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Rethinking the Categories of the German Revolution of 1848: The Emergence of Popular Conservatism in Bavaria
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 December 2008
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The revolution that began in March 1848 continues to fascinate historains, becoming a two-way lens used to examine later as well as earlier German history. It has become central to the “emplotment” of the broader historical narrative of German history. Historians commonly describe the ultimate failure of the revolution as reflecting the unhealthy and anachronistic hold of premodern society over the state in nineteenth and twentieth-century Germany and, therefore, see it as a cornerstone of the Sonderweg thesis. Because the revolution is used to explain later acts in the German historical drama, it is necessary to be as clear as possible about what actually happended in 1848 and 1849.
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References
The German Historical Institute, Washington, D.C., provided a forum for presentation of an early version of this essay. Professors Mack Walker (The Johns Hopkins University), and Alison Olson (University of Maryland) read and criticized it as did Mary Ann Coyle, a graduate student in history at Maryland. Professor Hanna Schissler (University of Minnesota) helped with the translation of the Kohlgrub petition. My thanks to all.
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17. Material for this section aslo comes from the collection cited in note 6 above.
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23. No. 124 againts.
24. No. 497 againts.
25. No. 231 againts. and see note 16 above.
26. No 268 against.
27. No 443 against.
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35. Best, Heinrich, Interessenpolitik und nationale Integration 1848/49. Handelspolitische Konflikte im frühindustriellen Deutschland (Göttingen, 1980) counts each community as a separate petition, such that 3,775 petitions (reflecting the discrete communities submitting them) derived from 670 submissions. See Simon, Handwerk, 102.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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69. ibid., 483f. In his earlier work, Popular Catholicism in Nineteenth Century Germany (Princeton, 1984), 47ff and 285ff and passim, Sperber documents a complex set of Catholic political attitudes on both left and right.Google Scholar
70. For examble, Hamerow, , Restoration, 193, 261.Google Scholar
71. Walker, Mack, Home Towns, is an excellent examble of a history which exposes a large part of the Bavarian milieu in which popular conservatism germinated.Google Scholar