The World War and What was Behind It eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 231 pages of information about The World War and What was Behind It.

The World War and What was Behind It eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 231 pages of information about The World War and What was Behind It.

[Map:  Formation of the German Empire]

In the meantime, another of Bismarck’s plans had been successful.  In January, 1871, while the siege of Paris was yet going on, he induced the kingdoms of Bavaria and Wurtemburg, together with Baden, Hesse-Darmstadt, and all the other little German states to join Prussia in forming a new empire of Germany.  The king of Prussia was to be “German Emperor,” and the people of Germany were to elect representatives to the Reichstag or Imperial Congress.  Although at the outset, the war was between the kingdom of Prussia and the empire of France, the treaty of peace was signed by the republic of France and the empire of Germany.

Bismarck was very harsh in his terms of peace.  France was condemned to pay an indemnity of 5,000,000,000 francs (nearly one billion dollars) and certain parts of France were to be occupied by the German troops until this money was fully paid.  Two counties of France, Alsace and Lorraine, were to be annexed to Germany.  Alsace was inhabited largely by people of German descent, but there were many French mingled with them, and the whole province had belonged to France so long that its people felt themselves to be wholly French.  Lorraine contained very few Germans, and was taken, contrary to Bismarck’s best judgment, because it contained the important city of Metz, which was strongly fortified.  Here the military chiefs overruled Bismarck.  The desire among the French for revenge on Germany for taking this French-speaking province has proved that Bismarck was right.  It was a blunder of the worst kind.

The policy of “blood and iron” had been successful.  From a second rate power, Prussia had risen, under Bismarck’s leadership, to become the strongest military force in Europe.  Schleswig had been torn from Danish, Holstein from Austrian control.  Hanover had been forcibly annexed, and Alsace and Lorraine wrested from France.  The greater part of the inhabitants of these countries were bitterly unhappy at being placed under the Prussian military rule.  Moreover, it must be remembered that a great deal of this growth in power had been at the expense of the liberty of the common people.  The revolution of 1848 had demanded free speech, free newspapers, the right to vote, and the right to elect men to a congress or parliament, and while some of these rights had been granted, still the whole country was under the control of the war department.  The emperor, as commander-in-chief of the army, could suppress any newspaper and dismiss the congress whenever he might think this proper.  The Reichstag was, as it has been called, a big debating society, whose members had the right to talk, but were not allowed to pass any laws that were contrary to the wishes of the military leaders.

Questions for Review

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The World War and What was Behind It from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.