READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
A HISTORY OF MODERN EUROPE : A.D. 1453-1900
CHAPTER LXIX.
LOUIS PHILIPPE AND EUROPE
LOUIS PHILIPPE opened the French
Legislature August 3rd. The Chamber of Deputies drew up a Declaration in which
the throne was announced to be vacant, through the abdication of the elder
branch of the Bourbons, and the principles were announced on which the new
reign was to be conducted. Many alterations and additions were made in the
existing Charter; of which the following are the most important:—The Roman
Catholic Religion was to be no longer the dominant one, but all confessions
were put on an equal footing: the censorship was abolished, and unconditional
freedom of the press established: the King was to have no power to suspend a
law, nor to appoint Special Commissioners in order to supersede the usual
tribunals: no foreigners were to be admitted into the French military service:
every Frenchman of the age of twenty-five to be an elector, and at the age of
thirty capable of being elected a Deputy: the Peers named by Charles X were
abolished, and the sittings of that Chamber were to be public: the Chambers, as
well as the King, to have the privilege of proposing laws: the King to be
called “King of the French” and the three-coloured flag to be substituted for
the white one (August 7th, 1830)
The Chamber of Deputies, under the presidency of
Lafitte, chose the Duke of Orleans for King by 219 votes against 33; 39
members abstained from voting. When Lafitte and the Deputies proceeded to the
Palais Royal to announce their decision Louis Philippe affected to complain
that it was highly disagreeable to him to be withdrawn from domestic life, but,
from love to his country, he would make the required sacrifice. Then, supported
by Lafitte and Lafayette, he showed himselfin the balcony of his palace, and was received by the people with cries
of Vive le Roi! In these proceedings
the Chamber of Peers was not consulted. Chateaubriand was the only Peer who had
the courage to maintain the rights of the Duke of Bordeaux; but he was
supported by only nineteen of his colleagues.
The new King was enthroned, August 9th, at the Palais
Bourbon, where the Deputies held their sittings. Casimir Périer having read the
Declaration of August 7th, and Baron Pasquier the accession to it of the Peers,
the Duke of Orleans took an oath to observe it, and ascended the throne as
Louis Philippe, amid the acclamations of the Assembly. The new King applied himself
to acquire popularity among the Parisians by displaying himself as a “Citizen
King.” Anybody and everybody was admitted to his presence in pantaloons and
boots; he appeared in the streets on foot, in a great coat and round hat, with
the proverbial umbrella under his arm, and shook hands familiarly with the
people. The church of St. Genevieve became once more the Pantheon, and Voltaire
and Rousseau were again adored. Louis Philippe displayed his prudence by
relinquishing to his children, on the day of his accession, all the estates of
the House of Orleans, so that they became private property, and could not be
forfeited with the Crown. France, as usual, acquiesced in the proceedings of
the capital; though there were some slight disturbances at Nimes and in La Vendée.
The news of the French Revolution ran through Europe
like an electric shock, firing all the elements of discontent in various
countries. Belgium, unwillingly united to Holland by the policy of the Allies
to encircle France with powerful States, first felt the explosion. Many were
the elements of discord between those two countries. They spoke different
languages, had different customs and manners, and opposite commercial
interests. The Dutch were rigid Calvinists, the Belgians bigoted Catholics; and
hence the two peoples felt for each other all the bitterness of religious hate.
In this state of things a desire had sprung up in Belgium for a union with
France, where, under the reign of Charles X, the Catholic Church again
flourished. The Belgians also complained that they were saddled with part of
the burden of the enormous national debt of Holland, that they contributed to
the building of Dutch ships, the maintenance of Dutch dykes, and other
objects, from which they derived no benefit whatever. Their discontent was
increased by the unpopular Government of King William I, who treated Belgium
like a conquered country.
Already before the breaking out of the French
Revolution symptoms of insurrection had appeared at Brussels, on occasion of
the prosecution of De Potter, a political writer, towards the end of 1828. A
serious riot had also occurred at the Catholic College of Louvain, in February,
1830. After the disturbances in France William I thought it prudent to make
some concessions to the Belgians, but they failed to give satisfaction. On the
night of August 25th the revolt broke out at Brussels. The opera of the Muette de Portici, which turns on the revolt
of Masaniello, was represented that evening, the
incidents of which were vociferously applauded. After the performance the mob
broke into, plundered, and even burnt the houses of some of the more unpopular
Ministers, the chief of whom was Van Maanen. Next day the old Brabant colours,
red, orange, and black, were hoisted on the Town House. The troops were now
called out, but having no orders, did not act with decision, and were driven
back into their barracks. From this period the insurrection ran its natural
course almost without opposition. A burgher-guard was formed, and succeeded in
keeping down the mob, but not without some bloodshed. On the 28th of August
forty of the principal inhabitants of Brussels assembled, and having chosen
Baron Secus as their President, and the advocate Van de Weyer as Secretary,
despatched a deputation to the Hague, to request the King to make the
concessions which had been so long desired. But William I was not disposed to
give way. He employed his eldest son to soothe the people with promises, whilst
his brother, Prince Frederick, assembled at Vilvorde as many troops as possible. On the 31st the two Princes required the
burgher-guard of Brussels to strike the national colours, and restore the
custody of the city to the King’s troops. This demand increased the prevailing
irritation. The example of the capital had spread into the provinces. At
Verviers dreadful excesses were committed, and many labourers repaired to
Brussels, to settle the question in the capital. On the night of September 1st
barricades were thrown up in the streets to prevent the entrance of troops. The
Prince of Orange now came to Brussels alone, stepped into the midst of the armed masses, and promised that a
Commission should be immediately appointed, to consult with himself about the
measures to be adopted. But this proceeding gave no satisfaction, and a
proclamation issued by the Commission was publicly burnt. The Prince now
proposed a legislative and administrative separation of Belgium from Holland;
in short, merely a union under the same crown. This concession appeared to
give universal satisfaction; it was even supported by the people of Amsterdam;
but the King would decide nothing till the meeting of the States-General, which
were to assemble at the Hague, September 13th. But when the States met nothing
was done. The King even recalled Van Maauen, who had
been dismissed, and the Belgians began to suspect that they had been deceived.
The revolt now assumed a more democratic and violent
form. The impulse came from Liége. On September 15th the Liégeois rose, and
after dispersing the burgher-guard, drove out the King’s troops. The boldest of
these insurgents then proceeded to Brussels, where they led an attack on the
Dutch troops. Ou September 20th they headed the people in disarming the
National Guard; after which all the depots of arms were seized, the public
buildings occupied, the public boards cashiered, and a Provisional Government
was established, of which De Potter, who was then at Paris, was appointed the
head. On September 23rd Prince Frederick attacked Brussels with 6,000 or 7,000
men; but though he penetrated into the town and occupied the upper part of it,
as the Rue Royale, the Park, etc., he found that he was not strong enough to
maintain those positions, and on the night of the 26th he was compelled to
retire.
In these and the following days the Dutch troops were
driven from most of the towns of Belgium, while the Belgian soldiery declared
for the national cause. Antwerp, Maestricht, Mechlin, Dendermonde,
and the citadel of Ghent alone remained in the hands of the Dutch. Now, when
it was too late, the States-General at the Hague sanctioned by a large majority
the legislative and administrative separation of Holland and Belgium, September
29th. But the victorious Belgians refused to listen to any terms. De Potter had
arrived in Brussels, and assumed the direction of the Provisional Government,
which on October 5th proclaimed the independence of Belgium, appointed a
Commission to draw up a Constitution, convoked a National Congress at Brussels, and annulled
whatever the Belgian Deputies had done in the States-General at the Hague
without the knowledge of the Provisional Government. On the 9th the House of
Orange-Nassau was declared to have forfeited, by its late proceedings, all its
claims on Belgium; and the Prince of Orange, who had proclaimed himself the
head of the separated Belgian administration, was pronounced to have no right
to the Regency, unless he should be elected by the National Congress. In the
elections for that assembly, however, the moderate party prevailed; even De
Potter himself was not returned; and the Prince of Orange, encouraged by this
circumstance, issued another proclamation, October 16th, in which, as if
resolved to carry out the revolution in spite of his father, he recognized the
independence of Belgium, and, as he expressed it, “placed himself at the head
of the movement.” But the Provisional Government answered this appeal by
recommending him to interfere no further in their affairs.
It was the wish of the Belgian liberals to be united
to France. But such a union was displeasing to the European Powers; and Louis
Philippe, whose own usurpation was hardly yet consolidated, ventured not to
offend them by encouraging the Belgian revolution. He procured the recognition
of some of the Powers by engaging neither to suffer a republic in Belgium nor
to unite that country with France; a proposition which had been made to him by
the Belgians through Gendebien. But at the same time
he bade the Great Powers remark that they must abstain from undertaking
anything against Belgian independence, or that he should not be able to
restrain the public opinion of France. Russia was at first inclined to support
King William; but all at length concurred in the views of Louis Philippe, and
the principle of non-intervention was for the first time unanimously
recognized. A conference of ministers, with regard to Belgian affairs, was
opened at London, November 4th, composed of Talleyrand, Lord Aberdeen, Prince
Esterhazy, Von Billow, and Count Mutusszewitsch.
The London Congress recognized the Independence of Belgium, December 30th.
This act, and the recognition of Louis Philippe, were the first blows struck at
the principle of legitimacy asserted by the Holy Alliance, and maintained at
all preceding conferences since the Congress of Vienna. In both these acts Great Britain took the
lead. The Belgian National Congress, which had been opened at Brussels November
10th, determined that it must proceed hand in hand with the Congress in London.
But William I was not inclined to relinquish what he could hold; consequently
the war went on, and while the Congresses were sitting several battles occurred
in the neighbourhood of Maestricht and in the Duchy of Luxembourg. The London
Congress assigned to Holland the limits which it had possessed in 1790, with
the addition of Luxembourg, and it imposed upon Belgium part of the Dutch debt.
With this arrangement King William declared himself satisfied; but the Brussels
Congress protested against it, February 1st, 1831; and William, therefore,
continued to retain possession of Antwerp.
The Belgian Congress voted a new Constitution February
7th, which was to consist of a king and two representative chambers. The choice
of a sovereign occasioned some difficulty. Among the candidates named were the
Prince of Orange, the Duke of Nemours, and the Duke of Leuchtenberg. The London
Conference proposed Prince Leopold of Saxe-Coburg, who was at length accepted
by the Brussels Congress, June 4th, 1831. Leopold made his solemn entry into
Brussels, July 21st, and took the oath to the new Constitution. But he was not
to enjoy his new dignity without dispute. King William had silently collected a
large army, with which the Prince of Orange suddenly entered Belgium while
Leopold was absent on a tour in the provinces. The Belgian Provisional
Government, confident that the great Powers would not suffer the armistice to
be broken, had neglected the army, and the mob who had been victorious in the
towns were no match for disciplined troops in the open field. The Prince of
Orange proclaimed that he came not to conquer Belgium, but only to obtain more
advantageous conditions. Advancing upon Liege, he defeated the Belgians under
General Niellon at Turnhout, August 3rd, and on the
8th overthrew, near Hasselt, General Daine and the larger portion of the
Belgian army. A Dutch division proceeded to Antwerp to reinforce General
Chasse, repulsed the Belgians under General Tiecke,
in whose camp Leopold was, and, breaking down the dykes, laid a large portion
of Flanders under water. Duke Bernhardt of Saxe-Weimar, whom King William had
appointed Governor of Luxembourg, now threw himself between Louvain and Brussels, thus cutting off
Leopold from his capital, while the Prince of Orange was advancing against him
with superior forces. The two rivals met at Tirlemont,
August 11th. A great part of Leopold’s army was composed of men in blouses, who
fled at the first onset. A few companies of the Brussels National Guard
ventured to oppose the Dutch, but were too weak, and the whole army fled in
disorder to Louvain. That place surrendered at the first summons of the Dutch,
but Leopold escaped to Mechlin.
Meanwhile a French army of 50,000 men,
under Marshal Gerard, who was accompanied by Louis Philippe’s two eldest sons, entered Belgium, to which step Talleyrand
had obtained the consent
of the English Ministry. An English fleet under Admiral Codrington also
appeared in the Scheldt. Beliard and Adair, the French and English negociators, proceeded to the Dutch camp, when the Prince
of Orange consented to an armistice, and the forces on all sides retired to
their former positions, August 12th. The Dutch, by this demonstration, and
through Russian influence, succeeded in obtaining more favourable conditions.
It was decided that Belgium should cede part of Limburg, as well as Luxembourg,
and take upon itself yearly 8,400,000 guilders of the Dutch debt. King William,
however, would not consent to the new articles, in the hope that, when the Czar
had put down the revolution in Poland, he should be assisted by Russia, as well
as by the German Powers. But in this expectation he was disappointed, siege of
In May, 1832, King Leopold proceeded to France, and in an Antwerp. interview
with Louis Philippe at Compiegne, obtained the hand of his eldest daughter,
Louisa. The marriage was celebrated in the following August, when Leopold
assured the Belgians that his children should be educated in the Catholic
faith. As the King of the Netherlands had not yet consented to the conditions
proposed, an embargo was laid upon Dutch vessels in England, and a French army
was set in motion to drive the Dutch from Antwerp. William I. declared that he
would yield only to force, and an English fleet under Admiral Malcolm began to
blockade the Dutch coast early in November, and about the middle of that month
the French laid siege to Antwerp. Chasse made a brave defence, and did not
surrender till the citadel was reduced to a heap of rubbish, December 23rd.
Even then William refused to accept the capitulation, or to abandon the forts
Lillo and Liefkenshoek. At length, on May 21st, 1833, a preliminary treaty
was signed; but it was not till January 22nd, 1839, that Holland consented, by
a definitive treaty, to accept the London Protocol!
The Russian autocrat, the main prop of legitimacy in
Europe, found himself called upon to support his own authority at home. At the
news of the outbreak in France Nicholas contemplated suppressing it by force,
and the Russian officers talked familiarly of a promenade to Paris. But the
irritation of the Tsar was somewhat soothed by the elevation of Louis Philippe
to a constitutional throne, and his attention was soon after diverted from the
affairs of France by a revolt among his Polish subjects. In 1829 Nicholas had
received the crown of Poland at Warsaw. All had then appeared tranquil in that
subject kingdom, but the elements of discontent lay festering under the
surface. Society still consisted only of a proud and restless nobility and a
peasantry of slaves; nor had the causes of Poland’s former misfortunes been
removed by the Constitution given to it by the Emperor Alexander after the
model of the French Charter. The misery of the Poles was increased by the
harshness of the Grand Duke Constantine’s government, who ruled like a Tartar
Prince, though he was suspected of being destitute of physical as well as moral
courage. The Revolution, which, like the rest in Europe about this time, had
its first impulse from the dethronement of Charles X in France, began by a
conspiracy of some young Polish students and subalterns to seize Constantine
at the Belvedere, a residence of the Prince’s in the vicinity of Warsaw; when
it was expected that the Polish troops in that city, who numbered 10,000 men,
would rise and drive out the Russian garrison of 7,000. The execution of this
plan was prematurely hastened by a suspicion that it had been discovered, since
the national troops had been withdrawn from Galicia and the Grand Duchy of
Posen, and their place supplied by Austrians and Prussians. In the dusk of
evening, on November 29th, 1830, twenty young men proceeded to the Belvedere,
where they killed General Gendre and the Vicepresident Lubowicski;
but Constantine escaped by concealing himself in a garret. Meanwhile the
citizens of Warsaw had risen en masse,
armed themselves at the arsenal, and seized many of the Russian officers in the
theatre: the Polish soldiers had joined the people, and murdered General
Stanislaus Potocki, and others of their officers who refused to renounce their
allegiance. The defection of the Polish soldiery gave great strength to the movement, and the
insurrection was now joined by many persons of distinction. After some
deliberation it had been resolved to confine the revolt to the Russian provinces
of Poland, or Lithuania, Volhynia and Podolia, in
order to avoid the hostility of Austria and Prussia. General Chlopicki, who had distinguished himself in the wars of
Napoleon, assumed the chief command, and eventually a sort of absolute
dictatorship. He was supported, among others, by Prince Lubecki, Professor Lelewel, Count Ostrowski, and Prince Adam Czartoryski. The
last, a descendant of the ancient Princes of Lithuania, and related to the
Russian Imperial Family, had been a favourite of the Emperor Alexander and the
Poles, in case of success, had marked him out for their future King.
Constantine retired with the troops which remained faithful to him to a village
within a mile or two of Warsaw. Here he permitted the Polish part of his force
to join, if they wished, their brethren in Warsaw, and with only 6,000 Russians
retreated towards Volhynia. He had referred to the
Imperial Court a deputation which waited upon him with a statement of their
claims and grievances; but Nicholas would hear of nothing but unconditional
submission, and early in 1831, a large Russian army, commanded by Diebitsch, prepared to reduce the Poles to obedience. At
the command of the Emperor, Chlopicki laid down his
dictatorship in January; but the Poles headed by Czartoryski, pursued the
insurrection more vigorously than ever. Prince Radzivill was now appointed commander-in-chief of their forces in place of Chlopicki. Diebitsch, having
issued a proclamation which left the Poles no choice between slavish submission
or destruction, the Diet declared, January 25th, that Nicholas had forfeited
the Polish crown; and they prepared to support their resolution by all the
means in their power. The army was raised to between 50,000 and 60,000 men; but
a great portion of them was armed only with scythes. Negotiations were entered
into with foreign Powers; and in order to conciliate them, it was resolved,
February 3rd, that Poland should be governed by a constitutional monarchy. But
the Poles were disappointed in their hopes of foreign support. Austria and
Prussia assured the Tsar that they would not countenance the rebellion, and
that they would join their arms with his if it extended to their own Provinces.
Austria, however, from dread of Russia, would willingly have seen an independent
Polish Kingdom, and offered to sacrifice Galicia for that purpose, provided a King
should be chosen from the House of Austria, and France and England should
concur. Lord Palmerston, however, declined, and was followed by France. Louis
Philippe only used the Polish insurrection to induce Nicholas to recognize his
own accession and the independence of Belgium, while England and Austria
afforded the Poles no substantial aid.
Diebitsch, who had collected an army of 114,000 men, with 336 guns, at Bialystok
and Grodno, crossed the Polish frontier February 5th. We cannot enter into the
details of the insurrectionary war. The campaign was marked by several desperate
battles fought with varying success; but at length the Poles, though aided by
insurrections in Podolia, the Ukraine, and Lithuania, were compelled to yield,
after an heroic defence, to superior numbers and discipline. The cholera had
ravaged the armies of both sides. Diebitsch died of
it June 10th, and a few weeks afterwards the Grand Duke Constantine, at Witebsk. Warsaw surrendered September 8th, to Paskiewitsch, who had succeeded Diebitsch in the command, and on the 28th of the same month, the Russian General Rudiger
entered Cracow. On the approach of the Russians, the mob at Warsaw, like that
at Paris on the advance of the Duke of Brunswick, forced their way into the
Palace and compelled a change of government, then broke into the state prisons
and committed an indiscriminate massacre. The Polish divisions in the provinces
were speedily dispersed, and before the end of autumn the insurrection was
entirely quelled. Paskiewitsch, who was made Prince
and Governor of Warsaw, re-established the Russian regimen. An amnesty was
indeed granted November 1st, but with so many exceptions that hardly anybody
was safe. Paskiewitsch directed his efforts to
abolish the nationality of Poland, and to reduce it as much as possible to a
Russian Province. The University of Warsaw was suppressed, the archives,
libraries, scientific collections, etc., were removed to St. Petersburg, the
Polish uniform and colours were abolished, and the Polish soldiery
incorporated in Russian regiments. Prince Radzivill and other leading Poles were relegated to the interior of the Empire, and it is
computed that in 1832, 80,000 Poles were sent into Siberia. Polish children
were snatched from their parents and carried into what are called the military
colonies of Russia; the Roman Catholic Church was persecuted agreeably to the
Tsar’s Graeco-Russian system; and on February 26th, 1832, Poland was declared a Russian Province.
Even the inert mass of the German Confederation was
stirred by the French Revolution of 1830. The most characteristic trait of
German history at this period is that the so-called constitutions moulded on
the French Charter, which had been bestowed on some of the minor States, were
established by Russian influence. But Russia had set her face against a
Prussian Constitution. The establishment of a Zollverein, or customs union,
between Bavaria and Wurtemberg, subsequently adopted
by other German States, seemed a step towards German unity.1 But the
partial revolutions which occurred in Germany in 1830, were more calculated to
confirm the ancient state of things than to lead to such a consummation. In
Saxony, the old King, Frederick Augustus, had died in May, 1827, and had been
succeeded by his brother Anthony. No line of Princes was more bigoted to the
old order of things than the House of Wettin; and the circumstance that while
the royal family professed the Roman Catholic religion, their subjects were
Protestants, augmented the danger of collision. In June, 1830, a few days
before the breaking out of the French Revolution, the citizens of Dresden and
the University of Leipsic had wished to celebrate the Jubilee of the Augsburg
Confession; but the demonstration was suppressed in order not to give offence
to the Court. This proceeding occasioned disturbances which had not been
quelled when the news of the French Revolution arrived in Saxony. Serious riots
ensued both in Leipsic and Dresden, in which latter capital the Council House
and police buildings were burnt. In order to allay the storm King Anthony found
himself compelled to adopt his son, Frederick Augustus, who was very popular,
as co-regent, to dismiss his Minister, Einsiedel, and
to make some improvements in the Constitution. Insurrections also broke out in
Brunswick, where the tyrannical Duke Charles was deposed in favour of his
brother William; and in electoral Hesse, where William II. abdicated in favour
of his son, Frederick William. Disturbances likewise occurred in Hesse Darmstadt,
Baden, and other minor States, as well as in Switzerland, where reforms were
effected in several cantons. Prussia and Austria proper were little affected
by the French
Revolution of 1830. But it gave an impulse to the awakening nationality of the
Hungarians. When in November, 1830, the Emperor Francis caused his son
Ferdinand to be crowned King of Hungary, the Diet made much larger demands
than it had ever done before: namely, that the Magyar tongue should in future
be the official one instead of Latin ; that Magyars only should be appointed to
commands in Hungarian regiments, etc. The two Tables, that is, the
upper and lower Houses of the Diet, or the Magnates and the States, now
introduced the use of the Magyar language in their debates. In consequence of
these proceedings the Diet was not again assembled till 1832, when Louis
Kossuth first appeared as the ablegat, or
proxy of an absent noble.
SPAIN
After the overthrow of Charles X, Mina, Valdez, and
hundreds of Spanish liberals who had sought refuge in France, made an irruption
into Spain. Louis Philippe at first supported them. He assured Lafayette, who
took a great interest in their success, of his favourable views towards them,
and even gave him money in support of their cause. But, as in the case of
Belgium and Poland, his interest in their success only extended so far as it
might affect his own political interests, and he treacherously abandoned them
to their fate as soon as Ferdinand VII acknowledged his dynasty. The Minister
Mole had warned the Spanish emigrants of their danger. They were already on the
frontier when Louis Philippe sent orders to disarm them. They preferred,
however, to enter Spain, but were speedily defeated at every point by superior
forces. It was with the greatest difficulty that Mina, after wandering several
days in the mountains, succeeded in escaping back to France. Italy was not at
this time disturbed, though insurrections, which we shall relate further on,
broke out in the following year.
Pope Pius VII had, in 1823, been succeeded by the
Cardinal della Genga, an old man of seventy-four,
who, as Leo XII, ruled severely and kept down the Carbonari. On his
death, in 1829, Cardinal Castiglione was elected to the vacant chair as Pope
Pius VIII.
The reign of Louis Philippe, the “ Citizen King,” was
without any fixed principles, and only a continued system of trimming, both in
foreign and domestic policy. His first Ministry, chosen from among the party
which had triumphed in the “great week,” consisted of Dupont de l’Eure, Lafitte, Gerard, Mole, Guizot, Broglie, Louis,
Sebastiani, Casimir Périer, and Dupin. Bignon, Napoleon’s celebrated secretary, had also a
place in it, but without a portfolio. Four of Charles X’s Ministers, Polignac, Peyronnet, Guernon de Ranville, and Chantelauze,
had been arrested, and the populace clamoured loudly for their death. They
were to be arraigned before the peers at the Luxembourg, December 15th, and
the people threatened to enforce their execution. To avert disturbances, the
King, under pretence of making preparations against foreign Powers, coloured
by a false rumour that Russia and Prussia were to invade France, appointed Marshal
Soult Minister-at-War, and directed him to organize a large force. The
unpopularity, however, of acting against the people was left in the first
instance to the National Guard under Lafayette, who appeared on the side of
order, defended the Luxembourg against the attacks of the mob, and captured
some 400 of their more turbulent leaders. Lafayette having thus rendered
himself unpopular, Louis Philippe found himself strong enough, with the
support of Soult, to dismiss him from the command of the National Guard, and at
the same time to disband the artillery, who had shown a disposition to fraternize
with the mob. Dupont de l’Eure, fearing some similar
trick, resigned, and was succeeded as head of the Ministry by Lafitte. The
ex-Ministers of Charles X were condemned to perpetual imprisonment, with loss
of rank and civil rights.
Louis Philippe’s domestic policy was necessarily in
some degree reactionary, because the principles on which he had accepted the
throne were untenable. Lafitte was dismissed in March, 1831, and Casimir Périer
then became Prime Minister, who immediately caused several noted Republicans to
be arrested. In his foreign policy, Louis Philippe endeavoured to acquire a
little popularity without risking a breach with the great Powers. Thus in July,
1831, he despatched a naval expedition against Dom Miguel, in order to
influence the elections then pending by the éclat of an easy victory. But as at
the same time Poland was left unaided in the midst of her troubles, this
manoeuvre deceived nobody. The new Government was at once exposed to the
intrigues and insurrections of the Carlists and of the Republicans. Serious riots
occurred at Lyons, Grenoble, and other places in the south of France.
Republican demonstrations having been made at Paris on the occasion of General
Lamarque’s funeral, June 1st, 1832, when barricades were erected and several
persons killed, Paris was declared in a state of siege, by the advice, it is
said, of M. Thiers. The Polytechnic School was now dissolved, and all suspected
persons arrested, including the leaders of the legitimists, Chateaubriand,
Fitz-james, and Hyde de Neuville; but these last were
speedily liberated. The Duchess of Berri, after attempting an insurrection in
Provence in the spring of the year, passed through France to La Vendée, and
endeavoured to raise the people in favour of her son the Duke of Bordeaux, or
Henry V. Some conflicts ensued between the insurgents and the royal troops;
but the contest soon appeared hopeless, and the Duchess retired to Nantes.
Here she was betrayed by one Deutz, a German Jew. A daughter was born at Blaye, May 10th, 1833, when she affirmed that Count Luchesi
Palli was the husband to whom she had been secretly united. This declaration
deprived her of any dangerous influence, and Louis Philippe liberated her, June
8th, when she proceeded to Palermo. In the previous September Charles X and
his family had quitted Holyrood to take up his residence at Prague. This change
was attributed to various motives. Some said that Charles was pursued by
creditors, others that Metternich wished to have the Duke of Bordeaux as a
pledge against the French usurper. Another claimant of the French throne, the
Duke de Reichstadt, had been removed by death July 22nd, 1832.
Fresh insurrections occurred at Lyons in the spring of
1834, which were not suppressed without considerable bloodshed. They were
instigated by certain secret political societies, several of the leaders of
which were brought to trial in May, 1835, and condemned to imprisonment or
transportation. On the 28th of July this year, on the celebration of the fifth
anniversary of the July revolution, a diabolical attempt was made on the King’s
life by a wretch named Fieschi, who from the window
of a small house on the Boulevard du Temple, discharged at Louis Philippe,
while passing, what was called an “infernal machine,” consisting of about a
hundred gun-barrels fixed on a frame, and fired simultaneously by means of a
train of gunpowder. Fortunately the King escaped unhurt, but great many of his
suite were either killed or wounded. Fieschi was
arrested and guillotined. This attempt occasioned what were called the “Laws
of September,” to expedite the proceedings of the tribunals in cases of
rebellion, and to curb the liberty of the press. M. Thiers, now Minister of the
Interior, took a principal share in these proceedings, and scrupled not, in
spite of the liberal doctrines which he so loudly professed when in opposition,
to resort when in office to the most absolute and tyrannical measures. M.
Guizot, who was his colleague in the Soult Ministry, was distinguished from
his rival by a more honourable and consistent conduct. In the following
February M. Thiers became President of the Council and Secretary for Foreign
Affairs. But in consequence of his views on the Spanish question his Ministry
was dissolved after an existence of about half a year; when Count Mole became
President, and M. Guizot was appointed Minister of Public Instruction. In June,
1836, another abortive attempt was made on the King’s life by a workman named Alibaud. In the same year Charles Louis Napoleon Bonaparte,
the future Emperor of the French, undertook his extraordinary and rash
conspiracy at Strassburg; but before relating his attempt we will briefly
advert to the affairs of Italy, where this Prince had already made himself
conspicuous by his participation in revolutionary movements.
ITALY
Symptoms of revolt first showed themselves in the
Italian States after the death of Pope Pius VIII in 1831, and during the
conclave which elected Cardinal Capillari to the
vacant chair, with the title of Gregory XVI, Francis, Duke of Modena, detested
for his absolutism and intolerance, who is thought to have entertained the
ambitious project of making himself King of Central Italy, was driven out by
his subjects, and a Provisional Government established (February, 1831). Singularly
enough, this revolt was led by Menotti, the head of the Modenese police, and a
favourite of the Duke. Bologna next felt the shock, where the Papal Prolegate
was in like manner expelled, and a Provisional Government erected. In the same
month the Archduchess Maria Louisa, widow of Napoleon, was driven from her
Duchy of Parma. Similar scenes occurred at Ferrara, Ancona, and Perugia. Louis
Napoleon and Charles Louis Napoleon, the sons of Louis Bonaparte King of
Holland, were at this time residing at Florence, whence they corresponded with
Menotti, the leader of the Modenese revolution. When the insurrection broke out
in the Papal States the two brothers joined the insurgents at Spoleto.
The Advocate Vicini opened at Bologna, February 26th,
what was called an Italian National Congress, with the avowed purpose of
establishing the unity of Italy; and General Zucchi, who had served under
Napoleon, but who had subsequently entered the Austrian service, endeavoured
to organize a revolutionary army. But the Austrians put down these attempts
with unwonted promptitude. An Austrian army under General Frimont entered the disturbed districts early in March, when the insurgents fled in all
directions. After some feeble attempts at resistance, Zucchi was defeated,
captured, and thrown into an Austrian dungeon, and the Austrians entered
Bologna March 21st. Spoleto capitulated on the 30th, and the insurrection was
at an end. The elder of the two sons of Louis Bonaparte died at Forli, during
the riots, March 17th. The younger, Charles Louis Napoleon, escaped disguised
as a servant in the retinue of his mother, Hortense, whose anxiety for the
safety of her sons had brought her to Spoleto.
The Italians relied without any solid grounds on the
aid of France. Louis Philippe had no idea of entering into a war with Austria
for Italian liberty, though public opinion in France compelled him to some
demonstrations on that side. Hence he exhorted the Pope to moderation, and on
July 5th Gregory XVI published an edict promising some reforms in the
administration. These, however, did not satisfy the Italian people. They were
encouraged by the opinion that the Austrians, who, with the exception of the citadel
of Ferrara, had evacuated all the places they had entered, feared the
intervention of the French, and the insurrection was resumed. At a meeting
held at Bologna it was determined to convoke in that town another National
Congress on January 5th, 1832. The Pope assembled his troops at Rimini and
Ferrara. The National Guard of Bologna, under General Patuzzi,
marched against them, but were defeated after a short combat at Cesena, January
20th. The Papal army, composed in a great part of bandits, had committed such
disorders and cruelties, that Cardinal Albani, the Pope’s representative, was
ashamed to lead them against Bologna; and the Austrians were therefore called
in once more. But so great was the clamour of the French liberals at this
invasion, that Louis Philippe was compelled to make a demonstration by taking
possession of Ancona. The act, however, was almost immediately disavowed, and on May 2nd the Papal troops
were admitted into that place.
Neither Naples nor Sardinia was disturbed by these
occurrences. The old King, Ferdinand IV of Naples, who after his restoration
had assumed the title of “Ferdinand I, King of the Two Sicilies,”
had died January 4th, 1825, and was succeeded by his son, Francis I. The latter
Sovereign died in November, 1830. His son and successor, Ferdinand II, had
rendered himself popular by introducing some reforms into the administration,
and by liberating political prisoners. In Sardinia, Charles Albert, Prince of Carignano, bad succeeded to the crown on the death of
Charles Felix in April, 1831. The situation of this Prince between Austria,
which he feared, and the liberals, whom he had betrayed, was somewhat critical;
but on the whole he inclined to the liberal side, where his interests seemed to
lie.
After his flight from Italy, Prince
Napoleon had for the most part lived with his mother, Queen Hortense, at her chateau of Arenenberg in the Thurgau. While residing in Switzerland he
employed himself in studying the science of artillery in the school of Thun,
under the tuition of Dufours. At this period his
character seemed to be earnest and thoughtful, though he was not averse to the
pleasures of youth. He aspired to a literary reputation, and composed at this
time “Political Dreams,” “Remarks on the Political and Military Condition of
Switzerland,” and a “Handbook of the Science of Artillery.” The unpopularity
which Louis Philippe had incurred suggested to him an attempt on the Crown of
France. Hence his abortive conspiracy of Strassburg in 1836; the best excuse
for which is, that he merely wished to attract the notice of the world, and to
exhibit himself as a leader to those who desired the downfall of Louis
Philippe. After some preparations at Strassburg, through Colonel Vaudray and others, he caused himself, on the morning of
October 30th, to be proclaimed Emperor, when he was joined by a small portion
of the troops. The greater part, however, remained faithful to the King; and
the Prince and his fellow conspirators were arrested and conducted to Paris.
Louis Philippe was surprised and embarrassed by this strange event; but he immediately
dismissed the Prince, thinking that the ridicule which attached to so rash and
inconsiderate an enterprise sufficed to render him harmless. Prince Napoleon
now proceeded to America; but alarmed at the illness of his mother, returned to
Switzerland the following year by way of England. His Strassburg accomplices
were acquitted at the assizes in January, 1837, an event which strengthened the
opposition by manifesting the disposition of the people. After the death of
Queen Hortense, October 5th, Louis Philippe called upon the Swiss to expel the
Prince from their territories, who, however, demurred to comply, as Napoleon
had been made an honorary citizen of the Thurgau. But he voluntarily
relinquished a privilege which might tell against his claims to the French
Crown, declared that he was, and would remain, a Frenchman, and in the autumn
of 1838 he took up his residence in London.
The discovery of Louis Philippe’s insatiable avarice
increased his unpopularity. To his inheritance, the richest in France, he had
added all the possessions of Charles X and Condé; he had entered into
partnership with the Rothschilds, and not content with all his wealth, he
solicited marriage portions for his children, and even tried to augment them by
false representations. Thus on the marriage of the Duke of Nemours to the
Princess Victoria of Coburg, early in 1837, Louis Philippe destined for him a
million francs besides the domain of Rambouillet; but the Chamber demurred, and
it turned out on inquiry that Rambouillet had been valued much too low.
Marriage settlements were also procured for the Duke of Orleans, who espoused a
Mecklenburg Princess, May 30th, and for the Queen of the Belgians. Towards the
end of 1837 the reign of Louis Philippe obtained a little military glory by the
conquest of Constantine, taken by storm by General Damremont October 13th. In the winter a naval expedition was despatched to Hayti, which compelled the negro government of that island
to pay a compensation of sixty million francs to the expelled planters.
Towards the end of 1838 the leaders of three of the
four parties into which the Chamber was divided, namely, Thiers, Guizot, and Odillon Barrot, the respective heads of the centre
gauche, the centre droit, and the côté gauche, having formed a coalition, the Mole Ministry was overthrown early
in the following year by an adverse address moved and carried by M. Thiers.
Louis Philippe now wished Marshal Soult to conduct the Government; but as M.
Thiers, whose services the Marshal considered indispensable, appeared to set
too much value
on them, the arrangements went off, and the Duke of Montebello, son of Marshal
Lannes, became Prime Minister. But his hold of power was short. The Republicans
of the secret society called la société des familles,
led by Blanqui and Barbés, succeeded, May 12th, in
seizing the Hotel de Ville, throwing up barricades, etc. They were soon put
down; but their attempt induced Soult, ever ready to throw his sword into the
scale of danger, to accept the office of Prime Minister. Early in 1840,
however, the Government was again overthrown by Thiers on the question of the
marriage-settlement of the Duke of Nemours, and Louis Philippe found himself
compelled to place that intriguer at the head of the Ministry. M. Guizot was
now appointed Ambassador at the Court of St. James’s. But the Eastern question,
which nearly involved France and England in a war, soon proved fatal to the
Ministry of Thiers.
The Eastern Question.
Mehemet Ali, not content with the Isle of Candia in
reward of his services to the Sultan in Greece, had thrown a covetous eye on
Syria. The Porte seemed in no condition to defend that Province, and in the
autumn of 1831, Mehemet, under pretence of punishing the Pasha of St. Jean d’Acre for some affronts, despatched thither his son
Ibrahim, with an army. Acre did not fall till May 27th, 1832. But Ibrahim had
betrayed his real design by occupying a great part of the country. After the
capture of Acre he proceeded to take Damascus and Tripoli; and having defeated
Hussein Pasha, July 7th, whom the Sultan had despatched against him with a
large army, he entered Aleppo and Antioch. The Grand Vizier, Redschid Pasha, who attempted to oppose his progress, was
defeated and captured at Konieh, December 21st.
The Sultan Mahmoud II, trembling for Constantinople
itself, implored the aid of Russia, as well as of England and France. Nicholas
having despatched a fleet to Constantinople, the French also sent one, but only
to watch that of Russia. Ibrahim continuing to advance, and Mehemet Ali having
refused French mediation, the Sultan had no alternative but to throw himself
upon the protection of Russia. In April, 1833, Nicholas sent 5,000 men to
Scutari, while another Russian army of 30,000 crossed the Pruth.
But an English fleet having appeared and joined the French, the Russians withdrew,
and Mehemet submitted to mediation, by which Syria was assigned to him, to be
held as a fief of the Porte. Mahmoud, indignant at being thus treated by the
Western Powers, threw himself into the arms of Russia, and by the Treaty of Unkiar Skelessi, July 8th, 1833,
agreed not to suffer any but Russian ships to pass the Dardanelles. But on the
protest of England and France, the treaty was subsequently modified in favour
of those countries in January, 1834.
The Porte, encouraged by England and Russia, attempted
in 1839 to recover Syria; but Ibrahim totally defeated the Turkish army at
Nisib on the Euphrates, June 24th. Sultan Mahmoud, who had experienced little
but misfortune during his reign, died a few days after (June 28th), leaving his
empire to his son, Abdul Medjid, then only seventeen
years of age, yet already enervated by premature enjoyment. The French now
wished the Osmanli sceptre to be transferred to Mehemet Ali, as better
qualified than Abdul for the difficult, task of maintaining the integrity of
the Turkish Empir ; but this proposition was opposed
by England as well as Russia. So strong was the opinion of the approaching fall
of the House of Osman, that the Capudan Pasha, Achmet Fewzi, carried the Turkish fleet to Alexandria, and
placed it at the disposal of Mehemet. The English Ministry now proposed to
France to prevent any further extension of Mehemet’s power, and to aid the
Porte, though not in such a manner as to forward the views of Russia. The
French, however, took up the cause of Mehemet, and were for establishing him in
the independent possession both of Egypt and Syria. Some warm diplomatic
correspondence ensued; till at length England persuaded Russia, Austria, and
Prussia to join her in the Treaty of London, July 15th, 1840, by which both
Syria and Candia were to be restored to the Porte. A small English and Austrian
army was landed in Syria, and being joined by some Turks and Druses, defeated
the hitherto victorious army of Ibrahim at Kaleb Medina, October 10th. Acre,
bombarded by the English fleet under Admiral Stopford and Admiral Napier,
surrendered November 4th, and Mehemet, seeing the impossibility of successful
resistance, agreed to the provisions of the London Treaty, November 27th, and
restored Candia and Syria, as well as the Turkish fleet, to the Porte. The
young Sultan was after this mostly guided by the counsels of England, ably conducted by Sir
Stratford Canning, afterwards Lord Redcliffe, her Ambassador at Constantinople.
This affair created great indignation in France, and
rendered the Thiers Ministry highly unpopular. A rupture with England seemed
for some time imminent; but Louis Philippe, as usual, only employed the
conjuncture to promote his domestic interests, and under the alarm of a
European war, carried the project for the fortification of Paris by a girdle of
forts; designed rather to keep down the populace within than to repel an enemy
from without. Prince Napoleon had also seized the occasion to make another attempt
on the Crown. Landing at Boulogne, August 4th, with a few followers, of whom
Count Montholon was the most distinguished, he proclaimed
himself Emperor of the French, and named M. Thiers as his Minister. Being
repulsed by the troops, he was nearly drowned in his attempt to escape by the
upsetting of a boat, but was saved and captured. M. Berryer undertook his defence before the Chamber of Peers; but he was condemned, and
sentenced to imprisonment at Ham; where he passed six years, for the most part
spent in study and writing.
Another attempt on the King’s life by an assassin
named Darmès, October 17th, is said to have
occasioned the dismissal of M. Thiers on the 29th. That minister had become so
unpopular, and the state of French affairs was so discouraging, that a change
of ministry was absolutely necessary. Marshal Soult now again became the
nominal prime minister, but M. Guizot, to whom was intrusted the portfolio for
foreign affairs, exercised supreme influence in the cabinet. The transfer of
the remains of Napoleon I. from St. Helena to Paris by the consent of England,
served to heal the temporary breach of the entente cordiale between
England and France. The body arrived at Paris December 15th, 1840, and was
entombed with great solemnity at the Invalides. But so vivid a resuscitation of
Napoleon’s memory was not perhaps the discreetest act
on the part of Louis Philippe.
M. Humann, the minister of finance, having in 1841
caused a new census of the people to be taken, in order to include persons who
had hitherto escaped taxation, disturbances broke out in several parts of
France, and even in Paris; but the rioters were reduced to order, and M. Guizot
proceeded against them with severity. The death of Louis Philippe’s eldest son, the Duke of
Orleans, killed by a fall from his carriage, June 13th, 1842, was a severe blow
to the new dynasty. The Duke indeed left two sons, Louis Philippe, Count of
Paris, and Robert, Duke of Chartres; but the eldest was only in his fourth
year, and thus the prospect was opened of a long minority. The main spring of
Louis Philippe’s policy was the maintenance of peace, and especially the
preservation of the entente cordiale with England; a policy, however,
which he sometimes pushed to a length which irritated the national feelings of
the French, and rendered him unpopular. An instance of this sort occurred in
the affair of Mr. Pritchard, an English missionary at Tahiti. Mr. Pritchard
having been improperly arrested in 1843 by the French captain D’Aubigny, the
English Government made peremptory demands for satisfaction, which were
granted by the Cabinet of the Tuileries. In so doing they only obeyed the
dictates of justice and good sense; but they offended the national vanity of
the French and rendered M. Guizot’s administration unpopular. In pursuance of
the same policy, Louis Philippe in the following year paid a visit to Queen
Victoria in England, when he was invested with the Order of the Garter. By
these means the reign of Louis Philippe was passed in profound peace with regard
to Europe; though the military ardour of the French was at the same time
gratified by battles and conquests in Africa. The French succeeded in
establishing themselves at Algiers, where, under the auspices of General
Bugeaud, a dreadful system of razzias was inaugurated, and every sort of
cruelty perpetrated on both sides. As Abd-el-Kader, the celebrated leader of
the Arabs, supported himself against the French by the aid of the Maroquins, an
expedition was undertaken against the Emperor of Morocco, who by the overthrow
of his army at the battle of the Isly, August 14th,
1844, was compelled to sue for peace. For this exploit Bugeaud was rewarded
with the marshal’s baton. About the same time the Prince de Joinville with the
French fleet attacked the town of Mogador, and compelled it to surrender.
The cunning of Louis Philippe sometimes outran his
caution. In spite of all his care, the affair of the Spanish marriages in 1846 nearly led to
a rupture with Great Britain. But before we relate that transaction it will be necessary to
take a brief retrospect of Spanish history.
Spanish Pragmatic Sanction. Death of Ferdinand VII,
1833.
After losing his first Sicilian wife, Ferdinand VII.
had married in 1816 his niece, Maria Isabel Francesca, second daughter of the
King of Portugal, while his brother Don Carlos married the third daughter.
Maria died in a year or two, and in 1819 Ferdinand married a niece of the King
of Saxony, who also died in 1829. By none of these three wives had he any
issue. At the age of forty-six, and debilitated in constitution, he married for
his fourth wife Maria Christina, daughter of Ferdinand IV of Naples, and sister
of the Duchess of Berri, and of Maria Carlotta, married to the Spanish King’s
youngest brother, Francisco. Three months after this marriage the new Queen
appearing to be pregnant, Ferdinand published a Pragmatic Sanction abolishing
the Salic law, March 29th, 1830. Ferdinand’s brothers, Carlos and Francisco, as
well as Charles X of France and Francis I of the Two Sicilies,
brother of the Spanish Queen, protested against this act, which threatened
their collateral claims to the throne of Spain. But Ferdinand persisted, and
on the 10th of October, 1830, his Queen was delivered of a daughter, Isabella,
who was recognized as Princess of the Asturias, or heiress apparent of the
throne. Ferdinand having being seized with a severe illness in the autumn of 1832,
Don Carlos either extorted from him a revocation of the Pragmatic Sanction, or
caused one to be forged. But Maria Christina, who had borne another daughter in
the preceding January, declared herself Regent for her daughter Isabella during
the King’s illness, and sought popularity by some liberal measures. She granted
an amnesty to the insurgents who had risen after the French Revolution of
July; she re-established the universities, which had been dissolved after the
Restoration; and, by the advice of Martinez de la Rosa, she announced a speedy
reassembly of the Cortes. Ferdinand unexpectedly recovered, and resumed the
reins of government in January, 1833, when he confirmed all that the Queen had
done; and Don Carlos, after protesting, withdrew to Don Miguel in Portugal. In
pursuance of the more liberal policy inaugurated by Christina, Ferdinand again
appointed Zea Bermudez to the ministry, and agreeably
to the Queen’s promise, reopened the Cortes, July 29th, when that assembly did
homage to his daughter Isabella as their future sovereign. Ferdinand VII did
not long survive this event. He was again attacked by his disorder, and expired
in dreadful torments, Sept. 29th, 1833.
Isabella II was now proclaimed Queen, and her mother Christina assumed the Regency. The
Pragmatic Sanction was recognized by Louis Philippe and by the English Government;
but the Northern Powers, as well as the Pope, refused to acknowledge it. Spain
itself was divided in opinion and torn by factions. The Liberals and moderate
party supported the Queen, and were hence called Christinos,
while the Serviles declared for Don Carlos,
and obtained the name of Carlists. The Christinos,
though not at one among themselves, prevailed. In 1834, Zea Bermudez was compelled to resign in favour of the still more liberal Martinez
de la Rosa. On the 10th of April the new minister proclaimed the Estatuto Real, a constitution modelled by the
advice of Louis Philippe. But it was not sufficiently liberal to please the
extreme party; warm disputes arose between the Moderados and Progresistas, and Martinez de la Rosa, to
whose embarrassments was added that of civil war, was unable to maintain
himself.
The Carlists had raised an insurrection in Biscay in
1833. Their strength lay chiefly in the Basque provinces, which had been
injured by the system of centralization adopted by Ferdinand after the French
model. The insurrection also spread to other provinces, but not to any great
extent. The priest Merino in Old Castile, and Locho in La Mancha, raised some guerilla bands. The Basque army, which had gradually
increased to 25,000 men, found an excellent leader in Zumalacarragui.
Generals Sarsfeld, Valdez, and two or three more in
vain attempted to subdue it. Don Carlos, who had been driven from Portugal and
taken refuge in England, returned secretly through France, and appearing in Zumalacarragui’s camp, June 9th, 1834, was received with
acclamation. But he was totally unfit for the enterprise he had undertaken. He
surrounded himself with the stiffest etiquette, and he continued to maintain
the Apostolic Junta, a former member of which, Father Cirilo, was his
most intimate confidant. Spain, like other parts of Europe, was this year
visited by the cholera, when a hundred monks, suspected of having poisoned the
fountains, were murdered in Madrid alone, and many others in various towns.
This popular prejudice was manifested in other countries with the same results.
In 1835 Mina undertook the command of the Christinos, but, like his predecessors, was worsted by Zumalacarragui after a sanguinary campaign of five months.
Valdez, who resumed the attempt with 20,000 men, had no better success. These
unfortunate campaigns exhausted the troops and money of the Spanish Government,
and compelled the Regent to apply to the Western Powers for aid. Louis Philippe
pursued in the affairs of Spain his usual double and self-interested policy. He
had formed the design of marrying his sons to Christina’s daughters, and he
courted the friendship of the Spanish Regent and pressed upon her his advice,
yet without taking so decided a part in her affairs as might excite the
hostility of the Northern Powers. In like manner he went hand in hand with
England in opposing Carlism, but so as not to give too much strength to the Progresistas. It was not till the summer of 1835,
after the unlooked-for resistance of the Basques, that Louis Philippe prepared
to give Christina any active assistance, agreeably to the Quadruple Alliance
formed in the preceding year. But as that alliance had reference primarily to
the affairs of Portugal, we must here briefly resume the history of that
country.
PORTUGAL
After the banishment of Dom Miguel, before recorded,
Portugal remained tranquil till the death of the weak but well-meaning King
John VI, March 10th, 1826. As Don Pedro, his eldest son, now Emperor of Brazil,
was precluded by the constitution of that country from assuming the crown of
Portugal, he transferred it to his youthful daughter, Donna Maria da Gloria,
while Dom Miguel, John’s second son, asserted his claim as the only legitimate
male heir. The question of the succession, therefore, was somewhat analogous to
that which subsequently arose in Spain, turning on the claims of a direct
female and collateral male heir. Both pretenders to the crown were absent, and
public opinion in Portugal was very much divided. The Liberals, led by Count
Villaflor, and composed for the most part of the educated and commercial
classes and a portion of the army, were for Donna Maria, while the Serviles, as they were called, with the Marquis de
Chaves at their head, comprising the clergy, the peasantry, and the remainder
of the troops, espoused the cause of Dom Miguel. The adverse parties had
already come to blows, when the arrival of 6,000 English soldiers in the Tagus
in December, despatched by Canning, decided the question in favour of Donna
Maria. The Serviles now submitted, Queen Maria
was acknowledged, and Donna Isabella, the young Queen’s aunt, was placed at the
head of the Regency. The Cortes being assembled, January 2nd, 1828, accepted
the charter of a constitution drawn up by Don Pedro on liberal principles.
These proceedings were highly displeasing to the
Northern Powers, who, as the assertors of legitimacy and of the principles of
the Holy Alliance, espoused the cause of Dom Miguel. Under these circumstances
a compromise was adopted. Dom Miguel, as before suggested by Don Pedro, was
betrothed to his niece, and it was arranged that he should undertake the
Regency in her name. He accordingly returned to Lisbon, after paying a visit to
England on his way, and took the oath to the Constitution, February 26th. But
on the 13th of March, immediately after the departure of the English army, he
dissolved the Chambers and annulled Don Pedro’s Constitution; and as the
clergy and the great mass of the people were in favour of the ancient
absolutism, an attempt at insurrection in support of the Charter proved
abortive.
Encouraged by this success, Miguel proceeded to
further violence. On the 17th of June, declaring the succession established by
his brother to be invalid, he seized the throne for himself, as legitimate
King, ( 1828 ), and his usurpation was sanctioned by acclamation by the
assembled Cortes on the 26th. Miguel now displayed all his real character. The
leading Liberals who had not succeeded in escaping were thrown into prison;
some of them were executed, the rest were treated with the greatest cruelty.
The young tyrant sometimes assaulted his sister the Regent to the danger of
her life; and he displayed his levity and caprice by making a çi-devant barber, one of his favourites, Duke of
Queluz. He succeeded, however, in maintaining himself upon the throne, and two
conspiracies in 1829 were suppressed and punished by bloody and illegal
executions. Don Pedro despatched a fleet to Terceira, and made some
unsuccessful attempts in favour of his daughter. Donna Maria had retired to
Brazil, where, in 1830, she was betrothed to the young Prince Augustus von
Leuchtenberg, whose sister Don Pedro had married. In 1831, Don Pedro being
compelled by a revolution to relinquish the throne of Brazil to his youthful
son, Don Pedro II., took charge of his daughter’s affairs in person, and sailed
for Terceira with a well-appointed army and fleet. He landed at Oporto, July
8th, 1832, and was received with enthusiasm; but Miguel kept him shut up a
whole year in that town. Napier, however, the commander of Pedro’s fleet,
having almost
annihilated that of Miguel in a battle off Cape St. Vincent, July 5th, 1833, it
became possible to ship an army at Oporto for Lisbon. Miguel’s forces having
been defeated in a battle, he was compelled to fly, and Pedro entered Lisbon
July 28th. Two months after, Donna Maria arrived from London, and assumed the
Crown September 23rd. Marshal Bourmont, driven from
France by the Revolution, having obtained the command of the Miguelite forces, made an attempt upon Lisbon, which
was defeated October 10th; but Miguel still maintained himself in the
provinces.
In this state of things the Northern Powers, the
patrons of legitimacy even in such representatives of the principle as Carlos
and Miguel, having assumed at a Congress at Munchengrütz a hostile, or at all events adverse, attitude to the policy of France and
England, the latter Powers concluded with the Queens of Spain and Portugal the
Quadruple Alliance before mentioned, April 22nd, 1834. Miguel, alarmed by this
step, agreed by the Treaty of Evoramonte to quit the
Peninsula, May 26th, and he subsequently fixed his residence at Rome. On the
24th of the following September, Don Pedro died. The marriage of Queen Maria
with the Prince of Leuchtenberg was celebrated in January, 1835; but in the
following March the youthful bridegroom was carried off by a cold, and Queen
Maria, on the proposal of England, shortly after accepted the hand of Prince
Ferdinand of Coburg.
SPAIN
The Spanish Queen did not derive much benefit from the
Quadruple Alliance. By a treaty of June 28th, 1835, Louis Philippe, indeed,
allowed the Christinos the aid of the
so-called Foreign Legion, composed of all the scum of Paris; which had been
sent to Algiers, and served as food for powder in the fights with the Arabs and Kabyles. A Legion of much the same kind, under
General Evans, was also organized in England. But before these troops could
arrive the position of Christina had become very critical. Although the
Carlists had lost their great general Zumalacarragui,
killed at the siege of Bilbao, June 25th, yet his place was ably filled by the
brave and youthful Cabrera. The Spanish Government, besides having to contend
with the Carlists, was also menaced by the factions and discontent of its own
supporters. The Regent, indeed, in her heart detested the Progresistas,
and it was only with reluctance that she was driven, through the success of the
Carlists, to court their aid. That party established in 1835 a Junta at
Barcelona, and demanded that the Constitution of 1812 should be restored; nor
could Mina, whom the Queen had appointed Governor of that place, succeed in
restoring obedience to the Government. The example spread: Juntas were erected
at Saragossa, Valencia, Seville, Malaga, Cadiz, and other places; till at last
the revolt broke out in the capital itself. The Regent was compelled to
proclaim the Constitution of 1812, at her castle at La Granja, August 13th,
1836, and to place Calatrava, a Liberal, at the head of the Ministry.
On that very day General Lebeau,
at the head of the French Foreign Legion, had at length entered Spain, and
published a manifesto, proclaiming that he had been sent by the King of the
French to support the Queen. But no sooner did Louis Philippe hear of the
proclamation at La Granja than he publicly disavowed his general in the Moniteur. He well knew that a government founded on
the Spanish Constitution of 1812, instead of following his counsels, would make
common cause with the Republican party in France. Agreeably, however, to the
Quadruple Alliance, he suffered his Legion to remain in Spain, where it
continued to fight in the Christina cause till it was almost exhausted.
Meanwhile Don Carlos not only prospered in the North, but also gained adherents
in Andalusia and the South. In the spring of 1837 he even felt himself strong
enough to make an attempt on Madrid, and gained a victory at Villa de las Navarras; but on the appearance of Espartero, who had
relinquished the siege of Bilbao he lost heart and retired, and from this time
his cause declined. Among the fanatical decrees which he issued in Biscay, was
one directing that all Englishmen should be put to death, because they
prevented him from receiving assistance by sea!
The Cortes, on the model of 1812, were opened by
Christina June 18th, 1837, when she took an oath to the Constitution. She
nevertheless favoured a reactionary policy, and was supported in it by the
victorious Espartero, who belonged to the Moderados.
That party was also favoured by Louis Philippe, who wished to suppress the
insurrection in Spain, and to form a matrimonial connection for his sons with
the Spanish family; while England opposed this policy by supporting the Progresistas. In the autumn of 1838, Narvaez having
failed in an attempt to overthrow Espartero, was compelled to fly to England. Maroto, who soon afterwards
obtained the command of the Basque army, seeing the incapacity of Don Carlos,
resolved to abandon the cause of legitimacy, and concluded a treaty with
Espartero at Vergara, August 31st, 1839, by which the Basque Provinces agreed
to acknowledge Queen Isabella II on condition of recovering their Fueros, or
ancient customs. Carlos now fled over the Pyrenees; when Louis Philippe caused
him to be apprehended and kept him in honourable custody at Bourges. General
O’Donnel dispersed the remains of the Carlists in the summer of 1840.
Espartero was rewarded for his success with the title
of “Duke of Victory.” Christina tried to persuade him to annul the Basque
Fueros; but he would not consent, and he was supported in his policy by an
insurrection at Barcelona. Christina now fled to Valencia, and placed herself
under the protection of O’Donnel; but in her absence the people of Madrid rose
and proclaimed a Provisional Government, an example which was followed by most
of the principal towns of Spain; and the Regent found herself compelled to
appoint Espartero Prime Minister. Espartero made a sort of triumphal entry
into Madrid September 16th, and in the following October, Christina laid down
the Regency in his favour and quitted Spain. This step was not taken entirely
on political grounds. A secret marriage with Munoz, a private in the guards, by
whom she had several children, as well as an accusation of embezzling the
public money, had rendered her contemptible. She proceeded to Rome, and thence
to France, where she took up her abode till, as the instrument of Louis
Philippe, she might find an opportunity again to interfere in the affairs of
Spain.
The Regency of Espartero, who was a moderate Progresista, attracted the envy and opposition of
the other generals. Hence what were called the Pronunciamentos. Wherever
the people were dissatisfied with the proceedings of the Government or the
person of the Regent, they pronounced against them and threatened to throw
Spain into eternal confusion. To this, however, an end was put by the Cortes
confirming Espartero in the Regency, May 8th, 1841; though Arguelles was named
guardian of Isabella. Espartero maintained himself in the Regency, in spite of
much opposition and many insurrections, till July, 1843, when being defeated by
Narvaez in Valencia, he was compelled to fly to England. The policy of Spain at
this period turned much on the marriage of the young Queen, The Moderados wanted to marry her, or at all events her
sister, to a French Prince; the moderate Progresistas approved the English proposal of a German Prince; while the ultras of the
latter party wished her to espouse her cousin, the son of Louisa Charlotte.
That Princess had formed a project to keep her sister Maria Christina for ever
out of Spain, and to seize upon the Government. But her plans were cut short by
a sudden death, January 29th, 1844.
The young Queen Isabella II was declared of age by the
Cortes, November 10th, 1843, when she took the oath to the Constitution.
Narvaez, who now enjoyed the supreme military power, being a Moderado, and consequently favouring the views of
France and Christina, the Queen-mother ventured, after her sister’s death, to
return to Madrid. She obtained the guidance of her daughter, but intent only on
the gratification of her base inclinations, suffered Narvaez to rule. She
created Muñoz Duke of Rianzarez and a grandee of
Spain, and employed herself in accumulating large sums for her numerous
children by him. Meanwhile Narvaez pursued a reactionary policy by curtailing
the power of the Cortes, restoring the prerogatives of the Crown, recalling
the exiled bishops, and otherwise promoting the interests of the Church. In
1845, in company with Christina and her two daughters, he made a tour in the
provinces; when they were met at Pamplona by Louis Philippe’s sons, the Dukes
of Nemours and Aumale, with a view to forward the
projected marriages. Narvaez was now created Duke of Valencia. But he was
suddenly dismissed, April 4th, 1846, for having, it is suspected, favoured the
suit of Francis, Count of Trapani, son of the King of Naples, for the hand of
Isabella. Isturitz, who had before held the reins of
power, now became Prime Minister.
Other suitors to the young Queen were her cousins, Don
Henry, second son of the Infant Francis de Paula; and Charles Louis, Count of Montemolin, son of Don Carlos, who had made over to his son
all his claims to the Spanish throne. An insurrection was even attempted in
favour of Don Henry; but its leader, Colonel Solis, was shot, and Don Henry banished
from Spain. A marriage with the Count of Montemolin would have united all the claims to the Spanish throne ; but both France and
England opposed it. Louis Philippe, with the acquiescence of Christina, had selected for
Isabella’s husband, Francis de Assis, the eldest son of Francis de Paula, a
young man weak in mind and body; while he destined his own son, the Duke of
Montpensier, for Isabella’s younger and healthier sister, Maria Louisa. Louis
Philippe had promised Queen Victoria, when on a visit to him at the Chateau d’Eu in Normandy, in 1845, that the marriage of his son
with the Infanta should not take place till Isabella had given birth to an heir
to the throne. The young Queen had manifested her aversion for Francis de
Assis, and Prince Leopold of Saxe-Coburg had proceeded to Madrid in the spring
of 1846 to sue for her hand. But by the machinations of Louis Philippe and
Christina, Isabella’s scruples to accept her cousin were overcome, and the King
of the French, sacrificing without remorse the domestic happiness of the young
Queen, gained a transient and not very honourable triumph by the fait
accompli of a simultaneous marriage of Isabella with Francis de Assis, and
of Montpensier with her sister, Maria Louisa, October 10th, 1846. Louis
Philippe’s deep-laid plot was, however, ultimately frustrated by unforeseen
circumstances. The expulsion of the Orleans dynasty from France at once severed
the family connection between the two crowns; and even had Louis Philippe
remained in possession of the French throne, the hopes of the Duke of
Montpensier would still have been frustrated by Queen Isabella giving birth to
a daughter in 1851. By Serrano’s advice Isabella emancipated herself from her
mother’s guidance, and favoured the party of the Progresistas,
while Christina proceeded again to Paris to seek the advice of Louis Philippe.
Isabella banished all the ancient Spanish etiquette, and the Court became a
scene of scandalous dissipation.
FRANCE
While Louis Philippe was thus engaged in the affairs
of Spain, his own fall was preparing in France. The discontent which
extensively prevailed in that kingdom was increased by the scarcity in the
years 1846 and 1847. Disturbances broke out in several places, and the Liberal
party began to agitate an electoral reform. The Central Electoral Committee at
Paris declared itself en permanence,
and incited the Provincial Committees to petition the Government. At a grand
reform banquet, held at Chateau Rouge near Paris, July 9th, 1847, at which
1,200 persons were present, the King’s health was omitted, but the toast of
“the sovereignty of the people” was drunk with acclamation. A similar banquet took place at Le Mans,
August 10th, under the presidency of Ledru Rollin, and was followed by many
others in various places. The reactionary policy of Guizot, and his
determination to maintain the English alliance, were highly unpopular; while
the corruption of some members of the Administration and of the Chambers had
rendered the Government in general contemptible. The French Republicans were
encouraged by the triumph of the Radicals in Switzerland, and by the progress
of Mazzini’s doctrines in Italy. The leaders of the first French Revolution had
been content with claiming liberty, equality, and fraternity; the ideas of the soi-disant philosophical and revolutionary Radicals
had now advanced considerably further. Communism, an offshoot of St. Simonism, had spread very extensively among the lower
classes of the French, while Louis Blanc had brought forward a gigantic scheme
of Utopian Socialism by which the State was to form one large happy
family, providing work and maintenance for all its members. The elements of
disturbance and revolution were insidiously stirred by Thiers, with the design
of supplanting Guizot, and again seizing the reins of government.
The King, on opening the Chambers, December 27th,
1847, indiscreetly alluded in offensive terms to the reform banquet, and
intimated his conviction that no reform was needed. In consequence of this
speech very sharp debates took place on the Address, which lasted till the
middle of February. The Electoral Committee of Paris, in conjunction with a
committee of the Opposition Deputies, and of the officers of the National
Guard, determined to have a colossal reform banquet in the Champs Elysees on
the 22nd February, 1848, when it was expected that 100,000 spectators would be
present. But it was forbidden by Guizot, who threatened to prevent it, if
necessary, by military force. Odillon Barrot and most
of the Deputies now abandoned any further opposition, though Lamartine and a
few followers continued to declaim against the arbitrariness of the Government.
The fete did not take place, as Marshal Bugeaud, who had between 50,000 and
60,000 men in Paris and its neighbourhood, was prepared to suppress it, while
the guns of the forts were directed upon Paris. But symptoms of revolt began to
manifest themselves among the Parisian populace; barricades were thrown up, and some conflicts took place with the
Municipal Guard. The riots were renewed on the 23rd, and the National Guard,
which was called out for the protection of the city, manifested a hostile
disposition towards the Government by shouts of Vive la Reforme! A bas Guizot! The King was weak
enough to yield to this demonstration, by dismissing Guizot, and sending for
Count Mole to form a new Administration. The tumult continued in the ensuing
night, but without any very marked character, till a Lyonese named Lagrange, a determined Republican and influential leader amongst the
secret societies, gave matters a decided turn by conducting a large band,
carrying a red flag, to the hotel of Guizot, where a battalion of infantry had
been drawn up for his protection. A shot, fired, it is said, by Lagrange
himself, having killed their commanding officer, the troops answered by a
volley, which prostrated many dead and wounded on the pavement.
While these scenes were passing out of doors, all was
indecision in the Palace. Count Mole declined to accept the Ministry, and
recourse was then had to Thiers. But matters had gone rather further than that
statesman had contemplated, and he required that Odillon Barrot should be joined with him. Thiers now required the King to consent to
the reforms demanded, to summon a new Chamber, elected on the principles of
them, to forbid the troops to use any further violence towards the people, and
to dismiss Marshal Bugeaud; in short, to disarm and countermand his enormous
military preparations. Louis Philippe had completely lost his head. He agreed
to all the demands of Thiers, who immediately issued a proclamation stating
that reform was granted, that all motive for further opposition was removed,
and that the soldiery had orders not to fire. But the proclamation came too
late ; and, as the signature had been omitted, it only excited the suspicions
of the people, as intended to disarm them. Bugeaud was dismissed on the morning
of February 24th, having previously signed an order forbidding the troops to
fire. Many of the soldiers now began to fraternize with the people; fresh
barricades were erected, and the attack drew hourly nearer and nearer to the
Tuileries. The Palais Royal was stormed, and its costly furniture destroyed ;
while the troops, agreeably to their orders, looked quietly on; the Municipal
Guards were massacred without assistance. The Duke of Nemours, who had been
appointed Regent in case of his father’s abdication, rejected Bugeaud’s pressing instances to resort to
force. Louis Philippe would not listen to his Consort’s exhortations to put himself at
the head of the troops. As the storm approached the Tuileries, indeed, he
mounted his horse and rode towards the troops; but he uttered not a word. The
soldiery also remained dumb; but some of the National Guards cried Vive la Reforme! A bas les ministers! The King turned back, and all was lost. It was a repetition of Louis XVI’s
review of August 10th.
At length Louis Philippe, at the instance of the Duke
de Abdication Montpensier, signed an Act of Abdication in favour of the Count de
Paris, his grandson, and then hurried to St. Cloud. General Lamoricière took
the Act of Abdication, and exhibited it to the people; but Lagrange tore the
sheet from his hand, exclaiming, “It is not enough—the whole Dynasty must go!”. As Lamoricière
turned to depart, his horse was shot and he himself wounded. His soldiers
lifted him up and fired. This incident aided the Republican cause. The Royal
family were in consternation, and at a loss how to act. Thiers had vanished
nobody knew whither, and left them to take care of themselves. The Duke de
Nemours, as Regent, conducted the Duchess of Orleans, with her two young sons,
to the Chamber of Deputies; but the mob broke in and prevented the proclamation of
the Regency. In the midst of the tumult, Marie, an advocate, mounted the
tribune, and proposed a Provisional Government. The motion was received with
shouts of applause. Dunoyer, at the head of another band, carrying a flag
captured at the Tuileries, now forced his way into the Chamber, and exclaimed: “This flag
proclaims our victory; outside are 100,000 combatants, who will have neither
King nor Regency.” It was but too plain that all was lost, and the Royal family
made their escape from Paris.
A Provisional Government was now appointed, consisting
of Dupont de l’Eure, Lamartine the poet, Arago the
astronomer, Marie, Garnier Pages, Ledru Rollin, and Cremieux. These names were
received with acclamation by the members, and by the armed mob which filled the
precincts of the Chamber. On the motion of Lamartine, the new Government resolved to fix itself
at the Hotel de Ville, in order to prevent the establishment there of a
Republican Socialist Directory. Louis Blanc, Marrast,
Bastide, Floçon, and other leaders of the Republicans
and Socialists, had indeed already taken possession of that building, and would no doubt have opposed the
Provisional Government, had not the latter deemed it expedient to coalesce
with them. It is to the firmness of Lamartine that must be attributed the
preservation of any degree of order among these discordant elements. He allowed
the Republic to be proclaimed only on condition of its future approval by the
people, to whose newly-elected representatives was to be intrusted the
settlement of the Constitution. Lamartine also caused a guard of young people
to be formed for the protection of the Government, and thus eliminated one of
the most dangerous elements of the revolt.
Matters, however, still wore a threatening aspect. The
mob had broken into the Tuileries, demolished all the furniture, and taken up
their abode in the palace. Lamartine resisted with admirable courage all
attempts at intimidation, and calmed the minds of the people by his
exhortations. The middle classes, alarmed at the prospect of a Red Republic,
assembled, the National Guard appeared on the Place de Greve, and the mob with
their red flag began gradually to disperse.
Louis Philippe, who was not pursued, fled towards the
seacoast, and after a concealment of nine days procured a passage for England
in the name of William Smith. He was accompanied by the Queen and a few
attendants, while the Duke de Montpensier, with the other ladies, except the
Duchess of Orleans, who proceeded to Germany, took a different route to the
coast, in order to lessen the risk of detection. Louis Philippe landed in
England March 3rd, and took up his residence at Claremont, the property of his
son-in-law, the King of the Belgians.
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