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Exercises — The Rise of Nationalism in Europe

🎓 Class 10 Social Science CBSE Theory Ch 1 — The Rise of Nationalism in Europe ⏱ ~15 min
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This MCQ module is based on: Exercises — The Rise of Nationalism in Europe

[myaischool_lt_sst_assessment grade_level="class_10" subject="history" difficulty="intermediate"]

Exercises — The Rise of Nationalism in Europe

NCERT India and the Contemporary World-II | Chapter 1: End-of-Chapter Exercises & Key Terms

Key Terms — Rise of Nationalism in Europe Quick Revision

TermMeaning
AbsolutistA centralised, militarised, and repressive form of monarchical government with no restraints on the ruler's power
UtopianA vision of a society that is so ideal it is unlikely to actually exist
PlebisciteA direct vote by which all the people of a region accept or reject a proposal
SuffrageThe right to vote in political elections
ConservatismA political philosophy stressing the importance of tradition, established institutions, and gradual change
LiberalismAn ideology standing for individual freedom, equality before the law, government by consent, and constitutional governance
Nation-stateA political entity where the majority of citizens share a common identity and sovereignty rests with the people
AllegoryExpressing an abstract idea (like freedom or nationhood) through a person or a thing
EthnicRelating to a common racial, tribal, or cultural origin or background
FeministAwareness of women's rights and interests based on the belief of social, economic, and political equality of the genders
IdeologyA system of ideas reflecting a particular social and political vision

Key Historical Figures — Mazzini, Bismarck, Garibaldi and More

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Giuseppe Mazzini
Italian revolutionary who founded Young Italy and Young Europe. Believed nations were the natural units of humanity. Advocated for a unified Italian democratic republic.
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Count Cavour
Chief Minister of Sardinia-Piedmont. Master diplomat who engineered an alliance with France to defeat Austria in 1859, paving the way for Italian unification.
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Giuseppe Garibaldi
Led the Expedition of the Thousand (1860) into southern Italy. His Red Shirts won peasant support and drove out the Spanish Bourbon rulers.
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Otto von Bismarck
Chief Minister of Prussia who unified Germany through "blood and iron" — three decisive wars against Denmark, Austria, and France (1864-1871).

NCERT Exercise Solutions — Write in Brief Questions and Answers

Q1. Write a note on: (a) Giuseppe Mazzini (b) Count Camillo de Cavour (c) The Greek war of independence (d) Frankfurt parliament (e) The role of women in nationalist struggles
L3 Apply
(a) Giuseppe Mazzini: Born in Genoa in 1805, Mazzini was an Italian revolutionary who joined the Carbonari secret society and was exiled in 1831. He founded Young Italy in Marseilles and Young Europe in Berne, believing God intended nations to be the natural units of humanity. He envisioned Italy as a single unified democratic republic. His ideas inspired secret societies across Europe and alarmed conservatives, with Metternich calling him the most dangerous enemy of the social order.

(b) Count Cavour: Chief Minister of Sardinia-Piedmont, Cavour was neither a revolutionary nor a democrat but a skilled diplomatist. He engineered a strategic alliance with France that enabled Sardinia-Piedmont to defeat Austrian forces in 1859. He spoke French better than Italian, reflecting the cosmopolitan nature of the Italian elite. His diplomatic efforts complemented Garibaldi's military campaigns in achieving Italian unification.

(c) Greek War of Independence: Greece had been part of the Ottoman Empire since the fifteenth century. In 1821, Greeks rose in revolt, supported by nationalists in exile and sympathetic Western Europeans who admired ancient Greek civilisation. Poets like Lord Byron raised funds and even fought in the war (dying of fever in 1824). The Treaty of Constantinople (1832) recognised Greece as an independent nation, marking an important victory for nationalist movements.

(d) Frankfurt Parliament: In May 1848, 831 elected representatives from the German states gathered at the Church of St Paul in Frankfurt to draft a constitution for a unified Germany under a parliamentary monarchy. However, when the crown was offered to the Prussian king Friedrich Wilhelm IV, he rejected it. The parliament lost support as middle-class deputies alienated workers and artisans by refusing their demands. Troops eventually forced the assembly to disband.

(e) Role of Women: Women participated actively in nationalist movements by forming political associations, founding newspapers, and taking part in political meetings and demonstrations. Louise Otto-Peters founded a women's journal and a feminist political association. Despite their significant contributions, women were denied suffrage during events like the Frankfurt parliament elections and were allowed only as observers. This exposed the contradiction within liberal nationalism, which championed freedom while restricting it for women.
Q2. What steps did the French revolutionaries take to create a sense of collective identity among the French people?
L3 Apply
Model Answer: The French revolutionaries took several deliberate steps to forge a collective national identity: (1) They introduced the concepts of la patrie (fatherland) and le citoyen (citizen), emphasising a united community of equals under a constitution. (2) The tricolour replaced the royal standard as the national flag. (3) The Estates General was elected by active citizens and renamed the National Assembly. (4) New national hymns were composed, oaths were taken, and martyrs were commemorated. (5) A centralised administrative system formulated uniform laws for all citizens. (6) Internal customs duties were abolished and uniform weights and measures were adopted. (7) Regional dialects were discouraged in favour of Parisian French as the national language. These measures collectively transformed France from a kingdom ruled by a monarch into a nation belonging to its citizens.
Q3. Who were Marianne and Germania? What was the importance of the way in which they were portrayed?
L4 Analyse
Model Answer: Marianne and Germania were female allegories used to personify the nations of France and Germany respectively. Marianne, named after a common Christian name, embodied the French Republic and carried attributes of Liberty: the red cap, the tricolour, and the cockade. Her image appeared on coins, stamps, and public statues. Germania represented the German nation, depicted wearing a crown of oak leaves (heroism), carrying a sword (readiness to fight) wrapped in an olive branch (willingness for peace), and bearing the black, red, and gold tricolour of the liberal-nationalists. Their portrayal was significant because they transformed the abstract idea of nationhood into recognisable, emotionally powerful figures that could unite diverse populations. They created a shared visual language of nationalism accessible even to the illiterate, making patriotic ideals part of everyday life.
Q4. Briefly trace the process of German unification.
L3 Apply
Model Answer: German unification proceeded through several stages: (1) In 1848, the liberal middle classes attempted unification through the Frankfurt parliament, but the effort failed when the Prussian king rejected the offered crown and conservative forces dissolved the assembly. (2) Leadership then shifted to Prussia under Chief Minister Otto von Bismarck, who pursued unification through military force and diplomacy. (3) Three wars over seven years completed the process: the Danish War (1864), the Austro-Prussian War (1866), and the Franco-Prussian War (1870-71). (4) In January 1871, the Prussian king William I was proclaimed German Emperor at a ceremony in the Hall of Mirrors at the Palace of Versailles. (5) The new nation-state modernised its currency, banking, legal, and judicial systems, with Prussian practices becoming the model for all of Germany. The process demonstrated that German unification was achieved through "blood and iron" rather than democratic processes.
Q5. What changes did Napoleon introduce to make the administrative system more efficient in the territories ruled by him?
L3 Apply
Model Answer: Napoleon introduced a comprehensive set of administrative reforms: (1) The Napoleonic Code (Civil Code of 1804) abolished all privileges based on birth and established equality before the law. (2) It secured the right to property for all citizens. (3) Administrative divisions were simplified across the Dutch Republic, Switzerland, Italy, and Germany. (4) The feudal system was abolished, and peasants were freed from serfdom and manorial dues. (5) Guild restrictions that limited trade in towns were removed. (6) Transport and communication systems were improved. (7) A standardised system of weights, measures, and currency facilitated trade. These reforms, while benefiting businessmen, artisans, and peasants, did not come with genuine political freedom, leading to eventual resentment in the conquered territories.

NCERT Exercise Solutions — Discuss Questions with Detailed Answers

Q1. Explain what is meant by the 1848 revolution of the liberals. What were the political, social and economic ideas supported by the liberals?
L4 Analyse
Model Answer: The 1848 revolution of the liberals was a series of uprisings across Europe led by the educated middle classes who combined demands for constitutionalism with national unification. Politically, liberals demanded a constitution, representative government through parliament, freedom of the press, and freedom of association. They opposed autocratic monarchies and sought nation-states based on parliamentary principles. Socially, they championed the end of aristocratic privileges and equality before the law, though they did not extend these ideals to women or the working classes, leading to internal contradictions. Economically, liberals supported free markets, abolition of trade restrictions, standardised weights and measures, and unified currencies (as demonstrated by the Zollverein). In the German regions, 831 elected representatives convened the Frankfurt parliament to draft a constitution. However, the revolution ultimately failed because the Prussian king rejected parliamentary authority, the middle classes alienated workers by refusing their demands, and conservative forces reasserted control through military power.
Q2. Choose three examples to show the contribution of culture to the growth of nationalism in Europe.
L4 Analyse
Model Answer: Three examples demonstrating culture's contribution to nationalism:

(1) The Grimm Brothers and German Folktales: Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm spent six years collecting folktales from German villages, publishing their first collection in 1812. They believed these stories expressed a pure German spirit and saw their work as resistance against French cultural domination. They also produced a 33-volume German dictionary, contributing directly to German national identity formation.

(2) Polish Language as National Resistance: After Russia partitioned Poland and forced out the Polish language from schools, the clergy and people used Polish as a weapon of national resistance. Polish was maintained in church gatherings and religious instruction, with many priests being imprisoned or exiled for refusing to preach in Russian. The language became a powerful symbol of the struggle against Russian domination.

(3) Karol Kurpinski and Polish Music: The Polish composer Kurpinski celebrated the national struggle through his operas and music, transforming traditional folk dances like the polonaise and mazurka into nationalist symbols. Music reached audiences that political tracts could not, making it an effective tool for spreading nationalist sentiment among ordinary people.
Q3. Through a focus on any two countries, explain how nations developed over the nineteenth century.
L4 Analyse
Model Answer (Germany and Italy):

Germany: In the early nineteenth century, the German-speaking region was a patchwork of 39 states. The Zollverein (1834) created economic unity by abolishing tariff barriers. In 1848, the liberal Frankfurt parliament attempted democratic unification but failed. Thereafter, Prussia under Bismarck led the process through three wars (1864-1871), culminating in the proclamation of the German Empire at Versailles in January 1871. German unification was characterised by military power ("blood and iron") and top-down state-building.

Italy: Italy was divided into seven states, with Austrian Habsburgs controlling the north, the Pope governing the centre, and Spanish Bourbons ruling the south. Mazzini's attempts at republican unification failed in the 1830s-1840s. Sardinia-Piedmont under King Victor Emmanuel II and Chief Minister Cavour then led the movement. A strategic alliance with France defeated Austria in 1859. Garibaldi's volunteer Red Shirts marched south, winning peasant support and driving out the Bourbons. Victor Emmanuel II was proclaimed king of united Italy in 1861, with the Papal States joining in 1870.

Both nations followed a path from initial liberal-democratic attempts (which failed) to state-led unification through military power and diplomacy, though Italy also involved significant popular mobilisation through Garibaldi.
Q4. How was the history of nationalism in Britain unlike the rest of Europe?
L4 Analyse
Model Answer: British nationalism was fundamentally different from the rest of Europe in several ways: (1) It was not the result of a sudden revolution or deliberate unification campaign but a long, gradual process. (2) There was no single 'British nation' before the eighteenth century; the primary identities were ethnic: English, Welsh, Scottish, and Irish. (3) The English parliament (having seized power from the monarchy in 1688) served as the instrument through which a nation-state centred on England was gradually forged. (4) The Act of Union (1707) united England and Scotland, effectively imposing English influence on Scotland. Scottish culture, including the Gaelic language and national dress, was systematically suppressed. (5) Ireland was forcibly incorporated in 1801 after a failed revolt. (6) A new 'British' identity was created through the active promotion of English culture, the Union Jack, the national anthem, and the English language. The older nations (Scotland, Wales, Ireland) survived only as subordinate partners. Unlike Germany and Italy, where nationalism was a force for liberation and democratic aspiration, British nationalism was essentially the expansion and imposition of English dominance.
Q5. Why did nationalist tensions emerge in the Balkans?
L4 Analyse
Model Answer: Nationalist tensions emerged in the Balkans due to several interconnected factors: (1) The region was home to great geographical and ethnic diversity, with various Slavic nationalities (Romanians, Bulgarians, Albanians, Greeks, Serbs, Croats, Slovenes, etc.) living under Ottoman control. (2) The spread of romantic nationalism inspired these peoples to demand independence, using historical claims to argue they had once been independent before Ottoman subjugation. (3) The Ottoman Empire was weakening, failing in its attempts at modernisation, which encouraged subject nationalities to break away. (4) As different Slavic nationalities defined their identities, they became fiercely jealous of each other, each hoping to gain territory at the expense of others. (5) The situation was further complicated by great power rivalry: Russia, Germany, Britain, and Austria-Hungary all competed to extend their influence over the strategically important region. This combination of ethnic nationalism, territorial ambition, imperial decline, and great power competition turned the Balkans into a powder keg that ultimately ignited the First World War.
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Competency-Based Questions — Chapter Revision

Case Study: A historian studying nineteenth-century Europe observes that nationalism began as a force for liberation and democracy but gradually transformed into a tool for imperial aggression. The French Revolution's ideals of liberty and equality inspired movements across the continent, yet by 1914 these same nationalist sentiments had drawn Europe into the most destructive war in its history.
Q1. Which of the following correctly matches the leader with their approach to nation-building?
L3 Apply
  • (A) Mazzini — Military conquest through Prussian armies
  • (B) Bismarck — Democratic republicanism through secret societies
  • (C) Cavour — Diplomatic alliances and strategic warfare
  • (D) Garibaldi — Restoring Bourbon monarchy in southern Italy
Q2. Analyse how the transformation of nationalism from a liberating to a destructive force can be traced through the chapter's narrative. Identify the turning point.
L4 Analyse
Q3. Evaluate whether the ideals of the French Revolution — liberty, equality, and fraternity — were truly realised in the nation-states that emerged during the nineteenth century.
L5 Evaluate
HOT Q. Drawing from this entire chapter, write a letter as a young European student in 1848 to a friend in India, explaining why you believe nationalism is important for your country's future. What hopes and fears would you express?
L6 Create
🎯 Assertion–Reason Questions — Chapter Revision
Assertion (A): The Napoleonic Code was considered a progressive reform across Europe.
Reason (R): It granted universal suffrage to all adult citizens regardless of gender or property.
(A) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A
(B) Both A and R are true, but R is NOT the correct explanation of A
(C) A is true but R is false
(D) A is false but R is true
Assertion (A): The Treaty of Constantinople (1832) recognised Greece as an independent nation.
Reason (R): The Greek struggle for independence received widespread support from Western European intellectuals, artists, and poets who admired ancient Greek civilisation.
(A) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A
(B) Both A and R are true, but R is NOT the correct explanation of A
(C) A is true but R is false
(D) A is false but R is true
Assertion (A): Nationalism in the colonies inspired by European powers took the same form as European nationalism.
Reason (R): The idea that societies should be organised into nation-states came to be widely accepted across the world.
(A) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A
(B) Both A and R are true, but R is NOT the correct explanation of A
(C) A is true but R is false
(D) A is false but R is true

Did You Know?

Frequently Asked Questions — Exercises - Rise of Nationalism in Europe

What are the NCERT solutions for Class 10 History Chapter 1?

NCERT solutions for Class 10 History Chapter 1 'The Rise of Nationalism in Europe' include answers to Write in Brief and Discuss questions covering the French Revolution, the role of Mazzini and Bismarck, the unification of Germany and Italy, the 1848 revolutions, and how nationalism evolved from a liberal democratic ideal into an aggressive imperialist force. Each solution follows the CBSE marking scheme and covers all key concepts tested in board examinations.

What is a nation-state Class 10 definition?

A nation-state is a political entity in which the majority of citizens develop a shared sense of common identity, culture, and history, and where sovereignty rests with the people rather than a single ruler. As explained in NCERT Class 10 History Chapter 1, modern nation-states emerged in 19th-century Europe when multinational empires gave way to countries based on common language, ethnicity, and collective political will.

What is the difference between absolutism and liberalism Class 10?

Absolutism refers to a system of government where the monarch holds unlimited and unchecked power over the state, claiming divine authority. Liberalism, derived from the Latin word 'liber' (free), stands for individual freedom, equality before the law, government by consent, and a constitutional framework. The shift from absolutism to liberalism was central to the rise of nationalism, as the educated middle classes demanded representative government and an end to aristocratic privileges.

Explain the concept of plebiscite in NCERT Class 10 History.

A plebiscite is a direct vote by which the people of a region are asked to accept or reject a proposal, especially regarding the choice of government or ruler. Philosopher Ernst Renan described a nation's existence as depending on a daily plebiscite meaning national identity relies on the continuous willing consent of its people to live together. Plebiscites were also used during the unification of territories in 19th-century Europe.

What were the key events of nationalism in Europe from 1789 to 1871?

The key events include: the French Revolution (1789) which introduced popular sovereignty; Napoleon's conquests spreading nationalism across Europe (1799-1815); the Congress of Vienna (1815) restoring conservative monarchies; the Greek War of Independence (1821-1832); the 1830 July Revolution in France; the 1848 liberal revolutions across Europe; the unification of Italy (1859-1870) under Cavour, Garibaldi, and Victor Emmanuel II; and the unification of Germany (1864-1871) under Bismarck through three wars.

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