Haden Edwards had recruited fifty families to…
March 1826 CE
As required under his contract, Edwards organizes a local militia open to his colonists and established residents.
When militia members elect Sepulveda as their captain, Edwards nullifies the results and proclaims himself head of the militia.
After that debacle, Edwards, acting outside his authority, calls for elections for a new alcalde.
Two men are nominated for the position—Edwards's son-in-law, Chichester Chaplin, seen as the representative for the newly-arrived immigrants, and Samuel Norris, an American who had married the daughter of a long-time resident and was sympathetic to the more-established residents.
After Chaplin's victory, many settlers allege vote-stacking in an appeal to Juan Antonio Saucedo, the political chief of the Department of Béxar.
In March, Saucedo overturns the election results and proclaims Norris the winner.
Edwards refuses to recognize Norris's authority.
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Atlantic West Europe (1828–1839): Liberal Revolutions, Nationalism, and Early Industrial Expansion
From 1828 to 1839, Atlantic West Europe—encompassing northern France, the Low Countries (Belgium, Netherlands, Luxembourg), and coastal areas along the Atlantic and English Channel—entered an era of profound political upheaval, early industrial acceleration, and rising nationalism. This period was defined by liberal challenges to conservative rule, industrial transformations reshaping economies and societies, and national movements significantly altering political boundaries and regional identities.
Political and Military Developments
The Belgian Revolution and Independence (1830–1839)
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Belgium erupted in revolution against Dutch rule in 1830, driven by liberal demands for constitutional governance and resistance to Dutch linguistic and religious dominance.
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Initial revolts in Brussels rapidly expanded, leading to a provisional government, independence declaration, and the adoption of a liberal constitution in 1831, establishing Belgium as a parliamentary monarchy under King Leopold I.
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Belgium’s independence was formally recognized by the Treaty of London (1839), confirming its neutrality and reshaping Atlantic West Europe’s political map.
July Revolution in France (1830)
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In France, the July Revolution (1830) dramatically transformed politics by overthrowing the conservative Bourbon King Charles X and installing the more liberal Louis-Philippe, the "Citizen King."
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This shift solidified the influence of the middle class, strengthening constitutional monarchy and liberal policies, yet fell short of radical republican aspirations, laying foundations for future political conflicts.
Stability and Constitutional Reform in the Netherlands and Luxembourg
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The Netherlands, having lost Belgium, consolidated politically under King William I, though the loss profoundly altered its national identity and reduced its economic and strategic influence.
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Luxembourg emerged in 1839 as a distinct state (Grand Duchy), maintaining a complex relationship of autonomy under Dutch sovereignty while also part of the German Confederation, symbolizing the region's complex nationalist and political dynamics.
Economic and Social Developments
Early Industrial Revolution
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Belgium emerged as an industrial pioneer in continental Europe, notably in textiles, coal mining, and metallurgy. Regions around Liège, Ghent, and Charleroi saw rapid industrial growth driven by British technology transfers and local innovation.
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Northern France, particularly around Lille, Roubaix, and Tourcoing, experienced rapid industrial expansion in textiles and coal mining, accelerating urbanization and fostering a significant working-class presence.
Expansion of Transport Infrastructure
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Infrastructure improvements, notably railways, roads, and canals, accelerated dramatically. Belgium inaugurated its first steam-powered railway between Brussels and Mechelen in 1835, significantly enhancing economic integration and mobility.
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France also invested heavily in transportation infrastructure, notably railways connecting industrial centers, facilitating raw material transport, industrial production, and commercial trade.
Cultural and Intellectual Developments
Romantic Nationalism and Literary Expression
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Romanticism flourished, expressing nationalist and liberal ideals in literature, poetry, art, and music. Victor Hugo, prominent during this period, reflected these revolutionary and nationalist ideals in his work, especially in "Les Misérables" (though published later, his literary prominence began in this era).
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Flemish and Walloon cultural identities gained momentum through literature and arts, reinforcing emerging Belgian nationalism distinct from Dutch identity.
Education and Secularization Reforms
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Educational reforms expanded literacy and secular instruction, especially in Belgium and France, emphasizing civic values and national identity. The rise of secular, state-run schools reduced church influence, reflecting liberal ideals.
Religious Developments
Religious Divides and Secularization
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Catholicism maintained a strong social and cultural influence, especially in Belgium and northern France, though increasingly challenged by liberal secular reforms promoting separation of church and state.
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Protestantism in the Netherlands continued fostering liberal and intellectual traditions, reinforcing its cultural divergence from predominantly Catholic Belgium.
Social and Urban Dynamics
Rapid Urbanization and Social Changes
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Industrial growth significantly transformed urban landscapes, with cities like Lille, Brussels, Liège, Ghent, and Antwerp experiencing rapid demographic expansion, creating new urban social dynamics, including influential working-class and bourgeois communities.
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Social tensions rose due to industrialization-related issues such as labor conditions, urban overcrowding, poverty, and class divisions, foreshadowing future social conflicts and demands for reform.
Long-Term Consequences and Historical Significance
The years 1828–1839 set the stage for profound transformations in Atlantic West Europe:
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Politically, the liberal revolutions established constitutional governance, notably Belgium’s successful independence and France’s transition to constitutional monarchy, fundamentally reshaping national identities.
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Economically, early industrialization significantly boosted regional prosperity and integration, positioning the region as a continental industrial powerhouse.
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Culturally and intellectually, the period reinforced Romantic nationalism, fueling future nationalist movements, artistic innovations, and socio-political activism.
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Socially, industrialization and urbanization triggered critical socio-economic challenges, laying foundations for labor movements, social reforms, and the emerging class politics that would define subsequent decades.
By 1839, Atlantic West Europe stood at the forefront of continental transformation, firmly on a trajectory toward political modernity, industrial prominence, and intense national consciousness, significantly shaping Europe's broader historical evolution.
The Netherlands have always been part of the precarious balance of power that has kept France in check.
The Russian tsar in particular had wanted the Netherlands to resume this role after the defeat of Napoleon in 1815 and had wanted the colonies to be returned.
In a secret protocol, known as the Eight Articles of London, a compromise had been struck with the United Kingdom before the Congress of Vienna, whereby only the Dutch East Indies were returned, and the Congress had created a kingdom for the House of Orange-Nassau in order to create a strong buffer state north of France.
The Kingdom of the United Netherlands combines, for the first time as a united sovereign state, the United Provinces of the Netherlands with the former Austrian Netherlands, with two capitals: Amsterdam and Brussels.
The son of the last stadtholder, William V, the Prince of Orange, had become King William I as well as hereditary Grand Duke of Luxembourg.
Catholic partisans have watched with excitement the unfolding of the July Revolution in France, details of which have been swiftly reported in the newspapers.
Daniel Auber’s La Muette de Portici, a sentimental and patriotic opera suited to fire National Romanticism, set as it is against Masaniello's uprising against the Spanish masters of Naples in the seventeenth century, has rapidly become a European favorite, its overture, arias, and choruses heard everywhere.
The duet Amour sacré de la patrie is welcomed like a new Marseillaise; the Brussels premiere on August 25, 1830, engenders a riot that becomes the spark for the Belgian Revolution.
The crowd pours into the streets after the performance, shouting patriotic slogans, and swiftly takes possession of government buildings.
The ensuing days will see an explosion of the desperate and exasperated proletariat of Brussels.
The Protestant Dutch hold sway over the economic, political, and social institutions of the United Provinces.
Although the former Austrian provinces, populated largely by French-speaking Catholic Walloons, possess nearly double the population of the Netherlands, these are assigned the same number of representatives in the States General.
The Walloons, having little influence over the economy, resent Dutch control.
At the most basic level, the Dutch, having always been a merchants' nation, are for free trade, while less developed local industries in the southern Netherlands call for the protection of tariffs.
Free trade lowers the price of bread, made from wheat imported through the reviving port of Antwerp; at the same time, these imports from the Baltic depress agriculture in French Catholic grain-growing regions.
The Walloons see the main political domination in the fact that King William I is Dutch, lives in the present day Netherlands, and largely ignores the Belgian demands for greater self-determination.
His more progressive and amiable representative living in Brussels, which is meant to be a twin capital, is the affable and moderate Crown Prince William, who has some popularity among the upper class but none among Walloon peasants and workers, whose Roman Catholicism conflicts with that of their Dutch King and his Calvinist beliefs.
Although there are (and remain today) many Roman Catholics in the present-day Netherlands, the southerners see themselves as purely Catholic and demand a higher role for the Church, and for Catholics, in their government.
The Estates-General convince the Crown Prince on September 1 that the administrative separation of north and south is the only viable solution to the crisis but his father rejects the terms of accommodation that he proposes.
The King attempts to restore the established order by force, but the six thousand Dutch troops under Prince Frederick are unable to retake Brussels in bloody street fighting (23rd to 26th September).
Any opportunity to repair the breach is lost on September 26 when a National Congress is summoned to draw-up a Constitution and a provisional government is established under Charles Rogier.
A Declaration of the creation of the independent state of Belgium follows on October 4th, 1830, by the Provisional Government in Brussels in revolt against the United Kingdom of the Netherlands.
The Netherlands’ King William is not satisfied with the settlement drawn up in London and does not accept Belgium's claim of independence, as it divides his kingdom and drastically affects his Treasury.
In August 1831 (from the 2nd to the 12th), the Dutch army, headed by the Dutch princes, invades Belgium, in the so-called "Ten Days Campaign,” and defeats a makeshift Belgian force near Hasselt and ...
...Leuven.
Only the appearance of a French army under Marshal Gérard (and with British approval) causes the Dutch to stop their advance.
While the victorious initial campaign gives the Dutch an advantageous position in subsequent negotiations, the Dutch are compelled to agree to an indefinite armistice.
The European Powers are divided over the Belgian cry for independence.
The Napoleonic Wars are still fresh in the memories of Europeans, so when the French, under the recently installed July Monarchy, support Belgian independence, the other powers unsurprisingly support the continued union of the Provinces of the Netherlands.
Russia, Prussia, Austria, and Great Britain all support the somewhat authoritarian Dutch king, many, particularly the British, fearing the French would annex an independent Belgium.
In the end, however, none of the European powers have sent troops to aid the Dutch government, partly because of rebellions within some of their own borders (the Russians are occupied with the November Uprising in Poland and Prussia is saddled with war debt.)
The Dutch army holds onto Maastricht; as a result, the Netherlands keeps the eastern half of Limburg and its large coalfields.