10836/12453
[ stop the slideshow ]

Bismarck

Bismarck.png Boston in 1775ThumbnailsBenjamin FranklinBoston in 1775ThumbnailsBenjamin FranklinBoston in 1775ThumbnailsBenjamin FranklinBoston in 1775ThumbnailsBenjamin FranklinBoston in 1775ThumbnailsBenjamin Franklin

Prussian affairs were then very much in the hands of a minister of the seventeenth-century type, Von Bismarck (count in 1865, prince in 1871), and he saw brilliant opportunities in this trouble. He became the champion of the German nationality in these duchies—it must be remembered that the King of Prussia had refused to undertake this rôle for democratic Germany in 1848—and he persuaded Austria to side with Prussia in a military intervention. Denmark had no chance against these Great Powers; she was easily beaten and obliged to relinquish the duchies. Then Bismarck picked a quarrel with Austria for the possession of these two small states. So he brought about a needless and fratricidal war of Germans for the greater glory of Prussia and the ascendancy of the Hohenzollern dynasty in Germany. German writers of a romantic turn of mind represent Bismarck as a great statesman planning the unity of Germany; but indeed he was doing nothing of the kind.