedient members, deprived the bishops of the free
appointment to holdings and obliged them to submit the names of the
candidates to the government. A bishop who, after the beginning
of the conflict, exercised any of his functions, from ordaining a
priest to consecrating the holy oils outside of his diocese, or failed
to propose a candidate for a vacant post within an appointed time ; a
priest in possession of a benefice before the beginning of the conflict
who said mass, administered the sacraments of baptism or penance,
or carried the consolations of religion to the sick and dying outside
of his district, or a priest performing any sacerdotal function with-
out State permission, was first fined for every single case, then de-
prived of his income, finally imprisoned or exiled either from a
specified district or from the Empire. When Pius IX. in his Ency-
clical of February 5th, 1875, declared the May laws null and void
because directed against the divine Constitution of the Church, Falk
retorted by restricting all State support and exemption from military
service to the Old Catholics and such clergymen alone as should sub-
scribe to the May laws — thus offering a reward for apostasy.
Under the operation of these laws all the bishops, save three, and
1,770 priests were, by the year 1880, imprisoned, exiled, or dead,
without being replaced ; 9,000 religious, 7,763 of them women, were
driven from their peaceful homes into misery and destitution after
the expulsion of the Jesuits and affiliated orders ; 601 parishes, com-
prising 644,697 souls, were entirely destitute of spiritual care, while
584 other parishes with over 1,500,000 souls were inadequately
served.
633. Result of the Persecution — The government was doomed to
disappointment. The loyalty of the German Catholics to the Church and
the Holy See remained unshaken. Not one theological student availed
himself of the course of study prescribed by the State. Not one State-
appointed priest obtained episcopal recognition. The Cathedral Chapters
in all cases refused to choose vicars capitular at the bidding of the State.
The number of clergy who submitted to the May laws amounted scarcely to
twenty in the whole kingdom of Prussia and they were shunned by Catho-
lics as traitors. In the dioceses deprived of their pastors the episcopal
440 OUR OWN TIMES.
power was exercised by delegates unknown to the public but promptly
obeyed by the Catholic people. The Bishop of Paderbofrn personally
administered his diocese from Belgium. In the archdiocese of Posen and
Gnesen an association of young priests secretly discharged their pastoral
duties in the vacant parishes. Espionage and priest hunts were of little
avail and soon fell into universal conteThpt.
634. Going to Canossa. — The fruits of the Culturkampf be-
gan to ripen. Under the new education laws morality perceptibly
decreased. The Emperor, half-hearted in the contest from the begin-
ning, was seriously annoyed by the fact, that all parliamentary leg-
islation was in the hands of the irreligious Liberal Party. Socialism
was spreading rapidly among the Protestants. On May 11, 1878,
two shots were fired at the Emperor, while out driving with his
daughter, by Hoedel, a young socialist. On June 2, another attempt
was made upon the Emperor's life, by Dr. Nobiling, an anarchist,
who fired two shots, this time wounding the Emperor in the face, the
arms, and the hands. William I. became alarmed at the dangers
threatening the country, and openly proclaimed the necessity of
religion and Christian education for his people.
Bismarck himself reluctantly acknowledged his cause defeated by
the unflinching loyalty to their faith of the German Catholics. Under
these circumstances he thought it prudent to go to Canossa. Be-
sides, he needed the Catholics against the Liberals in his new policy
of protection. He needed the Pope himself whom he had persecuted
so long, to aid him in both internal and external difficulties of his
administration. In 1878 the Iron Chancellor opened negotiations
with Leo XIII. In 1879 he dropped minister Falk and his policy.
The satisfactory way in which Leo XIII. mediated between Germany
and Spain in a dispute about the possession of certain Caroline
islands — recognizing Spain's right to the islands whilst securing
valuable commercial concessions to Germany, 1885 — greatly im-
proved the relations between the Vatican and Berlin. All hostile
legislation ceased. Concessions were made on both sides. One
by one the usurped powers over the Catholic Church were given
up by the Prussian government. After 1887 State interference in
the administration of the Church and in the education of the priest-
hood was, to a great part, abandoned. William II., who, after
CHURCH AND STATE. 441
the death of his grandfather and the short reign of his dying father,
Frederic III., ascended the throne in 1888, spoke at the opening of
the Prussian Parliament for religious toleration and the termination
of the Culturkampf and pledged himself to maintain a religious peace
in the countries under his rule. The dismissal of Prince Bismarck
from office put the seal on the imperial promises.
635 In Other Countries — Within the last three decades similar perse-
cutions of the Church have disgraced other European governments. The
methods have varied according to national differences and precedents, but
the aim was identical, the destruction of the Church of Christ.
In Russia the Czars (the present ruler excepted) have employed the
ruthless cruelty of Cossack and police agent to suppress Catholicism in
Poland and to drive the Uniats or Ruthenians into the Russian schism. The
Ruthenians are the Catholic descendants of the ten or twelve million Chris-
tians who in 1595 submitted to the Holy See under King Sigismund of
Poland. In the provinces of Podolia, Minsk, Grodno, Vilna, Catholic
churches closed or demolished, Catholic priests removed and schismatics
appointed ; in Lithuania hundreds of Catholics imprisoned, cut or trampled
down, crippled or whipped to death by the Cossacks ; men separated from
their wives and children and sent to Siberia for no other crime than their
Catholicity (atrocities of Kroze, 1893) — are some of the devices resorted
to. Yet all the brutality of Russian methods was unable to shake the faith
of the Polish and Ruthenian Catholics.
In France and Italy, and for a time in Belgium and Spain, the laws
against the Church and Christian education were the work of Masonic
lodges. To banish religion from the schools, to train up the young in the
hatred of priests and of religion, to sweep away as far as possible crucifixes,
Madonnas, statues of the saints, to persecute the clergy, to banish relig-
ious, to draft seminarists and priests inter the army and send them to
barracks and camp — are the means by which they carry on the internecine
war against Jesus Christ and His religion.
In France the Third Republic has shown itself singularly ungrateful for
the very definite service which Cardinal Lavigerie and Leo XIII. rendered
it when they urged the Catholics to rally around the existing form of gov-
ernment. A recent Masonic law against the religious orders (drawn up by
Ribot) is a graduated system of taxation so devised and calculated as to
render extinct within a period of eight to ten years all religious institutions
conducted by the regular clergy. The legislation against the Congregations
and the Catholic free schools of France became still more stringent under
the administration of Waldeck Rousseau, and found a brutal executor in
his successor, Mr. Combes. By a decree of the Council of State signed by
442 OUR OWN TIMES.
the President of the Republic, June 27, 1902, 135 religious houses were sum-
marily closed and their inmates thrust out resourceless upon the world. A
number of Religious Orders had already left the inhospitable soil of France
rather than submit to 'their iniquitous laws. On July 15, Mr. Combes, ar-
bitrarily extending the law beyond its scope, sent out a circular to the pre-
fects of the departments with the result,that in July and August, 1902, over
2,500 religious institutions were closed, 150,000 children turned out of schools
supported and chosen for them by their parents and 5,000 teachers sent
adrift — a policy which even liberal deputies denounced as a veritable crime
against liberty and against humanity. Cardinal Richard, Archbishop of
Paris, trenchantly summed up the whole matter when he declared that " this
present simultaneous closing of nearly 3,000 schools has no other object
than the destruction of religious teaching in the free schools after its
exclusion from the State schools."
In Belgium the Masonic government, lifted into power by Frere-Orban,
passed a law in 1879 which abolished the denominational system of primary
education adopted in 1830, and established a godless system of instruction.
To blind the Catholics to the real aim — the de-christianization of Bel- •
gium — an illusory clause embodied in the bill decreed that a room in the
school should be put at the disposition of the clergy for giving religious
instruction either before or after school hours. This clause degraded
religion in the eyes of the children beneath the lowest of secular branches.
The bishops of Belgium in a pastoral letter, approved by Leo XIII., forbade
the Catholics to co-operate in the new system and exhorted them to erect
their own schools. The Belgian Catholics answered this appeal with great
generosity, and accepted, though under protest, the burden of double taxa-
tion which the injustice of Frere-Orban's government entailed upon them.
This opposition of the Church and the success of the Catholic schools so
enraged the Prime Minister, that he rudely severed all diplomatic connec-
tions with the Holy See, 1882. But in 1884 the Catholics rose in their
might and smashed the liberal government by a most decisive majority.
The first Parliamentary measure of the new cabinet (M. Malou, President
of Council) re-establishing diplomatic relations with the Holy See was one
of justice and homage to the spiritual head of their country. The second,
that of a new education bill, swept away in a very great measure the gross
abuses and cruel intolerance that marked the Act of 1879 and its working.
The revised Constitution of 1893, which raised the number of voters from
140,000 to 1,350,000 electors, resulted in an overwhelming victory of the
Catholics in 1894.
Whereas in Catholic countries the Catholics had to suffer for their faith,
the Church enjoyed a period of peace, prosperity, and perceptible growth in
the United States, in England, and the extensive colonial possessions
of Great Britain. China, Japan, Corea, and most of the Indian and Pacific
Islands have their settled church establishments, and Catholic mission-
CHURCH AND STATE. 443
aries have crossed the closely-guarded frontiers of Thibet. Africa has
become a vast network of apostolic enterprises in spite of the murderous
climate and the nefarious slave trade. When the noble crusade of Cardinal
Lavigerie against slavery shall bear its fruit, a great future will dawn upon
the Church in Africa.
636. The Roman Question. — The most important question
awaiting a solution is the Roman question. For a body of nearly
300,000,000 Catholics belonging to every civilized nation has a far
deeper and more lasting interest in the complete independence of the
Holy See than in any merely political question. The position in
Rome of the head of the Catholic Church has been a violent and
unnatural one since 1870, and has become more so in the progress of
time owing to the growth of revolutionary and irreligious principles
in the party that rules Italy. This party is primarily not a political
but an anti-Catholic party which in its hatred of God and of Christ
strikes at the temporal ruler of the Papal States in order to strike at
the Vicar of Christ. Official utterances in the earlier Parliament of
the Italian Kingdom prove it. "We must overthrow the Catholic
Church" (Crispi). " The catechism is an immoral book which
should be banished from our homes" (Signor Cairoli). "The
Church is the negation of humanity " (S. Piccolomini) . " We
have need of a revolution in the name of all other religions against
the Catholic Church" (S. Andreotti). This ruling party stands in
the way of a reconciliation between the Church and the State in Italy.
The Pope is in conscience bound to demand at least such a tem-
poral sovereignty — say the city of Rome and surroundings — "as
shall be sufficient to guarantee his real and manifest independence."
The Italian Revolution will hear of no reconciliation unless the
Supreme Pontiff ratify the sacrilege of 1870. Political unity is not
the highest good of Italy. " Natural reason," Leo XIII. wrote to
Cardinal Rampolla in 1887, " recognizes the need of giving the first
place to considerations of justice, since this is the first foundation of
the happiness and permanence of /States, especially when it is bound*
up, as in the present case, with the highest interests of the Church."
But the union of Italy can be preserved without a King ruling at
Rome. One way has been pointed out by the Peace of Villafranca
444 OUR OWN TIMES.
and Zurich (see p. 316), another by the United States. The excep-
tional position and government of the District of Columbia does not
interfere with the Union. Whatever form of settlement Providence
may have in store, one thing is certain, the present violent state of
things cannot last. Whether the delay be for a short time or for
long years, the triumph of the Holy Father must come. "One hun-
dred and seventy times the Popes have been driven out of Rome,
and one hundred and seventy times they have returned in triumph
and shaken themselves free of the sacrilegious hands of their
enemies." "Thou art Peter, and upon this rock I will build My
Church, and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it."
Germany. — History of the Prussian Culturkampf: D. R. '79, 4 ; '80, 2 ; '80, 4. — v.
Ketteler, Bishop of Mainz: Der Kulturkampf; The New Prussian Bills (1874). — Wm.
Humphrey: Caesarism and Ultramontanism. — Prussian Law and the Cath. Church: T>.
R. '75, 1. — Prince Bismarck's Speeches: D. R. '75, 3. — The Culturkampf in Prussia: M. '83,
3. — The Persecution of Catholics in Prussia: M. 89, 3. — H. J. Heuser : Prince Bismarck's
Conflict with the Church: A. C. Q., v. 9. — Mgr. Schroeder: Windthorst: A. C. Q., v.
16. — Otto Pftilf : Hermann von Mallinckrodt.
Russia. — Goldle: The Ruthenian Church: M. '76, 2. — Lady Herbert Lea: Persecu-
tion of Catholics in Poland: M. '94, 1.
France. — W. S. Lilly: The Experiment of France: D. R. '84,2. —W.C.Robinson:
Cardinal Lavigerie: A. C. Q., v. 22. — Lives of Leo XIII. — See also books to § 1.
Belgium. — Prof . Laing: The School Question in Belgium: D. R. '79, 3. — Official
Documents: Tablet, July 24, '79. — Belgium and the Holy See: D. R., '80, 4. — Austin G.
Gates: The Catholic Triumph in Belgium: M. '84, 2, 3. — Belgium and Catholic Govern-
ment: M. '86, 3.
Missions. — The Catholic Missions (Monthly; Engl. and German). — L. E. Louvet:
Les Missions Catholiques aux XIX. siecle. — 'L. C. Casartelli: The Cath. Church in Japan;
The Revival of Christianity in Japan: St. 5. — E. M. Clerke: The Church in Korea: D. R.
'95, 4. — R. Clarke, S. J. : Cardinal Lavigerie and the African Slave Trade. — Herbert,
Bish. of Salford: The Evangelization of Africa: D. R. '79, 1. — The Slave Trade in Africa:
M. '77, 2. — Catholic Missions in Equatorial Africa: D. R. '81, 3. — Cardinal Lavigerie and
His Work: M. '89, 1.
The Roman Question. — R. F. C. The Roman Question, M. '89, 3. — J. McCarthy:
The Papacy and the European Powers, 1870-82: A. C. Q., v. 7. — Pope Leo XITI. and the
Freemasons: D. R. 84, 3. — E. Keller, S. J. : The Life and Acts of Leo XIII. — Justin
McCarthy: Pope Leo XIII.
ADDENDA.
(To English Hist.) English Premiers: Month (Old Series): -Sir Robert Walpole,
V. IV., p. 221. — Sir R. Walpole and Lord Carteret, p. 331. — Henry Pelham and the Duke
of Newcastle, p. 459.-^ The Earl of Chatham and Lord Bute, v. V., p. 28. — Chatham,
Grenville and Rockingham, p. 264. — Lord North, p. 487.— Chas. J. Fox, v. VI., pp. 33,
141. — Wm. Pitt, pp. 255, 412. — Pitt and Addington, p. 520. — Grenville, Portland and
Perceval, v. VII., p. 124. — Liverpool and Canning, p. 222. — Canning and Wellington, p.
397. — Wellington and Gray, p. 503.
(To Portugal under Dom Mig-uel.) M. v. VI. (Old Series), p. 450.— Auguste
Carayon, S. J., Lettres In^dites du R. P. J. Delvaux.
(On Martin's Histoire de France.) The use of this work should be controlled,
in all matters of religion, by M. L'Epinols: M. H. Martin et son Hist, de France (1 vol.).
(445)
INDEX.
BOOK I.
CAUSES OF THE SOCIAL REVOLUTION.
CHAPTER I.
THE HANOVERIAN SUCCESSION.
PAGE
§ 1. The Hanoverian or Protestant Succession in England * . 5
§ 2. Penal Laws against Catholics in Ireland . . 9
CHAPTER II.
THE MAKING OF RUSSIA.
§ 1. Peter the Great . . . . . • . 12
§ 2. The Great Northern War, 1700-1721 ... 16
§ 3. Close of the Northern War and Treaties of Peace . 19
§ 4. Changes in the Treaties of Carlowitz, of the Pruth, and
of Utrecht . 22
Chronological Tables —
The Hanoverian Succession in England and Hanover . . 26
Emperors of the House of Hapsburg- Lorraine . . " 27
Kings and Emperors of Prussia .of the House of Hohenzolleru . 28
Wars in Central and Western Europe .... 29
I. War between Spain and Austria . ... 29
II. The War of the Polish Succession ... 29
III. Wars of the Austrian Succession .... 30
IV. Second Silesian War, and War of Austrian Succession 31
CHAPTER III.
MARIA THERESA AND FREDERIC II.— WARS OF THE
AUSTRIAN SUCCESSION.
§ 1. First Silesian War, 1740-42 . . . .' .33
§ 2. Second Silesian War, 1744-45 (48) ... 33
CHAPTER IV.
THE COLONIES OF NORTH AMERICA.
*
§ 1. Foundation of the Colonies 43
(447)
448 INDEX.
PAGE
§ 2. Social, Political, and Religious State of the Colonies . 49
§ 3. Treatment of the Indians 52
§ 4. Negro Slavery in North America . . . . 56
Chronological Tables —
The Original English Colonies in North America . . 58
§5. Contact of Colonial with European History . . 61
CHAPTER V.
THE SEVEN YEARS' WAR.
§ 1. American Causes of the Seven Years' War . . 66
§ 2. Outbreak of the Seven Years' War in Europe . . 69
§ 3. The Seven Years' War in Europe — Frederic on the De-
fensive . . . . . . . .74
§ 4. The War in India and in America .... 76
§5. Political Changes and Treaties of Peace . . .81
Chronological Tables —
Contest between Europe and North America ... 86
Wars in Central and Western Europe .... 88
Treaties of Peace ....... 91
CHAPTER VI.
THE DIVISION OF POLAND.
§ 1. The Polish Succession 92
§ 2. The First Partition of Poland .... 95
§ 3. The Fall of Poland 99
Chronological Tables —
The Russian Rulers of the House of Romanow and Holstein-
Gottorp 102
. Wars in the East of Europe . . . . . 103
I. The Great Northern War 103
II. War between Austria allied with Venice against Turkey 104
III. War of the Polish Succession 105
IV. The Division of Poland 105
CHAPTER VII.
CAUSES OF THE POLITICAL AND SOCIAL REVOLUTION
OF THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY.
§ 1. Religious and Doctrinal Causes • . . . 108
§ 2. A Philosophical Emperor . . . . . .111
INDEX. 449
PAGE
§ 3. Religious Causes Continued — The Suppression of the
Society of Jesus . . . . . . 114
§ 4. Political and Social Causes of the French Re volution . 117
CHAPTER VIII.
AMERICAN WAR OF INDEPENDENCE.
§ 1. Causes .... . ; .... 123
§ 2. War of Independence — The Colonies Unassisted, 1775—
1778 . ; ..-;, &*£ ^ .. ..... . . 128
§ 3. ThelJ. St. in Alliance with European Powers, 1778-1783 135
§ 4. The Peace of Paris and the Constitution of the U. St. 139
Chronological Tables —
The War of American Independence, 1775-1783 . ; 142
Conclusion of Peace . . " •'"'...• . . : . . 145
; BOOK II.
CHAPTER I.
THE FRENCH REVOLUTION.
§ 1. The National Assembly (La Constituante) . . .; 146
§2. The Constitution of 1789 . ... x' • • 151
§ 3. The Fall of the Throne . . . . . "., 157
§4. The Reign of Terror in the Departments . . .. 164
§5. The Reign of Terror in Paris . . . . . 169
§ 6. The Reaction, 1794-1795 . . . . . . 174
§ 7. The Directory •. _. .. . . . . . 177
Chronological Tables —
The House of Bourbon in France, Spain, Naples, and Parma 185
The French Revolution .... ^ .' . 186
Contemporary Sovereigns . . • 1 . . 187
CHAPTER II.
THE ERA OF NAPOLEON I. — 1800-1815.
§ 1. The Consulate and the War of the Second Coalition . 193
§ 2. The First Empire % • . . . . . . ' 196
§ 3. War of the Third Coalition . \, . ' . . .. 199
§ 4. The War with Prussia and Russia, 1806-1807 . . ; 202
§5. The Peninsular War and its Complications -. , , • 205
29
450 INDEX.
> PAGE
§ 6. The War with Austria in 1809 .... 208
§ 7. Pius VII. and Napoleon I. 212
§ 8. The Russian War, 1812 215
§ 9. The Great War of Liberation, 1813 . . . .218
§ 10. The Fall of Napoleon 221
§ 11. The United States and the European Revolution . .225
§ 12. Acts of the Congress of Vienna .... 230
Chronological Tables —
The Family of Bonaparte .... . . 233
The Wars of Revolutionary France, 1792-1815 ... 234
I. War between France and the First Coalition . . 234
II. Civil War in France . ... 234
III. War of the Second Coalition . . . .237
IV. War of the Third Coalition against France . . 238
V. War of Napoleon with Prussia and Russia . . 239
VI. The Peninsular War 240
VII. The War with Austria 241
VIII. The Russian War 242
IX. The Great War of Liberation . . . .242
X. Last Napoleonic War . . . 244
CHAPTER III.
CATHOLIC EMANCIPATION IN GREAT BRITAIN.
§ 1. Relief Bills — Insurrection of " '98 " — The Union . 245
§ 2. Daniel O'Connell and the Catholic Emancipation t . 249
BOOK III.
THE EUROPEAN REVOLUTION.
CHAPTER I.
THE REVOLUTION OF THE BARRICADES.
§ 1. First Outbreaks ' .253
§ 2. The July Revolution in France . . . . 258
§ 3. Spread of the July Revolution . . . . .262
§4. The July Revolution in Portugal and. Spain . . 266
§5. England after the July Revolution . . . . 268
§ 6. The Catholic Revival on the Continent . . . 272
§ 7. The Romeward Movement in England .... 276
INDEX. 451
PAGE
§ 8. France after the July Revolution . , ,. , 279
§ 9. The February Revolution in France — The Second Re-
public and the Second Empire . . . . 282
§ 10. The February Revolution in Italy . ., * . ' .. . 286
§ 11. The Defeat of the Italian Revolution . . . 290
§ 12. The February Revolution in Germany and Austria, 1848 292
§13. The Hungarian Revolution — General Pacification . 295
Chronological Tables —
The House of Braganza in Portugal . . . . . ^ . 301
The European Revolution . . . ... . 302
The Revolutions in Spain, Portugal, and their American
Dependencies . . . . . 302
The Revolution and War of Grecian Independence . 302
The Earlier Revolutions in Italy . . . 305
The July Revolution, 1830 . . , . 306
The February Revolution, 1848 . . . . 307
CHAPTER II.
THE REVOLUTION OF THE CABINETS.
§ 1. The Crimean War and Italy 311
§ 2. War of France and Sardinia with Austria, 1859 . 314
§ 3. The Italian Annexations and the Roman Question . 317
§ 4. The Kingdom of Italy and the Roman Question . 322
§ 5. The War of 1866 . . . . / „ 327
§ 6. New Italian Aggressions — The Pontificate of Pius IX. 331
§ 7. Causes of the Franco-German War . . . 334
§ 8. Sedan and Rome .337
§ 9. The New German Empire . . . . .:f\ 341
§ 10. The Third Republic in France 344
Chronological Tables —
The House of Savoy ....... 347
Wars of the Second Half of the Nineteenth Century ' . ' 348
I. The Crimean War . . . . ( . .348
II. War of France and Sardinia with Austria . . 348
III. Sardinia's War of Spoliation against Sicily, Naples
and the States of the Church . . . . 349
IV. War of 1866 of Prussia and Italy against Austria . 350
V. The Franco- Prussian War of 1870-71, and the final
War of Spoliation in Italy .... 351
VI. The Turco-Russian War of 1877-78 353
452 INDEX.
CHAPTER III.
THE CIVIL WAR IN THE UNITED STATES AND ITS CAUSES.
PAGE
§ 1. The Slavery Question 355
§ 2. The Missouri Compromise . . . . . 358
§ 3. State Sovereignty and Nullification . . . .361
§ 4. The Annexation of Texas, and the Slavery Question 365
§ 5. The Victory of the Slave Power .... 369
§ 6. Catholic and National Parties . . . . .372
§ 7. Secession . 377
§ 8. The Civil War 380
§ 9. The Overthrow of the Confederacy ... 383
§ 10. .The End of Slavery 388
§ 11. Mexico and the United States .... 390
Chronological Tables —
Wars of the United States in the Nineteenth Century . . 395
I. Second War with Great Britain . . . 395
II. The War with Mexico 395
III. The Civil War for the Maintenance of the Union . 396
IV. The Mexican Expedition. The Empire and its Over-
throw .399
CHAPTER IV.
OUR OWN TIMES.
§ 1. The Great Powers 400
§ 2. The Eastern Question 409
§ 3. The War in South Africa . . ... . .418
§ 4. Europe, America, and the Far East . . . 426
§ 5. The United States and the Filipinos . . . .431
§ 6. Church and State 437
GENERAL INDEX.
ABBREVIATIONS.
a abbot,
abol abolitionist.
a dm admiral ; admission,
an anarchist.
Ap .. Apostle.
Gr. E ....Greek Emperor,
hum humanist.
k .. ..King of.
k R King of the Romans,
kgd kingdom of.
L. E Latin Emperor (Ct.).
1 lord.
M Martyr,
m .marshal.
B Bishop,
b ..battle.
Bl ..Blessed.
O Council.
Of. gen. . Confederate general,
com communist.
Chr. apol. Christian apologist,
c. w civil war.
Cr Crusader.
min .minister of state.
n. b naval battle.
P Pope.
Pr. ..President.
p peace of.
pr prince,
q .queen.
Ct .Constantinople.
ct count of.
D .Diet,
d . duke of.
R. E Roman Emperor.
(E ; W ;) of the eastern ; western
Empire.
Slav Slavonic.
Sp Spanish,
tr treaty of ; tribe.
U. gen ..Union general,
w wife of.
w..ind ...war of independence.
K Emperor of the Holy Roman
Empire.
E. A Emperor of Austria.
E. G Emperor of Germany,
e earl,
el elector of.
f founder of.
Fr French.
Other abbreviations will be readily understood.
Aachen, D. of, 813 ; I., 235 • p. of, 1668 ;
II., 569, 1748; III., 62, 107, 129.
Aayacucho, b. of ; III. ,376.
Abbas, uncle of Mohammed; I., 159.
Abbassid Caliphate; I., 180; destroyed,
I., 573.
Abbul Abbas; I., 180.
Abdallah, Saracen gen. ; I., 170.
Abd-el-Kader; III. ,417.
Abderrhaman, Caliph. Cordova; I., 181,
554.
Abd Errhaman, Saracen gen. ; I., 187.
Abd-ul-Azlz, Ottoman Sultan; III ,590.
Abdul Hamid, Ottoman Sultan ; III., 590.
Abdulla, Khalifa; III., 614.
Abdul Medjid, Ottom. Sultan; III., 418.
Abenakis, Ind. tr.; III., 66, 103, 106.
Aben Hnmeya, Moorish chief, Spain;
II., 344.
Abensberg, b. of; III., 306.
Abercrombie, Brit. gen. ; III., 133.
Abigail Hill (Mrs. Mashem) ; U. , 642.
Abn Abo, Moorish chief, Spain ; II., 344.
Aboukir, battles of ; III., 271.
Abraham, Patriarch ; I , 7.
Abu Bekr, Caliph. ; I., 157, 158, 165.
Abu Taleb, uncle of Moh. ; I., 157.
Acadia; III., 65, 101.
Acadians; III ,110.
Aclea, b.of; I., 276.
Acre, siege and capture of; I., 513.
Actium.b. of; I., 14,
1
INDEX.
Act of Corporation; II., 549; of Grace,
602; of Settlement (1701), lit., 1; of
Uniformity, II., 549; of Security, III.,
1.
Adalbert, St.; I. ,326.
Adalbert, Archb. Bremen; I., 377.
Adalbert, son of Berengar II ; I., 320,
322.
Adams, John ; III. , 184, 189, 199, Pr. U. S.,
339.
Adams, John Quincy, Pr. U. S., 531, 539.
Adams, Samuel; III., 184, 191.
Adda, b. on the; I., 119.
Ad Decimum, b. of ; I., 126.
Addison; II., 659.
Adela, countess of Blois; I., 408, 586.
Adelchis, son of Lomb. k. Desiderius;
I., 221.
Adelheid, St., Empress; I., 320, 326.
Adhemar, B. Pay; I.. 445.
Adige, b. on the; I., 119.
Adis Adeba, p. of, 189£j III., 584.
Adolf of Nassau, Germ. k. ; I. , 614 ; II., 7..
Adowa, b. of; III., 684.
Adrian, see Hadrian.
Adrianople, p. of, 1829; III., 379.
Alfred the Aetheling; I., 310.
Alfred the Great; I., 276, 278, 279-284.
^Elfheah, St., B. Winchester, Primate,
I., 303,304.
^Elfthrith, mother of ^Ethelred II. ; I. ;
290.
^Ella.k. Deira; I., 95.
^Ella, k. Sussex; I., 94.
^Emihanus, R. E. ; I. ,32.
JEneas Sylvius Piccolomlni (Pius II.);
II., 52.
^Ethelbald, k. Mercia ; I . , 105.
^Ethelbald, k. England ; I., 276.
^Ethelberht.k. Kent ; I., 96, 102.
yEthelbert, k. England ; 1 , 276.
^Ethelflead, Lady of Mercia; I., 285.
^Cthelfred, ealdorm. Mercia ; I., 279.
^Ethelfrith, the Destroyer; I., 95,97, 98.
^Ethelred, k. Mercia; I., 102.
^EthelredL, St.,k. England; I., 277, 278.
^Ethelred II., the Unready, k. Engl.; I.,
290, 302-05, 306.
.Ethelstan, k. Engl. ; I., 252, 286.
^Ethelstan the priest; I. ,283.
^thelwulf, k. Engl. ; I., 276.
Aetius; I., 81, 84,85.
Afanto di Rivera, col. ; III., 471.
Agereau, Fr. gen. ; III., 266.
Agilulf, k. Longobards; I., 142, 151,203.
Agincourt, b. of; II., 89.
Agnes, Empress-regent; I. ,341, 377,381.
Agnes of Meran; I. ,551.
Agnes of Poitiers, Empress; I., 339.
Agradello.b. of; II., 143.
Agricola, I.. 19; Rudolf, hum. ; II., 166.
Aguinaldo ; III., 587, 624.
Ahmet, Emir al Omra; I., 433.
Aidan, St., Ap. Northumbria; I., 100.
Aidan, k. Scots ; I., 150.
Ainslie bonds; II., 385.
Aistulf, k. Longobards; I., 198, 199.
Akbar the Great; III., 127.
Alamanni;! ,40, 54, 56, 57, 70, 112, 115,
186, 188.
Alamannia (Suabia), dukedom of; I.,
251.
Alans; I., 59, 61,69, 70,72,75,81.
Alarcos, b. of ; I., 557.
Alaric, House of; I., 75.
AlaricL.k. Visigoths; I., 67, 68, 73.
Alaric II., k. Visigoths ; I., 113.
Alban,St.;I.,91.
Albemarle (gen. Monk) ; II., 561 ; III., 69.
Alberic II. (House of Theodora) ; I., 319.
Alberigo de Barbiano ; II , 24.
Alberoni, Card ; III., 39.
Albert I. (Albrecht) of Austria, Germ.
k.; I., 605,11., 7,8.
Albert II. (Albrecht) of Austria, k. in
Germany and Hungary; II., 108.
Albert, Bl. Patr. Jerusalem; I., 5?0.
Albert, B. Riga; I., 580.
Albert, Archd., in the Netherlands ; II.,
378.
Albert, Archd., Austria; III., 483.
Albert, d. Bavaria ; II., 307.
Albert, prince-consort, Engl.; III., 399.
Albert, labor commissioner, Paris; III.,
421.
Albigenslans;I.,546, 547; wars of ; 548-
550.
Alboln, k. Longobards; I., 140, 141.
Albornoz, Card. ; II., 20, 22, 160.
Albrecht (see Albert).
Albrecht the Bear, margr. Branden-
burg; I., 459.
Albrecht V., d. Bavaria; II., 428.
Albrecht of Brandenburg, Archb.
Mainz; II., 189,296.
Albrecht of Brandenburg, the Burner;
II., 233.
Albrecht of Brandenburg, Teutonic,
grandmaster; II. ,206.
Alcantara, b. of ; II., 347.
INDEX.
Alcazar, b. of; II., 347.
Alcolea, b. of; III., 498.
Alcuin of York ; I., 103, 231.
Aldhelm, St. ; L, 103.
Aleander, Card. ; II., 195, 297.
Alessandria, truce of ; III., 275, 276.
Alexander the Great ; I , 4, 8.
Alexander Severus, R. E. ; I., 21, 30.
Alexander, St., P. and M. ; I., 26.
Alexander II , P.; I..364, 375, 376, 379,
388.
Alexander III., P., and Barbarossa;
I ,475-484; and Henry II.; I., 495, 497,
498, 501,541, 612; and Spain; 555, 556;
and slavery ; III., 95.
Alexander IV., P. ; 1 , 590, 599.
Alexander V., P. ; II., 35-37,
Alexander, VI., P.; II., 118, 130, 136,
141-143, 149, 182.
Alexander VIII., P.; II., 656.
Alexander, Co-Emperor (E.); I. ,428.
Alexander I., Czar; III., 278, 280, 288, 303,
319, 320, 327, 352, 358, 379.
Alexander II., Czar; III., 580, 582, 590,
591.
Alexander III., Czar; III., 582.
Alexander, k. Scots; I., 487.
Alexander of Battenberg; III., 592.
Alexander Farnese (A. of Parma) ; II ,
337, 338, 345, 372-379.
Alexander Leslie, e. Leven ; I [.,503, 510.
Alexander Heglus, hum.; II ,166.
Alexandria, massacre at; III., 594.
Alexleff, Russ. adm.
Alexis, Czar; III., 17.
Alexis, son of Peter the Great; III., 23.
Alexius I., Comnenus, E. (E ); 430,443,
446, 524.
Alexius II., Gr. E.; I., 524.
Alexius III., Angelus, Gr. E ; I , 524,
526.
Alexius IV., Gr. E. ; I., 524, 526.
Alexius V., Ducas, Gr. E. ; 1 , 526.
Alfonso, k. Leon and Castile; I., 554.
Alfonso (Sanchez), k. Aragon; I., 554.
Alfonso VIII., k. Castile; I., 557.
Alfonso X., the Wise, k. Castile ; I., 658;
k.- elect, R.,604.
Alfonso XI., k. Castile; II , 125.
Alfonso XII , k. Spain ; III., 585.
Alfonso XIII., k. Spain; III., 616.
Alfonso I., Henriquez, k. Portugal; I.,
555.
Alfonso III., k. Portugal ; II , 125.
Alfonso IV., k. Portugal; II., 125.
Alfonso V., k. Portugal ; II., 125.
Alfonso, k. Aragon and Naples; II., 53,
117.
Alfonso II. ; k. Naples; II., 136.
Algiers, conquest of ; III., 383, 417.
Algonqulns, Ind. confederation; III., 88.
Al Hakem, Fatimite caliph; I., 437.
All, caliph; I., 157, 170, 171, 173.
Alice Perrers; II., 73.
Alien Act, the (U. S.); III., 530.
Alix of Hesse, Czarina ; III., 582.
Al Kayem, caliph ; I. 434.
Allen, Card. William; II., 391.
Almagro, Pizzaro's companion; II., 411.
Al Mamoun, caliph ; 1 , 431.
Almanza, b. of ; II., 639.
Almohades in Spain; I. ,557.
Almonte, Mexican gen . , 572, 674.
Almoravides in Spain ; I., 554.
Al Motassem, caliph ; I., 431.
Alnwick, b. of; I., 505.
Alp Arslan, Seljuk Sultan; I. ,434.
Alphonso, brother of St. Louis ; I., 550.
Altmann, B., Passau; I. ,382.
Alt-Ranstadt, p. of, 1706; III., 30.
Alva, d of ; II., 229, 277, 347, 350, 359, 360-
367, 3S9, 390.
Alva, d. of (under Charles III.) ; III.,
172.
AmadeoL.k. Spain; III., 498,585.
Amalaric, k. Visigoths ; I., 75, 121.
Amalasuntha, q Ostrogoths; I., 128.
Amba Alaghi, b. of; III. ,584.
Amberg, b. of; III., 263.
Amboise, conspiracy of; II., 315; p. of ;
II., 319.
Ambrose, St. B. Milan ; I., 64.
America, discovery of by Northmen ; I.,
268; by Columbus; II , 129, 130.
American Independence, war of : tables ;
III., pp. 142-145.
Amherst, Americ. gen. ; III., 134.
Amiens, b. of; III., 5J2; p. of, 1303; I.,
623; p. of 1802; III., 280, 286.
Ammonias Sakkas, philos. ; I., 27.
Ampfing, b. of; II. ,12.
Amru, Saracen gen. ; I., 167, 169, 171.
Amurath I.,Ottom. sultan; II., 110.
Amnrath II., Ottom. sultan ; II., 113.
Anabaptists In MUnster; II., 204; in the
Netherlands, 356.
AnacharsisClootz; III., 255.
Anaclete II., antipope; I., 455, 460
Anagni, sacrilege of; I., 629.
Anastasius, R. E. (E . ) ; I., 113, 119, 123, 124.
INDEX.
Ancona.fall of; III., 469.
Anderson, major, U. S. ; III., 554.
Andrassy, ct. of ; III., 444, 488.
Andre", Engl. major ; III., 210.
Andrew, k. Hungary, Or. I., 559.
Andrew III., k. Hungary; II., 108.
Andrew, brother of Louis the Great, k.
Hungary; II., 108.
Andronicns, usurper (E.) ; I., 430.
Andronlcus, hum. ; II., 163.
Angles; I., 93, 95.
Anglicanism ; II., 281.
Anglican orders; II., 282.
Anglo-Dutch war, 1652-54; II., 538.
Anglo- Dutch war, 1665-67; II., 559-562,
in America; III., 101 ; 1672-74 ; II., 573,
574; in America; III., 102.
Anglo-French convention of 1889; III.,
601.
Anglo- Japanese alliance, 1902; III., 623.
Anglo-Saxon England, tables; I., pp.
76,77, 200-203; system; I., 291-301.
Angora, b. of; II., 112.
Angouleme, d. of ; III., 377.
Anhalt, pr. Christian of; II., 427, 430.
Anjou, House of, in Naples and Hun-
gary; II., 107.
Anna Ivanovna, Czarina; III., 37, 38.
Annabella Drummond, q. Scotland;
II., 85.
Anne of Austria, q. reg. France; II., 470,
484.
Anne of Cleves ; II., 263.
Anne, q. Engl. — princess; II., 553, 595,
598.601,616; q. Anne, 637, 642,643,645;
111,1,2.
Anne, q. Hungary; III., 221.
Anne, heiress of Brittany; II., 124.
Anne, heiress of Lionell ; II., 86.
Anno, St., Archb. Koeln; I., 341, 376,377.
Anselm, St., abbot of Bee.; I., 372;
Archb. Canterbury, 402-405, 407-409, 463.
Anselm, B. Lucca; I., 376.
Ansgar, St. Ap., Scandinavia; I., 261.
Anthimins, R. E. (W.) ; I., 87, 107.
Anthimius,min.of Theodosius II. ; I., 80.
Anthony, k. of Navarre; II., 314, 316, 318,
319.
Antietam Creek, b. of; III., 560.
Antioch.b. of; I., 447.
Antonelli, Card. ; III., 436, 467.
Antoninus, Plus, R. E. ; I., 21.
Antonio, Portuguese pretender; II., 347.
A. P. A. -ism; III., 552.
Apollonius of Tyana, phil. ; I. ; 27.
Apology to Augsburg Confession; II .
220.
Appomattox Courthouse, surrender at •
III., 565.
Apotheosis, Roman; I., 25.
Apraxim, Russ. gen.; III., 118.
Apulia and Calabria, fiefs of the Holy
See; I., 353.
Arab! Pasha; III., 594.
Arabs; I , 153-155.
Arago^III.,420.
Aranda ; Sp. min. ; III . , 161, 172.
Araucanians; II., 413.
Arbela, b, of; I., 4.
Arbogast, Franklshgen ; I., 65.
Arbues, St. Peter, Inquisitor, Ara*on •
II., 156.
Arcadius.R. E. (E.);I., 66,67.
Arcis, b. of; III., 333.
Arcole, b, of; III., 263.
Ardeshir (Artaxerxes), the Sassanld • I
29.
Arduin of Ivrea, k. Italy; I., 330,332.
Argall.gov. Virginia; III., 67.
Argyle, earl of; II. ,285.
Argyle, d of; II., 503, 511, 591; III ,2, 4.
Arianlsm (Arius) ; I., 39, 201.
Arlbert I.,k. Longobards; I., 195.
Arkansas, adm. of; III., 5X5.
Arlington (Cabal); II., 550, 570.
Aristotle; I., 9.
Armada, Span.; II., 397.
Armagnac.ct of; Armagnacs, II. ; 88, 90
Armellini; 111,432.
Armenian massacres; III., 593.
Arminlus (Herman) ; 1 , 53.
Arno, Archb. Salzburg; I. ,224.
Arnobius, Chr. apol ; I., 21.
Arnold of Brescia; I., 462, 471; — Bene-
dict; III., 194,195 210.
Arnulf, d: Bavaria; I. ,311, 315.
Arnulf of Carinthia, E. ; I., 248, 250, 263.
Arnulf, d. Flanders; I ,271.
Arnulf, St., B. Metz. ; 116, 184.
Arpad, k. Magyar*; I., 250; House of;
II. , 108.
Arran, Scotch reg.; II., 268.
Arras, Union of; II. ,375.
Arsouf, b. of; I., 514.
Artaxerxes (Ardeshir) The Sassanld; I ,
29.
Arteveld, Jacob van; II., 63, 65; Philip
van ; 88.
Artemius Anastasins, R. E. (E.); I,
164.
INDEX.
Arthur, son of Geoffrey of Brittany; I.
637.
Arthur, pr. of Wales; II., 132.
Artois, ct. of ; I., 625, 627.
Artols, ct. of; see Charles X.
Arnndel, Archb. ; II., 170.
Arundel.e. of ; II., 80, 81.
Arundel and Surry, e. of, Engl. M. ; II.,
170.
Ascalon, b. of; 1, 449.
Ashdown, b. of; 1 ,278.
Ashley, Cooper, b.; II., 550. (SeeShaftes-
bury.)
Aske, Robert; II., 259.
Aspern and Essllng, b. of ; III., 307.
Aspramonte, affair of ; III., 475.
Assandun, b. of ; I., 306.
Assassins, Moh. order; I., 435.
Asser, B.; I., 283.
Assiento contract ; II. , 645 ; III., 96.
Assignats; III., 250, 259.
Assyria; I., 4.
Atahnalpa, Inca; II., 410.
Athalaric, pr., Ostrogoths; I., 126.
Athanagild, k. Visigoths; I., 75.
Athanaric, k. Visigoths; I., 59, 62.
Athaulf, k. Visigoths; I., 73, 74.
Athenagoras, Chr. apol; I., 21.
Attains, B. usurper ; I., 73.
Attila, k. Huns; I., 79, 83.
Auerwald, gen. ; III., 441.
Aughrim, b. of; II., 610.
Augsburg, b. of; I., 251; confession of ;
II., 220; diet of; 220; Interim of; 230;
rel. p. Of 1555, 234, 426, 430.
Angustenburg, d. of; III., 480.
Augustine-, St., Ap. Engl. ; I., 96.
Augustine, St., B. Hippo; I., 85.
Augustus II., el. Saxony, K. Poland;
III., 25, 29, 33,34,36,41.
Augustus III., el. Saxony, K. Poland;
in., 30, 46, 57, 116, 117, 144.
Aurelian, B. E. ; 1 , 32, 65, 56.
Ausculta flli, bull of Boniface, VIII. ;
I., 625.
Ansterlita, b. of; III , 288.
Austria, monarchy of, founded ; II., 221 ;
war with Spain, 1717. III., 39; tables
of, p. 29; war with Turkey, 1714-18, 38;
table of , pp. 104-105 ; wars of succession,
43-62, 112-140; tables of, pp. 30-32; and
Napoleon ; see France ; in Congress of
Vienna, 351, 357; February Revolution
In, 439, 442-444; tables of, pp. 308-310;
modern Austria, III., 581 .
Authari, k. Longobards; I., 141.
Avars ; I., 135, 139, 140, 163, 224.
Avaric or East Mark ; I., 224.
Aveiros, Portng. nobles; III., 170.
Avignon, papal residence ; II., 1-22.
Avitus, R. E. (W.);I.,107.
Avranches, Henry II.'s absolution at;
I. ; 504.
Aymaras, Peruvian tr. ; II. ,409.
Aymard, a. Cluny; I., 260.
Aymor, Fr. gen. ; III., 398.
Aztecs; II., 407.
Babington, Anthony; II., 394, 395; con-
spiracy, 392, 393.
Babylon; I., 4.
Bacon, Francis 1. Verulam; II., 403, 493,
622.
Bacon, Sir Nicholas; II , 281.
Baden, margrave of; II., 441, 442.
Baden, p. of, 1714 ; II., 646.
Baden-Powell, Engl. col. ; III., 612.
Barwalde,tr. of; II., 457.
Bailly, mayor, Paris ; III , 219, 220, 253.
Bajazet, I., Ottom. Sultan ; II , 111, 112.
Balaclava, b. of ; III., 452.
Balbinus, R. E. ; I., 31.
Balboa, Vasco Nunez de, Sp. disc.; II.,
405.
Balfour, James of; II., 384.
Ball, John, Wyclifite; II., 77.
Baldwin I. (of Flanders); I., 523; L. E.
526,528.
Baldwin II., L. E. ; I., 567.
Baldwin of Edessa, K. Jerusalem ; I.,
44i,447,449,451.
Baldwin II. ,K. Jerusalem; I. ,451.
Baldwin, ct. Flanders; I., 331, 358, 361.
Baldwin, the younger, Cr. ; I., 445.
Balliol, John, Scotch claimant; I. ,613.
Balliol, John, K. Scots. ; I., 615, 617.
Balthasar Gerard ; II., 377.
Ban, the; I., 213.
Baner, Swed. gen. ; II., 465, 473.
Banks, U. gen. ; III. ; 559, 560.
Bannockburn, b of; II., 56.
Bar, Confederation of; III., 147, 150.
Baratieri, It. gen. ; III. ,.584.
Baraza, F. S. J. ; II., 421.
Barberini, Card ; II., 651, 653.
Barcelona, naval«code of; I., 587; p. of,
1529; II.. 21 9.
Barclay, Eug. commander; III., 344.
Bardas; L, 421. 423.
Barere; III., 256, 260.
INDEX.
Barlow, Angl. B. ; II., 282.
Barnabites; II., 298.
Barnave;III,221,253.
Barnet, b. of; II., 103.
Baronius, Card.; II., 649.
Barras; III., 260, 262, 266, 273.
Barricades, day of the ; II., 334.
Bar-sur-Aube, b. of ; III., 333.
Barthelemy ; III., 26, 267.
Barton, Elizabeth ; II., 257.
Basel, Council of; II., 48, 50, 52; p. of,
III., 261.
Basil, the Macedonian, E. (E.); I., 423,
426, 428.
Basil II., E. (E.); I., 429.
Basilius, Greek min.; I., 429.
Basques ; I., 76, 222.
Bassano, b. of ; III., 263.
Bastille, storming of the; III., 220.
Batavian Republic; III., 261.
Bathyany, Hung. ct. ; III., 444, 442.
Baton Khan, Mongol E. ; I., 571.
Bauge, b. of; II., 92. •
Bautzen, b. of; III., 326.
Bavaria, dukedom of; I., 251.
Bavarians; I., 186,188. •
Bavarian succession, war of; III., 153.
Bayard, Fr. knight; II., 148, 215.
Baylon, b. of; III., 301.
Bazaine, Fr. m.; III., 500, 502-504, 511,
574, 676.
Beatrice, Empress; I., 472.
Beatrice, daughter Phil, of Suabia; I.,
634.
Beatrice, duchess Tuscany : I . , 375.
Beachy Head, nav. b. of; II., 613.
Beaton, Card. David; II., 267, 268.
Bede, Venerable ; I., 103.
Bedinl, Mgr. Gaetano; III., 550.
Bedloe, James; II., 581.
Bedloe, William ; II., 581.
Behmis Heights, battles of; III., 204.
Beaufort, Card. ; II., 98.
Beauregard, Cf. gen. ; III., 554, 557.
Belfort,b. of; III., 512.
Belgium, U. 8. of; III., 169; Revolu-
tion, 1830,387,389.
Belgrade, relief of (1456) ; II , 116.
Belisarlus, R. gea.; I., 124-126, 129-132,
135.
Bellarmin, Card.; II., 649, 652.
Belleisle, ct. of, Fr. m. ; III., 48, 53.
Belleme, Robert of; I., 406.
Belmont,b. of; III. ,610.
Bern, Pol. *gen. ; III., 444.
Benburb, b. of; II., 530.
Benedeck, Austr. m. ; III., 459, 482, 484.
Benedetti, Fr. ambass. ; IH.,499. •
Benedict IV., P.; I , 256.
Benedict V., P. ; L, 322.
Benedict VIII., P. ; L, 332.
Benedict IX., P.; I., 339.
Benedict X., antip. ; I., 376
Benedict XII., P.-; II., 15, 18.
Benedict XIII. (Peter de Luna); II.,
33-35, 42, 43.
Benedict XIV., P.; III., 158.
Benedict Biscop, St.; I., 103.
Benedict of Xursia, St. ; I., 206.
Benevento, b. of; I., 600.
Beningsen, Russ. gen. ; III., 295.
Berengar I., E. ; I., 249, 250. 256, 257.
BerengarlL.E ; I., 320, 322.
Beresford, 1 ; III., 372.
Berezina, b. of ; IIL, 323.
Bergera, tr. of 1839; III , 395.
Bergerac, p. of (1577) ; II., 332.
Berkeley, 1.; II., 608; III., 78.
Berlin, conference of. 1884; III., 601;
congress of, 592 ; decrees of, 294, 342.
Bernadotte, Fr. m., etc.,; III., 272, 289,
325, 327, 329, 330.
Bernard of Ascania, d. of Saxony; I.,
484.
Bernard of Clairvaux, St.; I., 452 (453),
454, 456, 457, 460, 462, 464, 467, 490.
Bernard the Dane; I., 272.
Bernard of Galen, B. MUnster, 560, 561.
Bernard, k. of Italy; I., 235.
Bernard of Weimar; il., 460, 464-468,471.
Berno, a. Cluny; I., 260.
Berry, d. of ; III., 381 ; duchess of, 416.
Berryer;III.,405.
Bertha, q. Kent;!., 96.
Bertha of Susa, Empress; I., 378.
Berthari, k. Longob. ; I., 195.
Berthier, Fr. gen. ; III., 220.
Bertrada, q. Franks; I., 218.
Bertrand du Guesclin; II., 71, 72.
Berwick, tr. of; II., 286.
Besangon, D. of; I., 472, 473.
Bethlen Gabor; II., 446.
Bethune, Robert of, ct. Flanders ; I., 627.
Beust, Ferd.,ct. of; III., 488, 489, 501.
Beza, Theodore ; II., 213, 316, 318, 356.
Beziers, Roger of, Albig. ; I . , 549.
Bill of Rights; II. ,499.
Billaud-Varennes; III., 238, 255, 267, 260.
Birney.G. J.;IIL, 545.
Biron, Russ. min. ; III., 37, 38.
INDEX.
Bismarck, pr. ; HI., 477-480, 496, 497,499,
513, 514, 584, 592, 629, 630, 634.
Bixio, Garlb. gen. ; III. , 507, 508.
Black Death; II., 19, 66.
Blake, Engl. adm. ; II., 538.
Blanc, Louis, soc. ; II J., 416, 420, 421.
Blanche of Castile, q. France; I., 550,
575.
Blanche of Lancaster; II., 73.
Blanco, Sp. gen. ; III., 586.
Blanco Nufiez Vela, viceroy Peru; II.,
411.
Bleda,k. Huns; I., 79.
Blenheim, b. of; II., 638.
Blockade runners, Amer. c..w. ;III., 566.
Blois, States gen., 1576; II., 332, 335.
Blore Heath, b. of; II., 100.
Blount, Chas. ; III., 159.
Blum, Robert, III., 443.
Blucher, Pr. fieldm.; III., 293, 326-329,
332, 333, 336-338.
Boabdil, k. Granada; II., 128.
Boccaccio; II., 163.
Bo'hm, Hans, an. ; II., 168.
Boer republic; III., 601; first war, 603;
second war, 604-613.
Boethius, Bl. phll. ; I., 120, 121.
Bohemia; I., 331; annexed to the Em-
pire, 388; royal charter of, 432, 434, 440.
Bohemia- Luxemburg, House of; II. ,29.
Bohemian Brothers ; II., 49.
Bohemians, Slav. tr. ; I., 247.
Bohemund, pr. of Antioch; I., 345, 347,
349, 356.
Boileau; II., 658.
Boilieu, p. of (1576) ; II., 331.
Boleslaw I'., d. Bohemia; I., 317.
Boleslaw; II., d. Bohemia; I., 317, 324.
Boleslaw Chabry, d. Poland ; I., 328, 329,
331.
Boleyn.Anne; II., 246, 255, 256, 263.
Bolingbroke (St. John) ; II., 642, 644, 659 ;
III., 2, 4, 96, 161.
Bolivar, the Liberator ; III. , 376.
Bonaparte, Table of family; III., 233j
Jerome, 291; Lucien, pr. Canino; III.,
429.
Boniface of Montferat., Or.; I., 523,525;
k. Salonica;I.,527.
Boniface VIII., P.; I., 620-625, 628-630.
Boniface IX., P. ; II., 25, 32, 111 .
Boniface, Horn. gov. ; I., 84, 85.
Boniface of Savoy Bl. ; I., 687.
Boniface-Winfrith, St.; I., 189-192 (193),
200.
Bonjean, Prea. ; III., 516.
Bonner, B. London; II., 266.
Bonus, patrician, Ct.; I., 162.
Book of Common Prayer (1, 2, and 3d) ;
II., 266, 503.
Booth, John Wilkes; III., 565.
Borgia, Crasar; II., 141-143.
Borodino, b. of ; III., 321.
Boscoli, Peter Paul, hum. ; II., 164.
Boso, ct., k. Lower Burgundy, I., 248.
Bossuet, B. Meanx ; II., 655, 658.
Boston Tea Party; III., 189; Boston
massacre; III., 189; Boston, fall of;
III., 198; Boston Port Act; III., 190.
Bosworth, b. of; II., 106.
Botha, Louis, Boer gen. ; III. , 609, 612, 613.
Bothwell, e. of; III., 383-386. .
Bourne", Fr. gen. ; III., 232.
Boulanger, Fr. gen. ; III., 583.
Bonrbaki, Fr. gen. ; III., 612, 513.
Bourbon, House of; III., 185, 311.
Bourchier, Card. ; II., 101, 105, 106.
Bourdaloue, S. J. ; II., 658.
Bourges, Pragmatic Sanction of; II., 52,
151.
Bourgtheroulde, b. of ; I., 410.
Bovines.b. of; I., 535, 542.
Bower, Sir Graham ; III., 606.
Boxers, the, in China ; III., 617.
Boyne, b. on the; II., 609.
Braddock, Eng. gen. ; III., 109, 111.
Bradford, gov. ; III., 93.
Braganza, House of; II., 649; III., 301.
Bragg, Cf. gen. ; III., 558, 562.
Brandenburg, George Wm., d. of; II.,
457, 460, 466.
Brandt, Sebastian, hum. ; II , 166.
Brandy wine, b. of; III., 203.
Braniski, Pol. gen. ; III., 144.
Brazil; II., 415; Empire, III., 372; Re-
public, 394.
Brebeuf, S. J.; III., 65.
Brecklnridge, John C. ; III. ,545.
Breda, compromise of ; II., 336 ; declara-
tion of (Charles II.), 537, 545; p. of,
1667; II., 562, 564; III., 102.
Brehons;!., 147.
Breitenfeld, b. of, 1631; II., 460; second
b. of, 476.
Brequimaut, Calv., leader; II., 327.
Bresci, Gaetano, an. ; III., 616.
Breslau and Berlin, p. of ; III,, 52.
Bressani, S. J.; III., 65.
Bretigny, p. of; II., 70, 72, 89.
Bretislaw, d. Bohemia; I., 338.
INDEX.
Breton club; III.. 231.
Brian Boru, k. Munster; I. ,499.
Bridge of Dessau, b. of; II , 446.
" Brigandage " in Naples ; III., 472.
Briganti, Neap. gen. ; III., 466.
Bright, John ; III., 403, 579.
Brill, taking of; II., 363.
Brissot;III.,230,245,253.
Bristol,!.; II., 548.
Britain; A-S. Invasions of; I., 91-105.
Brockley, Engl. M. ; II., 257.
Brooke,!.; III., 75.
Brown, John; III., 544.
Browne, Austr. m.; III., 117, 118.
Bruce, Edward, k. Ireland; II., 56.
Bruce, Robert, Scotch claimant; I., 613.
Bruce, Robert I., k. Scots; I., 619; II.,
66, 57, 59.
Bruges, Matins of; I., 627.
Brunanbnrh, b. of; I., 286.
Brunhilda, q. Austrasia; 1 , 116, 151.
Bruno, St., Archb. Koeln; I., 316.
Bruno, St., f . of Carthusians ; I . , 463.
Brussels, Union of (1577) ; II., 369, 370, 375.
Brutus; I., 14.
Bucer; II., 266.
Buchanan, Pr., U. S. ; III , 543, 553.
Buckingham (Cabal) ; 1L, 550.
Buckingham, Villiers, d. of; II., 492-498;
III., 100.
Budaeus, Wm., hum. ; II., 168.
Buell,U.gen.;III.,558.
Btilow, Pr. gen. ; III., 328, 330.
Buena Vista, b. of ; III , 536.
Buffalo U. S., destruction of; III., 344.
Bugeaud, Fr. march. ; III., 417, 420, 424.
Bulgarians; I., 118, 123, 135, 163, 244, 420'
Bulgarian horrors, the; III., 590.
Bull Run, b. of; III., 557, 560.
Buller, Engl. gen. ; III., 609.
Bundschuhs; II., 186.
Bunker Hill, b. of; III. 194.
Bunsen, Pr. m. ; III , 408.
Buoquoi, Sp. gen. ; II., 435, 436, 439.
Burchard, B. Wiirzburg; I., 192 (193).
Burford.b. of; I., 105.
Burgau, b. of; II., 13.
Burgos, laws of, for the Sp. colonies;
II , 422.
Burgoyne, Engl. com.; III. ,204; surren-
der of ; III., 204, 205.
Burgnndlans, Kgd. of; I., 69-71, 81, 184.
Burgundy, Kgd. of Upper; I., 249; Kgd.
of Lower; I., 249; united with Ger-
many; I., 335; dukedom; II., 121-123.
Bargundian party In France ; II., 88.
Burkhard, d. Suabia ; I. , 311.
Burke, Edmund ; III., 184, 186, 360.
Burke, M., Irish under seer. ; III., 579.
Burkersdorf, b. of; III., 138.
Burnside, U. gen., III. ,560.
Burses; II., 160.
Bush gueux ; II., 363.
Bute, e. of; HI., 136.
Butler, imp. officer; II., 466; Benjamin,
U. gen.; in., 558.
Buxton, Engl. abol. ; III., 398.
Byng, Engl. adm. ; III., 39, 112.
Byzantinism; I., 422.
Cabal; II., 550.
Cabot, Engl. discov. ; II., 134.
Cabot, Sebastian; II., 414; Cabots, the;
III., 99.
Cabral, Pedro Alvarez, Port. disc. ; II.,
125, 415.
Cabrera, Carlist gen. ; III., 395.
Oadaudal, George ; III., 284.
Cadorna, It. gen. ; III., 507.
Cadwallon, Brit. k. ; I., 99, 100.
Caedmon;!., 103.
Caerularius, Patr. Ct. ; I., 427.; Schism
of; I., 427.
Caesar; I., 14, 25, 52; and Livia, House
of; I., 16.
Gainers; III., 218.
Cajetanus, Card.; II., 190.
Cajetanus, St.; II., 298.
Calais, taken ; II , 66 ; loss of to England ;
II., 277.
Calcutta, Black Hole of; III., 130.
Calhoun, John 0. ; III., 343, 531, 533.
California, adm. of; III., 541.
Caligula, R. E.; I., 17, 25.
Caliphate, Patriarchal ; I., 165-171; Ab-
bassid, 180; Omiad, 172-181; of Cor-
dova, 181.
CalixtlL, P. ; I., 396-399, 410, 463.
Calixtlll., P; II., 95, 115, 117, 118, 169-
Calixt III., antip. ; I., 479, 481.
dalixtines, sect. ; II., 47.
Calmar, Union of (1397) ; II., 209.
Calvert, Cecil, 1. Baltimore; III., 68;
George, 1. Baltimore; III., 68; John
Leonard, III., 68.
Calvin, John; II., 211, 283,315.
Calvinism; II., 211-214.
Camaram, Indian chief (Brazil) ; II., 416.
Cambaceres; III., 273.
Cambray, Ladies' p. of (1529); II., 219.
INDEX.
Cambray, League of ; II , 143.
Uamden, b. of ; III., 209.
Campeggio, Card ; II , 249, 251.
Campian, Bl. S. J., Engl. M. : II., 391.
Campo Formic, p. of 1797; III. ,268.
Campos, Sp. m.; III., 585,586.
Canada, effects of conquest of; III.,
183; rebellion of 1837; III., 400; Union
of; III. ,401.
Canares, Greek leader; III., 379.
Candahar, disaster of ; UI., 595.
Candia (Crete), fall of ; II., 648.
Canonicus, Ind. chief; III., 94.
Canossa, meeting at; I., 383; treaty of;
383, 384.
Canovas del Castillo, Span. m. ; III., 585.
Canrobert, Fr. m. ; III., 452, 458.
Canute the Great, see Qnut the Gr.
Canute IV., k. Denmark; I., 551.
Cape delle Colonne, b. of ; I., 325.
Cape La Hogue, nav. b. of; II., 613.
Capet, Hugh, k. France; I., 272, 343.
Capetian House, early; I., 342.
Capitularies of Charles the Gr. ; I., 232.
Cappel,b. of; II., 208.
Caracalla, R. E. ; I., 29, 30
Uaraffa, Card.; II., 297.
Carberry Hill, engagement of ; II., 386.
Carbonari, the; in., 371, 373, 374, 382,
385.
Carew, Engl. gen. in Ireland; II., 521.
Carlos, Don. k. of Naples and Sicily;
m., 42.
Carlos, Don, son of Philip II. ; II., 343; s.
of Charles IV., k. Spain; III ,300,395.
Carlotte, Empress, Mexico; III., 574,
576, 577.
Carlowitz, p. of 1699; II., 630; III., 38.
Carlstadt, Dr. ; II., 192, 196.
Carnot, min. war; III., 246, 247, 262,266,
267,274; Sadi, Pr. France; III., 583.
Carolina, q. Naples; III., 272.
Carolinas; III., 69; government of, 83;
slavery, 97.
Caroline, q. Engl.; III., 8. 15.
Carolingian Empire, table of divisions;
I., p. 171.
Carolingians, elder line; I., 183; in Ger-
many, Tables of ; I., p. 225 ; the last, 250-
251; House of, in France; I., 252; the
last, 252-255 ; in Italy 256-259.
Carr, Robert, favor, of James I. ; II., 492.
Carrier; III., 249,258.
Carteret, 1. Granville; III., 51,54, 78.
Carthage, ancient; I., 4.
Cams, R. E. ; I., 32.
Carvajal,Card.;II.,116.
Casimir, k. Bohemia; II., 49.
CasimlrlV., k. Poland; II., 109.
Casimir, last Piast in Poland ; II., 108,
109.
Casimir, d. Poland; I., 338.
Casimir, margrave Brandenburg; II.,
206.
Casimir, Perier, Pres. France; III ,385,
583.
Cassiodorus, min. of Theod. the Great;
1., 120, 122.
Cassius; I., 14.
Castelfidardo, b. of; III., 468.
Castelar, Sefior, Sp. diet. ; III., 535.
Castigllone, b. of; III., 263.
Castile and Aragon, union of; II., 127.
Castlereagh, lord lieut.Irel.; III., 363.
Catalafimi, b. of; III., 465.
Catalaunian Fields, b. of; I., 81.
Cateau Cambresis, p. of ; II., 280.
Catesby; II., 489,490.
Catharine I., Czarina; III., 24, 37.
Catharine II .Czarina; III., 137,213,272,
595; and Poland; III., 144, 145, 151, 153,
155, 156, 163, 173.
Catharine of Aragon; I., 132; II., 248-
250, 254, 255.
Catharine of Bora; II., 202.
Catharine of Braganza. ; III., 129.
Catharine of France, q. Engl.; II., 89,
91.
Catharine Howard; II., 263.
Catharine de' M<§dici; II., 313, 316-317,
320, 322-327. 332,333, 335.
Catharine Parr; II., 263.
Catharine of Siena, St.; II., 22, 26.
Catharine of Sweden. St ; II., 26.
Cathelineau, Vendean leader; III., 249.
Catholic Association in Irel. ; III., 366.
Catholic Emancipation in Great Britain ;
III ,359-370.
Catholic Revival ; II., 296-307.
Catinat, Fr. gen. ; II., 612.
Cauchon, B. ; II., 95.
Cavalier Parliament ; II., 547.
" Cavaliers;" II., 508.
Cavaignac, Fr. gen. ; III., 422, 423.
Cavendish, 1. Frederick; III., 579.
Cavour, ct. Camillo de; III., 450, 453,
455-457, 460-462, 464-467, 473.
Caxton; II., 170.
Cazales; III., 221, 228.
Ceawlin, k. Wessex; I., 94.
10
INDEX.
Cecil (Wm.) 1. Burleigh; II., 281, 388,
390, 392.
Cecil (Rob.) e. Salisbury ; II , 488-490, 492.
Cecil Rhodes; III., 604-607, 609.
Cedar Creek, b. of; III., 560, 564.
Celestine I., St., P.; I., 148.
Celestine III , P., I., 516, 551, 620.
Celestine IV., P., I., 566.
Celestine V., St., P.; I., 620.
Celsus, philos. ; I., 27.
Central America, republics of; III., 376.
Cesarini, Card. ; II., 113.
Cerdic, k. Wessex; I., 94; later house
of; I., 275.
Cesena, Michael; II., 14.
Chabot; III., 235.
Chaffee, gen. U. S. ; III., 620.
Chaireddin Barbarossa; II., 224, 344.
Chalais, ct. of; II., 469.
Chalcedon, b. of; I., 37; council of, 201.
Chalcocondylas, hum. ; II., 163.
Chamberlain, Mr. Jos. ; III., 579, 607, 608.
Champlain,! Fr. gov. Canada; III., 65,
92.
Champlain, b. on lake ; III. , 344.
Chancellorsville, b. of; III., 561.
Changarnier, Fr. gen. ; III., 417, 424.
Charette, Vend. gen. ; III., 249, 261.
Charleroi, b. of; II., 573; 1815, III , 33*
Charitas, Plrkheimer, abbess, hum.; II.,
166.
Charles I., the Great, E. ; I., 103, 192
(193), 200. 218-235; wars of, 219-229;
statesmanship, 230-235 ; canonized , 477 ;
family of, 218; house of, 236; table
of reign, pp. 168-171.
Charles II., the Bald, E.; I., 238, 239, 243,
245,270; House of, 245.
Charles III., the Fat, E. ; I., 248.
Charles IV., E. ; II., 17, 19, 65.
Charles V., E. (I. of Spain); II., 194,
195, 207; wars of, 215-219, 220-23.S;
crowned, 219; abdication and death,
235-250,299, 300, 348, 352; colonies, 410,
411,414,417,422.
Charles V., and Philip II., table of wars;
II., pp. 236-237.
Charles VI., E., archd.; II.,1 632, 633; k.
Spain, 635, 639, 641; E., 643, 646; III;
38-41,43.
Charles VII., E. (Charles Albert, d.
Bavaria); III., 45,46, 48,49,53, 56, 57.
Charles I., k. England; II., 494-516,524;
and Ireland, 526-532, 546 ; and colonies ;
III., 100.
Charles II., k. England ; II., 511, 532, 537,
543, ,544; home policy, 545-553, 557;
foreign policy, 559-564, 569, 570,572, 574,
577,579, 581-588; and colonies; III., 69,
80, 84, 102, 129.
Charles V., k. France; II., 24, 68, 69, 70,
71, 72, 74.
Charles VI., k. France; II., 88, 91, 92.
Charles VII., k. France; II., 52, 90, 91,
93-96,115,119,120.
Charles VIII., k. France ; II., 124, 135, 136,
141
Charles IX., k. France; II., 316, 320, 322,
324-326, 329, 331, 365.
Charles X.,k. France; III., 380, 382-386,
394,417.
Charles!., k. Hungary; II., 108.
Charles Martel, k. Hungary; II., 108.
Charles, k. Burgundy, Lower; I , 242.
Charles of Anjou, k. Naples; I., 580, 600,
601, 603.
Charles III. (of Durazzo), k. Naples; II.,
25.
Charles the Bad, k. Navarre; II., 62,
69.
Charles, k. Neustria; I., 224.
Charles I., k. Portugal; III., 394.
Charles Albert, k. Sardinia; III., 428,
432, 433.
Charles Felix, k. Sardinia; III., 374.
Charles I., k. Spain; II., 150 (see
Charles V.,E.).
Charles II., k. Spain ; II., 565, 614, 631, 633,
634.
Charles III.,k. Spain; III., 135, 172, 173.
Charles IV., k. Spain; III., 299, 300.
Charles IX., k. Sweden; II., 453.
Charles X., Gustavus, k. Sweden; II.,
556.
Charles XI., k. Sweden; III., 25.
Charles XII., k. Sweden; III., 25-35.
Charles XIII., k. Sweden; III.,- 325.
Charles the Simple, k. West-Franks;
I., 248,252,270, 311.
Charles, Archd. Austria; III., 263, 265,
272, 287, 305, 307, 311.
Charles, pr. Bavaria; III., 482.
Charles the Bold, d. Burgundy; II., 102*
104, 121, 122.
Charles of Bourbon; II., 216, 218.
Charles, Card. Bourbon; II., 333, 337.
Charles, Card. Lorraine; II., 309, 313,
316.
Charles Edward, the young pretender;
II., 595; III., CO.
INDEX.
11
Charles, el. Palatine; II., 604.
Charles, Emmanuel, d. Savoy; IT , 435.
Charles Lewis, el. Palatine ; II., 478.
Charles, d. Lorraine (Lower) ; I , 255,
324, 343.
Charles V., d. Lorraine; II., 576, 607,
621-625.
Charles, pr. Lorraine; III., 52, 55, 59.
Charles Martel, mayor d. ; I., 186, 187,
191, 197.
Charles, d. Mayenne; II., 335, 338, 378.
Charlotte Corday; III., 246.
Charter, the great ; I., 543 544.
Chartist Movement; III., 402.
Chartoryski, Pol. pr. ; III., 390.
Chase, Salomon ; III , 539.
Chateaubriand ; III , 405.
Chateaubriand, edict of (1551) ; II., 309.
Chatham, b. of; II. ,562.
Chatillon, edict ol; II., 314 (see Co-
Hgny).
Chattanooga, b. of; III , 562.
Chaumette ; III., 238, 246, 255.
Chaucer; II., 165.
Chazares; I., 164, 244.
Cherokees, Ind. conf. ; III., 88.
Chester, b. of; I., 97.
Chikasas, Ind. conf. ; III., 88.
Chickamauga, b. of; III., 562.
Childerich; III., k. Franks; I., 192 (193);
Chili; II., 412,
Chilperich, K. Franks; I., 122.
Chl»a; I., 570, 573; modern; III., 597-;
Boxer rising, 617-623.
Ching, Chin. pr. ; III., 617, 622.
Chios, massacre of; III., 379.
Chippewas, Ind. tr. ; III., 65.
Chivalry; I. ,585.
Chlotaire I., k. Franks; I., 115.
Chlotaire II., k. Franks; I., 116, 184.
Chlotilda, St., q. Franks; I., 112.
Choctaws.Ind. Tr ; III., 88.
Choiseul, Fr. min. ; III., 135, 161.
Chollet.b. of; III., 247.
Chosroes I., k. Persia; I., 124, 129, 139.
ChosroesIL, k. Persia: I , 139, 161, 162,
436.
Chouans, the ; III., 249, 261, 274, 284.
(Jhowaresmians; I., 572.
Christian, Archb. Mainz; I., 478.
Christian of Halberstadt (Brunswick);
II. ,441, 442, 446.
Christian II., k. Denmark; II., 209,
210.
Christian III., k. Denmark; II., 210.
Christian IV., k. Denmark; II., 443,444,
446, 447, 449.
Christian IX., k. Denmark; III., 478
Christina of Naples, reg. Spain; III.,
395, 396.
Christina, w. Philip of Hesse; II., 227.
Christina, q. Sweden; II., 465, 556; III.,
79.
Christines, the ; III , 395, 396.
Chun, Chin, pr.; III., 622.
Church, divine constitution of; I., 12;
church and state (w.) ; I., 214-216 (E ),
217; II., 647-659; III., 629 636.
Church, capt., Ind. fighter; III., 94.
Cialdini, Ital. gen. ; III., 467, 469.
Clceruacchio ; III ,426, 429, 436.
Cid,thel;554.
Cimbri and Teutones; I. ,51.
Cinque Mars, Fr. nobleman ; II., 469.
Cintra, convention of; III., 302.
Cisalpine, Republic; III., 265,272.
Cisleithania; III., 488.
Civitella,b. of; I., 353.
Clam Gallas, Austr. gen.; III., 458.
Clara, St.; I., 590.
Clara Eugenia Isabella (Netherlands) .
II., 378.
Clare Election, the; III , 367.
Clarence, Thomas, d. of ; II. , 92.
Clarendon, great council of (1164); I.
495; articles of, 494, 496.
Clarendon, e. of (Hyde); II., 548, 549,
557, 563; and colonies; III , 102; the
younger, e. ; II., 589, 597, 608 ; III., 69.
Clarkson, Engl. abol. ; III., 398.
Claudius, R. E.; I., 17, 19,20,25.
Claudius II ; R. E.; I., 32, 55.
Clavius, S. J. Mathem; II., 305.
Clay, Henry; III., 343, 526, 531-533, 541.
Clement I., St., P. M.;L, 26.
Clement II , P.; I., 339.
Clement III., P. ; I., 510, 516.
Clement III. (Wlbert), antip.; I., 386^
387.
Clement IV., P. ; I., 600, 601.
Clement V., P. ; II., 1-6, 9, 11, 55.
Clement VI., P ; II., 17, 18, 20.
Clement VII , P. ; II., 197, 217, 219, 223,
249, 251, 254, 256, 297, 299.
Clement VII. (Peter de Luna), antip.;
II., 24, 25, 33.
Clement VIII., P.; II., 204, 338, 648.
Clement IX., P.; II., 648, 649.
Clement XI., P.; III., 157.
Clement XIIL.P. ; III., 147, 171, 173.
12
INDEX.
Clement XIV., P.; III., 173.
Clement of Alexandria, Chr. apol.; I.,
27.
Clement of Bavaria, Archb. Koeln ; II.,
604.
Clement Droste of Vischering, Archb.
Koeln; III., 408,409.
Clement, murderer of Henry III.; II.,
336.
Clericis laicos.Bull. of Bonif. VIII.; I.,
621; II., 1.
Clermont, council of; I., 443.
Clermont, pr., Fr. gen. ; III., 121.
Clifford, George, e. Cumberland; II.,
402.
Clifford, e. (Cabal) ; II., 550, 551.
Clinton, Sir Henry; III., 198, 200, 207,
210, 214.
Cllssow, b. of; III., 29.
Clive, Robert; III., 129.
Clontarf.b. of; I., 499.
Clopickl, Pol. dictator; III , 390.
Clovis, k. Pranks; I., 71, 111-114.
Clubs, revol. in France; III., 231.
Cluniac Reform ; I., 289, 326, 331, 345.
Cluny, abbey of ; 1 , 260.
Cnut, the Great; I., 305-309, 335.
Coalition of 1673; II., 573; ag. revol.
France, 1st war of, 234, 237, 240, 244,
247, 261, 263-265, 238; second war of;
III., 272, 274-280.
Cobden, Richard; III., 403.
Coburg, d. of, Austr. gen. ; III., 244, 261.
Code Napoleon ; III., 283.
Cognac, league of; II., 217.
Cola di Rienzi ; II ,20.
Colbert, Fr. min. ; II., 555, 570.
Cold Harbor, b. of; III., 564.
Colenso,b. of; III., 609.
Colet, Dean; II., 165.
Coligny. Gaspard, of Chatillon, II., 314,
316, 317, 319, 320, 322-325, 327, 356, 363,
365; III., 64
Colleges; II., 160.
Collins, Anthony; III., 159.
Collot d'Herbois; III., 238, 241, 246, 255,
257, 260.
Colman, Irish St.; I., 152.
Colmar, b. of ; II , 575.
Colonies in N. Amer.; III., 63-65; Engl.
in N. Amer.; III., 66-98; external his-
tory of; 99-111; war of Independence
of, 183-205; causes, 183-193; tables of,
pp. 58-60.
Oolonnas, the, R. family;!., 628; II., 10.
Columba, Columbklll, St. ; I., 150.
Columban, Irish St.; I., 151.
Columbus; II., 129, 170.
Combes, M. Fr. min. ; III., 635.
Comgall, St., a. Bangor; I., 150.
Committee of public safety; III., 245,
246,236; of general security; III., 246.
Commodus, R. E. ; I., 21, 24.
Commune, Fr. of 1871 ; III., 515.
Communes in France; I. 460.
Compton, B., London; II , 593, 597.
Compromises of 1850 (slavery; ; III., 541.
Concord, b. of; III., 193.
Concordat of 1801; III., 281, 282; Austrian,
1855,449.
Conde", pr. Henry of; II., 325, 331.
Conde", pr. Louis of; II., 314-321.
Conde", pr., d. of Enghien (the great C.) ;
II., 472, 484, 485, 555, 567, 568, 571, 675.
Conde, pr. (Fr. Revol.); III., 243.
Condillac; III., 162.
Condorcet; III., 253.
Confederacy, N. Amer. ; III., 553 etc.;
reconstruction, 569-571.
Confederation, North German; III.
487.
Confederation, private, in Poland; III.,
42.
Conflans, tr. of; II., 120.
Congress, first colonial; III., 103.
Connecticut, III., 75; government of;
III., 83.
Conrad I., k. R. ; I., 251, 311.
Conrad II., E. ; I., 335-337, 350.
Conrad III., Hohenstauf en ; I., 454, 459,
464, 465, 468.
Conrad IV., k. R. ; I., 567, 571, 599.
Conrad, k. Italy; I., 384, 389.
Conrad, Archb. Mainz; I., 477,521.
Conrad, Archb. Salzburg; I., 477.
Conrad, St., B. Constance; I., 316.
Conrad Celtes, hum. ; II., 167.
Conrad of Monferat, Cr. ; I., 510, 513.
Conrad the Red, d. Lorraine; I., 315,318
Conrad, last Hohenstaufen; I., 599, 601.
Consalvi, Card.; III., 281, 315, 316, 335,
349, 373.
Constance, D. of (1043); I., 345; p. of
(1183), 483 ; Council of, II., 38 46.
Constance, w. of Manfred (Sicilies); I.,
602.
Constance, w. Henry VI. E. ; I., 485,
516, 522.
Constans, R. E.; I., 40.
Constant, Socialist; III., 416.
INDEX.
13
Constantine the Great, R. E. ; I., 21, 35-
40, 57, 193; family of, 35; donation of,
414.
Constantine II., R. E.; I., 40? 194.
Constantine IV., R. E. (E.) ; I., 164, 170.
Constantine V., R. E. (E.) ; I., 194, 198.
Constantine VII., Gr. E. ; I., 428, 429.
Constantine VIII., Gr. E. ; I., 429.
Constantine IX , co-E. (E.) ; I., 427, 429.
Constantine Dukas, Gr. E. ; I., 430.
Constantine Palaeologus, last gr. E.;
II., 114.
Constantine, R. usurper; I., 72.
Constantine II., k. Scots; I , 185,286.
Constantine, Czarewitch ; III., 390, 391 .
Constantinople, Latin Empire of; I.,
626-529; fall of; II., 114.
Constantius, R. E.; I., 40
Constantius Chlorus, R. E. ; I., 34, 36,
57.
Constitutions, Austrian; III., 488;
French, see French Revolution;
German, 487; Span, of 1812, 313, 372,
3«6; of theU. S.,217.
Contarlnl,Card.;II.,297.
Continental Congress of 1774; III., 191,
196, 205.
Continental System; III., 294.
Conventicle Act (1664) ; II., 549.
Convocation in Engl.; I., 372; of 1531;
II., 254; of 1555,275.
Coote, Engl. col.; III., 131; Sir Charles,
II., 225 ; the younger, 535.
Cope, Sir John ; III., 60.
Copenhagen, bombardment of ; III., 298,
p. of (1660); II., 556.
Copernican System ; II., 651, 653.
Copernicus, Astron. ; II., 651.
Cordeliers ; III., 231, 255.
Cordova, Hernandez, disc.; II., 406.
Corinth, b. of; III ,558.
Corn laws, repeal of ; III., 403.
Cornaro, Venetian gen.; II., 626.
Corneille; II., 658.
Cornelius, artist; III., 407.
Cornelius, R. centurion; I., 13.
Cornwall, parlam. gen. ; II., 510.
Cornwallis, Engl. gen.; III., 201, 210;
surrender of, 214; in Ireland, 363.
Corporation Act; II., 549; repealed; III.,
367.
Cortenuova, b. of; I., 565.
Cortez, Hernandez; II., 406.
Corunna, b. of; III., 304.
Coslmo de' Medici ; II., 135.
Cossacks; III., 32.
Cottam, 8. J., Engl. M. ; II., 391.
Council of Ordainers; II., 55.
Council of Troubles, Alva's; II., 360.
Courtenay, Edward ; II , 274.
Courtral, b. of; I., 627.
Couthon; III., 246, 255, 357.
Covenant, Scotch, first; II., 284; of 1637,
503.
Cowpens, b. of; III., 210.
Cralgmillar, bonds of; II., 383.
Cranmer, Thomas; II., 255, 256, 263, 265,
266, 272, 273, 276.
Crawford, Wm. H. ; III., 531.
Crecy, b. of; II., 65.
Creeks, Ind.tr.; III., 88.
Crefeld.b. of; III., 121.
Crequi, Fr. gen. ; II., 576, 577.
Crescentius (I.), House of Theodora; I.,
325.
Crescentius (II.); I., 327,328
Crespy, p. of (1544) ; II., 225.
Cridda, k.Mercia:!., 95.
Crimean War; III., 451-455; table of; p.
348.
Crlspi,Ital. min.; III., 584.
Cromer, Archb. Armagh; II., 518.
Cromwell, Oliver; II., 485, 509-512, 514-
516, 532; in Ireland, 533-535; Cromwel-
lian settlement, 536; and common-
wealth, 537-546; Protector, 540-544.
Cromwell, Richard; II., 544.
Cromwell, Thomas; II., 224, 253, 257, 260,
, 263, 518.
Cronje, Boer gen. ; III., 609, 611.
Crotus Rnbianus, hum. ; II., 167, 169.
Croya, sieges of ; II., 117.
Crusades, causes of; I., 436-443; first,
444-453; 2d, 464-467; 3d, 508-515; 4th,
521-526; children's, 530; 5th, 559-56-J;
6th, 576-577; 7th, 580; in Spain, 554-558;
effects of, 582-588; tables of, pp. 394-
399.
Cuba, modern; III. ,586.
Culloden, b. of; III. ,60.
Cumae, b. of; I., 133.
Cumberland, d. of; III., 58, 60, 118, 119.
Curtis, U. gen. ; III., 558.
Custine, Fr. gen.; III., 240, 244, 247.
Customs, royal, in Engl.; I., 494.
Custozza, b. of 1848; III., 428; 1866, 483.
Cuthberth Maine, Engl. M. ; II.. 391.
Cuvrat.Chakan, Avars; I., 163.
Cyaxares the Mede ; I., 4.
Cyprian, St., Chr. apol. ; I., 27.
14
INDEX.
Cyprus, conquest of, by Richard Lionh. ;
I., 512.
Cyril, St. ; Ap. Slavs. ; I., 247.
Cyrinus.gov. Syria; I., 10.
Cyrus; I. ,4, 8.
Czaelau Chotusitz, b. of.; III. ,52.
Czernechew, Russ. gen.; III., 138.
Czolgosz, anarch. ; III., 616.
D'Adret, baron; II., 327.
D'Affre, Archb. Paris; III., 405, 422.
Dagobert, k. Franks; I., 184.
Dakotahs, Ind. Conf. ; III ,88.
Dalberg, John of, B. Worms; II., 166.
D'Alembert, III., 162.
Dalgoruky, pr., Russ. mln. ; III., 37.
Dalradians; I., 150.
Damascus, massacre of; III., 590.
Damilaville; III., 162.
Damasus II., P.; I., 340.
Danaans; I., 144.
Danby, e. of ; II., 583, 584, 589, 597,598.
Daudelot, House of Chatillon; II., 314,
Dandolo, Doge Venice, Cr.; 1.^523, 525,
529.
Danelaw; I., 281.
Danes; I., 223.
Daniel, Prophet; I. ,8.
Daniel, S. J., Ind. miss.; III., 65.
Danish Mark; I., 313.
Dante; II., 11,163.
Danton; III., 230, 231, 238, 239, 241, 245,
246, 255.
Daras, b. of; I., 124.
Darboy, Archb. Paris; III , 515, 516.
Darcy,l.;II.,259.
Darius Codomanus; I., 4.
Darius Hystaspes ; I., 4.
Darius, the Mede ; 1 , 4.
Darnley, k. Scots; II., 380-384.
D'Aubeterre, Fr. ambass , III., 173.
D'Aumale, d. of, in Africa; III., 417.
Daun, Austr. m.; III., 118, 122, 124, 125,
138.
David, k. and Proph. ; I., 7.
David I., k. Scots, I., 487, 488.
David II., k. Scots ; II., 59, 64, 66-68, 85.
David, d. Rothsay; II., 85.
David, e. Huntingdon ; I . , 613.
David, chief, Wales; I., 610.
Davoust, Fr. m. ; III., 295, 325.
Deak, Francis, Hung. min. ; III., 488.
De Barri, John; II., 515.
De Bonald, Card ; III., 405.
De Bonald, phil. ; III., 405.
Decius, R. E.; I., 31, 55.
Declaration of Independence, Amer-
ican; III., 196, 199; Belgian, 1830; III.,
388; of Indulgence; II., 550, 594; of
Rights, 1688; II., 601 ; of Rights, Amer-
ican; III., 191.
Decretals, Pseudo-Isidorlan; I., 415.
De Fallonx; III., 405.
Defensor pads, principles of; II., 14.
Defoe; II., 659.
De Grasse, Fr. adm.; III., 214, 215.
De la Cerda, Don Jos. ; III., 105.
De la Mettrie; III., 162.
Delarey, Boer gen. ; III., 610, 612.
De la Salle, Cavalier; III , 65.
DeLauney; III., 220.
Delaware, III., 79.
Delia Torres; II., 10.
DeMaistre; III., 405.
DeMaupas; III., 424.
Dembinski, Pol. gen.; III., 444.
Demetrius of Dalmatia; I., 388.
Demetrius, Patr. Ct. ; II., 51.
Denain, b. of; II., 644.
Denmark, kgd. of; I., 264,330; Protest-
antism in ; II , 210.
Dennewitz, b. of; III., 328.
Deerham, b. of; I., 94.
Derby, 1., Engl. min. ; III., 457, 462.
Dermot MacMurrough, k. Leinster I.,
500.
Desaix, Fr. gen. ; III., 271, 275.
Desiderata, d. of Desiderins, k. Longo-
bards; I., 220.
Desiderius, last k. Longobards; I., 220.
Desmond, e. of; II., 520.
Desmonds, the; II., 517.
Desmoulins, Camille; III., 220, 230, 231,
255.
De Soils, Port, disc.; II. ,414.
Dessau, league of; II., 206; Leopold of
Pruss.,m. ; III., 59.
D'Estaing, Fr. adm., III., 211.
D'Estrdes, Fr. adm.; II., 573; Fr. min.;
III., 119.
Detmold.b. of; I., 223.
Dettingen, b. of; III., 54.
De Vaca, gov. Paraguay ; II., 414.
Deverenx, Captain; II., 466.
Devolution, right of; II., 566.
Devonshire, e. of; II., 597, 598.
Dewey, adm. U. S. ; III., 587.
Diaz, Bartholomew, Port, disc.; II., 125.
D'Iberville, Fr. disc.; III., 65.
Diderot; III., 162.
INDEX.
15
Diebitch, Russ. gen. ; III., 391.
Diego Almagro, Sp. disc ; II., 412.
Diego, B. Osma; I., 548.
Djeddah, massacre of; III., 590.
Dilemites of Persia; I ,433.
Diniz, k. Portugal; II., 125.
Diocletian, R. E.; I., 33, 34, 36.
Dionysius Lamblnus, hum. ; II., 168.
Dispensing power, the ; II., 593.
D'Israell, 1. Beaconsfleld; III., 403, 578,
579, 592.
Doeffingen, b. of; II., 30.
Doelllnger, Dr.; III., 495.
Dombroweka, w. of d. Meaco ; I . , 317.
Domitian, R E. ; I., 18, 19, 53:
Dominic, St. ; I., 548, 550, 590.
Domitilla, M.; I., 20.
Donald O'Neill, pr. Tyrone ; II., 56.
Donauwoerth, affair of ; II., 429.
Dongan, Thomas; III., 78.
Don John of Austria; II., 344, 345,370-
373.
Doomsday Book, the; I., 869.
Doria, Andrea; II., 218, 345.
Dorylaeum, b. of; I., 446.
Douglas, e. of ; II., 84; Sir William;
II., 64, 66.
Douglas, Lady, mother of Moray ; II., 386.
Douglas, Stephen A. ; III., 542, 544, 545.
Dover, tr. of (1670) ; II., 570.
Dowdal, Archb. Armagh; II., 519.
Downs, nav. b.ln the; II., 472
Dragonades; II., 657.
Drake, Francis, sea rover; II., 396, 397,
402, 416.
Dred Scott decision ; III., 544.
Dresden, b. of; III., 328; conference of
(1851), 447; p. of (1745), 59.
Dreux, b. of. ; II., 319.
Dreyfus case, the; III., 583.
Drogheda, Parl. of; II., 133; storming
of; n.,533.
Drogo.ct. Apulia; I., 351, 352, 354.
Drury.Sir; II., 395.
Drusns, R. gen. ; I., 19, 53.
Dryden ; H., 659.
Dubienka, b. of ; III., 155.
Dublin, kgd. of ; I., 266.
Ducrot, Fr. gen. ; III., 504, 513.
Dudley, John, d. Northumberland; II.,
271, 272.
Dugalls;I.,266.
Dugdale, conspirator; II., 581.
Dumont, Fr. gen. ; III., 502.
Dumourlez, Fr. gen. ; III., 240, 244.
Dunbar, b. of (1296); I., 617 (1650); II.,
537. .
Duncan, k. Scots ; I., 309, 360.
Dundalk, b. of; II. ,56.
Dunes, b. of; (1658) IL, 485, 538; (1666),
561.
Dungan Hill, b. of; II., 531.
Dunln, Archb. Gnesen; III., 408, 409.
Dunmore, 1. gov., Virg.; III., 194.
Dunstan, St., Archb. Canterbury; I,
287-290, 302.
Dupanloup, B. Orleans; III., 494.
Dupleix, Fr. gov. East lad. ; III., 129.
Dupont, Fr. gen. ; III., 301.
Du Prat, chancellor; II., 216.
Duquesne, Fr. adm. ; II., 576.
Durando, pap. gen. ; III., 428.
Durham,!.; III., 401.
Dutch Republic, the; II., 558.
Dnval, communist; III., 516.
Eadgar the Peace-winner, k. Engl. ; I.,
288. -
Eadgar, k. Scots; I., 401.
Eadgar the Aetheling, k. elec*. Engl.;
I., 366, 367, 371, 401.
Ealdred, Archb. York; I., 367.
Eadmund the Atheling; I , 307.
Eadmnnd Ironside; I., 306.
Eadmund the Magniflcns, k. Engl. ; I.,
287.
Eadmnnd the Ma-tyr, St., k. East
Anglia ; I., 277.
Eadred, k. Engl. ; I., 287.
Eadric the traitor; I., 206.
Eadward I., the Elder; I., 285.
Bad ward II., the Martyr; I., 290.
Eadward the Confessor; 1 , 357-362.
Eadward the Atheling; I., 307, 310, 361
Eadwig, k. Engl. ; I., 288.
Eadwine, e. Mercia; I., 363, 367.
Eadwlnc, k. Northumbria; I., 97,98, 99,
102.
Early, Cf. gen. ; III ,564.
Eastern Question, the; III , 588,601.
East Franks, kgd. of ; I., 249.
East India Co. ; III., 129.
East Mark (Austria) ; I., 318.
Eberhard of Wurtemberg; II., 30.
Ebroin, maj. d. Neustria; I., 185.
Eccl. Titles Bill ; III., 414.
Ecgberht, k. Engl. ; I., 273, 274.
Eck, Dr.; II., 192,297.
Eckmuhl, b. of; III., 306.
Eddas.the; I., 267.
16
INDEX.
Edmund Rich, St., Archb. Canterbury:,
I., 607.
Edgehill, b. of; II., 509.
Edgeworth, Father; III., 242.
Edinburgh, tr. of; II., 286, 379.
Edith, St., w. Otto !.;!., 316.
Edmund Beaufort, d. Somerset; II., 100,
103.
Edmund Hunchback, pr., e. Lancaster;
I., 600, 607, 608.
Edmund, e. of March. ; II., 84.
Edmund Mortimer, Sir; II , 84.
Edward!., k. Engl.; I., 580, 608-611,613,
614,621, 623; family table; II., 54.
Edward II., k. Engl.; I., 610; II., 55-58,
179.
Edward III., k. Engl.; II., 58-75, 179;
claim of French succession, 62; fam
lly table, 76.
Edward IV., k. Engl.; II., 100 104, 179.
Edward V., boy-k. Engl. ; II., 104, 105.
Edward VI., k. Engl., IL, 100, 103, 263,
265-272,283; and Ireland, 519.
Edward VII., k. Engl. ; III., 616.
Edward Balllol, rival k. Scotl. ; II., 61.
Edward, the Black Prince; II., 65. 67,
68, 71, 73.
Edward Seymour, d. Somerset; II., 265,
269, 270, 271.
Edward, d. York, regent; II., 83.
Egallt6, Philip, d. Orleans; III., 175,219,
222,241,253.
Egiva, k. Visigoths; I., 175.
Egmont, Ct. ; II. , 277, 354, 355, 359, 361.
Egypt, Napoleon In; 111,271; modern,
594.
Elnar, jarl, Orkneys; I., 265.
El Adel, Saladin's brother; I., 521.
Elagabalus, R. E ; I., 30.
Elandslaagte, b. of; III., 609.
Elba.nav. b. of; I., 566.
ElDuem.b. of; III., 614.
Eleanor of Aqultalne; I., 464, 467,490,
509.
Eleanor of Provence, q. Engl. ; 1 , 607.
Electors, imperial: I., 604; II. ,19.
Elizabeth, Czarina: III., 37, 114, 118, 135,
137, 143.
Elizabeth, q. Engl.; II., 266, 273, 274, 276;
and Anglicanism, 279-282; and Scot-
land, 284, 286 ; and European politics,
314,331, 373,427; and Mary Stuart, 379,
381, 387-395: and Philip II ,396-398; at
home, 401-404; and Ireland, 520; and
slavery; HI., 96; and colonies, 129.
Elizabeth of York, q. Engl. ; II., 106.
Elizabeth Farnese, q. Spain; III., 39, 46.
Elizabeth of Valois, q. Spain; II., 343.
Elizabeth, St., q. Portugal; II., 125.
Elizabeth, q. Bohemia; II., 9.
Elizabeth, princess, d. Charles I.; II.,
516.
Elizabeth, princess, d. James I.; II.
430, 437.
Elizabeth, Madame; III., 232, 252.
Eliot, the Commoner; II., 499, 502.
Ellandun, b. of; I., 274.
Elster, b. on the; I., 886.
Emadeddln Zenkl, Sultan, Mosul. ; I., 464.
Embargo Act; III., 342.
Emma, Lady, q. Engl. ; I., 305, 310.
Emmanuel the Great, k. Portugal, II.,
125.
Emmaus.b. of; I., 514.
Emmeran, St. ; I., 188.
Emmet, Robert; III , 364.
Empire, Greek; I., 420-430.
Encomiendas; II., 420.
Encyclopedists; III., 162.
Endicott, John; III., 73.
Engelbert, St., Archb. Koeln; I., 564.
Enghien, d. of; III., 284.
England, Anglo-Saxon; 91-105, 273305,
357-362; under Danish rule, 273-310;
under Norman Kings, 364-372, 400 410;
civil war under Stephen of Blols, 486
490; under H. of Anjou, 491-507, 537-
545, 606-619; IL, 76-83; House of Lan-
caster, 84-101 ; H. of York, 101-105; H.
of Tudor, 106, 131-134, 236-286, 388-404;
H. of Stuart, 487-516; commonwealth,
537-544; restoration, 545-553, 581-599'
(642); William, Mary, Anne, 601-603;
House of Hanover, III., 1-15; Catholic
revival, 410-415; modern Engl., 616.
England, Scotland, Ireland, from Wm.
the Conqueror to Edward I., tables; I.
pp. 435-439.
English and Scandinavian dynasties
table of; I., p. 197.
Enzio, k. Sardinia; I., 565, 566, 568.
Eobanus Hesse, hum.; II., 167.
Episcopacy in Scotland ; II. , 488.
Erasmus of Rotterdam, hum.; II. , 165,
167, 169, 193.
Erfurt, tr. of; III., 303.
Eric, B., Paderborn ; IL, 296.
Eric, Bloodaxe, Norse chief; I., 286,
287.
Eric Emundsson, k. Sweden; I., 264.
INDEX.
17
Eric the Red, Norse chief; I., 268.
Eric XIV., k. Sweden; II., 453.
Eric Upsi,B. Gardar; I. ,268.
Ernest August, el. Brunswick; II., 628.
Ernest August, k. Hanover; III., 399.
Ernest of Bavaria, Archb. Salzburg ; II ,
296.
Erwig, k. Visigoths; I., 175.
'Escovedo, Don John's secretary; II. ,371.
Eskyll, Archb. Lund; I., 473.
Espartero, gen., Spanish reg. ; III., 395.
Espremenil; III., 221.
Essex, e. of (reign of Eliz.) ; II., 397,
398.
Essex, e. of (civil war); II., 508-510,
512,520,521.
Essex, kgd. of ; I., 94.
Essex. 1. ; II , 587.
Estatuto Real of 1834; III., 395.
Estes in Modena and Ferrara ; II., 10.
Ethan Allen ; III., 194.
Ethandune, b. of ; I., 279.
Etienne Marcel, provost, Paris; II, 69.
Etrurla, kgd. of; III., 298.
Endo, d. Aquitaine; I., 187.
Eudoxia, Czarina; III., 23.
Eu'loxia, Empr. (Isaac Comnenus) ; I.,
430.
Eudoxia, Empr. (Valentinlan III.); I ,
86,87.
Eudoxia, q. Vandals ; I., 89, 90.
Eugene III. ; P. ; I., 462, 464, 471.
Eugene IV., P. ; II., 48, 50-53, 113, 125.
Eugene Beauharnals, viceroy, Italy;
III., 285, 291.
Eugene, pr. Savoy; II, 626, 629, 635,
638, 640, 641, 644, 646; III., 38, 41.
Eugene, pr. Wlirtemburg; III., 293.
Eugenie, Empr. France; III., 425, 501,
505.
Eugenius, R. usurp.; I., 65.
Euric.k. Visigoths; I., 75.
Europe and North Am., table of con-
tact; III., pp. 85-87.
Eustace of Boulogne ; I , 358, 445.
Eustace of Flanders, Cr ; I., 523.
Eustace, s Stephen of Blols; I., 490.
Eustm, b. of; III., 610.
Eutaw Springs, b. of; III., 210.
Eutroplus, R. min.; I. ,67;
Eutychianism; I., 201.
Eutychius, exarch.; I., 196, 198.
Evarist, St., P. M. ; I., 26.
Evesham.b. of; I., 609.
Excommunication; I., 412.
" Execrabills," Bull. Pius II. ; II , 138.
Eylau.b. of; III., 295.
Ezzelino of Romano; I., 565, 568, 599.
Faber, Fred. Wm. ; III., 413.
Fabricius, Boh. seer., II., 434.
Faenza, b. of; I., 131.
Fairfax, Sir Thomas; II., 510,511,514-516.
Falk, Dr., Pr. Min., III., 629, 634.
Falaise.tr. of; I., 506. •
Falkenberg, col. ; II., 458, 459.
Falkirk, b. of; I ,618; 1U.,60.
Falkland, 1. ; II , 505.
Family Compact, the; III., 135,136.
Fanti,It. Gen.; III., 467.
Farini; III., 462.
Farnham, b. of; I., 281.
Farragut, U. S. adm. ; III., 558.
"Father Joseph," Richelieu's agent;
II , 451.
Fathers, the, of the Church ; I., 204.
Fatlma, d. Mohammed ; I., 173.
Faure, Pres. France; III., 583.
Faust, promoter art of print. ; II , 170.
Favier, B., Pekin; III., 619.
February days, 1848, III., 42Q.
February Revol , table of; III., pp. 307-
310.
Febronianlsm, Febronins; III. ,168.
Federation, the American; 1IL,216.
Fehrbellin.b. of; II. ,576.
Felix, Burgundian prelate; I., 98.
Felix V., last antipope; II., 50, 52.
Felton, murderer of Buckingham; II.,
498.
F(§nelon ; II., 658.
Feodor, Czar; III., 16, 17.
Ferdinand I., E., archd. Austria; II.,
206, 208, 221; k. R., 222, 223, 225, 232,
233; E., 235, 425; House of , 425.
Ferdinand I., E. Austria; III., 439, 442,
443.
Ferdinand II., E., archd. Styria; II., 307,
428; k. Bohemia and Hungary, 433, 436;
E., 437-439, 442, 443, 445, 448, 451, 465-
468, 475.
Ferdinand in., E. ; II., 307, 451, 467, 475,
481.
Ferdinand the Catholic, k. Aragon ; II.,
127, 128, 136, 142, 143, 147, 148; and col-
onies, 417, 422.
Ferdinand and Isabella ; II., 153, 154, 297.
Ferdinand III., St., k. Castile and'Leon ;
I., 558.
Ferdinand VI., k Spain; III., 61, 135.
18
INDEX.
Ferdinand VII., k. Spain; III., 299, 300,
331, 355, 872, 377, 395.
Ferdinand II. (Aragon), k. Naples; II.,
136.
Ferdinand IV., of Naples, I. of the two
Sicilies; III., 172, 336, 356, 357.
Ferdinand II., k. Sicilies'; III., 373, 374,
392, 428, 430, 434, 455, 466.
Ferdinand, Archb. Koeln ; II., 428.
Ferdinand, Archd. Austria; III., 305,
grand d. Tuscany, 356.
Ferdinand, pr. Saxe-Coburg; III., 592.
Ferdinand of Spiegel, Archb. Koeln;
III., 408.
Ferdinand, pr. Brunswick; III., 119,
121, 126, 238, 240, 244, 247, 293.
Ferdinand of Toledo, Don; II., 365.
Ferrand, ct. Flanders; I., 541.
Fermor, Russ. gen. ; III., 122.
Ferrara-Florence, C. of; II., 50, 51.
Fesch, Card. ; III., 316.
Feudalism ; I., 210, 211, 245, 595-597.
Feuillants, club of; III., 232.
Filangieri, It. gen.; III., 434.
Fillmore, Millard, Pr. U. S. ;III., 551.
Flngalls;I.,266.
Finnian, St., a.,Clonard; I., 150.
Firbolgs; I., 144.
Fitzgerald, 1. Thomas; II., 517; Edward;
III., 359.
Fltzmaurice Fitzgerald, 1. James; II.,
520.
Fitzwilliams, W., 1. dep., Ireland; II.,
520.
Fitzwilliams, 1. lieut. Ireland ; III., 362.
Five Boroughs, the; I., 279, 285.
Five Mile Act (16<i5) ; II., 549.
Flagellants ; II., 19.
Flanders, table of counts of; I., 346.
Flavins Vespasian, R. E. ; I., 18, 19.
Fleix, p. of (1580); II. ,832.
Fleurus, b. of (1690) ; II., 612 ; (1794) ; III.,
261.
Fleury, Card. ; III., 7, 48, 55, 174.
Fleury, major: III., 424.
Flodden Field, b. of; II., 147.
Florence, b. of; I., 69; ordinances of
justice ; II., 10 ; republic, 22 ; p. of, 1801 ;
III., 279.
Florida; III., 64,535.
Flotte, Peter(; I., 614, 625, 627, 628.
Flourens, commun. ; III., 516.
Follan, Irish saint; I., 152.
Fontainebleau, preliminaries of; III.,
138.
Fontenoy.b. of (841) ; I., 240 (1745) ; III.,
58.
Foote, U. S. commodore; III., 558.
Forbach, b. of; III , 502.
Forbes, Engl. gen. ; III., 134.
Forchheim, D.of; (1077); I., 384.
Forest, F., Engl. M. ; II., 257.
Forey, Fr. gen ; III., 573, 574.
Formorians; I., 144.
Formosus, P. ; I., 250.
Fort Duquesne, b. of; III., 111.
Fouche; III. ,257, 274.
Foulon, Fr min. ; III., 220.
Fouquier-Tinville; III., 251, 258.
Fourier, social.; III., 416.
France under Capetians; I., 343-347, 460,
464, 506, 542, 546-553, 574, 578, 579, 581,
614-616, 620-629; tables, pp. 435-439;
House of Valois; II., 62-74, 88-96, 120-
124; Orleans and Angouleme, 140, 141;
tables, pp. 112-115, 118; nos. 215-219,
224, 225 ; Huguenot wars, 308 340 ; tables,
pp. 348-351 ; under Louis XIII., 443,469-
472, 484 -486; under Louis XIV., 555, etc.,
565-580, 604-617; 631-646; tables, pp.
461-464; under Louis XV.; III., 41, 42,
48,49,53; tables, 30-32; 88-91; in seven
years' war, 108 126, 135-139; causes of
revolution, 157-162, 170-182; French
Revolution, 218-273; under Napoleon,
274-338; tables, pp. 234-244; July Revo-
lution, 380-386; Louis Philip, 416-419;
Cath. revival, 405; February Revol.,
420 425; tables, pp. 306-309; under Na-
poleon III., 451-460, 463,476; Franco-
German war, 496-517; tables, pp. 348,
349; 351-353; modern France, 583 (see
French Revolution).
Francis I., E., Fr. Stephen, d. Lorraine,
grand d. Tuscany ; III., 42, 51, 57, 160.
Francis II., E. ; III, 236, 274, 276, 288-290;
Fr. I. E. A., 291, 305, 316, 327, 329.
Francis Joseph I., E. A ; III., 443, 441-
447, 449, 459, 460, 484, 580, 581.
Francis I., k. France; II , 52, 148, 194,
215,217-219, 221,224, 225, 308.
Francis II., k. France II., 285, 286, 313.
315, 316, 396.
Francis II. , k. Sicilies; III., 466,470,471.
Francis d. Alengon, d. Anjou; II., 331-
333, 375, 376.
Francis of Assissi, St. ; I., 590.
Francis of Solano, St., O. S. F.; II., 421.
Franco-German War; III., 496-514;
tables, pp. 351-353.
INDEX.
19
Franco -Sardinian war with Austria;
III., 456 460; tables, p. 349.
Frankenhausen, b. of; II., 201.
Frankfort, Pacification of (1142) ; I., 459;
b. of, 567, D. of (1338) ; II., 16; b. of,
232; Parliament of; III., 441, 446; p. of
(1871). 513.
Franklin, Benj. ; III., 184, 202, 546.
Franks; I., 40.54,56, 57,70, 81, 111; tables
of Kingdom and Empire, pp. 128, 129-
Fratlcelll, the; II., 13.
Fraustadt, b.of; III., 29.
Fraysslnous; III., 405.
Fredegnnda, q. Neustrla; I., 116.
Frederic!.; Barbarossa, E.; I., 459, 468,
470485; crusade, 511.
Frederic II., E.; I., 519, 522,531, 534; E ,
535, 560-569, 579, family table, 569.
Frederic III., E.; II , 49, 50,52, 108,115,
• 119,135.
Frederic III., E. G. (crown prince Fred.
Wm.), 482, 500, 514, 634.
Frederic I., k. Denmark; II., 210.
Frederic IV., k. Denmark; III., 25.
Frederic, k. Naples; II,, 136, 142.
Frederic I , k. Prussia ; II. , 635.
Frederic II., k. Prussia; III., 43-62, 112,
seven years war, 115 141; and Poland.
144, 145, 149, 150, 152; death, 153; alia,
160, 161, 163, 173.
Frederic, k. Sicily; II., 11.
Frederic, k. Sweden L(Hesse-Oassel);
HI., 35.
Frederic the Wlnterklng; II., 430, 435,
437, 439, 440, 441, 443, 493.
Frederic, d. Austria; I., 571.
Frederic of Austria, co-regent; II., 12-
14.
Frederic of Baden; I., 601.
Frederic, d. Brandenburg (Fr. of Nurem-
berg) ; II., 39.
Frederic III. ; palsgrave, II., 427; House
of, 427.
Frederic IV.. palsgrave; II., 430.
Frederic, el. Saxony; II., 188, 190, 193,
195, 206.
Frederic II., d. Suabia; I., 396, 453.
Frederic of Suabia, s. Conrad III.; I.,
468, 478.
Frederic of Suabia, s. Barbarossa; I.,
511, 613.
Frederic Charles, pr. Prussia; III., 136,
412, 482, 500, 504.
Frederic Wm. I., k. Prussia; III., 34,
43, 154.
Frederic Wm. II., k. Prussia; III., 234.
Frederic Wm. III., k. Prussia; III., 289,
292,296.325,327.
Frederic Wm. IV., k. Prussia; III., 409,
438, 440, 446, 477,
Frederic William, el. Brandenburg; II.,
556,573,575,576-579.
Frederic, pr. Wales; III., 15, 136.
Fredericksburg,.b.of; III., §60.
Freemasonry; III., 160, 419.
Freiberg, b. of; III., 138.
Fremont the Pathfinder; III., 536, 559.
French Revolution, causes; III., 157-162,
170-182; States General, 218, 219; Con
stituent Assembly, 219-233; constitu-
tion of 1789 (1st), 224-227; civil const,
of the clergy, 228; Legislative Assem-
bly, 235-240; National Convention,
241-261 ; Reign of Terror, 245-257 ; Coup
d'etat of Fructldor 18, 260; constitu-
tion of 1793 (2d), 254 Constitution of
1795 (3d), 260, 262; Directory, 262-273;
Constlt. of year VIII., 1799 (4th), 273;
Constit. of 1802, (5th), 283; tables, III.,
186-191.
Frere Orban, mln., Belgium; III., 635.
Freron;III.,248,257. .
Friars, the, in the Philippines; III., 625.
Fridolln, Irish St. ; I , 152.
Friedland, b.of; III., 295.
Frledrichsburg, p. of ; 1720; III., 36.
Frigidus, b on the; I., 65.
Frisians ; I., 112, 115, 188, 200.
Frobisher, Martin, Engl. dlscov.; II.,
402.
Fronde, the; II., 483,484.
Frontenac, gov., Canada; III., 103.
Frundsberg, Germ, gen.; II., 217, 218.
Fry, col.; III., 109.
Fulk, ct. Anjou;I.,410.
FulkofNeullly;I.,522.
Fulrad, a. St. Denis; I., 192 (193), 199.
Funston, col. U. S. ; III., 624.
Furlough, grands, of Brian Boru ; I., 499.
FUrstenberg, Card; II,, 580, 604, 617.
Fury, the Spanish ; II., 369.
Fttssen, tr. of, 1745; III., 57.
Gabelle, Fr. tax. ; III., 179.
Gaeta,fallof;III.,471.
Gage, Engl. gen. ; III., 190, 193.
Galba, R. E.;I.,17.
Galetti; III., 432.
Galerlus,R. E.;I.,34.
Galileo Galilei ; II., 650-654.
20
INDEX .
Gall, St. ; I., 151.
Galla Placldla, R. Empr.; I., 73-75,84,
85.
Qallas, Austr. gen. ; II., 466, 467.
Gallenga, Antonio; III., 393.
Gallicanism, origin of; I., 628; II., 655;
III., 157.
Gallienus, R. E. ; I., 32.
Gallus, R. E. ;I.,32.
Gambetta, gen., Fr. dictator; III., 505,
511, 512.
Games, public, in Rome; I., 25.
Gardiner, B, Winchester; II., 266, 273,
274.
Garibaldi, Joseph; III., 365, 393, 419, 428,
435, 436, 457, 458, 462, 466, 470, 475, 483,
490, 492.
Garlgllano, b. on the; I., 257.
Garnet, Fr. 8. J.; II., 490.
Gamier, S J., Ind. miss. ; III., 65.
Garrison, Wm. Lloyd, abol ; III., 539.
Gasco, Pedro de la; II., 411.
Gasteln, tr. of, 1865; III., 479,481.
Gaston of Foix, Fr. gen. ; II., 145.
Ga»ton, pr. Orleans; II. ,469.
Gatacre, Engl. gen ; III., 610.
Gates, Am. gen. ; III., 204, 209.
Gaul, Invasions of; I., 70, 71, 74, 110-
117.
Gavalkind;!., 146.
Gavazzi, " Father ; " III., 550.
Gaaa, b. of; I., 572.
Gebhard, Archb. Koeln ; II., 428.
Geiseel, Card. Archb. Koeln; III., 409,
448.
Gelasius II., P. ; I., 396.
Gelimer, k. Vandals; I., 90, 126.
Gemblours, b. of; II., 372.
General Councils in the East; I., 201,
425.
Genet, " citizen ;" III., 339.
Genlls, Fr. gen. ; II., 322, 365.
Genseric, k. Vandals; I., 84-88; House
of, 88.
Geoffrey of Anjou ; I., 410, 490.
Geoffrey of Beaulien; I., 580.
Geoffrey, d. Brittany; I., 406, 505.
Geoffrey Martel, ct. Anjou; I., 347.
George I., k. Engl.; III., 2 8, 34-36.
George II., k. Engl. ; III., 7, 8, 45, 51, 54,
68, 109, 112, 135, 136, 370.
George III., k. Engl.; III., 136, 206,274,
286, 365.
George IV., k. Bngl, ; III., 368, 397.
George I., k. Greece; III., 593.
George, k. Hanover- III. ,482.
George Podiebrad, k. Bohemia; II., 49.
George Brown, Prot. Archb. Dublin;
IL.518.
George, d. Clarence; II., 102-104.
George Clifford, e. Cumberland; II.,
402.
George, pr., gov.-gen., Crete; III., 693.
George, pr. Denmark ; II,, 598.
George, d. Saxony , II , 192, 201, 226.
Georgia; III., 70; and slavery, 97;
marching through, 563.
Gepids ; I,, 55, 81, 83, 119, 140.
Gerald Fitzgerald ; II., 517.
Geraldines, the, Ireland; II., 517; first
league of, 517 ; second league of, 520.
Gerard, Master, Knights of bt. John; I.,
452 (453).
Gerberga, w. of Karlmann ; I., 220.
Germanicus, s. of Drusus ; I., 19, 53.
Germantown, b. of; III., 203.
Germany (Holy R. E.) and Italy, under
Carolingians ; I. ,250, 251; Conrad the
Frank, 311; Saxon House, 312-333;
Salian H., 334-341, 376-399; Lothar the
Saxon, 453-457; Hohenstaufen, 459,
468 485,516-619, 531-536, 563 569; Inter-
regnum, 604; Rudolf of Hapsburg,
805; tables, pp. 414-418; Albrecht, I.,
Charles IV., II., 7-22; H. of Luxem-
burg, 29-32, 38; H. of Hapsburg, 49,
123,149, 184-186; Protest. Revolution,
188-235; Thirty years war, 425-485;
Leopold I., etc., 554, and following
(see Louis XIV. and Napoleon); G.
confederacy; III., 350;Cath. revival,
406-409; Febr. revolution, 437, 438,440,
441, 445-448; war of 1866, 477-488;
Franco-German war, 496-514; modern
Germany, 580, 629-634.
Gero, Margrave; I., 317.
Gerstungen, tr. of (1074) ; I., 378.
Gettysburg, b. of ; III., 561.
Geysa, k. Hungary; I., 325.
Gfroerer, hist. ; III., 407.
Ghent, pacification of; II., 369,370,371,
375; p. of, 1 814; III., 348.
Ghio, Neap. gen. ; III., 466.
Glfford, Gilbert, Engl. spy; II., 392, 395.
Gilbert, Engl. gen. ; II., 521.
Gilbert Foliot, B. London; I., 495, 497,
498.
Gilbert, Humphrey, Engl. disc.; II.,
402.
Ginkell, Dutch gen. ; II., 610, 611.
INDEX.
21
Gioberti, abb«; III., 393, 433.
Giordano Bruno; III., 159.
Girondists; III., 235, 237, 239, 241, 245,
247, 253, etc.
Gluliano de' Medici; II., 164.
Gladstone, Mr.; III., 579.
Glamorgan, e. of ; II., 528, 529.
Glencoe, massacre of; II ,602, 603.
Gloucester, Thos., d. of, II., 80.
Glycerins, R. E. (W.) ; I , 107.
Gobel, constlt. Archb. Paris; III., 229,
254, 255.
Godfrey of Bouillon, Or.; I., 445, 446,
448, 449.
Godfrey, Sir Edmund Berry; II., 581,
582.
Godfrey, d. Lorraine; I., 375.
Godolphin, 1. ; II., 589, 642.
Godoy, Span. min. ; III., 263, 299-301, 313.
Godwlne, e. Wessex; I., 308, 310, 357-359.
Goelhelm, b. of; II., 7.
Goergey, Hung, gen., III., 444.
Goerres, Joseph ; III , 406, 409.
Goertz, baron ; III., 35, 38.
Golden Bull, the; II., 19.
Gonsalvo de Cordova, "grand captain ; "
II., 128, 136, 142, 143.
Gonzagas In Mantua; II., 10.
Gorcnm, martyrs of; II. ,364.
Gordianus I., II. ,111., R. E.; I., 31.
Gordon0 Imp. officer, Ferd. II.; II., 466;
officer, Peter the Great; III., 18; 1.
George, 360; G. riots, 360; Engl. maj.
gen., 594.
Gorges, Fernando; III., 74,
Gorm the Old, k. Denmark; I., 264, 313.
Gortchacow, pr. ; III., 692.
Goths ; I., 54, 55, 67, 81, etc.
Gonrko, Russ. gen. ; III., 591 .
Grammont, d. of; III., 499, 602.
Granada, conquest of; II., 128.
Grand Alliance, the, of 1689; II., 606; of
1701, 035 ; dissolved, 644.
Grand Model, the; III., 69.
Grand Remonstrance, the; II., 506.
Granson, b. of; II., 122.
Grant, Ulysses 8. ; in., 558, 582-565.
Granvella, Card. ; II., 355, 357.
Gratlan, R. E. ; I., 42, 63.
Grattan, leader Irish Parl. ; III., 359, 362.
Gravellnes. b. of; II., 277; nav. b. of, 397.
Gravelotte, b. of; III., 503.
Great St. Bernard, crossing of; III., 275
Great Britain, modern ; III., 578, 579.
Great Council, the, in Engl. ; I., 372.
Great Meadows, b. of; III., 109.
Greco Turkish War, 1897; III., 593.
Greece, war of independ. ; III., 379;
modern, 593.
Greene, Am. gen. w. ind. ; III., 210.
Greenland, Norse settlem. ; I., 268.
Green way, Fr. S. J. ; II., 490.
Gregory I., the Great, St. P.; I., 77,96,
142, 193, 203, 206, 436; and slavery, I.,
203; III., 95.
Gregory II., St. P. ; I., 189, 194, 196.
Gregory III , P. ; I., 189, 194, 197.
Gregory V. (Bruno) P. ; I., 327, 328, 344.
Gregory VI., P ; I., 339.
'Gregory VII., St. P.; I., 260, 874, 379-388,
400, 414, 419, 438.
Gregory VIII (Burdlnus), antlp.; I.,
396,397.
Gregory IX., P. ; I., 550, 561, 563-668.
Gregory X.,P,; I. ,605.
Gregory XI., P. ; II., 22, 72, 160.
Gregory XII. ; II., 34-38; resignation, 42
Gregory XIII., P.; II., 304, 305, 323,326,
329, 391 ; Greg, calendar, 305.
Gregory XVI., P ; III., 392, 393, 408, 40«.
Gregory, Walsingham's forger; II., 392,
394.
Grenvllle, 1. ; III., 186.
Grey,!.; II., 587.
Grey, Sir Richard; II., ^105; l.Thomas,274.
Gre>y, Pres. France; III., 583.
Grey, lady Elisabeth Woodrllle; II.,
102, 105.
Qrlmbald of St. Omer; I., 283.
Grimoald, k. Longobards; I., 142.
Grocyn, hum. ; II., 165.!
Grodno, D. of; III., 155.
Groeningen, b. of; II. ,861.
Grossbeeren.b. of; III., 328.
Grossjagerndorf, b. of; III., 118.
Grouchy, Fr. gen. ; III., 337.
Guadaloupe Hidalgo, p. of, 1848; III ,
537.
Guadet, Girondist; III., 245, 263.
Gnalo, pap. leg ; I., 545.
Gnaranis, Ind. tr.; II., 423
Guarapa Hills, bs. of; II., 416.
Guatamozin, last Aztec E. ; III., 406.
Guelfs and Ghlbellines, Houses of ; I.,
469.
Gueux, the ; II., 357, etc.
Gutlford Courthouse, b. of ; III., 210.
Guise, Francis, d. of; II , 277, 313, 315,
316,318,319; Henry, rt. of, 324, 332-335;
Louis, Card, de, 335 ; House of ; 312.
22
INDEX.
Qulzot, Fr. min. ; III., 380, 382, 418, 420.
Gundioar, k. Burgundians ; I., 71.
Gundobad, k. Burgundians, I., 71, 113.
Gundobald, k. Burgundians; I., 71,107.
Gunhild, Dan. princess; I., 304.
Gunpowder Plot, the ; II., 489, 490.
Gunthamund, k. Vandals; 1 , 89.
Gustavus Adolphus, k. Sweden; II.,
454-464.
Gustavua Erioson, Wasa, k. Sweden;
II., 209.
GustavusIIL, k. Sweden; III., 152,161.
Guthrum — ^Jthelstan, k. East Anglia;
I., 277, 279.
Guttenberg, John, inv. of printing; II.,
170.
Gninegate, b. of; II., 147.
GuyFawkes;Il.,489.
Guy, ct. Flanders, 614.
Guy of Lusignan, k. Jerusalem ; I., 509;
of Cyprus, 513.
Gyulay, Austr gen ; III., 468.
Habeas Corpus; II., 584.
Hacon, k. Norway; I., 267.
Haddington, Scotch, Parl. of; II., 269.
Hadik, Austr. gen. ; III.. 118, 123
Hadley, Wm., hum. ; II., 165.
Hadrian I , P.; I., 220.
Hadrian II., P. ; I. , 244, 247, 425.
Hadrian IV., P.; I., 471, 473, 474.
Hadrian VI , P. ; II., 197, 215, 297, 422.
Hadrian, R. E. ; I., 21, 23, 26.
Hadrian, A. Canterbury; I. 103.
Hadrlanople, b. of ; I., 37 (387), 61.
Hague, treaty of the, 1625; II., 444;
peace congress of; III., 582.
Hale, John P.; III., 539.
Hales, Sir Edward ; II., 593.
Half dene, Norse chief; I., 278, 279.
Halidon Hill.b of; II., 61.
Halifax, 1. ; II , 589, 592, 600.
Halleck, U. gen. ; III., 558,559.
Hamburg, p. of 1762; III., 137.
Hamilton, gen.; II., 514,625.
Hammond, col. ; II., 513.
Hampden, John, commoner; II., 502,
605,506,507; the younger, 587.
Hanoverian succession, table of; III.,
p. 26.
Hansa, the; II., 30,
Hapsburg, House of; II., 123; German
and Spanish line, 149.
Elapsburg- Lorraine; III., 27.
Harald Blaatand, k. Denmark; I., 272,
302, 317, 324.
Harald Hardrada, k. Norway; I , 363.
Harold Harefoot, k. Engl. ; I., 310.
Harold Harf agr, k. Norw. ; I. , 264, 265, 267.
Harley, e. Oxford and Mortimer; II ,
642; III., 2, 4, 7.
Harold, k. Engl. ; I., 359, 361-365.
Haroun al Rashid, caliph; I., 181, 230,
431.
Harris, gov. S. C. ; III , 533
Harrison, Am. gen. ; III., 344.
Harrison, Wm, N , Pr. U. S. ; III., 534.
Harry Hotspur (Sir Henry Percy) ; II.,
84.
Harthacnut, k. Engl. ; I., 310.
Hassan, son of Ali ; I., 171.
Hassan Sabah, Assassin; I., 435.
Hasselt, b. of; III., 389.
Hastenbeck, b. of ; III , 119.
Hasting, Danish chief; L, 281,
Hastings (Senlac), b. of VI , 365.
Hastings, John, Scotch claimant; I.,
613.
Hastings, 1 , II , 105.
Hattin.b of; I., 609.
Hatto, archb Mainz; I., 251.
Haugnltz, ct., III., 289.
Hawkins, Sir John, Engl. freebooter;
II., 402, 416; III., 96.
Haynau, Austr. gen.; Ill , 444.
Heath. Archb. York; II ,279.
Heathfleld, b of; I., 99.
Heavens Field, b. of ; I , 100.
Heber MacMahon, B. Clogher; II. ,535.
Hubert; III., 231, 238, 2*5, 246, 255.
Hedwig, heiress Poland; II , 109.
Hegtra, the; I., 158.
Heilbronn, league of; II., 465, 471.
Heiligerlee, b. of; II, 361.
Heinsius, pensionary, Holland; II., 635.
Helena, St.; I., 36,39, 436.
Helena, Chin, empr ; III., 597.
Helvetian Republic; III., 269.
Helvetius;lII.,162.
Hengestesdun, b. of; L, 274.
Henglst and Horsa, ks. Kent; I., 92.
Henoticon, the; I., 123.
Henrietta, d, of Charles I. ; III., 60.
Henrietta, duchess Orleans; II., 570.
Henrietta Maria, qu. Engl.; II., 494, 496,
508, 509, 511.
Henriot; III, 245.
Henry I., the Fowler, k. Germans; I.,
311-313.
INDEX.
23
Henry II., St., E. ; I., 330-333, 349.
Henry III , the Black, E. ; L.333 341, 345.
Henry IV,, (E . )-, I., 341, 356, 376-399.
Henry V., E. ; I , 389, 391-398.
Henry VI., E ; I., 485, 512, 516-519.
Henry VIL (Luxemburg) ; II., 9, 11, 119.
Henry (of Flanders), Lat. E. ; I., 527.
Henry I., Beauclerk, k. Engl.; I., 370,
405-410, 460.
Henry II., k. Engl.; I., 490-507,541,612;
family of, 505.
Henry III., k. Engl. ; I., 544, 545, 575, 606-
609.
Henry IV., Lancaster, k. Engl. ; II., 68,
67, 81-87, 89-92, 179.
Henry V., k. Engl. ; II., 89, 91, 92.
Henry VI., k. Engl.; II., 93, 96-103, 179;
table of uncles, 97.
Henry VIL, k. Engl.; II., 106, 131-134.
Henry VIII., k. Engl.; I., 610; II., 132,
133, 144, 147, 156, 170,179, 194,216, 217,
224, 225, 237, 247-264, 267, 268 (and Ir
land), 617, 518.
Henry I., k. France; I., 344, 347.
Henry II., k. France; II., 271, 274, 277,
309, 331.
Henry III., k. France; II., 321, 323, 324,
330 336.
Henry IV., k. France; II., 322, 323, 325,
331, 332, 334, 336 340, 368, 427, 430, 431.
Henry d'Albrot, k. Navarre; II., 308.
Henry IH., k. Castile; II., 126.
Henry IV., k. Castile ; II. , 127.
Henry Trastamare, k. Castile ; II., 71, 72.
Henry, k. Germany (s. Conrad III.);
I., 464, 468.
Henry of Luslgnan, k. Cyprus; I., 576.
Henry of Luxemburg, rival k. Germ.;
I., 386.
Henry of Baspe, rival k. Germ.; I., 567.
Henry, Card., k. Portugal; II., 347.
Henry, k. Sicily and Germany (s. Fred.
II.); I., 535, 564.
Henry Jasomirgott, d. Austria ; I. ,459,4 72.
Henry, d. Bavaria; I., 315.
Henry, d. Bordeaux, ct. Chambord; III.,
381, 386, 517.
Henry, d. Buckingham; II., 105, 106.
Henry of Champagne, Cr. ; I., 513.
Henry, pr., s. David, k. Scots; I., 487.
Henry, pr., s. Henry II. Engl.; I., 497,
605.
Henry of Flanders, Cr. ; I., 523.
Henry the Lion, d. Saxony a. Bavaria;
I., 469, 468, 470, 471, 479, 480, 48-*, 517.
Henry of Montfort; I., 609.
Henry the Navigator, pr. Portugal; II.,
125.
Henry, Palsgrave on the Rhine; I., 531,
536.
Henry, ancest. ks. Portugal; 1 , 555.
Henry the Proud, d. Bavaria; I., 454,456,
457, 459.
Henry, pr. Prussia (br. Fred. II.); III.,
122, 123, 138.
Henry the Quarrelsome, d. Bavaria ; I.,
324,325.
Henry, d. Saxony; II, ,226.
Henry, B. Winchester; I., 488.
Heptarchy, the Anglo-Saxon; I., 95-105;
tables of, pp. 76, 77.
Heraclius, R. E. (E.); I., 161-163; house
of, 164.
Heraclius, exarch. Africa; I., 139.
H4rault de Sechelles; III., 255.
Herbert, ct. Vermandois ; 1 , 252.
Hereward the Outlaw; I., 367.
Heribert, Archb. Milan; I., 336.
Herman Billung, margrave; I., 315, 317.
Herman, Archb. Koeln; II., 290.
Herman of Reichenau ; I , 231.
Herman of Salza; I , 563, 580.
Hermandad, the Holy; II., 127.
Hermaneric, k. Suevians; I., 72.
Hermanrlc, k. Ostrogoths ; I. ,59.
Hermenegild, St. ; I., 76.
Herod Agrippa; I., 25.
Herod the Great; I., 10.
Herulians; I., 55, 83, 108.
Hessians; I., 188; III., 201.
Hetaries, Greek; III., 379.
Hexham, b. of; II., 102.
Hierapolis, b. of ; III., 275.
Hildebrand, Card. (Gregory VIL); I.,
339, 340, 345, 364, 375, 376.
Hildebrand, k. Longobards; I., 197.
Hilderic, k. Vandals; I., 90.
Hinkmar, Archb. Mainz; I., 231.
Hobbes, Thomas; III., 159.
Hobskirk Hill, b. of; III , 210.
Hoche, Fr. gen. ; III., 247, 249, 261, 362.
Hochkirch, b. of ; III., 122.
Hochstadt and Blindheim, b. of; II.,
638.
Hochst.b. of; II., 442.
Hoedel, socialist ; III . , 634.
Hofer, Andreas ; III , 311.
Hohenburg, b. of; I., 378.
Hohenfriedberg, b. of ; III., 59.
Hohenlinden, b. of ; III., 276.
24
INDEX.
Hohenstaufen, see Germany; House of;
I., 469; fall of the, 599 601.
Hohenzollern, House of, p.; III., 38;
Incident, the; III. ,499.
Holbach;III.,162.
Holy Alliance, the; III., 358, 548.
Holy League, the, of 1511; II., 144; in
France; II., 332, 333, 335, 337; of Plus
V. ; II., 345; of Innocent XI ; II., 625.
Holy Roman Empire of the German
Nation; I., 321.
Homage (homaglum) ; I., .373, etc.
Honorlus II., P.; I., 452 (453).
Honorlus II., antip ; I., 376.
Honorlus III ,P ; I., 545, 550, 569, 660.
Honorlus, R. E. (W.); I ,66-68, 73, 193.
Hood, Cf . gen. ; III , 563.
Hooker, U. gen. ; II. ; 403, 560-562.
Horace;!., 15.
Horn, ct., adm. ; II., 351, 364, 365, 359-
361.
Horn, Swed. gen. ; II., 465, 467.
Hortense, q. Holland; III., 291.
Hotham, Brit, adm ; III , 338.
Houghton, John, Engl. M. ; II., 267.
Howard, 1.; II.; 587.
Howard of Efflngham, Engl. adm.; II.,
397, 398.
Howe, 1., adm. ; III., 200, 203, 211.
Howe, 1., Engl. gen.; III., 133, 198, 200,
203.
Hroswitha, abb. Gandershelm; I., 316.
Huascar, Inea; II,, 410.
Hubert de Burgh, administr. Engl.; I.,
606.
Hubertsburg, p. of 1763; III., 140.
Hubert Walter, Archb. Canterbury ; I.,
520, 538.
Huddleston, Father; II., 588.
Hudson, Henry, Dutch discor. ; III., 78.
Hugh, a. Cluny;!., 383.
Hugh, St.. B. Lincoln; I., 372.
Hugh Capet, k France ; I., 255, 343.
Hugh the Dispenser; II., 57, 58.
Hugh the Great, d. Francia; I., 253, 254,
272.
Hugh de Payens, Kn. Templar; I., 452
(453).
Hugh of Vermandols, Cr. ; I., 445,
Hugh the White, Card. ; I., 384, 386.
Hughes, Archb. N. Y. ; III., 549, 552.
Hugo, k. Italy and Burgundy ; I., 258.
Huguenots, II., 157, 314, 416, 469, 657; H.
wars In France, 308-340^ 498; tables
Of, pp. 348-360.
Human, massacre of; III., 147.
Humbert, k. Italy; III., 510, 616.
Humble Petition and Advise to Crom-
well ; II . 541.
Humphrey, ct. Apulia; I., 151, 153.
Humphrey, d. Gloucester; II., 93, 98.
Hundred Days, Napoleon's; III , 336-
337.
Hundred Years' War; II., 55-96; tables,
pp. ,111-115.
Huneric, k. Vandals; I. ,89.
Hungary; I, 329, 330; II., 108; and
Joseph II ,111., 169; February Revo-
lution, 439; Transleithania, 488.
Huns, the; I., 57, 58, 69.
Huntley, e of ; II , 384.
Hunyadl, pr. Transilvania ; II., 108, 113,
116.
Hurley, Archb ; II. ,521.
Hurons, Ind. tr ; III., 65.
• Hus, John ; II., 28, 44, 45, 159.
Hussite Wars; II , 47-49.
Huyana Capac.. Inca; II., 410.
Hyde, Sir Edward; II., 505, 546 (see
Clarendon); Anne; 11,553.
Hyder All, ruler, Mysore; III., 212.
Hy— Ivars in Ireland , 1 , 266
Hypatius, R. ursuper (E.) ; I., 125.
Ibn-al-Arabl, Spain; I., 222.
Ibn lussuf, Spain; I., 222.
Ibrahim, Abbassld; I., 180.
Ibrahim Pasha, III., 379, 418
Iceland, Rep. of; I ,267.
Iconmm, b. of ; 1 , 511.
Iconoclasm in the East; I., 201; in Scot-
land; II ,285; in the Netherlands, 358.
Ida, the Flamebearer, k. Bernlcia; I.,
85.
Idle, b. on the; I., 98.
Iglau, compact of; II., 48.
Ignatius, St M.; I., 26.
Ignatius, St Patr. Ct; I., 421, 422, 426,
426.
Ignatius of Loyola; II., 215, 298.
Ignazio Azevedo, Bl. S. J ; II., 421.
Igor, son of Ruric; I , 269.
Ina, k. Wessex; I., 102-104.
Inchiquin, 1 ; II., 531.
Independents In c. w., Engl. ; II., 512.
Indiana, adm. of; III., 524.
Indians, North Amer. ; III., 88-93;
Indian wars, 94.
Indo Portuguese Empire; II., 125.
Indulgences; II., 191.
INDEX.
25
M Ineffabilis," bull, of Boniface VIII. ;
I., 621.
Ingeborg, w. Philip Aug. ; I., 551.
Inkermann, b. of ; HI., 452.
Innocent II., P.; I., 455-458, 460, 462,
486.
Innocent III., P.; I., 414, 520, 522,525,
529-535; and John Lackland, 637-545;
and Albigenses, 548-551; and Span.
Crusades, 556, 557, 559.
Innocent IV , P. ; 1. , 566-568, 579, 581.
Innocent VI., P. ; II., 18, 20, 68, 70.
Innocent VII., P; II., 25.
Innocent VIII., P.; II., 118, 182.
Innocent X., P. ; II., 481, 529.
Innocent XI., P ; II., 593, 604, 622, 624,
626, 627, 648, 649, 656, 657.
Innocent XII. ; II. , 655.
Inquisition, papal and episcopal; I.,
650; II., 151, 152, Spanish, 153-156; holy
office of, 157.
Iowa, adm. of; III, 535.
Irala, gov. Paraguay; II., 414.
Ireland; I., 144-152; under Henry II.,
499-503; under Edward III.; II., 75;
under Henry VII., 133; under Tudors,
517521; under the Stuarts, 522532;
insurrection of 1641, 624-532,608; un-
der Cromwell, 533-536; penal laws,
III., 9 15; Irish brigade, 58; insurrec-
tion of, 1798, 362-365; Cath. emancipa-
tion, 366-370; famine, 403-404; in 1848,
437; Irish question, 579.
Irene, Empress (E.) ; I., 226.
Ireton, parl. gen. ; II., 435.
Ironsides, Cromwell's ; II., 485, 511.
Iroquois, Ind. confed.; III., 65, 78, 92,
103, 207.
Isaac Angelus.gr., E.; I., 430, 511,524-
526.
Isaac Comnenus, gr. E. ; I., 430.
Isabel, q. -regent France; II., 88, 90, 91.
Isabella, q. Castile; II., 126-130, 153, 154,
297.
Isabella, q. Engl. (Edw. II.); I., 623;
II., 55, 58,60, 62.
Isabella, q. Portugal ; II., 343.
Isabella II., q. Spain ; III , 395, 396.
Isidore, St. Archb. Sevilla; I., 77, 78.
Isidor Mercator ; I., 415.
Islam, the; I., 114, 153-160, 165-181, etc.
Isles, kgd. of the; I., 266.
Isonzo, b. on the: I., 119.
Israel; .".,7.
Italy, invasions of; L, 68, 69, 73, 87, 106
109, 115; in the middle ages, see Ger-
many and Italy; kgd. of, 249; munic-
ipalities, 461; wars, 1494-1516; II.,
134-150; under Charles V., 215-219,
225; tables of, pp. 234-236; republic of;
III., 283; revolution of 1820, 371-375;
July revol., 392,393; Febr. revol.,426-
486; and Crimean war, 450-455; w. with
Austria, 456-460; annexations and
Roman question; kgd, of Italy, 461-
495,501. 502; sacrilege of 1870, 506-510;
modern Italy, 584, 616.
Iturbide, gen., E. Mexico; III., 376.
Ivan III., Czar; I., 571.
IvanIV.,Czaj; III., 37.
Ivan, brou Peter the Great; III., 7.
Ivan the Terrible, Czar; III., 16, 17.
Ivar the Boneless; I. ,266, 277.
Ivry.b. of; II. ,337.
Jack Cade; II,, 98.
Jack Straw; II., 78.
Jackson, Andrew, Pr. U. S. ; III., 347, 531,
533,634; Stonewall; III., 559-561.
Jacob of Molay,grandra., Templars; II.,
2, 3, 6.
Jacob, pr. Poland (s. Sobieski) ; II., 624.
Jacobins, club of; III., 231, 237, 238, 241
245, 258, 260, 266, etc.
Jacobites; III., 2, 60.
Jacquerie, the, in France; II., 69.
Jaddus, high priest; I., 8.
Jaffa, b. of; I., 514.
Jagello, k. Poland; I., 580; II., 109.
Jamblichus, phil. ; I., 27.
James the Conqueror, k. Aragon; I.,
558.
James I., k. Engl., II., 436, 443,487-495,
522; III., 71.
James II., k. Engl., d. York; II., 485,
546, 551-553, 559, 560, 581, 582, 585, 587;
589-603, 609, 616, 635; and colonies; III.,
80, 84, 102.
James III. (James Edward, old pre-
tender); II., 635, 640; III., 2, 4, 5, 60.
James I., Stuart, k. Scots; II., 85, 93.
James IV., k. Scots; II., 132, 147.
James V., k. Scots; II., 225, 267.
James VI., k. Scots; II., 383, 386, 393 (see
James I., k. Engl.).
James de Vltry, B. Acre; I. , 569.
Jameson, Dr. ; III., 606.
Jandun, John of; II., 14.
Jane, q. Naples ; II., 24.
INDEX.
Jane Grey, lady; II., 272, 274.
JansenistsjlIL, 157,171.
Jansenlus, B. Ypres; III., 157.
Janissaries; II., 110.
Japanese war with China; III., 699.
Jarnac.b. of; II., 321.
Jassy, p. of; III., 15J.
Jay, John; III , 191.
Jean, heiress of Navarre; I., 581.
Jeanne d'Arc; II., 94, 95.
Jefferson, Pr. U. S. ; III., 199, 339, 340, 342,
622, 530.
Jefferson, Davis; III., 553, 555, 563, 565.
Jeffreys, 1. chancellor; II., 691.
Jellachlch, Ban of Croatia; III., 442, 443.
Jemappes, b. of ; III., 240.
Jemmingen, b. of; II., 361.
Jena and Auerstadt, b. of; III., 293.
Jenghiz Khan ; I., 570; III., 597.
Jerome of Prague ; II., 28, 45.
Jerusalem, Latin kgd. of ; I., 450-453,465-
467, 508, 509; table of kings; I, 450; fall
of, 509.
JESUS CHRIST; I., 9-13.
Joachim I , mgr. Brandenburg; II., 226.
Joachim II., mgr. Brandenburg; II., 226.
Joan, arehd. Austria ; II., 343.
Joanna I., q. Naples; II., 108.
Joanna, q. Sicily; I., 512.
Joannes, B. usurper; I., 80, 84.
Jobst of Moravia ; II., 38.
Jognes, S. J., Ind. miss. ; III., 65.
John, St. Apostle; I., 20, 28.
John the Baptist; I., 11.
John I., St. P.; I, ,121.
John VIII., P.; I., 244, 245, 426.
John X., P. ; I., 257, 319.
John XL, P.; I., 319.
John XII., P. ;L, 319, 321, 322.
John XIII. , P.; I., 322, 325.
John XV ., P. ; I., 327.
John XIX., P.; I., 335.
John XXIL, P. ; II., 12-15, 56, 60.
John XXIII. , P. ; II. ,37-41.
John II., k. Aragon; II., 127.
John the Blind, k. Bohemia; II., 9,65.
John of Braganza, reg. Portugal; III.,
299.
John III. of Braganza, k. Portugal; II., .
415.
John IV. of Braganza, k. Portugal; II.,
347, 483.
John VI. of Braganza, k. Portugal; III.,
372.
John Casimir, k. Poland ; II., 556.
John II., k. Castile; II., 126.
Jonn II., Comnenus, Gr. E. ; I., 524.
John, the Good, k. Prance; II., 21, 67-70,
121.
John I., the Great, k. Portugal; II., 125,
John Lackland, k. Engl. ; I., 505, 506, 517,
520, 535, 537-545, 553.
John Palaeologus, Gr. E. ; II., 61.
John III., Sobieski, k. Poland; II., 622-
625.
John VI., k. Spain ; III., 378.
John, k. Sweden; II., 453.
John I., Zimisces, Gr. Co-E. ; I., 429.
John, Archd. Austria, III., 276, 305, 307,
441.
John, d. Bedford; II., 93-96, 98.
John of Brienne, Cr. ; I. , 559, 563.
John Capistrano, St.; II., 116.
John Carroll, Archb. Baltimore; III.,
546.
John Casimir, pr. palatine; II., 320,375
427.
John the Fearless, d. Burgundy; II.,
88, 90, 91.
John Fisher, Bl. B. Rochester; II., 134,
248,251,257.
John Frederic, el. Saxony; II., 229, 232.
John of Gaunt, d. Lancaster; II., 72, 73,
77, 80, 83.
John George, d. Saxony; II., 427, 435,
438, 439, 444, 450, 456, 457, 460, 461, 465,
466, 468.
John de Gray, B. Norwich; I., 538.
John, ct., Nassau; II., 374.
John Nepomucene, St. ; II., 30.
John, the Old Saxon, of Corbey ; I., 283.
John Parricida;!!., 8.
John.Patr. Ct.; I., 203.
John, Archb. Ravenna; I., 119.
John of Salisbury; I., 502.
John, el. Saxony; II., 206,222.
John de Warenne, e. Surrey; I., 617.
John von Wesel; IL, 184.
Johnson, Andrew, pr. U. S. ; III., 569,
*670; H. V. secess. ; III., 545.
Johnston, Albert Sidney, Cf. gen.; III.,
558; Joe, Cf. gen. ; in., 558, 659,562, 563,
565.
Johnston, Sir W.; III., 134.
Joinville, Cr., historian ; I., 588.
Jonas, Prophet; I., 8.
Jones, Engl. gen.; II., 530,531; Paul;
III., 212.
Joseph I., E.; IL, 606; k. Hungary, 626;
k. R.,632; E., 638, 642, 643.
INDEX.
27
Joseph II., E.; III., 45, 140, 149, 150, 153,
163-169
Joseph Bonaparte; III., 269, 285; k.
Naples, 291; k. Spain, 300, 301, 303,
309, 331, 336.
Joseph I., Emmanuel, k. Portugal; III.,
170.
Joseph Anchleta, Bl. S. J ; II., 421.
Joseph Ferdinand, pr. Bavaria; II., 631,
633.
Josephine (de Beauharnais), Empress,
France; III., 286, 316.
Josephinlsm ; III , 163-169
Joubert, Boer Gen.; Ill , 609.
Joubert, Fr. gen.; Ill ,272.
Jourdan, Fr. gen.; III., 261, 263, 272,
331.
Jovianus, R E ; I., 42.
Juarez Benlto, pr. Mexico; III., 572,
675-577.
Judea; I., 7.
Judith, w. Lewis the Pious; I., 238,
239.
Jules Favre; III., 505, 513, 515.
Julian the Apostate, R. E., I., 40, 41, 57
Julian, Visig. Count, I , 174, 176.
Julius II., P.; II., 143, 144, 146, 248, 250.
Julias III., P.; II., 300.
Julius Nepos, R, E. (W.) ; I., 107.
July Revolution, tables of; III., pp. 306-
307 (see France).
June Days of 1848; III., 422.
Junot, Fr m. ; III., 299, 302.
Jurisdiction in the Church; I., 417.
Justin, St., Chr, apol. ; I,, 21, 26.
Justin I., R. E. (E.) ; I., 121, 123, 124.
Justin II., R. E. (E.) ; I., 139, 140.
Justinian I., R. E. (E.); I., 90, 123-139,
193.
Justlanlan II., R. E. (E.); I., 164.
Jutes; I., 92.
Kaaba, the; I., 155.
Kabyles; III., 417.
Kadesla, b. of; I., 168.
Khadldja, w. Mohammed; I., 157.
Kaiserslautera, bs. of; III., 247, 261.
Kalamltesin Arabia; I., 435.
Kalb, baron ; III., 202, 209.
Kahlenberg,b. of; II ,6-24.
Kalish, tr. of, 1813; III.. 325.
Kalo-Joannes, Gr. E. ; I., 430.
Kanghl, Chin. E ; III., 597.
Kansas fight, the , -III., 543.
Kansas-Nebraska Bill, III., 542.
Kanzler, gen., papal min. ; III., 490, 492,
507.
Kara Mustafa; II., 621, 623, 6i4.
Karlman, k. Franks; I., 192 (193), 200.
218
Kasan, Mongol settlement In Russia; I.,
571,
Katlpunau, Soc. Jn Philippines; III.,
625.
Katie, Pruss. officer; III , 43.
Katzbach, b. of. ; III. , 328.
Kaunitz, ct. of, Austr. min.; III., 113,
149, 150, 161, 163, 168.
Kearney, Stephen W., col. II. S.; III.,
536.
Keeling, Ryehouse plotter; II., 587.
Kellermann, Fr. gen.; III., 240.
Kenneth, k. Scots; 1 , 285.
Kent, kgd. of; I,, 92.
Kentucky; III., -208; adm, of, 524; reso-
lutions of ; 630 .
Kepler, astron. ; II., 652.
Kerboga, suit. Mosul. ; I., 447.
Kesselsdorf , b of; III., 59.
Ketteler, baron of; III ,619.
Khaled, Saracen gen. ; I., 165.
Khevenhiiller, Austr. m ; III., 51.
Kildare, e. of, II., 517.
Klllian,IrlshSt.;I.,152.
Kilidje Arslan, suit. ; I., 446.
Kilkenny, confed. of; II., 527; synod o*,
527; gen. assembly of, 527.
Kllllekrankie, b. of ; II., 602.
Kimberley, relief of ; III., 611.
King George's War; III. 107.
King William's War, in the colonies;
III., 103.
Kirk, Engl. comm.; III., 100.
Kirke, Engl. gen. ; II., 609.
Kitchener,!,, Engl., gen.; III., 594,611,
613.
Klapka, Hung. gen. ; III., 444.
K16ber, Fr. gen, ; III., 271, 275.
Kleph, k. Longobards; I., 141.
Klosterseven, convention of; III., 119.
Knights of Alcantara; I., 556; of Avis,
Port. 556; of Calatrava, 556; of St.
John; I., 452 (453), 580; II., 6, 221; of
Santiago; I., 556; of the Sword; I.
580; Templars; I., 452 (453;, 580; sup-
pression of; II., 2-6; Teutonic; I., 613,
580; II., 109.
Know-Nothingism; III., 551.
Knox, John; II., 268, 283-285, 381,382.
28
INDEX.
Kobad I., k New Persia; I., 124.
Koeln, affair of ; III ,408.
Koenlgsberg.tr. of; III., 297.
Koenigsho/en, b. of; II., 201.
Kolm, b. of; III., 118.
Kollomtch, Card. Leopold; II., 623,625.
Koran, the; 1 , 160.
Korsakow, Russ. gen. ; III., 272.
Kosciusko, Thaddaus; III., 156, 156, 202.
Kossowa, b. of; II., 113.
Ko88Uth; III. ,439, 442, 444.
Krasnoy, b. of; III., 323.
Kray, Austr. gen ; III , 272, 276.
Kritzinger, Boer gen, ; III., 612.
Krtiger, Paul, Pr. S. Afr. Rep.; Ill,, 603,
605, 612.
Kublai Khan, Mongol. Emp. ; I., 573, 597.
Ka-Klux Klan ; III , 552, 571.
Kumanes; I., 430.
Kunersdorf, b. of; III., 123.
Kunigunda, St., Empress; I., 332.
Kutchouc Kalnardji, p. of, 1744; III.,
151.
Kutusow, Russ. gen.; III. ,321, 323.
Kwang-Su, Chin. B.,111., 617,622.
Kyrilliza, the ; I-.247, 269.
La Bastida, Archb. Mexico; III., 574.
Lachlne, Ind. massacre of; III., 103.
Lacordaire;III.,405.
Lactantius, Chr. apol. ; I., 21. *
Lacy, Austr. gen. ; III., 125.
Ladislas, k. Naples; II., 37, 38.
Ladislas, k. Poland and Bohemia; II.,
49.
Ladysmith, relief of ; III., 609.
Laetua Pomponius, hum. ; II., 164.
Lafayette, Fr. gen,, in war of indep. ;
III., 202, 210, 214 ; in Fr. revol., 219, 220,
222, 230, 232, 237, 238; in July revol.,
382, 385.
Lafltte;III.,385.
La Fontaine ; II., 658.
Lefort, teacher, Peter Great; III., 18.
Lainez, Jacob, gen. S. J.;II ,316.
Lallemant, 8. J., Ind . miss. ; III., 65.
Lally Tolendal, ct. ; III., 131 ; junior, 131,
2-21.
La Marmora, sen., Ital. min.; III., 434,
453, 476, 477, 480, 463.
LamartinejIII.,420,421.
Lamballe, Fr. princess; III., 239.
Lambert, E.; I ,260.
Lambert, Bttt. gen. ; III. , 347.
Lamoricifcre, Fr. gen. ; III., 417, 422, 424;
pap. gen., 467-469.
Lancaster, Thos., e of; II., 55-57.
Lancastrian House, tables; II., 82, 99;
Lancaster, York and Tudor, p. 75.
Landeshut, b. of; III.- 125
Landshut, b. of; III., 306.
Lanfrank, Archb. Canterbury; I., 370.
372, 400, 401.
Langen, Rudolf of, hum. ; II. . 166.
Langensalza, capitulation of; III., 482.
Langside, b. of; II. ,387.
Langton, B. Winchester; II., 165.
Langue d'oc; I., 270.
Langue d'oil;!., 270.
Laon, b. of; III. ,333.
La Rdvelliere Lepoux; III., 262, 266.
La Rochejaquelin, Vend, gen ; III., 249.
La Uochelle, p. of; II.,330;Calv. strong-
nold, 330, 363, 498; fall of. 498.
LaRothier, b. of; III,, 332.
Lascaris, Constantine, hum.; II., 163,
John, hum., 163,
Las Casas, Bartholomew; II., 419, 422;
III., 96.
Las Navas de Tolosa, b. of ; I., 567. •
Lateran, Gen. Councils. of : 1st, 1 , 399;
2d,462; 3d, 482; 4th, 549, 559; 5th, II.,
52, 144, 151.
Latimer, B ; II., 276.
Latour, Austr. min. ; III., 443.
Laud, Archb. Canterbury; II., 500, 504.
Laudablllter, bull. Adrian IV. ; I., 502.
Lauderdale, d. of; II., 550.
Laudon, Austr. gen.; III., 122, 123, 125,
153.
Launay, viceroy, Naples; II., 217.
Lautrec, Fr. gen.; II., 218.
La Valette, ex-jesuit; III., 171.
La Vendee, war in ; III., 247, 249, 274.
Lavigerie, Card. ; III., 417, 635.
Law, John (Louisiana Co.); III., 7,65,
174.
Lawrence, gov. Nova Scotia; III., 110.
Laybach, Congress of; III., 374.
Lay Investiture, contest about in Ger-
many; I., 373-389, 391-399; in France,
390; in Engl., 400-409; tables of, pp.
284-286.
Layton, Dr.; II., 258.
Lazarists; II., 298.
Lea, b. on the; I., 281.
Leaghaire, ardrigh; I., 148.
Leander.St. Archb. Sevilla; I., 76, 77.
Lebeuf, Fr. m.; II., 500,602.
INDEX.
29
Lebrija, hnm. ; II.. 168.
Le brun;III.,273.
Lech, b on the (1632) ; II., 463.
Lechfeld, b of; I., 318.
La Compte, Fr. gen. ; III., 515.
LedruRollm; III 436.
Lee, Roland, chapl. Henry VIII.; II.,
255; Am. gen., w ind.; III.; 198, 207;
Richard Henry; III., 199; Robert, Of.
gen , III, 559-562, 564; surrender of ,
565.
Lefevre, Pr. gen. ; III., 311.
Legaspl, 8p. comm ; II., 407.
Legations, European, Siege of (Pekln) ;
III., 619,620.
Legendre the butcher; III., 237.
Legion of Honor; III ,284.
Legnano, b. of ; I., 480.
Leicester, e. of; II., 392,396.
Lelf Erlcson; I., 268.
Leigh, Dr. ; II , 258.
Lelpslc, disputation of; II., 192; b. of,
1813; III., 329.
Leisler, gov. N. Y., III., 103.
Le Mans, b. of ; III., 247.
Lemberg, ct. of; III., 442.
Lenox, e. of; II., 384.
Lennox, 1. Henry; III., 472.
Lenten Snyod of, 1074; I., 379; of 1075,
380; of 1076,381.
Leo I. the Great, P ; I., 82, t7, 193.
Leo III., St. P. ; I., 226, 227, 229, 301
Leo IV , St. P. , I., 243, 244, 276.
Leo VIII, antip., I.. 322.
Leo IX , St P. ; I , 340, 353, 414, 427.
Leo X., P.; II., 52, 146-148, 165, 169, 189,
190, 193, 248, 308.
Leo XII. P. ; III., 375, 382, 409.
Leo XIII., P. ; III., 510, 586, 634-636.
Leo I., the Thraclan, R. E. (E.);I.,87,
118, 123.
Leo the Isaurian, R. E. (E.); I., 164
179, 194.
Leo the Philosopher, Gr. E. ; I. , 426, 428.
Leoben, preliminary p. of, 1797; III., 266.
Leofrlc, e. Mercla; I., 367, 358.
Leofwine, s. Godwlne; I., 359.
Leonine City; I., 244.
Leontins, R. gen. ; I,, 164.
Leovlglld, fc. Visigoths, I., 76.
Leopold I., E.; II., 554; war of devolu-
tion, 573, 678-680; war of Palatine
succession, 606, 615, 617; Turkish wars,
619-630; Spanish succession, 631-633,
635, 638, 643.
Leopold II., E. ; III., 153, 232, 234.
Leopold I., k. Belgium; III., 388.
Leopold, Archd. Florence; III., 434.
Leopold, margr. Austria; I., 459.
Leopold, d. Austria; I., 517, 559; II., 12,
13, 119.
Leopold, pr. Hohenzollern ; III., 498.
Leopold, Joseph, d. Lorraine; II., 617.
Lepanto, b. of; II., 345.
Lepidus; I., 14.
Leslie, Imp. officer; II , 466.
Lesseps, M. de; III., 435,583.
Letelller, Fr. chancellor; II., 657.
Letourneur; 111,262.
Letters de cachet; III., 178.
Leuthen.b. of; III., 120.
Levellers or Rationalists ; II., 515
Lewes, b. and tr. of; I., 608.
Lewis the Pious, E.; I., 224, 235, 237-239.
Lewis II., E ; I., 243.
Lewis III., k. West Franks; I.. 270.
Lexington, b. of; III., 193.
Leyden, John of; II., 204.
L'H6pital, Michel; II., 314, 316, 317, 320.
Liberum Veto In Poland; III., 142, 154.
LIblus Severus, R. E. (W->; I., 107.
Llchnowski, pr. ; III., 441.
Llclnins, R. E. ; I., 36, 37.
Llgnltz,b.of,III.,125.
Liga, the Catholic; II , 431, 435, etc.
Ligurlan Republic; III ,265,434.
LI Hung Chang, Chin. mln. ; III., 622.
Llewellyn, pr. Wales ; I. , 610.
Limerick, tr. of (1691) ; II , 611.
Lludolf, d. Suabia; I.. 315. 318, 320.
Linacre, hum. ; II., 165.
Lincoln, Abraham, Pr. U. 8.; III., 544,
545, 551, 553, 555, 565, 568, 569.
Lincoln, b. of; I., 489; 1216, 545.
Lincoln, Am. gen., w. Ind.; III., 208, 209,
216.
Lindisfarne, monastery of ; I., 100, 101.
Lionel, pr. s. of Edw. III.; II., 66,75;
table of claim, 87.
Llonne, Fr. mln. ; II., 555.
Lisle d'Adam, Grandm. Knights of St.
John; II., 221.
Llssa, nav. b. of; III., 485.
Lithuanians; I., 671, 580; II., 109.
Llts de justice ; III., 178.
Lluva, k. Visigoths; I., 76.
Livy;I.,15.
Lobosltz.b. of; III., 117.
Locke, John; 111., 69, 83, 159.
Lodi (Adda), b. of; III., 263.
30
INDEX.
. Loewen.b, of; I., 263.
Lollards; II., 27, 238.
Lombard League; I., 478-480, 565.
Lombardo- Venetian, kgd. 1815; III . 357
London, Dr; II., 258.
London, Tower of ; I., 367; great council
of, 1107, 409; p. of, 1654; II , 538; III.,
101; conference of, 1830; III f 379, 388,
389, confer, of, 1867, 496; tr. of, 1861,
572 ; 1884, 603, 608.
Long Island, b. of ; III., 200.
Longjumeau, p. of (1568) ; II., 320.
Longobards; I., 83. 140-143; kgd. of, 195-
200, 220; fall of, 221.
Long Parliament, the; II., 504, 505, etc.,
545
Lookout Mountain, b, of; III., 562.
Lopez, Mex. col ; III., 577.
Lords Appellants; II., 80.
Lords of the Congregation (Scotland) ;
II., 284.
Lorenzo 11 Magnlflco, de'Medlcl ; II., 135,
137, 146, 164.
Lorenzo II , de'Medlcl ; II , 145.
Lorraine ; I., 240, duked. of; 251, 335.
Lothaire, k. West Franks; 1 , 254, 272,
324.
Lothar I., E.; 1 , 237 242; House of, 241.
Lothar, k. Italy ; 1 , 258.
Lothar, k. Italy and Burgundy;!., 320.
Lothar II., k Lorraine ; I , 243, 244.
Lothar the Saxon, E ;I.,395, 453 457.
Loubet, M., Pr. France; III., 583.
Louis the Blind, E. ; I , 249, 256, 258.
Louis V. the Sluggard, k. West Franks;
1 , 255.
Louis VI., k France ; I., 390, 397, 410, 460.
Louis VII , k. France; 1 , 464, 465, 475, 490,
496 498, 505, 506.
Louis VIII , k. France; I , 542, 545, 550,
553.
Louis IX., the Saint; I., 566, 574-580, 585,
600, 607, 608; family of, 574; canonized,
621.
Louis X , k. France; II., 62.
Louis XI., k. France; II., 62, 102, 104, 120-
124.
Louis XII., k. France; II., 141-144, 147,
148.
Louis XIII., k. France; II., 443, 469-471,
498.
Louis XIV., k. France; II., 484,486, 553,
555,557, 559, 561; 1st war of spol., 565
569; 2d war of spol., 571-578; Reunions,
579-580; and Engl. 559-563, 581, 583, 685,
596, 598, 599,603; 3d war of spol., 604-
618; and Turks, 620, 622, 627 630; w. of
Span, succession, 631 646; and the
Church, 649, 651 657; character, 658;
and colonies; III , 103; result of reign,
174.
Louis XV., k. France; II, 644; 111,5,
41,42, 48,58,132,135, 158,173; result of
reigu,174.
Louis XVI, k. France; III , 182. 218 242.
Louis XVII , k. France; III., 243, 252.
Louis XVIII.; Ill , 262, 273, 283, 335, 336,
338, 380, 382, 405.
Louis Bonaparte, k. Holland; III., 291,
310, 392.
Louis the Great, k. Hungary and
Poland ; II , 108, 109.
Louis, k Hungary and Bohemia; II., 221.
Louis II , k Naples; II. ,37.
Louis Oversee, k. West Franks; 1., 253,
272
Louis Philip, k. French; III., 382, 385,
386, 395. 416, 420, 440.
Louis, ct. Blois, Cr. ; I , 523.
Louis, dauphin, s Louis XIV. ; II., 641.
Louis, d. Burgundy; II., 640, 644.
Louis, d. Orleans; II, 88.
Louisa of Savoy , II , 219.
Louisiana Co ; III., 7; col. 65; purchase
of, 340, adm. of, 524.
Louvain, b. of; III., 389.
Louvel; III., 381.
Louvois, Fr. min.; II., 555, 579, 614.
Louvre, Galilean meeting at the; I., 628.
LUbeck,p. of, 1629; II ,449.
Lowestoft, nav. b. of; II., 560.
Lucan, Rom poet; I., 17.
Lucius II, P.; I. .462.
Lnckner, Fr. gen.; III., 237.
Ludlow, Parl. gen.; II., 635.
Ludwig the Bavarian (K.) ; II., 12-17, 63.
Ludwig, k. Bavaria; III , 438.
Ludwigthe Child, k. Germans; I., 251.
Ludwig the German ; I , 237, 239, 240, 243,
246, 247; House of, 246.
Ludwig, Archd. Austria; III., 306.
Ludwig, Margr. Baden; II , 626, 627, 638.
Ludwig of Brandenburg; II., 17.
Ludwig of Nassau; II., 359, 361, 363, 365,
368.
Ludwig, landgr. Thurlngla, Cr. ; I.. 513;
561.
Lndwlg Ferdinand, pr. Prussia; III.,
293.
LUgenfeld (Rothfeld) b.of; 1,238.
INDEX.
31
Ltttzen, b. of; II., 464 (1813) ; III., 326.
Luis, k, Portugal ; III., S94.
Luitprand, k. Longobards; I., 143, 196,
197.
Lumley,l.;IL, 597.
Lun^ville. p. of, 1801; III., 276, 277.
Luther, Dr. Martin; II., 187-193, 195-200,
202,205, 220, 222, 227, 228, 299.
Lntter am Barenberg, b. of; II., 447.
Luxembourg, Fr. m. ; II., 571, 612, 614.
Luxemburg Question ; III., 496.
Lyons ; 1st Gen. Council of ; I., 541,567;
2dGen, C. of; 581, 589.
Macbeth, k. Scots ; I. , 360.
Macchiavelli, Nlccolo; II., 175.
Macdonald, Fr. m. ; III., 328, 333.
Macdonougb, Am, comm. ; III., 344.
MacDowell, U. g. ; III., 557.
Macedonianism ; I., 201.
Maciejowice, b. of ; III., 156.
Mack, Austr. gen. ; III., 287.
MacMahon, m., Pr. Fr. republic; III.,
458-500, 502-504, 515, 517, 583.
Madison, Pr. U. S ; III., 522, 630, 543.
Madrid, p. of (1525) ; II., 217.
Magdeburg, siege and fall of; II., 458,
459.
Magallaes, Port. disc. ; II., 405,407.
Magenta, b. of; III ,458.
Magersfontain, b. of; III., 610.
Magnus the Good, k. Norway and Den-
mark; I., 310, 363.
Magnus, d Saxony; I., 378.
Magnentius, R. usurper; I., 40.
Maguire,!., Irish leader; II., 524.
Maguire, Austr. gen. ; III., 125.
Magyars, the; I., 250, 251, 312, 313, 318.
Mahdl, the ; 1 , 173 ; III. , 594.
Mahmoud, of Ghazln, Turk, sultan;
I., 434.
Mahmoud, Ottom. Sultan; III., 418.
Mahomet II.. Ottom. sultan ; II., 114-118.
Mahrattas, the; III., kgd. of.
Maieul, St., a. Cluny; I., 260;
Maine; III., 74; adm. of, 526.
Maine and Normandy, united with
Engl.,I.,410.
Majuba Hill, b. of; III., 603, 128, 212.
Malachi, k. Meath. ; I., 499, 500.
Malatestas, the, in Rimini ; II., 10; Carlo
di, 35, 38, 42.
Malcolm I., k. Scots ; I., 287, 309.
Malcolm III., Oanmore, k. Scots ; I., 360,
367, 369, 371, 401.
Malcolm I V.,k. Scots; I., 490.
Malcolm and St. Margaret, House of;
I., 612.
Malek el Kamel, Suit. Egypt; I., 560 562.
Malek, el Saleh, Suit. Egypt; I., 572, 577.
Malek Shah, Seljuk suit. ; !.,( 434.
MaHgnano, b. of; III., 459.
Mallow, b. of; II., 531.
Mallinckrodt, centrist; III., 630.
Malou, Belg. min. ; III., 635.
Malouet; HI., 221.
Malplaquet, b. of; II., 641.
Mamelukes; I., 434, 576, 577, 580.
Manchester, 1., parl. gen. ; II., 510, 512.
Manchuria, occup. by Russia; III , 612.
Manco, Inca; II., 410, 411.
Mandat, Fr commander; HI , 238.
Manfred, k. Sicily; I., 568, 599, 600.
Manila Bay, b. of; III., 587.
Manning, Card. ; III., 413, 415.
Mans, b. of, 1871 ; III., 512.
Mansfeld, Ernest of; II., 435, 436, 441,
442,444, 446, 495.
Mansfield, 1., chief just; III., 360.
Mansur, Caliph ; I., 180
Mansnrah, b. of; I., 559, 576.
Manteuffel.Pruss. gen. ; III , 512.
Mantua, Congress of; II., 145.
Manuel I , Comnenus; I., 430,524.
Manzikert, b of ; I., 430, 434
Mar, e. of; III., 2, 4.
Marafios; 11,153.
Marat; III , 230, 231, 239, 245, 246.
Marbot, k. Marcomanni; I., 53.
Marchand.Fr. capt.; III. ,594.
Marchfleld, b.of; I ,605.
Marcian, R. E. (E.) ; I. , 81.
Marco d'Aviano, Fra; II., 622, 624, 628.
Marco Polo, traveller; III., 597.
Marcus Aurelius, R. E. ; I., 21, 24.
Marengo, b. of; III., 275.
Margaret of Austria; II., 219.
Margaret of Burgundy (Charles the
Bold); II., 131.
Margaret of Carinthia and Tyrol; II.,
17.
Margaret, q. Engl. (Edw. I.) ; I., 614, 623.
Margaret of Anjou, q. Engl. (Henry VI.) ;
II., 96, 100-103.
Margaret, Fair Maid of Norway; I., 611.
Margaret of Parma; II., 355-360.
Margaret von derSaale; II., 227.
Margaret, Bl,, duchess, Salisbury; II.,
257.
Margaret of Savoy ; II., 348.
32
INDEX.
Margaret, St., q. Scotl. ; I., 371, 401.
Margaret, q. Scotl. (James IV.) ; II., 132.
Margaret of Valois, q. France; II.. 322,
323.
Margaret of Valois, q. Navarre; II., 308
Maria, q. Portugal; III ,170,299.
Maria Infanta, Spain ; II., 494.
Maria Christina, q.-regent Spain; III.,
586,616.
Maria da Gloria, q. Portugal ; III., 394.
Maria Lesczinska, q. Prance; III. ,41.
Maria Louisa, Empress of the French;
III , 316, 333, 334; duchess of Parma,
356.
Maria Theresa, Empress -q.; claims;
III. ; 40, 42 ; first Silesian war, 45-54 ; 2d
Siles. w., 55-59, 62; Seven years war,
112-126, 138-140; and Poland, 149, 150;
death of, 153; and the Church, 163, 173.
Maria Theresa, q. France (Louis XIV.) ;
II ,486,566.
Maria Antoinette, q. France; III., 182,
202, 232,237,252.
Marie Therese (d. Louis XVI.) ; III., 252.
Marie de'Medici, q. France; II., 469.
Marignano, b. of ; II., 148.
Marlllac, m. de. ; II., 469.
Marion, guerrilla leader; III., 209.
Mark Anthony; I., 14.
MarkAurel.R. E.;I ,26.
Marius, Cajus; I., 14, 51.
Marlborough, d. of (1. Churchill); II.,
598, 603, 610, 634, 635, 638-643; duchess
of, 642; Parliament of, 1267; I., 609.
Marmont, m., d. Ragusa; III., 310, 329,
333.
Marqnette, S, J. , Ind. miss. ; III., 65.
Maroto, Carlist. gen. ; III., 395.
Marozia I.; I., 319.
Marshal, Wm., e. Pembroke ; I., 546.
Marsilio Ficino, hum ; II., 164.
Marpiglio of Padua ; II., 14.
Marston Moor. b. of; II , 510.
Martignac, Fr. mln. ; III., 383.
Martin I., St. P. ; I., 164, 194.
Martin IV., P. ; I , 603.
Martin V., P. ; II., 41, 43, 46, 48.
Martinez, Boh. official; II., 434.
Martinez de la Rosa, Sp min. ; III., 395.
Mary, heiress of Burgundy; II., 104, 122.
Mary of Guise, q.-regent, Scotl.; II.,
269, 286.
Mary of Este, q. Engl. ; II,, 553, 595
Mary, princess of Orange, q. Engl. ; II.,
558, 595, 600-602.
Mary, q. Hungary; II. , 348.
Mary Stuart, q. Scotland; II., 268, 269;
claims to Engl. throne, 279; — 285, 28(5,
314; in Scotland, 379-387; in Engl., 388-
396.
Mary Tudor, q. Engl.; II. , 250,255,269,
272-278, and Ireland, 419.
Mary Anne, q. Spain ; II., 565.
Maryland; III., 68,82; and the Church,
86 , and negro slavery, 97.
Maserfeld, b. of; I., 100.
Mason and Dlxon's line; III., 68.
Mason, John, III., 74.
Massachusetts; III., 73; governm. 83;
Church, 85; negro slavery, 97.
Massaglia, b. of; II , 612.
Massena, Fr. m., III.. 269, 272, 276, 287,
306; pr. of Essling, 312.
Massillon, B., orator; II., 658; III., 180.
Massosoit, Ind. chief; III., 94.
Mather, Dr. Increase ; III., 93.
Matilda the Empress (Henry V.);L,
391, 410, 486-488; Lady of Engl., 489, 490.
Matilda, q. Engl (Henry !.);!., 405.
Matilda of Engl., w. Henry the Lion; I.,
484.
Matilda, St., q. Germane; I., 313.
Matilda, duchess of Tuscany; I., 375,
383, 384, 386, 387, 389; Matildan inheri-
tance, 383, 396, 456, 474, 481, 522.
Matthew, Father, III., 370.
Matthias, E., archd. Austria j II., 371,
374-370, E., 432 -435.
Matthias Corvinus, k. Hungary; II., 108,
116, 118, 119.
Maurice, R. E. (E.); I., 139.
Mauritius, R. E. (E.) ; 1., 203.
Maurice of Nassau, Stadtholder; II.,
378, 416, 439.
Maurice, d. and el., Saxony; II., 226, 229,
231, 233, 300.
Maury, abbe; III., 221,228.
Maxen, b. of; HI., 124.
Maxentius, R. E. ; I., 34, 36.
Maximmnus, R. E. ; I., 34.
Maximtenus, Hercules, R. Co. E.; I., 33.
Maximilian I., E. elect. ; II., 122, 132, 135
136, 143-145, 147, 148, 185, 194.
Maximilian II., E. ; II., 303, 425.
Maximilian, E. Mexico, archd. ; III., 306;
E., 572-577.
MaximWan.k. Bavaria; III. ,438.
Maximilian, d. Bavaria; II., 307, 428,429,
431, 435, 438, 439, 441 ; el. Bavaria, 442,
451, 462, 463, 477, 478.
INDEX.
33
Maximilian Emmanuel, el. Bavaria; II.,
636.
Maximilian Joseph, el. Bavaria; III.,
57.
Maxlminus, E. E. ; I., 31, 37.
Maximinus Daza, R. E.; I., 34.
Maximus Pupienus, It E. ; I., 31.
Maximus, R. usurper ; I.. 63.
Maximum price, the; III., 250, 259.
Mayas, the, of Yucatan , II., 406.
May Laws, the ; III., 632.
Mayoranus, R. E., ( W.) ; I., 107.
Mazarin, Card. ; II., 484-486, 554, 555.
Mazeppa, hctman, Cossacks; III ., 32.
Mazzlni; III., 393,419, 426,428,432,435,
436.
McClellan, U. gen.; III., 557-560.
McDowell, U. gen. ; III., 559.
McKinley, Pr. U. S. ; III., 616.
McLaughlins, royal family;!., 145.
MeMurronghs, royal family; I., 145.
Meade, George G., U. gen. ; III., 561.
Meander, b. on the ; I., 466.
Meaux, p. of , 1229 ; 1 , 550.
Mechlin, Council of; 1570, II., 362.
Mecklenburg, dukes of ; II., 448, 451.
Medina Sldonia, d. of ; II., 397.
Meer Jaffier, Nabob ; III., 130.
Meersen, tr. of (870) ; I., 243.
Mehemet All, viceroy, Egypt; III., 379,
418, 594.
Melac, Fr. gen. ; II., 605.
Mclanchton ; II. , 196, 205, 220, 222, 227.
Melander, Luth. preacher; II., 227.
Melas, Austr. gen.; III., 272,275.
Melven, b. of; I., 619.
Menabrea, Ital. min.;IIL, 491.
Mendicant Friars; I., 590.
Mendoza, Card. ; II., 128; Don Pedro de ;
II., 414.
Menelek, Negus, Abyssinia ; in., 584.
Menotti, Ital. revol. ; III., 392.
Montana, b. of; III., 492.
Mentchicow, Russ. min.;IIL, 37; Russ.
gen., 452.
Menxel, Pruss. goverm. clerk; III., 115;
116.
Merciless Parliament, the ; I., 80.
Meredune, b. of ; I., 278.
Merino, Carlist gen. ; III., 395.
Merode, B. Geneva, papal mln.; III.,
490.
Merowig or Merwig, k. Franks; I., 111.
Merovingians, House of; I., 182.
Merwinj II., Caliph; I., 180.
Mesco I., d. Poland ; I., 317, 324.
Mesco II., d. Poland; I., 335.
Messalina;!., 17.
Messina, b. of; III., 465.
Methodius, St., Ap. of the Slavs.; I.,
247.
Methuen, 1., Engl. gen. ; in., 610.
Metropolitan Sees; I., 202.
Metternich, Austr. mln.; III., 335, 357,
426, 439, 440.
Metz, fall of, III., 511.
Mexico, Empire of 1822, II., 406; III., 376;
republic, 376, 535; war with U. S.,536,
537; second Empire, 572-577; tables,
p 399.
Miantonomo,Ind. chief; III., 94.
Michael III.,E. (E.); I., 420, 421, 425.
Michael IV., Co.-E. (E.); I. ,429.
Michael V., Co.- E. (E.); I.,429.
Michael Palaeologus, E. Nice and Ct.;
I., 528.
Michigan, adm. of ; III., 535.
Middle Ages, principles of; I., 418.
Middleton, 1. ; II., 599.
Miguel, Dom., k. Portugal; III., 378, 394,
395.
Migration of Nations and the Church ; I.,
Decrees (Napoleon's); III., 342;
rising of 1S48, 427.
Milan, pr. Servia; III., 590.
Milazzo,b.of; III., 465.
Milesians ; I., 144.
Millesimo, b. of; III., 263.
Milner, Sir Alfred;' III., 608.
Miltiz, Charles of; II., 190.
Milton ; II., 659.
Milvian Bridge, b. of; I., 36.
Minghetti, Ital. min. ; III., 476.
Minto,l.;III.,426.
Minucius, Felix, Chr. apol. ; I., 27.
Minute Men; III., 193.
Miollis, Fr. gen. ; III., 314.
Mirabeau, ct. ; IIL, 219, 221.
Missionary Ridge, b. of; III., 562.
Mississippi, adm. of ; III., 524; opening
of, 558.
Missolonghi, fall of; III., 379.
Missouri, compromise; III., 525; adm.
of, 526 ; compromise repealed, 542.
Mitchell, Young Ireland ; III., 437.
Moawlya, Caliph; I., 170-172.
Mobillans, Ind. confederacy; III., 88.
Modder River, b. of; III., 610.
Mohacs, b. of ; II., 221 ; (1687) 626.
3
34
INDEX.
Mohammed; I., 157-160; family table,
156.
Mohammed IV., Ottom. Sultan ; II., 620,
624.
Mohammed Achmet, the Mahdi;IIL,
594.
Mohammed al Mahdi, Caliph, Africa;
I., 432.
Mohawks, Ind. tr. ; in., 65.
Mohicans, Ind, tr. ; III., 94.
Mohere;II.,658.
Mollwitz, b. of; III., 47.
Moltke, [von, Pruss. fleld-m. ; III., 482,
500, 504, 505.
Monarchies, ancient; I., 4; European
consolidated: II., 107-150; tables; II. ,
117-119..
Monasteries, suppression of English;
II., 258,260-262.
Monastlcism and Monks; I., 205-208.
Moncontour, b. of; II., 321.
Mondovi, b. of; III., 263.
Monfort, Simon of, Cr. ; I., 523, 525, 549,
550, 553; Aumery de, 550; e. of
Leicester, 608-610; Parliament of, 608;
Henry of, 609.
Mongol Invasion; I., 570-573; Second
Empire; III., 127,128.
Monk, George, Engl. gen. (d. Albe-
marle) ; II., 544-546.
Monino, ct. Florida Blanca ; III., 173.
Monmouth, d. of; II., 581, 585, 687, 591.
Monmouth Courthouse, b. of; III., 207.
Monothelism; I ,201.
Monro, Scotch gen.; II., 526,527,530.
Monroe, Pres. U. S.; III., 525, 531 Doc-
trine, 573.
Mons, b. of (1572) ; II., 322, 365.
Montague, 1. ; II., 583.
Montalembert; III., 405.
Montcalm, marquis of ; III., 133, 134.
Monteagle, 1. ; II., 489.
Montebello, b. of ; III., 458.
Montecuculi, Austr. gen. ; II., 573, 474,
575.
Montereau, b. of ; III., 332.
Montezuma, E. Mexico; II., 406.
Montgarret,l.;II.,608.
Montgomery, Am. geu. ; III., 195.
Montjoy,l.;IL, 520.
Montlehry, b. of ; II., 120.
Montmorency, Anne de; II., 314, 316,
318,319.
Montmorency, ct. of ; II., 469.
Montreal,?, of; 1701; III., 103.
Montrose, e. of; II., 511.
Mooker Heath, b. of ; II., 368.
Moore, James, gov. S. C ; 111,105; Sir
John, Engl. gen.; III., 304.
Moravians ; I., 244, 247, 250.
Moreau, Fr. gen. ; III., 2f>3, 272,284,327,
328.
Morgan, Am. gen., w. ind. ; III., 210.
Morgan, the Freemason ; III., 531.
Morgarten, b. of ; II. , 1 19.
Moriscos; II., 153, 344.
Morisini, Lat. Patr. Ct. ; I., 526.
Morisini, Venetian gen. ; II. ; 626.
Morkere, e. Northumbria ; I., 361, 363,
367.
Morny, Fr. min. ; III., 424.
Morosinl, Papal legate; II., 335.
Morraugh, s. of Brian Boru ; I., 499.
Mortara, b. of, 1849, III., 433.
Mortemer, b. of; I., 347.
Mortiers, Fr. m.; III., 333.
Mortimer's Cross, b of; II., 101.
Morton, Thomas, B. Ely; II., 106
Morton, e. of; II , 381, 383, 384
Moses; I., 7.
Moscow, burning of; III , 322; retreat
from, 323.
Motassem, caliph; I., 434.
Moultrie, Am. col., w Ind,; III, 198.
Mounler; III ,221.
Mount Tabor, b. of; I., 559; III., 371.
Mourad, Sultan; III., 590.
Miihlberg, b. of (1547) ; II., 229.
Muhlhausen, b. of; II. , 575.
Munich, Russ. itlin. ; III., 37: 38.
Minister, Anabaptists of, II., 204.
Mtinier, Thomas; II ,201.
Muezzedin, Caliph; I., 432.
Mukhtar, Turk. gen. ; III , 591.
Mursa, b. of; I., 40. .
Murat, Fr. m. grand.-d., Berg; III. .291,
293, 295; k. Naples, 300, 322, 330, 336,
338,356,357,371.
Murfreesboro, b, of; III., 558.
Murten, b. of; II., 122
Musa, Sarac. gen. ; I., 174, 176,177.
Mustafa, Ottom. Sultan ; II., 629,
Mustafa Koprili.gr. vizier; II., 627,628.
Mutian, C. Rufus, hum.; II., 167.
Mutiny Act in America; III., 188.
Nabopolasar;I.,4.
Nabuchodonosor ; I., 8.
Nahum, Prophet ; L. 8.
Nancy, b. of; II., 122.
INDEX.
35
Nangis.b. of; III., 332.
Nanking, tr. of, 1842; III., 598.
Nantes, Edict of; II. , 339, 498; revoca-
tion. 591, 657.
Napoleon I., Bonaparte; III., 260, 263,
264 ; in Egypt, 271 ; first consul, 278-284 ;
E. of the French, 283 338; war of 3d
coalition, 286-291; with Prussia and
Russia, 292-297; Peninsular w., 298 304,
312, 313; with Austria, 305-311; and
Pius VIL, 314-318; war with Russia,
319 324; war of liberation, 325 331; fall
of, 332-338; character, 338; and U. S.,
339, 340, 342, 343 ; tables, pp. 234-244.
Napoleon III., E. Fr., prince Louis Bona-
parte ; III., 392, 416, 417, 422; President
rep. 423, 424; E.,425, 435,451 ; and Italy,
456-460; 463, 467, 481, 484, 491, 402; war
with Germany, 496, 97, 499, 500, 504, 505,
506, 510 ; and Mexico, 572-574, 576.
Narragansetts, Ind. tr ; III., 76, 94.
Narses, R. gen. (E.) ; I., 133, 140.
Narva, b. of; III., 28.
Narvaez, gen., Span. min. ; III., 396.
Naseby.b. of; II., 511.
Nashville, b. of; III., 563.
Natlvism in U. S. ; III. , 547-555.
Navarette, b. of ; II., 71.
Navarino, b. of; III., 379.
Navigation Act; II , 538, 562; III., 101; in
America, 102, 185.
Necker, Fr. min. ; III., 218, 220.
Neerwinden, b. of; II., 612; 1793; III.,
244.
Negro Slavery, in North Am. ; III., 95-98.
Nehavend, b. of; I. ,168.
Nelson, Engl. adm.; III., 271, 280, 287.
Nemours, tr. of; II., 333.
Nero, R. E.; I., 13, 17, 20, 25.
Nerva, R. E.; I., 21,22, 26.
Nestorianism ; I., 201.
Netherlands, the; I., 614, 627; II., 63, 88,
90, 102; Charles the Bold, 121-123;
under Philip II., 348-378; defection of,
374, 376, 377; tables, pp. 350-351;
Spanish, 378; and Cromwell, 538; and
Charles II., 558 564; and Louis XIV.,
566-578; and Wm. III., 595> 597; and
war of Span, succ., 638-645; during the
Fr. revol.; III., 240, 243, 261, 272, 336,
337; kgd. of, 355; July revol., 387-389;
modern, 635.
Neuilly, b. of; III., 503.
Neutrality, armed ; III., 213, 274, 341, 455.
Neville, Archb. York; II., 240.
Neville's Cross, b, of; II., 66.
Newbury, 1st b. of; II., 509; 2nd b. of,
510.
Newcastle, d. of ; III., 112.
Newcastle, Engl. gen.; II., 509, 510.
New England; III., 76, 82, 97.
New Forest;!., 404.
New France; III., 65.
New Hampshire; III., 74.
New Haven; III. ,83
New Jersey; III., 78.
Newman, Card. ; III., 410, 411, 413.
"New Model;" II., 512.
New Netherlands; III. ,78.
New Orleans, b. of ; III., 347.
New Persia; I., 124, 130, 165, 168.
New Sweden; III., 79.
Newton, Astron. ; II., 652.
New York; III., 78, 83.
Ney, Fr. m. ; III., 323, 328, 329, 336-338.
Nice, Councils of ; I., 201; Greek Empire
of, 528; Truce of; II., 224.
Nicephorus, Metropoltan.Kief. ; I., 427.
Nicephorus Phocas, co-E. (E.); I., 429.
Nicholas I., St. P.; I., 244,247, 423.
Nicholas II., P.; I. ,375, 376.
Nicholas III., P. ; I., 601.
Nicholas V., P. ; II., 53, 115, 125, 169.
Nicholas, E. (E.) ; I., 526.
Nicholas I., Czar; III., 379,386, 390, 451,
595.
Nicholas II., Czar; III. , 582, 583.
Nicholas, boy-crusader; I., 530.
Nicholas Cusa, Card. ; II . 651.
Nicholas, Grand-d. Russia; III., 591.
Nicholas Stork ; II., 196.
Nicholson, gov. N. Y.; III., 106.
Nicolaitism; I., 340, 373,374.
Nicopolis, b. of; II., 111.
Nihilism; III., 582.
Nika.the; I., 125,
Nikita, pr. Montenegro; III., 590.
Nilus, St.; I., 326.
Ninive; I., 4,8; b. of, 162.
Nlsh, b. of; II. ,113.
Nlsibis, b. of; III., 418.
Noailles, Fr. gen. ; III., 54
Nobiling, Dr., anarchist; III., 634
Nordlingen, b. of; II., 467,471.
Nogaret, William of; I., 614, 628, 629.
Non-intercourse Act; III., 342, 343.
Non- jurors; II., 602.
Norbert, St. Archb., Magdeburg; I.;
456,457, 463;
Norfolk, d. of ; II., 259, 264, 389, 390.
36
INDEX.
Norfolk coast, nav. b. off ; II., 561.
Nor ham, award of ; I . , 613.
Normandy, foundation of; I., 270; table
of dukes, 346; separation from En-
gland, 537.
Normans in Apulia; I., 332, 338; in
England, 364, 372 etc.; in Greek
Empire, 366; in southern Italy, 349-
355; in Spain, 348; table of migrations,
203.
Norris, Sir John ; II., 397, 402.
North, 1., Engl. min.; III., 188, 206, 215,
359, 360.
North Allerton, b. of the Standard; I.,
487.
North America; III., 63.
North Carolina; III., 69.
Northampton, tr. of; II., 59; b. of 101.
Northern war, the great; III., 25 36;
tables of, pp. 103-104.
Northmen; I., 238; in Europe and
America, 261 -269; 274-287, 303-310; table
of migrations, 200 203.
Northumberland, e. of (Percy); II., 83,
84; II., 389.
Norway, kgd. of; I., 264; protestantism
in ; II., 210.
Nottingham, e. and d. of Norfolk.; II.,
81.
Northwestern Territory antislave; III.,
522.
Notker of St Gall; I., 231.
Novara, b. of (1513); II., 147; 1821; III.,
374; 1849, 432, 433.
Nova Scotia; III., 101.
Novi, b. of; III., 272.
Noyon, p. of (1516); II., 160.
Nugent, Irish-Austr. gen.; III., 428.
Nullification; III., 533.
Nuremberg, rel. truce of; II., 223.
Nymphenburg, Alliance of; III., 48.
Nymwegen, p. of, 1678 and 1679; II., 577.
Nystadt, p. of, 1721; III., 36.
Oakely, canon; III., 413.
Oath of 'Allegiance, absol. from; I., 413.
Obotrites, Slav, tribe ; I., 223.
O'Briens, royal family; I., 145.
Occam, William; II., 14.
O'Connell, Daniel; III., 366-370, 403.
O'Connor, Roderlc, ardrlgh; I , 500.
O'Connors, royal fam.; I., 145.
Octavlanus Augustus, B. E. ; I., 10, 14,
15, 25, 53.
October Days, 1789; III., 222.
Octroi, Fr. tax; III., 179.
Odilo, St. a. Cluny;I.,260.
Odillon Barrot ; III., 385, 420.
Odo, Archb. Canterbury;!., 286.
Odo, bro. of Henry I., France; I.,
347.
Odo of Paris, king, West Franks; I.,
249, 252, 270.
Odo, St. a. Cluny ; I., 260, 345.
O'Donnell, e. of Tirconnell ; II., 320, 517,
518.
Odovaker; I ,108-110,119.
Offa, k. Mercians; I. ,273.
Oglethorpe, B. Carlisle; II., 279; James;
III., 70.
Ohio, Company; III., 109; adm. of, 624.
Oktai, Mongol chief; I., 571.
Olaf Cuaran, k. Dublin ; I., 26G.
Olaf the Fair, sea king; I., 266, 277.
Olaf the Saint, k. Norway; I., 309.
Olaf, s. of Sithric; I., 286.
Olaf Triggvason, k. Norway; I., 267, 268,
303.
Old Man of the Mountain; I., 435.
Oldcastle, John, Lollard; II., 86.
Oleg the Rus. ; I., 269.
Oleron, rolls of; I., 587.
Oliva, p. of (1660^ ; II., 556.
Olivier, Boer gen. ; III., 610
Ollivier, Fr. min. ; III., 497, 6C2.
Olmiitz, Conference of, 1850; III., 447.
Olybrius.R. E. (W.) ; I., 107.
Omar, Caliph; I., 157, 166 169.
Omdurman, b. of; III., 594.
O'Moore, Sir Roger; II., 524.
O'Neill, Sir Brian ; II., 521.
O'Neih, Hugh, e. Tyrone; II., 520; the
younger, 534.
O'Neill, Owen Roe; II., 526, 530,534.
O'Neill, Sir Phelim ; II., 524, 525, 535.
O'Neill, Shane; II., 520, 521.
O'Neill, e. of Tyrone ; II , 518.
O'Neills, roy, fam.; I., 145.
O'Neills, the, of Tyrone; II., 517.
Oppede, pres. Parl. of Aix; II., 308.
Oppenhelm, meeting of ; I., 382.
Opium War, the; III., 598.
Orange Free State; III., 601, 602; so-
ciety, 362, 366.
Ordeals; I., 212.
Ordinances of Charles X. ; III., 384.
Orestes, R. gen.; I., 107, 109.
Origen, Chr. writer ; I . , 27.
Orkhan, Ottoman chief; II., 110.
Orkneys, jarls of; I., 265.
INDEX.
37
Orleans and Angouleme, Houses of; II.,
140; House of O., 810.
Orleans, b. of; 1870; III., 512.
Orleans, d. of, br. Louis XIV. ; II., 604.
Ormond, d. of; II., 608, 643, 644; III., 4.
Ortnond, e. of; II., 527, 529, 530, 532.
Ormond, Irish gen. q. Elizabeth; II.,
520, 521.
Ormonds, the; II., 517.
Orphans, the (Hussites) ; II., 47.
Orseolo, Peter, doge, Venice ; I., 329.
Orsini, Felice; III., 456.
Orslms.Rom. fam.; I., 629; II., 10.
Orthok, Seljuk chief; I., 438.
Osman Digna; III., 614.
Qsman Pasha; III., 451, 591.
Ostmen; I..266.
Osnabruck.b. of; I., 223.
Ostead, manifesto of; III., 586.
Ostermann, Russ. min.; III., 37.
Ostrogoths; I., 59 62, 83, 118-121, 123;
kgd.of; 127-132; fall of , 133.
Ostrolenka, b. of, III., 391.
Oswald, k. Northumbria; I., 100, 102.
Oswiu, k. Northumbria; I., 101.
Othere, Engl. seaman ; I., 283.
Othman, Caliph ; I., 157, 170.
Othman, Ottoman chief; II., 110.
Otho.R. E.; I., 17.
Otis, James; III., 184.
Otto I., the Great, E. ; I., 272, 313, 315-323.
Otto II., E. ; I., 320, 323-325.
Otto III., E.; I., 325-328, 343.
Otto IV., E. ; I., 531-536, 542.
Otto I., k. Greece; III., 379.
Otto, St., B. Bamberg; I., 457.
Otto of Frelsing, Or. ; I. , 467.
Otto the Illustrious, d. Saxony; I., 251
311.
Otto of Nordheim, d. Saxony; I., 378.
Otto, d. Snabia, and Bavaria ; I., 324.
Otto of Wittelsbach, d. Bavaria; I., 471,
484, 532.
Ottokar II., k. Bohemia; I., 604, 605.
Ottoman Turks; II., 110-114, 116-118, 221,
223.
Ottowas, Ind. tr. ; III., 141.
Oudenard, b. of; II., 640.
Oudinot, Fr. gen. ; III., 435, 436.
Oudlnot, Fr. m. ; III., 323, 328, S33.
Overbeck, artist, III., 407.
Ovid; I., 15.
Owen Glendower, pr. Wales; II., 84.
Oxenstyerna, Dan. mln., II., 465, 466.
Oxford, wltenagemot of; I., 310; pro-
visions of, 608; university of; II., 159,
162; movement; III., 410, etc.
Ozanam; III., 405, 407.
Paardeburg, b. of; III., 611.
Pacca, Card.; III., 315.
Pacta Conventa in Poland; III., 142.
Paderborn, Mayfield of (777); I., 221.
Paganism; I., 5, 6.
Pakenham, Brit, gen.; III., 347.
Palafox, Jose ; III., 301, 304.
Palatinate, devastation of, II., 605.
Pale, the; I., 503.
Palermo, b. of; III., 465.
Palestro, b. of; III., 458.
Palikao, b. of; III., 598.
Palladlus, St., B. Ireland; I., 148.
Palm, clt. Nuremberg; III., 292.
Palma,Mgr. ;III., 430.
Palmerston, 1 , Engl. min. ; III., 390, 395,
403, 426, 462, 467, 598.
Pampangas; II., 407.
Panama scandal ; III., 583.
Pandulph, papal legate; I., 541.
Pankau, b.of; II., 476.
Papacy, the; I., 411-419; exile of; II.,
1-22; tables, 108.
Papal election decrees; I., 376, 482.
Papal Infallibility; III., 495.
Papal States, annexed by Napoleon ; III.,
315.
Papineau, Mr. Louis Joseph; III., 400.
Paplnianus, R. jurist; I., 30.
Pappenheim, imp gen; II., 457, 459,460,
461.
Paraguay; II., 414.
Paris, Council of, 1104 ; I., 390 ; University
of, 579; p. of 1763; III., 139; Commune
Of, 246, 250; p. of 1814. 334, p. of 1815,
838; Congress and p. ot 1856, 454, 455,
590; first siege of, 505, 511 513; 2d siege
and commune of, 515, 516; ct. 517 ; p. of,
1899, 587.
Paris and Versailles, p. of, 1783; III.,
215.
Parkany.b. of; II., 624.
Parker, Matth. archb. Canterbury; II.,
282.
Parliaments: Simon of Montfort's; I..
508; first perfect Engl.; I., 616; the
merciless; II., SO, the beardless, 281;
Scotch, oi 1560; II., 287; of 1639; II.,
503 , the Long Parliament, 503-544.
Parma, b. of, I., 568.
38
INDEX.
Parnell, Mr., M. P.; III., 579.
Parsons, F..S.J.; II., 391.
Parthenopean republic; III., 272.
Paschal I., P. ; I., 237.
Paschal II., P.; I., 389, 391, 392-394, 396,
407, 409.
Paschal III . , antlpop e ; I. , 477, 479.
Paschasius Radbertus, St. ; I., 231.
Paskewitch, Russ. gen. ; III , 391.
Passaro, Cape, nav. b. of ; III., 39.
Passaro witch, p. of, 1718; III., 38.
Passau, truce of ; II., 232.
Pataria, the; I., 375.
Patkul, John Reinhold; III., 25, 30.
Patrick, St. ; I., 148, 149.
Patrick Henry; III., 184*. 186, 191, 522.
Patrimony of St. Peter;!., 193, and pass.
Patterson, Miss., Mrs. Jerome Bona-
parte; III., 291.
Paul, St., the Apostle; I., 13.
Paul II, P.; II., 118, 169.
Paul III., P.; II., 224, 229, 230, 257, 268,
297-300, 422; and slavery; III., 95.
Paul IV., P.; II., 277, 278, 300, 309, 353,
399.
Paul V., P. ; II , 649, 652.
PaulJ., Czar ; III., 272, 274, 279, 280.
Panlinus, St. , archb. York ; I., 98.
Panlistas, robbers, in South America;
II., 420, 422, 423.
Paulus, R. jurist, I., 30.
Pa via, tr. of ; I., 199; schismatical synod
of, 475; b. of; II., 217.
Pea Ridge, b. of; III., 558.
Peasant's War In Germany; II., 199-203.
Peckham, archb. Canterbury; II., 240.
Pedro I., Dom, E. Brazil; III., 372, 378,
394, 396.
Pedro II . , Dom , E. Brazil ; III., 394.
Pedro, the Cruel, k. Castile; II., 71.
Pedro, k. Portugal; III., 394.
Peel, Robert, Brit. min. ; III., 368, 403.
Pei-tsang, b. of ; III., 620.
Pekin, tr. of, 1860; III , 598; taking of,
698, 620; p. of 1901, 622.
Pelagianism; I., 201.
Pelham, Engl. gen. ; II., 520, 521.
Pelham, Henry; III., 54.
Pellisier, Fr. gen. ; III. , 452.
Pemberton, Cf. gen. ; III., 558.
Penacooks, Ind. tr. ; III., 103.
Penal Code, the (Engl and Irel.); III.,
9 15.
Penal laws in colonies ; III , 87.
Penard, Fr. commissary ; Hi.. 249.
Penda, k. Mercia; I., 99-101.
Penn, William; II., 594, III., 80.
Pennsylvania; III., 80; governm., 82, 83.
Pentapolis, the; I., 199.
Pepperell, Wm. ; III., 107.
Pequods.Ind. tr.; III., 94.
Perez, Antonio; III., 371, 399.
Peronne, tr. of; II., 121.
Perpetual Edict, the; II , 370; de Witt's,
564, 572.
Percy, gunpowder plot; II., 489.
Perry, capt. Oliver H. ; III., 344.
Perry ville, b. of; III., 558.
Persano, Sard, adm.; III., 465, 467, 469,
485.
Persigny, Fr. min. ; III., 424.
Pertinax, R. E . ; I. ,30.
Peru, ancient; II., 409; Spanish, 410.
Petchenegs; I., 430.
Peter, St. ; I., 13; and Paul, death of, 20.
Peter the Great, Czar; II., 630; III, 17,
24,25,27,37,143.
Peter II., Czar; III., 37.
Peter III., Czar; III., 186, 143.
Peter, k. Aragon; I. ,541.
Peter III., k. Aragon and Sicily; I., 602,
603.
Peter, k. Hungary; I., 338.
Peter Canisius, Bl. S. J.; II , 428.
Peter of Castlenau, pap. legate; I., 548.
Peter Claver, St., S. J. ; II., 4-21.
Peter Damien, St., Card ; I., 339, 373,
375.
Peter, grand-d. Russia; III., 114, 115.
Peter the Hermit; I., 443, 444.
Peter de Luna, Card.; II., 24; (see Ben-
edict XIII.).
Peter of Luxemburg, Bl. ; II., 26.
Peter Martyr ; II , 266, 316.
Peter de Roche; I., 607.
Peter de Vineis; I., 568.
Petersburg, p. of, 1762; III., 137.
Peterwardein, b. of; III., 38.
Petion; III., 221, 235.
Petrarch; II., 163.
Petre, Edward, S. J., II., 589, 593, 694
598.
Petroleurs;III.,516.
Petronius Maximus, R. usurper. , 1., «6.
Peuerbach, Astron. ; II., 651.
Peutinger, hum. ; II., 166
j Pfeftercorn, John; 11., 169.
Philip 11., E (Suabia);!., 524, 525, 541,
532.
j Philip I., k. France; I., 370, 390
INDEX.
39
Philip II , Augustus, k. France; I., 506,
507; crusade, 512, 513, 517, 520, 531, 537,
542, character, 551.
Philip III., the Bold, k. France, II., 580,
581, 603.
Philip IV., the Fair; I., 581, 614-616,
620 627,630; II., 1-6.
Philip VI., k. France (Valois); II., 15,
61 65.
Philip II., k. Spain ; II., 235 ; In England,
274-277,280-303, 307; and France 333,
337; and Spain, 341 -347; and the Neth-
erlands, 348-360, 362,368-378; and Eliza-
beth, 390, 396-398; character, 399; gov.-
erm., 400 ; colonies, 407, 416, 422.
Philip IIL.k. Spain; II ,344, 438.
Philip IV., k. Spain; IL, 423, 494: 557,
565.
Philip V., k. Spain (Anjou);II, 632,
634, 636,641, 643-646; III., 5,39,61.
Philip the Bold, d. Burgundy; II., 68,
88, 121.
Philip the Good, d. Burgundy; II.,
91, 96, 121.
Philip the Fair, Archd. Austria; II.,
122, 131, 132.
Philip of Hesse; II., 206, 220, 222, 226,
227, 229, 232, 356.
Philip, Ind. chief ; III., 194.
Philip of Orleans, reg. ; III , 5, 174.
Philip, Don, d. Parma ; III , 46, 62.
Phillphaugh, b. of; II., 511.
Phllippes, Walshingham's forger; II.,
Philippi.b. of; I., 14.
Philippines, the; II., 407, 408,424; III.,
587,624-628.
Philippicus, K. E. (E.) ; I., 164.
Phillips, Wendell, abol.; III., 539.
Philippus Arabs, R. E. ; I , 31.
Philomelium, b. of ; I ,511.
Philostratus phil. ; I., 27.
Phipps, Sir William ; III . , 103.
Phocas, R. E. ; (E.) I., 139.
Photlus, Patr. Ct. ; I., 421-426.
Placenza, sham synod, of ; I., 381 ; Coun-
cil of, 443; b. of; III., 61.
Piasts, rulers of Poland ; I., 317.
Piccolomini, imp. gen. ; II., 466.
Pichegru, Fr. gen. ; III., 247, 261, 267,
284.
Pico de Mlrandola, hum. ; II., 164.
Pietro of Corvaria, antip. ; II., 14.
Plcts;!., 23,91, 92.
Pier de Gast, Sieur de Monts, Fr. disc. ;
III., 65.
Pierce, Franklin, Pr. U. 8. ; III., 542, 586.
Piers Gaveston ; II., 65.
Pilgrimage of Grace, the; II., 259; sec-
ond, 389.
Pillnitz, declaration of; III., 234.
Pimodan, pap. gen. ; III., 468.
Pinkie Cleugh, b. of; II., 269.
Pinzon, Vincente Yanez, Sp. disc. ; II.,
415.
Pipin, k. Aqultaine; I., 237.
Pipin of Heristal, m. d. ; I., 185.
Plpin of Landen, m. d. ; I., 116, 184.
Pipin, k. Lombardy; I., 224.
Pipin, the Short, k. Franks; I., 191, 192
(193), 198-200,218.
Pirkhelmer, hum ; II., 166, Charitas, 166.
Pisa, Council of (1409; ; II., 34-37; schis-
matical council of. 144
Pitt, William, 1. Chatham; III 119, 121,
132,134, 136; 184, 186,206.
Pitt, Wm., the younger ; III, 243, 280, 286,
363-365.
Plttsburg Landing (Shiloh), b. of ; III.,
558.
Pius II., P. ; II., 52, 118, 169.
Pius III., P.; II. 143.
Pius IV.; II., 303- 304.
Pius V., St. P. ; II. 304, 345, 359, 389 391.
Pius VI., P.; III., 168, 172, 229, 264, 269.
272, 323; and America, 546.
Pius VII., P.; III., 272, 281, 285, 314-318
334, 349, 358, 373, 375, 382.
Pius VIII., P. ; III., 375, 408.
Pius IX., P.; III., 414, and Ital. revol..
426, 428, 432, 435, 436; and the Roman
question, 461, 463, 467, 468, 471, 473, 474,
490; Pontlflpate, 493-495; the sacrilege
of 1870, 506 510; and U. S., 550;' and
Culturkampf, 630-632.
Pizarro, Francesco, conq. Pern; II., 405,
410, 411 ; Alonzo, 411.
Placet, royal; II, 26.
Plains of Abraham, b.. of; III., 134.
Plassey, b. of ; III., 130.
Plato; I., 9.
Plegmund, Archb. Canterbury; I., 283.
Pliny, the younger; I., 26.
Plombieres, agreement of; III., 456.
Plotinus, Phil.; I., 27.
Plunket, Archb., Armagh; II., 584,586.
Plymouth, colony of; III., 72.
Poissy, conference of; II , 316.
Poitiers, b. of (1356), II., 68.
40
INDEX.
Poland; I., 817, 325, 329, 330t 335, 338; II.,
25, 109; Protestantism in, 210; — 330,
452-454, 622-625; 630; great Northern
war; III., 25-36; Polish succession, 41,
42; Division of Poland, 142-156; tables
of, pp. 29, 30, 105-107; and Napoleon,
295-297, 321 ; July Revol., 390, 391 ; Febr.
Re vol., 445.
Pole, Sir Geoffrey, Engl. M.; II., 257;
William de la., d. Suffolk; II., 98.
Polhez, Fr. gen. ; III., 492.
Poliguac, Fr. mln.; III., 383.
Polizlano, Angelo, hum. ; II., 164, 165.
Polk, James V., Pr. U. S. ; III., 535, 536,
586.
Pollentla, b. of; I., 68.
Poll tax, French; III., 179.
Poltrdt, murderer of Guise; II., 319.
Policarp, St. M.; I. ,26.
Pombal, Carvalho, marq. of, Port. min. ;
III., 161, 170.
Pomeranla, d. of; II., 455.
Pomeranians; I., 329.
Pompey;!., 14.
Ponce de Leon, Span, discov. ; III., 64.
Poniatowski, pr.; III., 155, 329.
Pontiac, Ottowa chief; III , 141.
Pontius Pilate; I., 10, 11.
Pope, U. gen. ; III., 558-560, 563.
Pope, Engl. poet; II., 659.
Popish Plot, the ; II., 581-584.
Porcaro, Stephano, hum. ; II., 164.
Porfirio Diaz ,Pres. Mexico; III., 577.
Porphyrius, phil. ; I., 27.
Portocarrero, Card. ; II., 633.
Portugal, kingd. of; I., 555, 558; II.,
125; succession, 346; under Spain,
347; under House of Braganza, 347,
557; and Brazil, 416, 416; and Na-
poleon ; III., 280, 299, 301, 302, 303, 312 ;
Revol. 1820, 378; July Revol., 394.
Poulet, Sir Amlas; II., 392, 393, 395.
Poynings, Sir Edward, Poynings' Acts ;
II., 133.
Pragmatic Sanction of Louis IX. ; I.,
579; of Bourges, 579; of Charles VI.,
II., 52, 151.
Prague, university of; II., 19; p. of,
1634,468; b. of; III., 118, congress of,
327; p. Of 1866,486.
Praise-God Barebones; II., 539.
Pravllegium, the ; I., 393, 394.
Preble, Am. commander ; III., 345.
Premyalides; II., 9.
Presbyterianism (Puritanism) ; II., 286-
287, 401, 488, 491, 500, 603, 512, 533, 539.
Pressburg, b. of ; I., 251 ; D. of ; II . , 626,
p. of, 1806; 111,290.
Preston, b. of; II., 514.
Preston, col., Irish Confederacy; II
526, 531.
Preston Pans, b. of; III., 60.
Preston, cap tain; III., 189.
Pretoria, tr. of, 1880; III., 603; p. of,
1902, 613.
Price, Cf. gen.; III., 558.
Pride, captain, Pride's Purge; II. ,515.
Prim, Sp. dictator; III , 498.
Princeton, b. of; III., 201.
Printing, invention of; II., 170.
Probus.R. E.; I., 32, 53,56.
Procopius the Great , II , 47, 48.
Progressistos, the, in Spain ; III . , 396.
Protestantism, Eve of, on the conti-
nent, II., 181-187; in England, 236-244;
Protestantism inGermany,188-214, 220-
235; in Engl. 236-282; In Scotland, 283-
287; effects of, 288-295; in France, 308-
340; in the Netherlands, 348-378; in
Switzerland, 208; 211; in Sweden, 209;
in Denmark, Norway, Poland, etc., 210.
Protestant Association, England; III.,
360. .
Protestant Succession in England; II.,
645.
Proudhon, soc. ; III., 416.
Prussians; I., 326, 329, 580.
Prussia, Austria and Italy, war of, 1866;
III., 482 489.
Pruth, p. of the, 1711; III., 33.
Ptolomies, kgd. of the; I., 4.
Pulaski, Pol. ct. ; III., 202.
Pulcheria, St. R., Empress (E.); I.,
80-81.
Pultowa, b. of; III., 32
Pultusk. b. of (1703) ; III., 29, 295.
Puritan Revolution, the ; II , 487-544. '
Puritanism. See Presbyterianism.
Puaey, Edward B. ; III., 410.
Put-in-Bay Island, b. off; III., 344.
Pym, Puritan Commoner; II., 504-507,
509.
Pyramids, b. of the; III., 271.
Pyrenees, p. of (1659) ; II., 486.
Pythagoras, phil. ; I., 27.
Quadratus, Chr. apol. ; I., 21.
Quadrivium; I., 231.
INDEX .
41
Quadruple Alliance of 1718; III., 39;
of 1840, 418.
Quatre-Bras, b. of; III., 337.
Quebec Act ; III., 190 ; b. of, 134.
Queen Anne's War; III , 104-106.
Quiberon, b. of; III., 261.
Quiersy, D. of (754) ; I., 199.
Quinctilius Varus, R g. ; I., 53.
Qulncy, Joslah; III., 189.
Raab b. on the; I., 338.
Rabanus JViaurus, Archb. Mainz; I., 231.
Rabelais, Francis, hum. ; II., 168.
Races, division of; I., 1; first immigra-
tions, 2; table of, 3.
Rachis, k. Longobards ; I , 197.
Racine; II., 658.
Radet, Fr. gen.; III., 315.
Radetzki, Austr., fieldm.; III., 427, 428.
433, 434.
Radom, Polish Association of; III., 146.
Radziwill, Polish pr. (sen.), III., 144, 145;
(jun.), 390.
Ragaz b. of; II., 119.
Raglan, 1., Engl. gen. ; III., 452.
Rainald of Dassel, Archb. Koeln; I.,
473-475,477,478.
Rainulf, Norman ct. of A versa; 1 , 350,
352.
Rakoczi, Hungar. rebel; II., 636.
Raleigh, Sir Walter, Engl. discov. ; II.,
67, 402, 416.
Ralph de Wader, ct., Norfolk; 1 , 367.
Ramillies.b. of; II., 639.
Rampolla, Card. ; III., 628, 636.
Randon, Fr. m., III., 417.
Ranulf Flambard, justiciary ; I., 402, 405,
406.
Ranulf, earl Chester, Cr. ; I., 559.
Raslowitz,b. of; III., 156.
Rastadt, p. of 1714; II., 646; congress of;
III., 268.
Ratazzi, It. min. ; III., 475, 490, 491.
RatgertheGoth;!., 69.
Rationalists or Levellers; II., 515.
Ratisbon, league of ; II., 206; D. of; 1608,
430 ; 1630, 451 ; truce of, 580.
Ravenna, b. of; II., 145.
Ravalllac; II., 340.
Ravignan, S. J. ; III., 405.
Raymond of Toulouse, ct. Tripolls; I.,
445, 449.
Raymond VI., ct. Toulouse; I., 548 550.
Raymond VII., of Toulouse; I., 550.
Raynald of Spoleto; I., 562, 563.
Raynoval, m. de ; III., 461.
Readwald, k. East Anglla; I., 98.
Reccared, k. Visigoths; I., 76, 77.
Red Comyn, the, Scotch Claimant; I.,
619.
Reductions, Jesuit, in South America;
II., 423.
Reform Act of 1832; III., 397, second and
third, 578.
Regensburg, truce of; II., 604.
Reginald, subprior Canterbury; I., 538.
Reginald Pole, Card. Archb. Canter-
bury; II., 257. 274, 275, 278, 297.
Regnier, Fr. gen. ; III., 328.
Regulators of N. C. ; III., 189.
Reichensperger, centrist; III., 630.
Relief Act, first Irish; III., 359; first
Engl., 360; Scotch, 361; of 1791, 361;
Grattan's bill, 375.
Remigius, St. B. Rheims; I., 112.
Renaissance, the ; II., 163-175.
Repnin,Russ. ambass. ; III., 146, 147.
Requesens, Louis Zuiliga y ; II., 345, 367,
368.
Restitution, Edict of (1629) ; II., 450, 451,
468.
Re'z, Card, de; II., 484.
Reuchlin, John, hum.; II., 169; con-
troversy, 169, 189.
Revolutionary Tribunal; III., 245, 246,
251.
Rewbel, Dlr.; Ill , 262, 266,273.
Rheims, council of (1119) ; I., 397.
Rhenish Confederacy; II., 554, 567.
Rhense, assembly of, 1338; II , 16.
Rhode Island; III., 76; governm., 83;
negro sl.t 97.
Rhodesia; III., 604.
Ricci, Lorenzo, gen., S. J. ; III., 173.
Richard I., Lionheart, k. Engl., Cr.; I ,
505-507, 512-514, 517, 519, 520, 531, 612.
Richard II., k. Engl.; II., 76 84.
Richard III., k. Engl.; II. ,103-106.
Richard, ct. Aversa; I., 363.
Richard of Cornwall, k. Romans; I.,
604, 607-609.
Richard, e. Cambridge; II., 86.
Richard I., the Fearless, d. Normandy;
I ,272.
Richard Fox, B. Durham; II. ,242.
Richard II., the Good, d. Normandy; I.,
344, 348.
Richard, e. Salisbury; II., 100, 101.
Richard Strongbow, e. Pembroke; I.,
500.
42
INDEX,
Richard, d. York; II., 86, 98, 100, 101.
Richard, boy-d. York; II., 104, 105.
Richard, e. Warwick, " kingmaker " ; II.,
100-103.
Richard Wlche, St. B., Chtchester; I.,
607.
Richelieu, Card.; II., 443, 457, 463, 465,
466, 469, 470, 472, 498; III., 100.
Richelieu, Fr.m.; III., 119.
Richmond, battles around, 1862; III.,
559 ; 1864, 564.
Richmond, countess of ; II., 134.
Ricasoll, It. mln. ; III., 473.
Ricimer, patrician; I., 107.
Ridley, Anglic. B. ; II., 273, 276.
Rldolfiplot; II., 390.
Riga, b. of; III., 29.
Rinucclnl, pap. nuncio; II., 529, 530,532.
Rlpon, tr. of; II., 503, 504.
Rivers, e. ; II., 105.
Rlvoli.b. of; III., 263.
Rizzio, murder of ; II., 381.
Robert, d. Albany; 85.
Robert the Pious, k. France ; II., 333, 335,
343-345.
Robert, k. Naples; II., 11. 14, 16.
Robert the Steward; II., 64.
Robert I., k. Scots. See Bruce.
Robert II., Stuart, k. Scots; II., 85.
Robert, k. West Franks; I., 252.
Robert, Archb. Canterbury; I., 358, 359.
Robert, ct. Artois; I., 576; II., 63.
Robert, d. Burgundy; I., 344.
Robert of Citeaux, f. Cistercians; I.,
163.
Robert de Curzon, Card. ; I., 559."
Robert, ct. Flanders, Cr. ; I., 445.
Robert of Geneva, Card.; II., 22, 24.
(See Clement VIL)
Robert, e. Gloucester; I., 489.
Robert GrossetSte, B. Lincoln ; I., 607.
Robert I. (Rollo), d. Normandy; I.,
270.
Robert II., the Magnificent d. Nor-
mandy; I., 344,347.
Robert III., d. Normandy, Cr. ; I., 370,
401,406,445.
Robert the Strong, ct. Paris; I., 270.
Robert Wlscard, d. Apulia, etc,; I.,
351-356,386,387.
Roberts, 1., Engl. fieldm.; III. ,611, 612.
Robesplerres Maximilian; III., 221, 230,
233, 238, 241, 245, 246, 263, 255-257;
Augustine, 257.
Rochambeau, Fr Com.; III., 214, 237.
Rochejaquelln, marq. de la.; III., 336.
Rochester, 1. ; II., 589, 597, 659 ; III., 159.
Rockingham, Council of ; I., 403.
Rocklngham, Engl. min.; III., 187
Rocroy, b. of; II., 472.
Roderlc, k. Connaught ; I., 501.
Roderic, k. Visigoths; I., 175, 176.
Roderigo Diaz dl Blvar, the Cld; I.,
654.
Rodney; III., 215.
Roegnwald, jari ; I., 265.
Roger Duclos; III., 273.
Roger, e. Hereford; I., 367.
Roger Mortimer, e. March.; II., 58-60.
Roger, ct. Sicily ; I., 355.
Roger; II., k. Sicilies; I., 455,458.
Roger, B. Salisbury; I., 406, 488.
Roger, Archb. York ; I., 495, 497, 498
Rohan, Card. ; III., 176; d. of ; II , 498.
Roland, hero; I , 222.
Roland, Card ; I., 471, 473. (See Alex-
ander III.)
Roland, Fr. min. ; III. ,237, 238; madame,
253.
Rollo, the Viking; I., 270.
Roman republic, ancient; I., 14; Em-
pire, ancient; I., 15-57; division by
Theodosius, 66; fall of the Western,
106-109; R. republic of 1798; III., 269,
272 ; of 1848, 432, 435, 436.
Romanow. House of; III., 16; and Hoi •
Stein, table, 102.
Romanus Lecapenus, co-E. (E.); I.,
428.
Romanus II., Gr. E. ; I , 429.
Romanus III., co-E., (E.) ; I., 429.
Romanus Diogenes, R. gen. (E.); I.,
430.
Rome, ancient; I., 4; sack of , 73, 86 ;b.
of, 393; sack of .1527; II., 218; sacrilege
of 1870; III., 507.
Romeward Movement, the; III, 411 415.
Romuald, St. ; I , 326.
Romulus Augustulus, R. E. (W.) ; I.,
107, 108.
Roncallan Fields, D. of (1055); I., 341,
474.
Roncesvalles, b. of; I, 222.
Ronge; III., 409.
Roosebeke, b. of; II., 88.
Roosevelt, Theodore, Pr. U S.; III.,
616, 624, 628.
Root and Branch bill; II., 505.
Root, Elihu, sec. U. S. ; III., 628.
Rosamund, q. Longobards; I., 141.
INDEX.
43
Rose of Lima, St ; II., 421.
Rosecrans, U gen. ; III., 558, 562.
Roses, Wars of the; II., 97-106; tables,
pp 115-117.
« Ross, Bi it. gen. ; III., 346.
Rossbach,b. of; III., 120.
Rossi, Signor, pap. min. ; III., 429.
Rostopchin, gov. Moscow; III., 322.
Rouen, edict of, II., 335.
Rouher, M., Fr. min. ; III., 492, 497.
"Roundheads;" II., 508.
Rousseau, J. Jacques; II., 659; III., 162,
180, 181.
Roveredo, b. of; III., 263.
Royal Supremacy, Act of; II., 256.
Rudiger, ct. of Staremberg; II., 623.
Rudolf Aquaviva, S. J., M.; III., 127.
Rudolf of Hapsburg, E. ; I., 604, 605.
Rudolf II., E ; II., 425, 428, 429, 432, 433.
Rudolf of Suabia, rival k. ; I., 384-386.
Rudolf, k West Franks ; I. ; 252.
Rudolph II., k. Upper Burgundy and
Italy; I., 257.
Rudolf III., k. Burgundy; I., 331, 335.
Rudiger, Austr. gen.; III., 444.
Rugians; I., 83, 108.
Ruiz de Montoya, 8. J. ; II., 421.
"Rump," the; II., 537, 545.
Runnymede, assembly of; L, 543.
Rupert, pr. ; II., 509, 511, 551, 561, 573.
Ruprecht, k. Germany; II., 32, 35, 37, 38.
Ruric, chief of the Russ. ; I., 269.
Russell, 1.; II., 684, 587; Engl. adm.
(Orford),597, 613; lord John; III., 367,
369, 397, 403, 414, 462.
Russia, foundation of; I., 269; Mongol
invasion, 571 ; under House of Ruric;
III , 16; of Romanow, 17-24; 28,31-37;
Seven years war; 114, 118, 125, 137;
division of Poland; 143-156; Napo-
leonic wars; 272, 274, 279, 286, 288, 292,
295, 297, 319-323, 327, 328, 358; and
Greece, 379; July revol., 390, 391;
Crimean war, 450-455; modern, 582;
war of 1877,589-592; eastern question,
695, 596, 599; and China, 618-621.
Russians; I., 429.
Rutland, e. of; II., 100, 101.
Ruthenians, persecution of; III., 635.
Ruyter, de, Dutch adm.; II., 561, 562,
571, 573, 587.
Ryehouseplot; II., 587.
Ryswick, p. of 1697; II., 615-618, 646; III.,
103.
Saalfeld, b. of; III., 293.
Sablanism; 1., 155.
Sacheverell, Dr. ; II., 642.
Sadolet, Card. ; II , 297.
Sadowa, b. of; III. ,484.
Sagasta, Span. min. ; III., 585.
" Saints," Puritan; II., 501.
Saints of the Reformation period; II.,
306.
Saint Simon, Soc.; III. 416.
Saladin; I., 508, 509, 511, 513, 514; truce
of; 515.
Salado, b. on the; II., 125.
Salamanca, b. of; III., 312.
Salankemen, b. of; II., 628.
Salas, Mex. gen. ; III., 574.
Salian House, table of; I., pp. 227-228;
Emperors, pp., 284, 285 ; no. 334.
Saligny, ct. du Fr. min. ; III., 572.
Salisbury, 1., Engl. min.; III., 579.
Salm, ct. ; II., 221.
Salmanassar; I., 8.
Sancho the Great, k. Navarre; I., 554.
Bancroft, Archb. Canterbury; II., 594.
Sandomir, Association of; III , 29.
San Germano, p. of (1230) ; i , 563.
San Jacinto, b. of; III., 535.
San Juan, b. of; III., 587. ,
Santa Anna, Pr. Mexico ; III , 535, 536.
Santa Cruz, Span, adm.; II., 347,397.
Santerre the brewer; III., 237.
Santiago, nav. b. of; III., 587.
San Stefano, p. of, 1878; III., 591; modi-
fied in Congress of Berlin, 592.
Sapor, k. New Persia; I., 32.
Sardinia, war of spoliation, tables; III.,
349-350.
Sarpi, Paul; II., 649.
Sarsfield, Irish gen.; 11,610,611.
Sassanids, New Persian Empire of; 1^,
29.
Sassbach, b. of ; II., 576.
Saucourt, b. of; I., 270.
Saul; L, 7.
Savonarola, Fra. ; II., 136-139.
Savoy, cts. of in Piedmont ; II., 10 ; House
of; III., 347.
Saxe, m. de; III., 49, 55, 56, 58.
Saxon House, Tables of; I., 314. pp. 225-
227.
Saxons ; I., 54, 70, 81, 91, 93, 115, 188; rising
of, 378.
Saxony, dukedom of ; I , 251.
Say and Seal, vise, of ; III., 75.
Scarampo, Card. ; II., 115.
44
INDEX.
Scanderbeg, George Kastrlota; II, 117,
il8.
Scarlffhollis, b. of; II., 535.
Scharnhorst, Pr. min. ; III., 297, 325.
Scherer, Fr. gen. ; III ; 272.
Schlegel, Fred, von; III., 407,548.
Schley, Adm., U. S.; III., 587.
Schinner, Card. ; II., 144.
Schism, great western; II., 23-46; tables,
pp. 109,110.
Schleswlg Holsteln, war of 1848; III.,
441 ; affair, the, 478.
Schoeffer, assist. Guttenberg; II., 170.
Scholasticism and Schoolmen; I., 593.
Schomberg, m. ; II., 609.
Schorlemer-Alst, centrist; III., 630.
Schurz, Karl; III., 446.
Schuyler, gov. N. Y. ; III, 104.
Schwarzenberg, Austr. field m. ; III., 320,
323, 327. 329, 332, 333.
Schwerin, Pruss. m. ; III., 47, 118.
Sciarra Colonna; I., 629; II., 14.
Scirrl; I., 108.
Scott, Wlnfleld, gen. U. S. ; III., 536, 555,
557.
Scotland; I., 150, 265, 285, 286, 309, 360;
under Malcolm and St. Margaret, 371 ;
and England, 487, 490, 505, 507, 540;
succession In, 611, 612; Engl. fief, 613;
conquest of, 617-619; and Ireland
under the Bruces, 619; II., 56, 59; and
England and France, 61, 66, 67; and
Stuarts, 85, 147; reformation, 267-269,
271, 283-287; under Mary Stuart, 379-
387; James VI., 487, 488; Charles I.,
503, 509, 512-514; William III., 601;
Union.wlth England ; III., 1,4; Charles
Edw.,60
Scots; I., 91, 92.
Scroggs, Sir William; II., 684.
Scrope, Archb. York; II., 84.
Sebastian, k. Port.; II., 347.
Sebastopol. fall of; III., 454.
Sebbe, k. Essex; I., 102.
Secandun, b. of; I., 105.
Secession In U. S. ; III., 553-556.
Sedan, b. of; III., 504.
Sedgemoor, b. of ; II., 591.
Sedgwlck, Engl. comm. ; III., 101.
Sedition Act (U. S.) ; III., 530.
Segovia, States gen. of; II., 127.
Seldlltz, Pruss. gen. , III , 120, ?2.
Sejanus, praetor; I., 17.
Seleucidae, klngd. of ; I., 4.
SellmII.,Ottom. sultan; II. 45,425.
Seljuk Turks; I., 430,434, etc.
Selling, Wm , hum. ; II., 165.
Sempach, b. of; II., 119.
Seneca; I., 17.
Seneff, b.of; II., 575.
Senlis, States gen. of ; I., 255.
Sepoys; III., 129.
September murders; III., 239; conven-
tion 1864, 476.
Septennial Act, 1716; III., 6.
Septlmius Severus, R E ; I., 30.
Serglus, Patr. Ct.; I., 162, 194.
Seroes, k. New Persia; I., 162.
Serrano, m. Span. m. ; III., 498, 585.
Servetus, Michael; II., 213.
Seven Weeks' War, 1866, tables; III.,
pp. 350-351.
Seven Years' War; III., 108-141; in
India, 127-131; in Canada, 132-134;
tables, pp. 88-91.
Seward, W. N.; III. ,539, 576.
Seymour, Brit. adm.;III., 618, Jane;
II., 263, 265; 1. Thomas, 271.
Sforza, Francesco, d Milan; II., 53, 141,
218, 219, 224; Ludovico, 136, 141; Max-
imilian, 145, 148.
Shaf tesbury, e. of; II., 550, 553,570,581,
583 586; III., 69, 83, 159.
Shakespeare; II., 304.
Sheridan, U. gen. ; III., 562, 564, 576.
Sherlffmulr, b. of. ; III , 4.
Sherman, U. gen. ; III., 562, 563, 565, 576.
Shiahs; I., 173.
Ship-money; II., 502.
Shrewsbury, Parl. of (1379); II., 81; b.
of, 84; e. of, 597; III., 2.
Shumla, b. of; III., 151.
Sicily, under Vandals; I., 85; under
Ostrogoths, 121; under Ct., 129; under
Saracens, 243, 351; under Normans,
355, etc.; under Hohenstaufen, 516,
etc.; under Charles of Anjou, 600;
under Aragonese, 603 ; in the Ital. wars
(see Naples); in the p. of Utrecht;
II., 645, 646; In the Quadruple Alli-
ance; III. ,39; in Congress of Vienna
356; in the Ital. revolutions, 373, 434
465, 471.
Sicklngen, Francis of; II., 186, 198, 199.
Sidney, Henry; II., 597; Sir Philip, 403;
Algernon; II. ,587.
Siegel, U. gen. ; III. ,446.
Sieyes, AbW ; III., 219, 221, 273.
Sievershausen, b. of; II., 233.
Sigehard, Patr. Aquileia; I., 382.
INDEX.
45
Sigibert, k. Franks; I., Ill, 112.
Sigismund, E., k. Hungary and Bohe-
mia, II., 30; k. Germans, 38, 39, 41, 43,
44, 47 ;E., 48, 108, 111.
Sigismund, St., k. Burgumlians; I., 71.
Sigismund I., k. Poland ; II , 206, 210.
Sigismund III., k. Poland and Sweden;
II., 453.
Sikkah, b. of; III., 417.
Simnel, Lambert, Engl. pretender; II.,
131.
Simon, jailer of Louis XVII. ; III., 252
Simony; I., 337, 340, etc.
Simpson, Engl. gen. ; III., 452.
Sinope, nav. b. of; III., 451.
Sioux, Ind. confd. ; III., 88.
Sisibut, k. Visigoths; I., 77.
Sithric, k. Dublin and York; I , 285, 286.
Slward, e. Northumbria; I., 357, 358, 360
SixtusIV.,P. ; II., 118, 127, 154,169, 182.
Slxtus V. ; II., 304, 333, 336.
Slatina, b. of; III., 153.
Slave laws; III , 98, 518, 520; abolition of
trade, 398.
Slavery, in Am. colonies; III, 95-98,
abolition in Engl. colonies, 398; effects
of In America, 521; slavery in U. S.,
522-524; end Of in U. S., 568-571.
Slavs ; I., 135, 139, etc.
Slawata, Boh. official; II., 434.
Sluys, nav. b. of; II., 64.
Smalkald, league of; II., 222, 226; war,
229.
Smith, cpt. John, Virginia; III., 67, 71;
gen. U.S.; III., 624.
Smolensk, storming of; III , 321.
Sobeslaw, d. Bohemia; 1 , 453.
Social Contract, Rousseau's ; III., 181, 220.
Society of Jesus; II., 298; suppression
of, 170-173.
Socrates; I., 9.
Sohr.b. of; III., 59.
Soissons, b. of; I., Ill ; d. of (754), 199.
Solemn League and Covenant; II., 509,
547.
Solferino, b. of; III., 459.
Solomon; I., 7.
Solticow.Russ. gen. ; III , 123.
Somerset, e. of; III ,2.
Somosierra, b. of; III., 304.
Sons of Liberty; III., 187-189.
Sophia, electress Hanover ; II., 602; III.,
1,2; sister of Peter the Great, 17.
Sorbes, Slav, tribe; I , 223, 247.
Sorbon, Robert de; II., 160.
Sorbonne, the; II., 124, 160.
Soublse, d. of; II., 498, Fr. m.; III., 120
Soult, Fr. m. ; III., 304, 309, 381.
South African Republic; III., 60-2, 603,
etc.
South American Republics; III., 376.
South Carolina; III., 69.
South Sea Company; III., 7.
Southwell, S. J. , Engl. M. ; II , 391.
Southwold Bay, nav. b. in; II., 571.
Spain, Invasions of; I., 70, 72, 74; his-
tory, 75-78; crusades, 554-558; under
Ferdinand and Isabelle; II., 126-130;
under Philip II., 341-347, 396-400; col-
onies, 405-414; 417-424; Franco-Spanish
(30 years') war, 422, 471,472, 483486;
and Louis XIV., 557, 565-569, 573 578,
612 618; war of Spanish succession
631-646; under Philip V.; III., 39; sup-
pression of the S. J ,172; and Fr. Rev-
olution, 243, 247, 261; and Napoleon,
277 ; Peninsular war, 298-304, 309, 312
313,331; Revol. of 1820,372, 377; July
Revol., 395, 396; Revol. 1868,498; mod-
ern, 585-587, 616.
Spanish-American War; III., 587.
Spanish colonies in America, defection
of; III., 376
Spanish mark; I., 224.
Spanish Succession, Table of claimants ;
II., 445,
Spaur, ct. Bav. ambass. ; III., 430.
Spenser; II., 403.
Speyer, D. of (1526) ; II., 206 (1529), 207;
Spinola, Span. gen. ; II., 439.
Spion Kop, b. of; III., 609.
Spottsylvania, b. of; III., 564.
St. Andr<§, m. ; II., 316, 318, 319.
Stadtlohn, b. of; II., 442.
Stafford, capt. ; II., 533.
Stafford, Sir Thomas; II., 276,277.
Stair, e. of; III., 54.
St. Albans 1st b. of; II.. 100; 2nd b. of,
101.
Stamford, b. of; II., 102.
Stamford Bridge, b. of ; I., 363.
Stamp Act ; III. , 186 ; repeal of, 187.
Stanislas Augustus Poniatowski, k
Poland; III., 144, 145,147, 150, 156.
Stanislas Lesczinski, k. Poland; III., 29,
30, 33, 36, 41, 42, 143.
St. Antoine, b. of; II., 484.
Star Chamber, the; II., 501.
St. Arnaud, Fr. m. ; III., 424, 452.
States General, 1st, in France; I., 625.
46
INDEX.
State Sovereignty; III., 529.
Statute of Kilkenny; II., 75; of laborers,
66, 77.
St. Bartholomew's, massacre of; II., 324-
329, 365.
St. Clalre-sur-Epte, tr. of; I., 270.
St. Denis, b. of ; II., 320.
Steele;II.,659.
Steenkirk.b. of; II., 612.
Stein, Baron von; III., 297.
Steinmetz, Pr. gen.; III., 500.
Stephen II., P.; I., 192 (193), 198, 199.
Stephen III., P.; I., 220.
Stephen IV., P.; I., 237.
Stephen V., P.; I., 250,
Stephen X., P. ; I., 340, 375, 376.
Stephen of Blois, k. Engl. ; I., 486-490.
Stephen, St., k. Hungary; I., 3n7, 329.
Stephen, Archd. Austria ; III , 44-2.
Stephen of Blois, Cr. ; I., 445.
Stephen, boy - Cr. ; I., 530.
Stephen Langton, Archb. Canterbury;
I., 538, 539, 541,543,
Stephens, Alex. H. ; III., 553.
Sterbini; III., 429.
Steuben, baron von ; III , 202, 210.
Steyn, Pr. Orange Free State; III , 607.
St. Germain, tr. of ; III. , 100 ; en Laye, p
Of, 1570; II., 321, 322, 325; 1679,578.
St. Gotthard, b. of; II., 619.
Stigand, Archb. Canterbury; I , 359.
Stilichothe Vandal, R. gen.; I., 66, 68,
69, 73.
Stirling bonds;; II , 386.
St. Jacobs, b.pf; II., 119.
St. Just; III., 246, 255, 257.
St. L6ger, assembly of; I., 551.
St. Leger, Engl. gen. ; II., 526.
Stockholm, massacre of; II., 209; p. of.
1719; III., 249.
Stockton, commodore U. S. ; III., 536.
Stofflet, Vend, leader; III., 249, 261.
etolberg, ct. Leopold of; III., 407.
St. Petersburg, foundation of; III., 31.
Straff ord,l.; II., 584.
Strelitzes; III., 17.
Stromberg, b. of; III., 610.
Struensee; III., 161.
St. Ruth, Fr. gen.; II ,610.
St. Quentln, b. of ; II , 277 ; III., 512.
Stuart, 1. James, e. Moray; II., 285, 286,
379-381. 383, 384, 386-389; House < f, 245;
Card. Henry III , 60.
Suabian city league ; II., 30, 194, 201
Suevians; I., 52,69, 70, 72, 75, 76.
Suffolk, d. of; II., 131, 132.
Suger, abbe, St. Denis; I., 460, 464.
Sugyiama, Jap. chancellor; III., 619.
Suleiman, caliph; I., 179; gen.; I., 434.
Suleyman, the Magnificent; II., 221, 224,
225, 425.
Sulla; I. ,14.
Sullivan, Am gen., w. Ind.; III., 207.
Sully, d. of; II., 340.
Sumner, Charles; III ,539.
Snmpter, guerrilla leader; III , 209.
Sunderbund, the; III., 419.
Sunderland, 1. ; II., 589, 592, 597, 598.
Sunnites; I., 173.
" Super Petn Solio," bull of Boniface
VIII. ; I., 629.
Surafcih Dowlah, Nabob; III , 130.
Surrey, e. of; 11,264.
Sussex^, e. of; II., 388, 389.
Sutri, s*ynod of (1046) ; I., 339; tr. of, 392.
Suwarow, Russ. gen.; III., 272.
Sweden, kgd. of ; I., 264; II., 209, 210,
452-454,556; III., 152.
Swegen, k. Norway; I., 310.
Swegen, Estrithson, k. Denmark; I,
363, 367.
Swegen, Forkbeard, k. Denmark; I.,
302 305, 325.
Swift (Dean); II., 642, 659; III., 159.
Swintila, k. Visigoths; I , 77.
Switzerland; II., 119, 122; in the Italian
wars, 141, 144, 145, 147, 148, 478; revol.
Of 1848; III., 19.
Syagrius, R. gen. ; I. , no, 111.
Syllabus, the; III ,493.
Sylvester II. (Gerbert), P. ; I., 328, 329,
345, 388, 437.
Sylvester III , antip ; I., 339.
Symmachus, consul; I , 120, 121.
Szezckoziny, b. of; III., 156.
Taborites, the; II., 47, 49, 186.
Tacitus; I., 19.
Taft.gov. Philippines; III., 628.
Tagals;II.,407.
Tagina.b. of; I., 133.
Tagliacozza, b. of; I., 601.
Tahirites of Khorassan; I., 433.
Taille, Fr. tax; III., 179.
T.iku forts, storming of ; III., 618.
Talana Hill, b. of; III., 609.
Talavera, b. of; III., 309.
Talbot, Archb Dublin; II., 608.
Tallard, Fr. m. ; II., 638.
Talleyrand, Oard. ; II , 68.
INDEX.
47
Talleyrand, Fr. min.; III., 228, 229,274,
334,335.
Tallien; III., 248, 257.
Tamerlane, E., Mongols; II., 112.
Tamorniza, b. of; II., 117.
Tancred of Hauteville; I., 351.
Tancred of Lecce, k. Sicilies; I., 512,
516-518.
Tancred, ct. Tripoli, Or. ; I , 445, 451.
Taney, Justice U. S.; III., 544.
Tanistry; I., 145.
Tannenberg, b. of; II., 109.
Tannucci, Neap. min. ; III., 161, 172.
Targowitz, Confederation of; III., 155.
Tarik, Sar. gen. ; I., 167.
Tarleton, Engl. officer; III., 210.
Tavoras, Portuguese nobles; III., 170
Taxation, revolutionary, in France;
III., 250.
Taylor, Zach., Pr. U. S.; III., 536, 540,
542.
Tegethoff, Austr. adm. ; III., 485, 577.
Teias, k. Ostrogoths; I., 133.
Temple, Sir William ; II., 568.
Tennessee, adm. of; III., 524.
Teplitz, tr. of, 1813; III., 327.
Terror, reign of; III., 246-257; second,
267.
Tertullian, Chr. apol. ; I., 21.
Test Act, the; II., 551; second, 583, 592;
repealed; 111,367.
Testri.b. of; I., 185.
Tetzel, John; II., 189, 190.
Teutoburg Forest, b. in ; I., 53.
Teutonic Kingdoms, table of, pp. 65 68.
Teutonic Race, polity; I., 43-47; priests,
48 ; ancient gods, 49.
Tewkesbury, b. of; III., 103.
Texas, annexation of; III., 536; adm.
of, 635, 537.
Thankmar, br. of, Otto I.; I., 315.
Thassilo, d. Bavaria; I., 224.
Thaun, b. of; III., 306.
Theatines; II., 298.
Theobald, Archb. Canterbury; I., 492.
Theodohad, k. Ostrogoths;!., 128, 129.
Theodolinda, q.Longobards; I., 141, 142,
151.
Theodora Augusta (E.) ; I., 124, 125.
Theodora, Maced. Empr. (E.); I., 429.
Theodora, Empress-regent; I., 420.
Theodora, R. family of; I,, 319.
Theodore Angelus, E. Thessalonika; I.,
528.
Theodore Lascaris, E. Nice; I., 328.
Theodore, St., Archb. Canterbury; I.,
103, 301.
TheodoricL, k. Visigoths; I., 81.
Theodorlc II., k. Visigoths; I.,*75, 107.
Theodoric the Great, k. Ostrogoths; I.,
118-122; table of successors, 127.
Theodosius I., the Great, R. E. ; I., 62 66.
Theodosius II., R. E. (E.) ; I., 80,193.
Theodosius III., R. E. (E.) ; I., 164.
Theodosius, R. gov. ; I., 91.
Theophano, Empress; I., 323, 326.
Thermidorians;!!!., 258.
Thessalonica, Greek Empire of; I.,
528.
Theudebert, k. Franks; 1 , 129.
Theutberga, q. Franks; I., 244.
Thieleman.Pr. gen. ; III., 337.
Thiers, M., Fr. min. ; III., 382, 418, 420,
513; Pr. French rep., 515.
Thirty Tears' War, the, II., 425-486;
tables, pp., 351 -354.
Thomas, Fr . gen ; III , 615.
Thomas, U. gen.; III., 558,562.
Thomas a Becket, St., Archb. Canter-
bury;!., 492, 495-498.
Thomas Cantilupe, St. B. He eford; I.,
607.
Thomas a Kempis; II., 166, 170.
Thomas More, Bl. Chancel or Engl ;
II., 165,170,240,252, 257.
Thomas William; II., 274.
Thorgils, Norse sea-king; I , 2H6, 274.
Thorkill, e.;I ,304.
Thorn, p. of (1466), II., 109.
Thrasamund, k. Vandals; I., 121.
Thuringians; I., 112, 115, 186, 188.
Thurn, Boh. ct ; II , 434-436.
Tiberius I., R E. ; I., 17, 19, 53.
Tiberius II., R. E. (E ) ; I., 139.
Tien Tsin, storming of; III , 6JO.
Tilly, imp. gen. ; II., 438, 439, 442, 446-449,
451, 457, 458, 460.
Tilsit, meeting of ; III., 296; treaties of,
297, 319.
Tlndal, Matthew; III. ,159.
Tinchebray, b. of; I., 406.
Tippecanoe, b. of; III., 344.
Tirconnell, e. of; II., 597, 608, 610.
Tithe War in Ireland; III , 369.
Titus, R. E.; I., 18.
Titus, Flavius Clemens, M. ; I., 20.
Titus Oates ; II., 581, 582.
Todleben, Russ. gen-; III., 452, 591.
Tokolly, Emmerich; II., 580, 620, 624,
626, 627, 630.
48
INDEX.
Toesny, Roger de ; I., 348,
Togrul Beg, Sultan; I., 434.
Toland, John; III., 181.
Tolentino, p. of, 1797; III., 264; b. of,
336.
Toleration, Edict of, 1562; II., 317; act of,
1690, 602.
Toltan.k. Magyars; I., 251.
Tonnage and Poundage; II., 499.
Topcliffe ; II., 391.
Torgau, League of; II., 206; b. of; III.,
125.
Tories; II., 584, 642; American; III., 192.
Torquemada, Card. Juan; II., 183;
Thos. of, Inquisitor; II., 154, 172.
Torrington, 1., Engl. adm ; II , 613.
Torstenson, Swed. gen. ; II., 476
Tostig, e. Northumbria; I., 360, 361, 363.
Totila, k. Ostrogoths; I., 131.
Toulouse, synod of (1163) ; I., 475; coun-
cil' of, 1229, 550.
Tours and Poitiers, b. of; I., 187.
Tourville, Fr. adm. ; II., 613.
Townshend, Chas. ; III., 188.
Town ton, b. of; II., 101.
Tractarians; III., 410.
Tracy, William de; I., 498.
Trafalgar, b. of; III., 287.
Trajan, R. E. ; I., 21, 22, 26.
Transletthania, HI., 488.
Trasimund, d. Spoleto; I., 197.
Trastemare, House of ; II , 126.
Traun, Anstr. m. ; III., 55, 56.
Trautenau, b. of ; III., 484.
Travendal, p. of, 1700; III., 27.
Trebonius, R. jurist;.!., 136.
Tregian, Francis; II., 391.
Trent, Council of; II., 299-303.
Trenton, b. of; III., 201.
Tresham, gunpowder plotter; II , 489.
Tribur, D. of (887); I., 248; (1076), 382.
Triennial Act; II., 602.
Trier, b. of; II., 576.
Triple Alliance, of 1668; II., 568; 1882;
III., 580.
Tritheim, a. hum. ; II., 166.
Trivium, the; I. ,231.
Trochu, Fr. gen. ; III., 505, 513.
Tromp, van, Dutch adm.; II., 538, 561,
573.
Trond, assembly of; II., 358.
Troppau, Congress of ; III. ,374.
Trouveres and Troubadours , I., 594.
Troyes, p. of, 1420; II., 91.
Truce of God; i., 345.
Truchsess, George; II., 201.
Tschesme, nav. b. of; III., 148
Tuan,Chin. pr. ; III., 61 7.
Tudela, b. of; III ,304.
Tunstall, B. Durham; II., 266.
Turanshah, sultan, Egypt; I., 577.
Turco Russian War, 1768-74; III., 148;
178V92, 153; 1877, 590-592; tables, pp.
353-354.
Turenne, Fr. m. ; II., 477, 484, 485, 555,
567,571,573-576.
Turgot, Fr. min. ; III., 182.
Turreau; III., 249.
Tuscaroras.Ind. ter.; III., 105.
Tuscnlum.b. cf; I., 478.
Tu-Tsing,Chin. pr. ; III., 617.
Tuttlingen, b. of; II , 471.
Tyler, John, Pr. U. S. ; III., 534, 536.
Tyndale's version; II., 170.
Tyrolese, rising of; III., 311.
Uffa, k. East Anglia; I., 95.
Ulfilas, Gothic B .; I. ,59.
Ulm, b. of; II., 201; surrender of; III.,
387.
Ulpianns, R. jurist; I., 30.
Ulrica Eleonora, q. Sweden; III., 35.
Ulrlch, St. B. Augsburg; I., 316, 318.
Ulrich of Hutten, hum. ; II., 167, 169, 186,
198.
Ulrich of Wurtemberg; II., 201, 226.
Ulster Plantation; II., 522.
Ultan, St.; I., 152.
" Unam Sanctam," Bull of Boniface
VIII.; I., 626.
" Unigenitns," Bull of Clement XI. ; III. ,
157, 158.
Union Act, betw. Engl. and Ireland;
III., 364.
Union, the evangelical; II., 430, 433, 435,
440.
Union, parliamentery, between Engl.
and Scotland; III., 1.
United Irishmen, Soc. of; III., 362.
United Provinces, Netherlands; II., 377,
478.
United States of America; III., 205; war
of independence, 205-217; and Fr.
Revol., 339-340; 2nd war with England,
341 -348; tables, p. 395; Civil war tables,
pp. 396 399; causes of civil war, 518-
5f>6; civil war, 557-567; end of slavery,
568-571; and Mexico, 572 577; Spanish
war, 585-587 (616) ; and the Philippine
Islands, 624 -628.
INDEX.
49
Universities; I., 591-593; II., 33,158-162.
Unstrnt, b. on the; I., 313.
Urban II., P. ; I., 389, 403,404,440, 443, 445.
Urban III., P.; I., 510.
Urban IV., P.; I., 600.
Urban V., Bl. P. ; II., 18, 21.
Urban VI., P.; II. ,23-25.
Urban VIII., P. ; II., H49 651, 653.
Urdaneta, Aug. friar; II., 407.
Utraquists;II.,47.
Utrecht, Union of (1578) ; II., 374; con-
gress of, 644; p. of, 1713, 645; III. ,106.
VadierjIIL, 257.
Valdivia, Pedro, Span, discov ; II., 412.
Valenciennes, b. of ; II. ,485.
Valentinian I., R E ; I., 42, 57, 91, 193.
Vaientinian II., R. K. ; I ,63.
Valentinian III., R. E. (W.); I., 84,86.
Valerianus, R. E. ; I., 32.
Valerius Severus, R E.; I., 34.
Valens, R. E.;I.,42, 61.
Vales Dunes, b. of; I., 347.
Valla, Lorenzo, hum ; II., 164.
Valley Forge, b. of; III., 203; camp of,
207.
Van Buren, Martin, Pr. U. S. ; III ,534.
Van Dorn, Cf. gen. ; III., 558.
Vandals; I., 57, 69, 70, 72, 75; kgd. of,
84 -90; fall of , 126.
Varangians (Warings); I., 269.
Varaville, b. of; I., 347.
Varna, b. of ; II., 109. 113.
Vasco da Gama, Portug. discov.; II.,
125; III., 602.
Vassos, Greek, col.; III., 593.
Vassy, massacre of; II., 318.
Vatican Council (1099); I., 404, 494, Gen.
C. of the; III., 494,495.
Vauban;II.,555,571.
Vaughan, Card ; III., 415.
Vehme,the;IL, 31.
Venables, Engl.comm. ; II., 538.
Vendee, war in ; III., 261, 336.
Venddme, Fr. m. ; II , 638-640; III., 328.
Venice, foundation of; I., 82-329; p. of
1177, 481; in the fourth Crusade, 523-
529; Council of Ten; II., 10; in the
Italian wars, 135, 136, 141-145, 147, 150;
republic of 1848 ; III., 427.
Veuillot, Louis; III. ,405, 463.
Verden, Saxon execution at; I., 223.
Verdun, tr. of (843) ; I., 240.
Vergnlaud; III., 241, 245, 253.
Vermont, adm. of ; III., 524.
Verona, b. of; I., 68; congress of; III.,
374, 377.
Versailles; tr. of, 1756; III., 113.
Vervins, p. of (1598) ; II., 338.
Vespasian, R. E. ; I., 21, 25.
Vespers, Danish; I. ,304; Sicilian, 602.
Victor II. P.; I. ,340, 341.
Victor III., P.; I., 389.
Victor IV., antip.; I., 475.
Victor Amadeus; III., d. Savoy, II., 606
612,614, 639; k. Sicily, III., 39; k. Sar-
dinia, 263.
Victor Mmmanuel I., k. Sardinia; III.,
356, 357, 374.
Victor Emmanuel II , k. Sardinia; III.,
433, 450, 457-460, 463, 466, 470, 471, 476 ; k.
Italy, 483, 491, 506, 507, 510.
Victor Emmanuel III., k. Italy; III., 616.
Victoria, q. Engl. ; III., 399, 579, 616.
Vieira, Joam Fernandez, Brazil, patriot;
II. ,416.
Vienna, Siege of, 1683; II., 623; relief of,
624; p. of, 173S; III., 42, 1809, 310; con-
gress of 1814 1815, 333,349-358; p. of,
1864, 478;. 1863, 486.
Vienne, council of; II., 5.
Vieyra, Antonio, S. J. ; II., 421, 42 .
Vigilius, P.; I., 137
Vilagos.b. of; III., 444.
Villafranca.p. of,1859; III., 460
Villars, Fr. gen. ; II., 641.
Villa Viciosa, b. of; II., 565.
Villeharduin, Geoffrey of; I., 523, 588.
Villele.Fr. min.; III., 383.
Villeroi.Fr. gen.; 11,638,639.
Vimiero, b. of; III., 302.
Vincent of Ferrer, St. ; II., 26.
Vincent of Paul, St. ; II., 298.
Vinland, Norse settlement; I., 268.
Vionville, b. of; III., 503.
Virgil; I., 15.
Virginia; III., 67, and negro slav., 97;
resolutions, 530.
Visayas ; II . , 407.
Visconti, House of, in Milan; II., 10;
Matteo, 11; Barnabo, 22; Galeazzo, 32,
164; Philippo Maria, 60,53, 141; Valen-
tina, 141 ; Venosta, Ital. min. ; III., 506-
Visigoths; I., 59-62, 72, 75-78; kgd. of,
134, 175-176; fall of, 177.
Vitellins, R. E ; I., 17.
Vitry, massacre of; I., 464.
Vittoria, b. of; III , 331.
Vives, Louis, hum . ; II., 168.
Vladimir of Russia ; I., 269.
50
INDEX.
Vladimir II., k. Denmark; I. ,564.
Vortigern, British k.; l!,92.
Voltaire; II ,659; III., 43, 161, 162,170.
Voltri.b. of; III., 275.
Volturno, b. of ; III., 470.
Von der Tann, Pr. gen. ; III., 512.
Voudois, massacre of the; II, 308.
Voullon, b. of; L, 113.
Wagram, b. of; III., 308.
Wahlstatt, b. of ; L, 571.
Waiblings (It. Ghibellines); I., 459.
Wakefield.b. of; II., 101.
Walafrid Strabo; I., 231.
Walchereu, expedition to; III., 309.
Waldeck.pr.; II., 612.
Waldeck-Rousseau, Fr. min.; III., 635.
Waldemarll., k. Denmark; I., 484.
Waldenses; I., 547.
Waldersee, ct. of; III., 620.
Waldo, Peter, of Lyons ; L, 547.
Waldron, Richard; III., 103.
WalidL, Caliph.; I., 174.
Walker, Sir, Engl. comm.; III., 106.
Wallace, William, Scotch patriot; I ,
617, 618.
Wallenstein, Alb.,d. Frledland; II , 445-
449,451,455,463,464,466.
Waller, parliamentary gen. ; II., 510, 512-
Waller, major U. S. ; III., 624.
Wallia, k. Visigoths; I ,74, 75.
Wallingiord, tr. of (1153) ; I., 490.
Walpole, Robert, Engl. min.; Ill, 7,
15, 51.
Walsingham, Sir Francis; II., 281, 392-
395.
Walter de Pacy, Or. ; I., 444.
Walter the Penniless, Or. ; I.,
Walter of Brienne, Cr. ; I., 525
Walter Scott; 111,407.
Walworth, mayor London; II.,
Wamba, k. Visigoths; L, 175.
Wampanoags, Ind. tr. ; III., 94.
Wandewash, b. of; III. ,131.
Warbeck, Perkin ; II., 131, 132.
Ward, Am. gen. ; III., 198.
Ward, George W.; III., 411-413.
Warham, Archb. Canterbury; II., 165,
254.
Warren, Commodore; III., 107.
Warsaw, Association of; III., 29; D. of,
146
Warwick, e. of; II., 80.
Warwick, Richard, e. of, " Kingmaker,"
100-103.
Warwick, e. of (son of Clarence); II.,
131.
Wasa, House of; II., 452.
Washington, George; III., 109, 111, 184,
191; war of liberation, 196-198, 200,201,
203, 207, 210, 214; Pr. U. S., 217, 339, 522.
Washington, destruction of city; III,
346.
Wat Tyler; II., 78, 79; insurrection,
77-79.
Waterford, National synod of; II., 530.
Water Gueux; II., 363.
Waterloo, b. of; III., 337.
Wavre and Grochow, b. of; III., 391
Webster; III., 533, 540.
Wedmore, p. of; I., 279.
Weinsberg, b. of; I., 459.
Weissenburg, b. of; III., 247,502
Welf, ct. Altdorf; I., 238; d. Bavaria,
378; VI., 459.
Welfs (It. Guelphs), party of; I. ,459.
Welfswood, b. of ; I , 395.
Wellington, d. of; III., 302, 309, 312, 331,
335-339, 367, 368, 397.
Wenceslas; I., k. Bohemia; I., 604
Wenceslaw III., k. Bohemia; II., 9
Wenceslaw, St. d. Bohemia; I , 313.
Wends Slav. tr. ; I. ; 247, 317, 32«.
Wentworth, Thorn., e. Straffoid; II., 501,
503, 504, 525.
Wenzel, k, Bohemia; I., 571.
Wenzel, k. Germany and Bohemia ; H.,
30, 32, 141.
Werder, Germ, gen.; III., 512.
Werfrith, B. Worcester; I., 283.
Werwulf the priest; I.f 283.
Wesley, John; III. ,97, 360.
Westchester, witenagemot of ; I.; 274.
West Franks (France), kgd. of; I , 249
Westmen; I., 266.
Westminster, p. of, 1674; II., 574; III.,
102 ;tr. of, 1756; III , 112.
Westmoreland, e. of; II., 389.
Westphalia, p. of ; II., 377, 478 481; kgd.
of; III., 297.
Westsaexna law; I. ,281.
West Virginia, adm. of; III., 555.
Wet, Christian de, Boer gen. ; III.-, 602,
609, 612.
Weyler, Span. gen. ; III., 586.
Whigs; II., 584; fall of, 642; in power;
III., 3, etc.
Whimpheling, Jacob, hum. ; II , 166.
White, Father, S. J. ; III., 68.
White, Engl. gen. ; III., 60'J.
INDEX.
Whitefleld; III., 97.
White Hill, b. of; II., 439.
Whitney, Ely; III., 523.
Wibald. abb. Stable; I., 470, 473.
Wibert, Archb. Ravenna; I.," 384. (See
Clement III.)
Wido of Spoleto, B. ; I., 250.
Widukind, d. Westphalia; I., 220, 221,
223.
Widukind of Corvey ; I., 316.
Wilberforce, Engl. abol. ; III., 398.
Wilford, Ralph, Engl. pretend.; II. 131.
Wilfrith, St., Archb. York; 1 , 102, 103
William I., E. G., crown prince; III.,
440, 446 ; k. Prussia, 477, 478, 482, 499,
500, 503, 505; Emp. 514, 580, 631, 634.
William II., E.G.; III., 634.
William I, the Conqueror, k. Engl.;
d. Normandy; I., 347,358, 363, 364 ; k.
Engl. 366-372, 400, 404.
William II., Rufus, k. Engl.; I., 370,
401-404.
William III., k. Engl., pr. Orange; II.,
559, 571; Stadtholder, 572-574,577, 579,
594-598; regent in Ecgl., 600; k., 601-
603, 606; and Ireland, 609, 611; and
France, 614, 616, 633, 634, 637 ; colonies ;
III., 78, 80, 84, 87, 103.
William IV., k. Engl.; III., 397, 399.
William of Holland, rival k. Germany,
I., 599, 604.
William I., k. Netherlands; III., 355;
of Holland, 389.
William, the Lion, k. Scots; I., 505,
507.
William I.,k. Sicilies; I., 473.
William II., k. Sicilies; I., 478, 510.
William the Aetbeling; I., 410.
William, Archb. Tyre; I., 467, 510,588.
William, d. Aquitaine; I., 260.
William the Great, d. Aquitaine; I.,
345.
William V., d. Bavaria; II., 428.
William III., el. Brandenburg; II., 607.
William of Brescia; II., 160.
William Clito, son of Robert, Normandy ;
I., 410.
William Ironarm.ct. Apulia; I., 351, 352.
William, landgrave, Hesse; II., 427, 460.
William of Lecce; I., 518.
William Longchamp, B. Ely; I., 507.
William Longsword, d. Normandy; I.,
271.
William Longsword, e. Salisbury; I.,
542,576.
William the Silent, pr. Orange; II., 351,
354 356, 358, 359, 361, 363-365, 368 371,
374-377, 427.
William II., of Orange, Stadtholder; II.,
538, 558.
William, ct. Toulouse; I., 224.
William, James, guerrilla leader; III,
209.
Williams, Roger; III., 76.
Wlllibrord, St.; I., 188.
Willigis, St. Archb. Mainz; I., 326.
Wilmot, David; III., 538.
Wilmot, John, e. Rochester; III., 159.
Wilmot Proviso, the; III., 538.
Wilson, M. (France) ; III., 583.
Wilson's Creek, b. of;. III , 557.
Wiltshire, Thos., e. of; II., 248.
Wilzes, Slav. tr. ; I., 223.
Wimpfen, b. of; II., 442.
Wimpffen, Fr. gen.; III., 504, 505.
Winchelsey, Archb. Canterbury ; I. ,622.
Winchester, b. of; III., 564.
Windiachgratz, Austr. gen ; III , 443,444.
Windthorst, Centrist; III., 630.
Wingate, Sir Francis; III., 614.
Winslow, col. ; III., 110.
Winslow, capt., Ind -fighter; III., 94.
Winters, gunpowder plotters; II., 489.
Winthrop, John ; III., 73.
Winwead, b. of; I., 101.
Wisconsin, adm. of; III., 535.
Wiseman, Card. ; III., 413, 415.
Wishart, George; II., 268.
Witiges, k. Ostrogoths; I., 129.
Witiza, k. Visigoths; I., 175.
Witt, John de; II., 559,560,562,564,568,
571,572; Cornelius de; 572.
Wittgenstein, Russ. gen. ; III., 326.
Wlttstock, D. of; II., 473.
Wladislas II.,Jagello; II., 109, 113.
Wladislaw III., k. Poland and Hungary;
II., 109.
Woerth, b. of; III., 502.
Wolfe, James, maj. gen. ; III., 134.
Wolfe Tone; III., 362.
Wolsey, Card ; II., 147, 165, 248-253.
Woolston, Thos. ; III., 159.
Worcester, b. of; II., 537.
Worcester, Thos. of; II., 84.
Worms, Mayfield of, 722; I., 219; sham
synod of, 381 ; cone ^rdat of, 398 ; D. of.
II., 195; edict of, 195, 197.
Wrangel, Swed. gen. ; II., 477.
Wrangel, Pruss. gen.; III., 441, 445.
Wratislaw, k. Bohemia; I., 472.
52
INDEX.
Wrights, gunp. plotters; II., 489.
Writs of Assistance; III., 185.
WUrzburg, D. of (1165); I., 477; b. of;
III., 263.
Wulphere, Eng. seaman; I. ,283.
Wurmser, Austr. gen.; III., 247.
Wulfstan, Archb. York ; I., 286.
Wnlfstan. St., B., Worcester; I., 367, 368.
Wyat, Sir Thomas; II., 274.
Wyclif, John; II., 27, 73, 77; version of,
170.
Xeres de la Frontera, b. of; I., 176.
Xlmenes, Card. ; II., 168, 297, 422.
Yang-Tsun, b. of ;. Ill , 620.
Yeardley, Sir George; III., 67.
Yellow Ford on the Blackwater, b. of ;
II., 520.
Yemassees, Ind. tr. ; III., 105.
Yermouk, b. of; I., 165.
Yesdijerd, k. New Persia; I., 168.
York, b. of; I., 163; Parliam. of; II., 57;
and Westminster, conferences of, 388.
York, Pruss. gen. ; III. , 320, 323.
Yorktown, surrender of; III., 214.
Young Ireland ; III., 370.
Young Italy; III., 393.
Ypsilanti, Gr patriot; III., 379.
Zab, b. on'the; I., 180.
Zachary, St. P.; I., 192 (193), 197.
Zallaca, b. of; I., 554.
Zapolia, John ; II., 221, 223.
Zaporovian Cossacks; III., 32, 147
Zara, Conquest of; I., 525; constitution
of, 525, 526.
Zeno, R. E. (E.) ; I., 109, 1 18, 119.
Zeno, the Isaurian, R. E. (E.); I., 123.
Zenta, b. of; II., 629.
Zlethen.Pr. gen.; III., 337.
Ziska, John; II., 47.
Znaim, truce of; III. ,308.
Zoe, Gr. Empress; I., 429.
Zorndorf, b. of; III. ,122.
Zriny, Hungarian patriot; II., 425.
Zulpich, b. of; I., 112.
ZUrich, b of ; (1799),.III.,272; p. of (1859)
460.
Zumalacarregul, Carlist gen. ; III., 395.
Zumarraga, B., Mexico; II.. 406.
Zuylestein, van; II., 597.
Zwingly, Ulrica; II., 203, 220.
D 102 .G94 v.3 SMC
Guggenberger , Anthony,
S. J.
A general history of the
Christian era : for
AKD-7046 (mcsk)
^