Critique of the "Concert of Europe" Concept: Hierarchy, Repression, and the Illusion of Order
The "Concert of Europe" (1815-1914), the system of collective security among the great powers (Russia, Austria, Prussia, Britain, France) established after the Congress of Vienna, has traditionally been presented as a model of successful diplomacy, ensuring nearly a century of absence of a general European war (Pax Britannica). However, a critical analysis of this model reveals its deeply problematic nature: it was a conservative, elitist, and repressive mechanism that, by suppressing necessary changes, ultimately sowed the seeds of an even more massive conflict.
1. Antidemocratic and Antinational Character
The main principle of the "Concert" was legitimacy, which meant support for "legitimate" (i.e., traditional, often monarchic) dynasties and the negation of national and liberal sovereignty of nations.
Suppression of national movements: The "Concert" regarded nationalism as a mortal threat to stability. This was manifested in the harsh suppression of Austrian revolts in Italy (1820-1821, 1831) and, most notably, in the crushing of the November Uprising (1830-1831) in Poland by imperial Russia with the silent consent of other powers. Poland, whose national aspirations were ignored at the Congress of Vienna, became the main victim of the system.
Disregard for revolutions and liberalism: The Holy Alliance, the ideological foundation of the "Concert," openly declared the right to intervene against the revolutionary "contagion." This led to the French intervention in Spain (1823) to restore absolutism for King Ferdinand VII and the Austrian invasion of Naples and Piedmont (1821). The system worked to freeze the political development of entire regions.
Critique: The "Concert" ensured peace not for the peoples of Europe, but between its aristocratic elites at the expense of the peoples themselves. It artificially preserved outdated imperial structures (Ottoman, Austrian Empires) ...
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