The estimated death rate from tuberculosis in…
1812 CE
The estimated death rate from tuberculosis in New York at this time is seven hundred in one hundred thousand.
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Atlantic West Europe (1816–1827): Restoration, Economic Recovery, and the Rise of Liberalism
From 1816 to 1827, Atlantic West Europe—covering northern France, the Low Countries (modern Belgium, the Netherlands, and Luxembourg), and regions along the Atlantic and English Channel coasts—underwent a period of political restoration, economic reconstruction, and burgeoning liberal and nationalist sentiments following the upheaval of the Napoleonic Wars. This era saw conservative attempts to re-establish traditional monarchies and social orders clashing increasingly with rising demands for constitutional reform, economic liberalization, and national self-determination.
Political and Military Developments
Post-Napoleonic Restoration (1815–1818)
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Following Napoleon’s defeat at Waterloo (1815), the Congress of Vienna (1814–1815) reshaped Europe, emphasizing balance of power and legitimacy, leading to the re-establishment of Bourbon monarchy in France under Louis XVIII (r. 1814–1824).
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The Low Countries were united into the newly formed United Kingdom of the Netherlands under King William I (r. 1815–1840), intended as a buffer state against French aggression. Belgium, dominated by Catholic, French-speaking elites, was merged uneasily with Protestant, Dutch-speaking northern provinces.
French Monarchical Consolidation and Challenges
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Louis XVIII established a constitutional monarchy with the Charter of 1814, providing limited parliamentary governance while preserving royal authority. His reign saw efforts to balance conservative royalists and liberal factions.
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After Louis XVIII’s death in 1824, Charles X (r. 1824–1830) attempted stronger conservative restoration, antagonizing liberals through press restrictions and increased clerical influence, laying foundations for future conflicts.
Growing National and Political Tensions in the Netherlands
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Belgium’s forced union with the Netherlands created political, religious, and cultural friction, as southern (Belgian) provinces increasingly resented Dutch political dominance and Protestant policies. Initial liberal resistance emerged strongly in Brussels and other Belgian cities by the late 1820s, foreshadowing eventual revolution (1830).
Economic Developments: Recovery and Early Industrialization
Post-War Economic Recovery
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Following severe wartime economic disruptions, Atlantic West Europe experienced gradual economic recovery, aided by peace, agricultural revival, and renewed commercial activity through ports such as Antwerp, Rotterdam, Nantes, and Bordeaux.
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Infrastructure restoration became essential, notably improving canal and road networks to facilitate regional and international trade, stimulating commerce and urban revival.
Early Industrial Growth
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Northern France, particularly Lille, Rouen, and areas around the Loire and Seine valleys, saw early industrial growth in textiles, coal mining, and iron production. This marked the beginning of significant industrialization that later accelerated mid-century.
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In the Low Countries, Belgium’s industrialization rapidly expanded, notably around Liège and Ghent, focused on textiles, iron, and machinery, setting the stage for Belgium’s prominent industrial role in continental Europe.
Maritime Commerce and Atlantic Trade
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Atlantic and Channel ports regained importance, notably Bordeaux’s wine exports, Antwerp’s re-established trade networks, and Amsterdam’s revival as a financial and mercantile hub. These developments significantly boosted regional prosperity.
Social and Cultural Developments
Liberalism and Nationalism
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Intellectual and political liberalism gained strength, influenced by Enlightenment ideas, emphasizing constitutional government, civic freedoms, press liberties, and parliamentary representation. These ideals gained support in urban centers across northern France and Belgium.
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Nationalist sentiment grew, especially in Belgium, where distinct cultural identity strengthened opposition to Dutch rule. Increasingly vocal demands for political autonomy and cultural recognition became prominent.
Urban Revival and Social Change
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Urban centers, particularly Paris, Brussels, Antwerp, and Amsterdam, experienced rapid growth, driven by industrialization and trade. A dynamic urban middle class emerged, advocating for economic liberalization and political reforms.
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Improved educational institutions and expanding literacy facilitated greater political consciousness among urban populations, laying the groundwork for future political activism and cultural vibrancy.
Intellectual and Religious Developments
Revival of Catholic Influence
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Post-Napoleonic restorations revived Catholic institutional strength, particularly evident in Belgium and northern France, influencing social policies, education, and cultural life. This resurgence sometimes fueled conflicts between liberal secularists and conservative Catholics.
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Belgium became a key center of Catholic cultural revival, reflecting broader European patterns of post-revolutionary religious revival.
Liberal Intellectual Movements
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Liberal intellectual circles in Brussels, Ghent, Paris, and Amsterdam advocated constitutional reform, freedom of expression, and economic liberalization, influencing public debates and setting the stage for political changes in subsequent decades.
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Prominent figures such as François Guizot in France began formulating doctrines combining conservative order with liberal governance principles, significantly shaping political thought in France and beyond.
Legacy and Historical Significance
The era 1816–1827 represented a crucial transitional phase for Atlantic West Europe, bridging the turbulent Napoleonic era and the subsequent revolutionary period:
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Politically, it established fragile restorations of conservative monarchies, which encountered mounting challenges from liberal and nationalist forces.
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Economically, it marked initial recovery and significant early industrialization, laying essential foundations for future economic transformation and prosperity.
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Socially and culturally, rising liberalism and nationalism increasingly shaped political identities, influencing societal values, political organization, and intellectual debates.
Ultimately, this period set the stage for major revolutionary and constitutional upheavals, notably Belgium’s independence (1830) and France’s July Revolution (1830), critically defining the region’s path toward modern nation-states, constitutional governance, and industrial economies.
Louis XVIII of France had been restored a second time by the allies in 1815, ending more than two decades of war.
He had announced he would rule as a limited, constitutional monarch.
After the Hundred Days in 1815 when Napoleon suddenly returned and was vanquished, a more harsh peace treaty had been imposed on France, returning it to its 1789 boundaries and requiring a war indemnity in gold.
Allied troops remain in the country until it is paid.
There are large-scale purges of Bonapartists from the government and military, and a brief "White Terror" in the south of France claims three hundred victims.
Otherwise the transition is largely peaceful.
Although the old ruling class has returned they do not recover their lost lands, and are unable to reverse most of the dramatic changes in French society, economics, and ways of thinking.
France intervenes in Spain in 1823, where a civil war has deposed king Ferdinand VII.
The French troops march into Spain, retake Madrid from the rebels, and leave almost as quickly as they come.
Despite worries to the contrary, France shows no sign of returning to an aggressive foreign policy and is admitted to the Concert of Europe in 1818.
Louis XVIII, for the most part, accepts that much has changed.
However, he is pushed on his right by the Ultra-royalists, led by the comte de Villèle, who condemn the Doctrinaires' attempt to reconcile the Revolution with the monarchy through a constitutional monarchy.
Instead, the Chambre introuvable elected in 1815 had banished all Conventionnels who had voted Louis XVI's death and passes several reactionary laws.
Louis XVIII had been forced to dissolve this Chamber, dominated by the Ultras, in 1816, fearing a popular uprising.
The liberals thus govern until the 1820 assassination of the duc de Berry, the nephew of the king and known supporter of the Ultras, which brings Villèle's ultras back to power.
Louis dies in September 1824 and is succeeded by his brother.
Charles X of France follows the "ultra" conservative line but is a much less effective coalition builder than Louis XVIII.
John Constable’s The Hay Wain causes a sensation when it was exhibited with other works by Constable at the 1824 Paris Salon (it has been suggested that the inclusion of Constable's paintings in the exhibition were a tribute to Géricault, who died early that year).
In this exhibition, The Hay Wain is singled out for a gold medal awarded by Charles X of France, a cast of which is incorporated into the picture's frame.
The works by Constable in the exhibition inspire a new generation of French painters, including Eugène Delacroix, who, after seeing the Constables at Arrowsmith's Gallery, which he says had done him a great deal of good, repaints the background of his 1824 Massacre de Scio.
Constable is to sell only twenty paintings in England in his lifetime, but in France he will sell more than twenty in just a few years.
Despite this, he will refuse all invitations to travel internationally to promote his work.
Louis XVIII's health has been worsening since the beginning of 1824.
Suffering from both dry and wet gangrene in his legs and spine, he dies on September 16 of this year.
His brother succeeds him to the throne as King Charles X of France.
In his first act as king, Charles attempts to unify the House of Bourbon by granting the style of Royal Highness to his cousins of the House of Orléans, who had been deprived of this by Louis XVIII because of the former Duke of Orléans' role in the death of Louis XVI.
This debt to France will be reduced to ninety million in 1838 and will finally be paid off by the mid-twentieth century.
Charles X of France recognizes Haitian independence on April 17, 1825—twenty-one years after it expelled the French following the successful Haitian Revolution—in return for the payment of of one hundred and fifty million million gold francs, thirty million of which Haiti must finance through France itself, as down payment.
The total indemnity, nearly half a million francs, is to be paid at an annual rate until 1887.
Zarafa, a female Nubian giraffe presented by the Ottoman Viceroy of Egypt, Muhammad Ali Pasha, to King Charles X of France, the first to be seen in Europe for over three centuries since the Medici giraffe was sent to Lorenzo de' Medici in Florence in 1486, ...
...walks from Marseilles to Paris, departing on May 20 and arriving on July 9 at the Jardin des Plantes, where she will live out the next eighteen years.
One of three giraffes Muhammad Ali has sent to European rulers in 1827, she will not receive the name "Zarafa" until 1985.
The Ultraroyalistes, supporters of King Charles X, lose their two hundred and thirty-three-seat majority and finish with one hundred and eighty seats, the same number as the opposition Doctrinaires, in France's four hundred and thirty member Chamber of Deputies when election results are tallied on November 24, 1827.
The new government, composed of liberal opponents of the Algiers expedition, is reluctant to pursue the conquest ordered by the old regime, but withdrawing from Algeria proves more difficult than conquering it.
A parliamentary commission that examines the Algerian situation concludes that although French policy, behavior, and organization are failures, the occupation should continue for the sake of national prestige.
In 1834 France annexes the occupied areas, which have an estimated Muslim population of about three million, as a colony.
Colonial administration in the occupied areas—the so-called regime du sabre (government of the sword)—is placed under a governor general, a high-ranking army officer invested with civil and military jurisdiction, who is responsible to the minister of war.