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How realpolitik reshaped the map of Europe through the unification of Italy and Germany and destabilized the Concert of Europe.
The decades following the Congress of Vienna (1814–1815) witnessed an uneasy tension between the conservative order imposed by Metternich and the rising forces of nationalism and liberalism. The Concert of Europe sought to maintain a balance of power and suppress revolutionary movements, yet the revolutions of 1848 demonstrated that popular demands for self-determination could not be permanently contained. Although the revolutions largely failed in the short term, they exposed the fragility of multinational empires and primed a new generation of leaders—most notably Cavour and Bismarck—to pursue national consolidation through diplomacy, war, and political calculation rather than idealistic revolt.
Both the Italian and German unification movements posed fundamental challenges to the European state system. The Italian peninsula was fragmented among several states, many under Habsburg influence, while the German-speaking lands were divided between a Prussian-led north and an Austrian-dominated south within the loose German Confederation. The process of forging nation-states out of these fragments inevitably upset the carefully constructed balance of power, drawing in France, Austria, Russia, and Britain and generating diplomatic crises that reverberated well into the twentieth century.
The central question this lesson addresses is: how did statesmen like Cavour, Bismarck, and Napoleon III use realpolitik—pragmatic, power-driven diplomacy—to achieve national unification, and what diplomatic tensions did their successes create for the broader European order?
Understanding national unification and the diplomatic upheavals it produced requires mastery of several foundational concepts. These principles recur throughout the AP exam and provide the analytical framework for evaluating primary sources and constructing arguments about causation and change over time.
The diagram illustrates how Italian unification was not a single event but a phased process driven by distinct actors with overlapping but sometimes conflicting agendas. Count Camillo di Cavour, the prime minister of Piedmont-Sardinia, orchestrated the alliance with France that yielded Lombardy in 1859, while Giuseppe Garibaldi's famous Expedition of the Thousand conquered the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies from below. The subsequent acquisition of Venetia in 1866 and Rome in 1870 each depended on broader European conflicts—the Austro-Prussian and Franco-Prussian Wars, respectively—demonstrating how Italian unification was inextricably linked to the shifting diplomatic landscape of the entire continent.
While Italian unification relied on a combination of diplomacy, popular uprising, and foreign intervention, German unification was driven almost exclusively by the calculated statecraft of Otto von Bismarck. Appointed Minister-President of Prussia in 1862, Bismarck declared that the great questions of the day would be settled not by speeches and majority decisions but by "iron and blood". His strategy rested on three interlocking mechanisms: isolating each opponent diplomatically before provoking a conflict, ensuring that Prussia appeared as the aggrieved party to legitimize war, and leveraging military victories to draw the southern German states into a Prussian-dominated federation.
Each war followed a deliberate pattern. First, Bismarck secured the neutrality or support of potential interveners—Russia was placated during the Austro-Prussian War because Prussia had supported Russian suppression of the Polish revolt in 1863, while France was kept neutral with vague promises of territorial compensation. Second, Bismarck manufactured a diplomatic provocation that cast Prussia as the defender rather than the aggressor, securing domestic and international legitimacy. Third, Prussian military reforms under Helmuth von Moltke—including railroads for rapid mobilization and the needle gun—ensured swift, decisive victories that prevented other powers from intervening.
The proclamation of the German Empire at Versailles in January 1871 created the most powerful state on the European continent, and Bismarck spent the next two decades constructing an elaborate alliance system to secure its position. The Dual Alliance with Austria-Hungary (1879) formed the backbone, while the Triple Alliance (1882) added Italy. The secret Reinsurance Treaty (1887) with Russia was Bismarck's masterstroke—ensuring that Germany would not face a two-front war. However, Kaiser Wilhelm II's decision not to renew the Reinsurance Treaty in 1890 fatally undermined this system, pushing Russia into an alliance with France by 1894 and setting the stage for the rigid alliance blocs that would turn a Balkan crisis into a world war.
France's desire to recover Alsace-Lorraine, ceded under the Treaty of Frankfurt (1871), generated persistent revanchism that poisoned Franco-German relations for decades. Meanwhile, Austro-Russian rivalry over the declining Ottoman Empire's Balkan territories—particularly after the Congress of Berlin in 1878—created a volatile fault line in southeastern Europe. British "splendid isolation" meant that London initially stayed aloof from continental entanglements, but rising German naval ambitions under Tirpitz's fleet-building program gradually pushed Britain toward France, culminating in the Entente Cordiale of 1904.
A common AP exam task requires analyzing primary-source documents related to unification and diplomacy. Below is a worked example of how to construct an argument about Bismarck's use of realpolitik, modeled on the kind of reasoning the exam rewards.
| Dimension | Italian Unification | German Unification |
|---|---|---|
| Leading State | Piedmont-Sardinia | Prussia |
| Key Statesman | Count Cavour (diplomacy) and Garibaldi (military) | Otto von Bismarck (both diplomacy and war direction) |
| Role of Foreign Powers | Heavily reliant on French military support (1859); benefited from Prussian wars (1866, 1870) | Manipulated foreign powers; secured neutrality or provoked opponents into war |
| Popular Movements | Significant: Garibaldi's Red Shirts, Young Italy (Mazzini) | Limited: Liberal nationalists marginalized after 1848; Bismarck pursued 'revolution from above' |
| Main Opponent | Austrian Empire (controlled Lombardy, Venetia) | Austria (excluded from Germany), then France |
| Outcome for Europe | Moderate disruption; Italy remained a secondary power with irredentist ambitions | Massive disruption; Germany became the dominant continental power, generating arms race and alliance blocs |
The unification of Italy and Germany did not merely redraw borders; it reconfigured the fundamental logic of European diplomacy and created pressures that persisted into the twentieth century. Understanding these connections is essential for the AP exam, which frequently asks students to trace continuity and change over extended periods.
| 19th-Century Development | 20th-Century Consequence |
|---|---|
| French revanchism over Alsace-Lorraine | Fueled Franco-German hostility; contributed to rigid alliance blocs; Alsace-Lorraine's return was a central French war aim in 1914 |
| Austro-Russian Balkan rivalry after 1878 | Bosnian Crisis (1908), Balkan Wars (1912–13), assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand (1914)—the immediate trigger for WWI |
| Italian irredentism (Trentino, Trieste) | Italy's secret Treaty of London (1915) to enter WWI on the Allied side in exchange for Habsburg territories; post-war disillusionment fueled fascism |
| German naval expansion and Weltpolitik after 1890 | Anglo-German naval arms race; pushed Britain toward France and Russia (Triple Entente); contributed to pre-1914 tensions |
| Bismarck's alliance system (and its collapse post-1890) | Franco-Russian Alliance (1894); formation of two rigid alliance blocs; the 'chain-gang' mechanism that turned a local crisis into a general war |
The AP exam often frames questions around the theme of unintended consequences. Bismarck's system was designed to maintain peace and German hegemony simultaneously, yet it depended on his personal diplomatic skill. Once he was dismissed by Wilhelm II in 1890, the system's inherent contradictions—particularly the tension between alliance with Austria-Hungary and friendship with Russia—became unmanageable. The lesson for AP students is that the processes of national unification in the mid-nineteenth century created structural tensions in European diplomacy that no amount of skilled statecraft could permanently resolve, ultimately channeling the continent toward the catastrophe of 1914.