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Economic Strength and Diplomatic Attitudes: The Formation of French Hostility Before World War I*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 January 2016
Extract
The rivalry between France and Germany was one of the most important themes of late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century history. It was at the heart of the alliance system of this period and helped to produce that most horrible conflict, World War I. Understanding the causes and nature of Franco-German hostility would help to explain the war’s outbreak. A study of this hostility might also be a way of testing some of the theories of conflict recently developed by scholars from several disciplines but rarely applied by historians in their work. I shall discuss here several models of international conflict and show how one of them, relating images of national strength to diplomatic attitudes, can increase our insight into the formation of French hostility between 1871 and 1914.
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- Copyright © Social Science History Association 1978
Footnotes
A much briefer version of this article was presented at the Third Annual Conference of the Western Society for French History.
References
Notes
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14 Consular and commercial correspondence from all French posts in Germany was examined. Dispatches may be found in the Archives of the Foreign Ministry in volumes of the Correspondance commerciale (hereafter called C.C.) up to 1901 and the Nouvelle série (called N.S.) after that date. The Archives nationales (abbreviated A.N.) in series F12 and F30 has consular dispatches forwarded to other ministries. Selected dispatches and other documents were printed in the Moniteur officiel du commerce (hereafter abbreviated MOC).
15 I have not relied on newspapers as a source of French opinion. When the subject under consideration is the long-term development of attitudes and images (as opposed to reaction to a specific event), they are not likely to be any more revealing than books and articles. The wide range of views encountered in the latter sources makes it unlikely that the newspaper press would contain images not present elsewhere.
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18 Reclus, La France, 865.
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20 Dispatches from the consulate in Hamburg emphasized this theme: Feer to Minister, 27 September 1878, C.C, Hambourg, 45:fol. 121-222; Dervieu to Minister, 11 November 1879, ibid., fol. 467-69; De Clercqto Minister, 10 April 1880, ibid., 46:fol. 101-02,161; De Pina to Minister, 4 May 1881, ibid., fol. 405,454.
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44 In a statement by the chairman of the commission studying tariffs: J.O. (26 January 1880), 789-91. See also J.O. (17 July 1878), 7946.
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48 See: Annales de la Chambre des Députés, Débats parlementaires (hereafter called Annales de la Chambre, Débats) (18 October 1884), 26, 28; Pingaud, Dusseldorf, IO March 1896, in MOC (30 April 1896), 275; Soulange-Bodin, 31 August 1896, C.C, Berlin, 44:fol. 248,252.
49 Courcel to Challemel-Lacour, 1 June 1883, C.C, Berlin, 29:fol. 234-35; Rouvier to Ferry, 4 July 1884, C.C, Buenos Aires, 13:fol. 66; Commission Permanente des Valeurs de Douane, Report of the President, 26 September 1887, MOC (19 January 1888), 41-42; d’Almeida, P. Camena, L’Europe, vol. 2 of Cours de géographie à l’usage de l’enseignement secondaire, ed. by Blache, Vidal de la and d’Almeida, Camena (Paris, 1894), 300Google Scholar. See also consular dispatches from Dusseldorf, Berlin, Hamburg and Stuttgart in C.C. volumes for these years.
50 Charles Grad (Paris, 1888).
51 Georges Blondel (Paris, 1894).
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53 Dr. Rommel [Alfred Pernessin, fils], Au pays de la revanche (Geneva, 1886), 225, 256-60; Lucien, Nicol, L’Allemagne à Paris (Paris, 1887), 173–74Google Scholar.
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55 Courcel to Ferry, 6 January 1884, C.C, Berlin, 30:fol. 175-76.
56 Rommel, Au pays, 74, 76, 132; Charles Thierry-Mieg, “La concurrence allemande,” Journal des économistes (May 1884), 26:287-93; Commission Permanente des Valeurs de Douane, Report of the President, 25 August 1886, MOC (2 December 1886), 504; Annales de la Chambre, Débats (19December 1884), 1040; Héricourt to Freycinet, 29 June 1886, C.C, Stuttgart, 8:fol. 23; Herbette to Flourens, 14 January 1888, C.C, Berlin, 34:fol. 7; Jacquot to Goblet, May 1888, C.C, Leipzig, 17:fol. 82.
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60 The Moniteur officiel du commerce.
61 MOC (25 December 1884), 606.
62 Freycinet to Herbette, 15 October 1886, C.C, Berlin, 32:fol. 430-32.
63 Baudrillard, Henri “Le nouvel enseignement de l’économie politique dans les facultés de droit,” Revue des deux mondes (1 May 1885), 158–85; “Notre programme,” Revue d’économie politique (January-February 1887), 1–2Google Scholar; Saint-Marc, Henri, Etude sur l’enseignement de l’économie politique dans les universités d’Allemagne et d’Autriche (Paris, 1892), 81, 122–24Google Scholar.
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65 See, for example: Thierry-Mieg, Charles, La France et la concurrence étrangère (Paris, 1884), 22Google Scholar; Levy, Raphaël-Georges, Le péril financier (Paris, 1888), 32Google Scholar.
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68 Neither Robert Soucy’s Fascism in France: The Case of Maurice Barrès (Berkeley, 1972) nor Adrien Dansette’s Le boulangisme (Paris, 1938) has much to say about the connections between the state of the French economy and the Boulangist movement. Soucy’s point that Barres was attracted to Boulangism by his “desire to see French energy unified” (124) would accord with my argument here.
69 Lavisse, “Notes prises,” 917-18.
70 Digeon, La crise allemande, 330, calls it the “most famous” of its type.
71 Rommel, Au pays, 256-60. See also Jules Flammermont, L’expansion de l’Allemagne (Paris, 1885).
72 Nicot, L’Allemagne, v-vi.
73 Marteau, 8 October 1887 in MOC (9 February 1888), 106.
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75 See Carroll, Public Opinion, 110-12.
76 For these events, see: Carroll, Public Opinion, 145-48; Chastenet, République des républicains, 293; William Langer, D/p/omacy of Imperialism, 15-16.
77 Arvède Barine, “Questions actuelles: la fin de Carthage,” Revue des deux mondes (15 September 1896), 362.
78 Reclus, Elisée, Nouvelle géographie universelle, 16: Les Etats-Unis (Paris, 1892), 739Google Scholar. See also: Dubois, Marcel, Précis de la géographie économique des cinq parties du monde (Paris, 1890), 237, 277Google Scholar; Levasseur, Emile de, Géographie générale et étude du Continent américain (Paris, 1891), 84, 95–96Google Scholar; Foncin, Pierre, Géographie générale du monde (Paris, [1892]), 39Google Scholar; d’Almeida, P. Camena, La Terre, l’Amérique, vol. 1 of Cours de géographie à l’usage de l’enseignement secondaire, ed. by la Blanche, P. Vidal de and d’Almeida, P. Camena (Paris, [1892]), 231–32Google Scholar.
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80 See, for example, on iron and steel: Héricourt to Minister, 17 October 1884, C.C., Stuttgart, 7:fol. 307; Lefaivre to Spuller, 13 October 1889, C.C., Hambourg, 50:fol. 198-99; on trade: Rouvier to Ferry, 14February 1885, C.C., BuenosAires, 13:fol. 183.
81 (London, 1896).
82 Consul general, 28 November 1896, C.C., Londres, 99:fol. 64; Barine, “Questions,” 362. See also Courcel to Hanotaux, 28 July 1896, C.C., Londres, 98:fol. 362; Soulange-Bodin to Hanotaux, Berlin, 5 August 1896, A.N., F12703 1. For a thorough analysis of British perceptions, see Hoffman, Great Britain, chs. 5-6.
83 Courcel to Ferry, 10 August 1884, C.C., Berlin, 31:fol. 78.
84 Chastenet, République des républicains, 119.
85 See: ibid., 116-19; Carroll, Public Opinion, 94; Schuman, War, 98-104; Langer, Imperialism, 43-50. Carroll, Public Opinion, 119 and Thomas F. Power, Jules Ferry and the Renaissance of French Imperialism (New York, 1944), 196-97 find more evidence of anti-English hostility than I do.
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88 MOC (5 September 1895), 163.
89 Annales de la Chambre, Débats (12 February 1906), 1:847.
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93 These qualities were similar to the ones emphasized by the theorists who developed the French military strategy of the offensive à outrance. See Possony, Stefan T. and Mantoux, Etienne in Earle, ed., Makers, 206–31Google Scholar.
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97 For example, Maurice Schwob, Le danger allemand (Paris, 1897), 2.
98 Edmond Théry, 1890-1900, histoire économique de l’Angleterre, de l’Allemagne, des Etats-Unis et de la France (Paris, 1902), 121.
99 Carroll, Public Opinion, 176, 179,185.
100Annales de la Chambre, Débats (10 March 1903), 1:1323-34. See also: ibid. (21 January 1902), 1:110; ibid. (11 March 1903), 1:1340, 1357; ibid. (23 November 1903), session extraordinaire: 653; ibid. (10 November 1904), session extraordinaire: 397-98.
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103 Paul-Dubois, Louis, “Les monopoles industriels aux Etats-Unis,” Revue des deux mondes (1 February 1897), 634–36; Théry, , 1890–1900, 308, 338–40; Schwob, , Guerre 324–29Google Scholar.
104 Chastenet, République triomphante, 156, 306. Delcassé made many friendly remarks about the United States, for example in Annales de la Chambre, Débats (11 March 1903), 1:1358.
105 Consul (Hong Kong) to Minister, 19 April 1904, Grande-Bretagne, Affaires commerciales, N.S., 38:fol. 46.
106 Annales de la Chambre, Débats (23 January 1899), 1:133.
107 Annales de la Chambre, Débats (28 January 1899), 1:132-34,136-39, 141,148-50.
108 Ibid. (10 March 1903), 1:1322, 1325; ibid. (11 March 1903), 1:1343-44, 1352, 1357; ibid. (30 June 1903), 2:662; ibid. (19 November 1903), session extraordinaire: 600-02.
109 Annales du Sénat, Débats (7 December 1904), session extraordinaire: 209-10. Opponents of the Entente in parliament were unhappy about specific provisions, not the basic policy.
110 Klotz to Foreign Minister, 20 August 1912, A.N., F30258. See also: Ministry to J. Cambon, 15 February 1910, Allemagne, Affaires commerciales, N.S., 77:fol. 73-98; Pingaud, Dusseldorf, 19 August 1911, ibid., 78:fol. 158-61; Coquet, “Le commerce franco-allemand en 1911,” Le commerce franco-allemand (15 May 1912) in ibid., 82:fol. 405; Ferrand, Berlin, to Minister, 6 June 1913, ibid., 79:fol. 49-51.
111 J. Cambon to Pichón, 12 December 1910, Allemagne, Industrie, N.S., 71:fol. 149.
112 See, for example, Secretary of the Union des Industries Métallurgiques et Minières to Pichón, 20May 1911, ibid., fol. 154-55.
113 Annales de la Chambre, Défais (22 November 1909), session extraordinaire: 701.
114 Capdeville, Frankfort, “Le marché financier de Francfort en 1906,” A.N., F30259; Ferrand, Berlin, 22 June 1912, “Note sur l’aide prêtée au marché de Berlin par les banques françaises,” A.N..F30259.
115 Georges Blondel, Les embarras de l’Allemagne, 6th ed. (Paris, 1913, 1st ed., 1912), vi, 26, 83-86, 90, 94-%, 100-05; Ajam, “La situation économique de l’Allemagne,” La France (4 October 1913) in Allemagne, Affaires commerciales, N.S., 82:fol. 133-34; Victor Bérard, La France et Guillaume II(Paris, 1907), 147-48, 151,159-62,167-74,279-80.
116 See Coquet, in Le commerce franco-allemand (July 1908), 1–8 in Allemagne, Affaires commerciales, N.S., 81; Annales de la Chambre, Débats (29 November 1908), session extraordinaire: 1199–1202; ibid. (18 January 1909), 1: 36–39Google Scholar.
117 Ziebura, Die deutsche Frage, 11. See also Eugen Weber, The Nationalist Revival in France, 1905-1914 (Berkeley, 1959), passim, esp. “Conclusion.” Though Weber does not mention economic factors as a cause of the “nationalist revival, “ he does stress French fears (8-9).
118 A few examples of rightist rhetoric may be found in Annales du Sénat, Débats (28 December 1909), 2:507-11, 517-18; ibid. (6 April 1911), 1:443-47, 454. For the center, see André Tardieu, “France et Allemagne (1906-09),” Revue des deux mondes (1 July 1909), 65-98; Stephen Pichón, Foreign Minister between 1906 and 1911, in Annales de la Chambre, Débats (7 June 1907), 2:409-10; ibid. (27 December 1909), session extraordinaire: 1883, and elsewhere.
119 See: Chastenet, Histoire de la Troisième République, A:Jours inquiets et jours sanglants, 1906-1918 (Paris, 1957), 45-124; A.J.P. Taylor, The Struggle for Mastery in Europe 1848-1918 (Oxford, 1954), 465-73, 488-89, 500-01; Joseph Caillaux, Agadir: Ma politique extérieure (Paris, 1919), passim.
120 This is not the place to argue the old “war guilt question”; I would maintain that the French were less blameworthy than most others.