This series has eight easy 5 minute installments. This first installment: Robert Blum Protests.
This selection is from The Revolutionary Movement of 1848-9 in Italy, Austria-Hungary, and Germany by C. Edmund Maurice published in 1887. For works benefiting from the latest research see the “More information” section at the bottom of these pages.
C. Edmund Maurice (1843-1927) wrote history such as the one quoted from here.
Time: 1848
Place: Germany
Popular demonstrations in various parts of Germany in the great revolutionary year 1848 were no doubt partly due to the outbreaks in France and elsewhere, but it is also apparent that discontent at home had been long turning the people toward revolt. The agitation that began in March — the month following the “February Revolution” and the declaration of a republic in France — was the work of a patriotic party that cherished not only aspirations for extending popular rights in the several States, but also a prophetic desire for German unity.
The Congress of Vienna (1815) attempted to adjust the balance of power in Europe. Some sort of union for the States was imperatively required by the general situation, but there was fear of making Germany too strong. The Congress created the German Confederation, constituted by a union of independent States, under the hegemony or political headship of Austria. This confederation (bund) lacked strength in the Central Government, and although it reduced the number of States from more than three hundred to thirty-nine, it still perpetuated elements of unwieldiness and discord. At the head of the Austrian Government, as chief minister of the Emperor Ferdinand I, was Metternich, who for many years had been the great reactionary leader of Europe. He was compelled now to face conditions such as, in his long and varied career of statecraft and diplomacy, he never had confronted. Ferdinand himself, always a weak ruler, succumbed to the revolution provoked by his minister, whose downfall was followed by the Emperor’s abdication (December 2, 1848) in favor of his nephew, Francis Joseph, the present ruler of Austria.
The most interesting of the German struggles of 1848 was that in Saxony. Robert Blum was present at a ball in Leipzig when the news arrived of the French revolution. * He at once hastened to consult his friends; and they agreed to act through the Town Council of Leipzig, and sketched out the demands that they desired should be laid before the King. These were: “A reorganization of the constitution of the German Bund in the spirit and in accordance with the needs of the times, for which the way is to be prepared by the unfettering of the press, and the summoning of representatives of all German peoples to the Assembly of the Bund.” The Town Council adopted this address on March 1st, and sent a deputation with it to Dresden; and, on the 3d, the people gathered to meet the deputation on its return. The following is the account given by the son of Robert Blum:
[* Blum, born at Cologne in 1807, was a writer and an agitator, leader of the Liberal party in Saxony. He was executed in November, 1848. — ED.]
By anonymous placards on the wall the population of Leipzig was summoned on the evening of March 3rd to meet at the railway station the deputation returning from Dresden. Since the space was too narrow in this place, the innumerable mass marched to the market-place, which, as well as the neighboring streets, they completely filled. In perfect silence the thousands awaited here the arrival of the deputation, which, at last, toward nine o’clock, arrived and was greeted with unceasing applause. Town Councilor Seeburg spoke first of the deep emotion of the King; after him spoke Biedermann. But the crowd uproariously demanded Robert Blum.
At last Blum appeared on the balcony of the Town Council House. His voice alone controlled the whole market-place, and was even heard in the neighboring streets. He too sought, by trying to quiet them, to turn them away from the subject of the address and of the King’s answer. But the people broke uproariously into his speech with the demand, ‘The answer! The answer!’ It could no longer be concealed that the petitions of the town had received harsh rejection. Then came a loud and passionate murmur. The masses had firmly hoped that the deputation would bring with them from Dresden the news of the dismissal of the hated ministers.
But Blum continued his speech, and they renewed their attention to him. ‘In constitutional countries,’ said he, ‘it is not the King, but the ministers who are responsible. They, too, bear the responsibility of the rejection of the Leipzig proposals. The people must press for their removal.’ He added that he would bring forward in the next meeting of the town representatives the proposal that the King should dismiss the Ministry, ‘which does not possess the confidence of the people.’ Amid shouts of exultation and applause, the appeased assembly dispersed.”
Blum was as successful with his colleagues as with the crowd; and the Town Council now demanded from the King the dismissal of his ministers, the meeting of the Assembly, and freedom of the press. The King tried to resist the last of these three proposals, pleading his duty to the Bund. But even the Bundestag had felt the spirit of the times, and on March 1st had passed a resolution giving leave to every government to abolish the censorship of the press. The King seemed to yield, and promised to fulfil all that was wished; but the reactionary party in Dresden had become alarmed at the action of the men of Leipzig; and so, on March 11th, when the men of Leipzig supposed that all was granted, General von Carlowitz entered their city at the head of a strong force, and demanded that the Town Council should abstain from exciting speeches; that the Elocution Union should give up all political discussion; that the processions of people should cease; and above all, that the march from Leipzig to Dresden, which was believed to be then intended, should be given up.
These demands were met by Blum with an indignant protest. “Five men,” said he, “who manage the army cannot understand that, though their bullets may kill men, they cannot make a single hole in the idea that rules the world.” The town councilors of Leipzig were equally firm. Carlowitz abandoned his attempt as hopeless; and on March 13th the King summoned a Liberal Ministry which abolished press censorship, granted publicity of legal proceedings, trial by jury, and a wider basis for the Saxon Parliament, and promised to assist in the reform of the Bund.
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