Revolutions of 1848 Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
- Society was cut in two: those who had nothing united in common envy, and those who had anything united in common terror.
- —Alexis de Tocqueville, Recollections
- —Alexis de Tocqueville, Recollections
The result was a wave of revolution sweeping across Europe and raising hopes of liberal reform as far away as Brazil, where the rhetoric surrounding the Praieira revolt took many cues from European events, as did its thorough repression. Only the United Kingdom and Russia were missing: Russia had not yet a real bourgeois or proletarian class to initiate a revolution. In the United Kingdom, the middle classes had been pacified by general enfranchisement in the Reform Act of 1832, with the consequent agitations, violence and petitions of the Chartist movement that came to a head with the petition to Parliament of 1848. The repeal of the protectionist agricultural tariffs called the "Corn Laws" in 1846 had defused some proletarian fervor. The United States remained profoundly isolated, increasingly involved in its own expansion and social ills; there, after a summer of European revolutions, the Free Soil Party in the November presidential election sufficed only to divide Democrats and bring the apolitical slave-holding career soldier General Zachary Taylor into office.
Although the revolutions were put down quickly, in their span there was horrific violence on all sides. Thousands were killed.
Although the immediate effects of the revolutions were short-term, there were lasting legacies.
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