-
The 1830 July Revolution: History Matters (Short Animated Documentary)
Twitter: https://twitter.com/Tenminhistory
Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/user?u=4973164
Merch: https://teespring.com/stores/history-matters-store-2
Special Thanks to the following Patrons for their support on Patreon:
Franco La Bruna
James Baker
Daniel Lambert
Richard Wolfe
Chris Fatta
Joshua
William Foster
Blaine Tillack
Andrew Niedbala
Mitchell Wildoer
Bernardo Santos
Cornel
Thomas Mitchell
Norman A. Letterman
Danny Anstess
Matthew Crighton
Shaun Pullin
Joooooshhhhh
Perry Gagne
Fuzzythefair
Daan ter Elst
Byzans_Scotorius
Spencer Smith
Richard Manklow
Andrew Keeling
Rbj
Mark Bevan
João Santos
anon
This episode covers the 1830 Revolution which came in the wake of the Bourbon Restoration and the rule of Charles X of France, who was a bit tyrannical. After three days of violence he a...
published: 13 Mar 2019
-
The July Revolution of 1830
When people think of the French revolution, they think of the 1789 one. They assume us French just cut our King’s head, among a few thousand more, and presto! We now had a republic. But that’s far from true. In fact, it would take 77 years before France got rid of its last monarch thanks to numerous revolutions, one of which was the July Revolution, better known as "Les Trois Glorieuses".
Ancient Accounts' video: https://youtu.be/xHnRsKUWhbo
Useful Charts' video: https://youtu.be/_S31SY-Wqd0
Project Revolution Playlist: http://yt.vu/p/PL0MwcDYjQCaNWvMbxAcLoTxvqOxfC24MW
Hi there! This is Barris, a French – American that lived most of his life in France and is passionate about learning, exploring, hiking and cooking. It’s a vast and beautiful world out there so join me as we discover the h...
published: 08 Jun 2019
-
July Revolution | 3 Minute History
https://www.patreon.com/Jabzy
https://twitter.com/JabzyJoe
Music - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCjMZjGhrFq_4llVS_x2XJ_w
published: 17 Feb 2019
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The July Revolution of 1830
published: 22 Aug 2018
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Revolutions of 1848: Crash Course European History #26
In 1848, Europe experienced a wave of revolutions. Last week we covered some of the reform movements that presaged these uprisings. This week, we're learning about what the people wanted from the revolutions, who was involved, and how many of those goals were accomplished. We'll look at revolutions in the Austrian Empire, Hungary, Italy, the German States, and the region formerly known as Poland.
Sources:
-Johann Nepomuk Höfel (1788-1964)-'the first uncensored newspaper are sold in street of Vienna after the revolution of 1848'-watercolour Wien-Historisches Museum der Stadt Wien
-Hunt, Lynn et al. The Challenge of the West: Peoples and Cultures from 1320 to the Global Age. Lexington MA: D. C. Heath, 1995.
-Judson, Pieter M. The Habsburg Empire: A New History. Cambridge: Harvard Unive...
published: 19 Nov 2019
-
July Revolution 1830 | European History | Lectures by Waqas Aziz
July Revolution 1830 | European History | Lectures by Waqas Aziz
July Revolution 1830 is known as the second French Revolution. After the death of Louis XVIII, Charles X became the emperor of France. He was conservative. He wanted to restore absolute monarchy and the privileges of clergy and nobles. His appointment of Prince Polignac as Minister raised some serious concerns among French people. Besides, his infamous and unconstitutional ordinances provoked revolutionary sentiments among masses. Resultantly, a three day revolution forced Charles X to abdicate his throne in favour of Louis Philippe.
This lecture explains July Revolution of 1830 in France in detail.
Other Playlists on my channel
➡️ Playlist of Political Science 👇
https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PL3T6dsqle3vm6exYORzs89c...
published: 06 Oct 2023
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Europe Ablaze: The 1848 Revolutions
This is the story of the 1848 European revolutions, one of the most dramatic and significant moments in the history of the continent. Hungry workers and peasants joined forces with liberals and nationalists, and in a series of tumultuous events, toppled the French monarchy, and forced reforms across Italy, Germany, and the Austrian Empire. But the revolutionaries were divided between middle class liberals seeking limited reforms, and radicals and workers who wanted sweeping change. As they argued over political and economic reform, counter-revolutionary forces recovered their confidence, and gathered their strength for a brutal onslaught against Europe's revolutionaries.
Support Epic History TV on Patreon from $1 per video, and get perks including ad-free early access & votes on future t...
published: 05 Aug 2022
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Why didn't Britain have a Revolution in 1848? (Short Animated Documentary)
Loads of European countries had revolutions or wars in 1848 but the United Kingdom didn't. So why not?
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published: 28 Jul 2022
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What Were the Revolutions of 1830 and 1848? AP Euro Bit by Bit #30
The ideologies of liberalism, nationalism, and conservatism came into conflict in Europe in 1830 and 1848. Across the continent, revolutions broke out. Most of them failed. Here's a brief overview of some of those revolutions.
published: 27 Jan 2016
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The REVOLUTIONS of 1848, Explained [AP Euro—Unit 6 Topic 6]
AP HEIMLER REVIEW GUIDE (formerly known as the Ultimate Review Packet):
+AP Euro Heimler Review Guide: https://bit.ly/3PCPyiw
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In this video Heimler explains what you need to know about Unit 6 Topic 6 (6.6) of the AP European History curriculum which is all about how various European states reacted against the conservatism applied to them in the Concert of Europe, the most potent expressions of which came in t...
published: 19 Jan 2023
3:21
The 1830 July Revolution: History Matters (Short Animated Documentary)
Twitter: https://twitter.com/Tenminhistory
Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/user?u=4973164
Merch: https://teespring.com/stores/history-matters-store-2
Special ...
Twitter: https://twitter.com/Tenminhistory
Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/user?u=4973164
Merch: https://teespring.com/stores/history-matters-store-2
Special Thanks to the following Patrons for their support on Patreon:
Franco La Bruna
James Baker
Daniel Lambert
Richard Wolfe
Chris Fatta
Joshua
William Foster
Blaine Tillack
Andrew Niedbala
Mitchell Wildoer
Bernardo Santos
Cornel
Thomas Mitchell
Norman A. Letterman
Danny Anstess
Matthew Crighton
Shaun Pullin
Joooooshhhhh
Perry Gagne
Fuzzythefair
Daan ter Elst
Byzans_Scotorius
Spencer Smith
Richard Manklow
Andrew Keeling
Rbj
Mark Bevan
João Santos
anon
This episode covers the 1830 Revolution which came in the wake of the Bourbon Restoration and the rule of Charles X of France, who was a bit tyrannical. After three days of violence he abdicated and was replaced by his cousin Louis-Philippe who would have his own fair share of problems.
Book Recommendations:
A Modern History of Europe from the Renaissance to the Present by John Merriman. For a book that covers such a large span of history, this is phenomenally detailed (although not the cheapest book there is). If you'd like a broad overview of European history with a great focus on France than this book is a great one to start with.
A Concise History of France by Roger Price. Fantastic at covering France from the 1789 onwards. Just be aware that whilst it calls itself a history of France, the pre Louis XIV bits are extremely brief (or non-existent) so be aware.
https://wn.com/The_1830_July_Revolution_History_Matters_(Short_Animated_Documentary)
Twitter: https://twitter.com/Tenminhistory
Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/user?u=4973164
Merch: https://teespring.com/stores/history-matters-store-2
Special Thanks to the following Patrons for their support on Patreon:
Franco La Bruna
James Baker
Daniel Lambert
Richard Wolfe
Chris Fatta
Joshua
William Foster
Blaine Tillack
Andrew Niedbala
Mitchell Wildoer
Bernardo Santos
Cornel
Thomas Mitchell
Norman A. Letterman
Danny Anstess
Matthew Crighton
Shaun Pullin
Joooooshhhhh
Perry Gagne
Fuzzythefair
Daan ter Elst
Byzans_Scotorius
Spencer Smith
Richard Manklow
Andrew Keeling
Rbj
Mark Bevan
João Santos
anon
This episode covers the 1830 Revolution which came in the wake of the Bourbon Restoration and the rule of Charles X of France, who was a bit tyrannical. After three days of violence he abdicated and was replaced by his cousin Louis-Philippe who would have his own fair share of problems.
Book Recommendations:
A Modern History of Europe from the Renaissance to the Present by John Merriman. For a book that covers such a large span of history, this is phenomenally detailed (although not the cheapest book there is). If you'd like a broad overview of European history with a great focus on France than this book is a great one to start with.
A Concise History of France by Roger Price. Fantastic at covering France from the 1789 onwards. Just be aware that whilst it calls itself a history of France, the pre Louis XIV bits are extremely brief (or non-existent) so be aware.
- published: 13 Mar 2019
- views: 766984
13:53
The July Revolution of 1830
When people think of the French revolution, they think of the 1789 one. They assume us French just cut our King’s head, among a few thousand more, and presto! W...
When people think of the French revolution, they think of the 1789 one. They assume us French just cut our King’s head, among a few thousand more, and presto! We now had a republic. But that’s far from true. In fact, it would take 77 years before France got rid of its last monarch thanks to numerous revolutions, one of which was the July Revolution, better known as "Les Trois Glorieuses".
Ancient Accounts' video: https://youtu.be/xHnRsKUWhbo
Useful Charts' video: https://youtu.be/_S31SY-Wqd0
Project Revolution Playlist: http://yt.vu/p/PL0MwcDYjQCaNWvMbxAcLoTxvqOxfC24MW
Hi there! This is Barris, a French – American that lived most of his life in France and is passionate about learning, exploring, hiking and cooking. It’s a vast and beautiful world out there so join me as we discover the historical, cultural and culinary heritage of France, Europe and the rest of the World.
This, of course, will take a lot of resources and only you can make it happen! So, if you enjoy my content, please consider supporting the community by sharing, liking, commenting, and subscribing: https://www.youtube.com/c/thisisbarris?sub_confirmation=1
Following the defeat of Napoleon at the battle of Waterloo, the coalition restored France's borders back to their 1791 location and reinstalled the Bourbon dynasty through Louis XVI's brother, Louis XVIII
Louis XVIII reign was marked by relative peace and stability, which ushered in the beginnings of a French industrial revolution. On September 16th, 1824, he died at 68, childless. And so, the throne was given to his younger brother, Charles X.
Charles X embodied the worst of the Ancien Régime. His prime-minister was a leader of the ultra-royalist faction named Joseph de Villèle. In April 1825, he decided to compensate nobles whose estates had been confiscated during the revolution. This would end up costing close to 1 billion Francs. On the same month, he passed anti-blasphemy laws which were an affront to the religious liberty imposed by the constitution.
On November of that same year, legislative elections occurred. Ultra-royalists lost 228 deputies to the benefit of Liberals called Les Doctrinaires. They favored a constitutional monarchy and were led by LaFayette, who had staunchly opposed the Jacobin Club during the Reign of Terror.
Following this defeat, the King attempted to introduce new laws to tighten censorship but the deputies objected so violently that he had no choice but to withdraw the proposal. Villèle resigned and was replaced by a more moderate minister, Le Vicomte de Martignac, before being dismissed and replaced by Le Prince de Polignac, who was the son of La Duchesse de Polignac, aka the most hated woman of the Revolution.
On March 1830, the King threatened the opposition in a speech to the Assembly. In retaliation, 221 Liberal deputies voted in favor of a motion of no confidence.
Charles X then dissolved the assembly in hopes that a new election would restore the balance in favor of the ultra-royalists. It did not. The King was persuaded that no compromise could be made without threatening his throne and remained determined to keep his ministers. Finally, bolstered by the news of the recent capture of Algiers, Charles X released the infamous Saint-Cloud Ordinances on the 25th of July.
The first ordinance suspended the freedom of press. The second dissolved the new assembly even though it had been elected less than a week before. The third removed the right of vote of the liberal-leaning commercial bourgeoisie. This reduced the electoral body from under 100,000 to a mere 40,000 (France's pop = 33.6M)
Over 50 newspapers refused to submit to the new ordinances. When the local police attempt to seize their presses, they are attacked by a mob screaming, “A bas les Bourbons! Vive la Charte!”
By 5PM, the first barricades are risen and altercations between rioters and soldiers begin. From the rooftops, Parisians throw rocks, roof tiles and more onto the patrolling troops. At first, the soldiers fire in the air to scare them off but soon they aim to kill. 22 rioters are killed.
The King sends General Marmont to Paris. Nevertheless, the Parisians capture the Hôtel de Ville. There, they raise the tricolor flag and ring the bell of Paris.
In just one day and night, 4,000 barricades had been erected across Paris, manned by up to 30,000 revolutionaries. Marmont receives no orders nor reinforcements.
In the early afternoon, the Louvre and the Tuileries palace is captured. Paris has fallen. The Liberals impose a provisional government and Lafayette is sent to calm the mobs before the whole affair degenerates like in 1792.
The cousin of the King, the Duke of Orleans, is chosen by the provisional government as the new King of France, Louis-Phillipe 1er. On August 2nd, Charles X and his son abdicate any rights to the throne of France and flee to England, thus extinguishing forever the Bourbon dynasty in France
#ProjectRevolution
https://wn.com/The_July_Revolution_Of_1830
When people think of the French revolution, they think of the 1789 one. They assume us French just cut our King’s head, among a few thousand more, and presto! We now had a republic. But that’s far from true. In fact, it would take 77 years before France got rid of its last monarch thanks to numerous revolutions, one of which was the July Revolution, better known as "Les Trois Glorieuses".
Ancient Accounts' video: https://youtu.be/xHnRsKUWhbo
Useful Charts' video: https://youtu.be/_S31SY-Wqd0
Project Revolution Playlist: http://yt.vu/p/PL0MwcDYjQCaNWvMbxAcLoTxvqOxfC24MW
Hi there! This is Barris, a French – American that lived most of his life in France and is passionate about learning, exploring, hiking and cooking. It’s a vast and beautiful world out there so join me as we discover the historical, cultural and culinary heritage of France, Europe and the rest of the World.
This, of course, will take a lot of resources and only you can make it happen! So, if you enjoy my content, please consider supporting the community by sharing, liking, commenting, and subscribing: https://www.youtube.com/c/thisisbarris?sub_confirmation=1
Following the defeat of Napoleon at the battle of Waterloo, the coalition restored France's borders back to their 1791 location and reinstalled the Bourbon dynasty through Louis XVI's brother, Louis XVIII
Louis XVIII reign was marked by relative peace and stability, which ushered in the beginnings of a French industrial revolution. On September 16th, 1824, he died at 68, childless. And so, the throne was given to his younger brother, Charles X.
Charles X embodied the worst of the Ancien Régime. His prime-minister was a leader of the ultra-royalist faction named Joseph de Villèle. In April 1825, he decided to compensate nobles whose estates had been confiscated during the revolution. This would end up costing close to 1 billion Francs. On the same month, he passed anti-blasphemy laws which were an affront to the religious liberty imposed by the constitution.
On November of that same year, legislative elections occurred. Ultra-royalists lost 228 deputies to the benefit of Liberals called Les Doctrinaires. They favored a constitutional monarchy and were led by LaFayette, who had staunchly opposed the Jacobin Club during the Reign of Terror.
Following this defeat, the King attempted to introduce new laws to tighten censorship but the deputies objected so violently that he had no choice but to withdraw the proposal. Villèle resigned and was replaced by a more moderate minister, Le Vicomte de Martignac, before being dismissed and replaced by Le Prince de Polignac, who was the son of La Duchesse de Polignac, aka the most hated woman of the Revolution.
On March 1830, the King threatened the opposition in a speech to the Assembly. In retaliation, 221 Liberal deputies voted in favor of a motion of no confidence.
Charles X then dissolved the assembly in hopes that a new election would restore the balance in favor of the ultra-royalists. It did not. The King was persuaded that no compromise could be made without threatening his throne and remained determined to keep his ministers. Finally, bolstered by the news of the recent capture of Algiers, Charles X released the infamous Saint-Cloud Ordinances on the 25th of July.
The first ordinance suspended the freedom of press. The second dissolved the new assembly even though it had been elected less than a week before. The third removed the right of vote of the liberal-leaning commercial bourgeoisie. This reduced the electoral body from under 100,000 to a mere 40,000 (France's pop = 33.6M)
Over 50 newspapers refused to submit to the new ordinances. When the local police attempt to seize their presses, they are attacked by a mob screaming, “A bas les Bourbons! Vive la Charte!”
By 5PM, the first barricades are risen and altercations between rioters and soldiers begin. From the rooftops, Parisians throw rocks, roof tiles and more onto the patrolling troops. At first, the soldiers fire in the air to scare them off but soon they aim to kill. 22 rioters are killed.
The King sends General Marmont to Paris. Nevertheless, the Parisians capture the Hôtel de Ville. There, they raise the tricolor flag and ring the bell of Paris.
In just one day and night, 4,000 barricades had been erected across Paris, manned by up to 30,000 revolutionaries. Marmont receives no orders nor reinforcements.
In the early afternoon, the Louvre and the Tuileries palace is captured. Paris has fallen. The Liberals impose a provisional government and Lafayette is sent to calm the mobs before the whole affair degenerates like in 1792.
The cousin of the King, the Duke of Orleans, is chosen by the provisional government as the new King of France, Louis-Phillipe 1er. On August 2nd, Charles X and his son abdicate any rights to the throne of France and flee to England, thus extinguishing forever the Bourbon dynasty in France
#ProjectRevolution
- published: 08 Jun 2019
- views: 71843
4:31
July Revolution | 3 Minute History
https://www.patreon.com/Jabzy
https://twitter.com/JabzyJoe
Music - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCjMZjGhrFq_4llVS_x2XJ_w
https://www.patreon.com/Jabzy
https://twitter.com/JabzyJoe
Music - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCjMZjGhrFq_4llVS_x2XJ_w
https://wn.com/July_Revolution_|_3_Minute_History
https://www.patreon.com/Jabzy
https://twitter.com/JabzyJoe
Music - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCjMZjGhrFq_4llVS_x2XJ_w
- published: 17 Feb 2019
- views: 34884
16:25
Revolutions of 1848: Crash Course European History #26
In 1848, Europe experienced a wave of revolutions. Last week we covered some of the reform movements that presaged these uprisings. This week, we're learning ab...
In 1848, Europe experienced a wave of revolutions. Last week we covered some of the reform movements that presaged these uprisings. This week, we're learning about what the people wanted from the revolutions, who was involved, and how many of those goals were accomplished. We'll look at revolutions in the Austrian Empire, Hungary, Italy, the German States, and the region formerly known as Poland.
Sources:
-Johann Nepomuk Höfel (1788-1964)-'the first uncensored newspaper are sold in street of Vienna after the revolution of 1848'-watercolour Wien-Historisches Museum der Stadt Wien
-Hunt, Lynn et al. The Challenge of the West: Peoples and Cultures from 1320 to the Global Age. Lexington MA: D. C. Heath, 1995.
-Judson, Pieter M. The Habsburg Empire: A New History. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2016.
-Kent, Susan Kingsley. A New History of Britain: Four Nations and an Empire. New York: Oxford University Press, 2017.
-Smith, Bonnie G. Changing Lives: Women in European History Since 1700. Lexington MA: D. C. Heath, 1989.
-Sperber, Jonathan. Revolutionary Europe, 1780-1850. 2nd ed. London: Routledge, 2017.
Crash Course is on Patreon! You can support us directly by signing up at http://www.patreon.com/crashcourse
Thanks to the following patrons for their generous monthly contributions that help keep Crash Course free for everyone forever:
Eric Prestemon, Sam Buck, Mark Brouwer, Indika Siriwardena, Avi Yashchin, Timothy J Kwist, Brian Thomas Gossett, Haixiang N/A Liu, Jonathan Zbikowski, Siobhan Sabino, Zach Van Stanley, Jennifer Killen, Nathan Catchings, Brandon Westmoreland, dorsey, Kenneth F Penttinen, Trevin Beattie, Erika & Alexa Saur, Justin Zingsheim, Jessica Wode, Tom Trval, Jason Saslow, Nathan Taylor, Khaled El Shalakany, SR Foxley, Sam Ferguson, Yasenia Cruz, Eric Koslow, Tim Curwick, David Noe, Shawn Arnold, William McGraw, Andrei Krishkevich, Rachel Bright, Jirat, Ian Dundore
--
Want to find Crash Course elsewhere on the internet?
Facebook - http://www.facebook.com/YouTubeCrashCourse
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Support Crash Course on Patreon: http://patreon.com/crashcourse
CC Kids: http://www.youtube.com/crashcoursekids
#crashcourse #history #europeanhistory
https://wn.com/Revolutions_Of_1848_Crash_Course_European_History_26
In 1848, Europe experienced a wave of revolutions. Last week we covered some of the reform movements that presaged these uprisings. This week, we're learning about what the people wanted from the revolutions, who was involved, and how many of those goals were accomplished. We'll look at revolutions in the Austrian Empire, Hungary, Italy, the German States, and the region formerly known as Poland.
Sources:
-Johann Nepomuk Höfel (1788-1964)-'the first uncensored newspaper are sold in street of Vienna after the revolution of 1848'-watercolour Wien-Historisches Museum der Stadt Wien
-Hunt, Lynn et al. The Challenge of the West: Peoples and Cultures from 1320 to the Global Age. Lexington MA: D. C. Heath, 1995.
-Judson, Pieter M. The Habsburg Empire: A New History. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2016.
-Kent, Susan Kingsley. A New History of Britain: Four Nations and an Empire. New York: Oxford University Press, 2017.
-Smith, Bonnie G. Changing Lives: Women in European History Since 1700. Lexington MA: D. C. Heath, 1989.
-Sperber, Jonathan. Revolutionary Europe, 1780-1850. 2nd ed. London: Routledge, 2017.
Crash Course is on Patreon! You can support us directly by signing up at http://www.patreon.com/crashcourse
Thanks to the following patrons for their generous monthly contributions that help keep Crash Course free for everyone forever:
Eric Prestemon, Sam Buck, Mark Brouwer, Indika Siriwardena, Avi Yashchin, Timothy J Kwist, Brian Thomas Gossett, Haixiang N/A Liu, Jonathan Zbikowski, Siobhan Sabino, Zach Van Stanley, Jennifer Killen, Nathan Catchings, Brandon Westmoreland, dorsey, Kenneth F Penttinen, Trevin Beattie, Erika & Alexa Saur, Justin Zingsheim, Jessica Wode, Tom Trval, Jason Saslow, Nathan Taylor, Khaled El Shalakany, SR Foxley, Sam Ferguson, Yasenia Cruz, Eric Koslow, Tim Curwick, David Noe, Shawn Arnold, William McGraw, Andrei Krishkevich, Rachel Bright, Jirat, Ian Dundore
--
Want to find Crash Course elsewhere on the internet?
Facebook - http://www.facebook.com/YouTubeCrashCourse
Twitter - http://www.twitter.com/TheCrashCourse
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Support Crash Course on Patreon: http://patreon.com/crashcourse
CC Kids: http://www.youtube.com/crashcoursekids
#crashcourse #history #europeanhistory
- published: 19 Nov 2019
- views: 995870
19:32
July Revolution 1830 | European History | Lectures by Waqas Aziz
July Revolution 1830 | European History | Lectures by Waqas Aziz
July Revolution 1830 is known as the second French Revolution. After the death of Louis XVIII,...
July Revolution 1830 | European History | Lectures by Waqas Aziz
July Revolution 1830 is known as the second French Revolution. After the death of Louis XVIII, Charles X became the emperor of France. He was conservative. He wanted to restore absolute monarchy and the privileges of clergy and nobles. His appointment of Prince Polignac as Minister raised some serious concerns among French people. Besides, his infamous and unconstitutional ordinances provoked revolutionary sentiments among masses. Resultantly, a three day revolution forced Charles X to abdicate his throne in favour of Louis Philippe.
This lecture explains July Revolution of 1830 in France in detail.
Other Playlists on my channel
➡️ Playlist of Political Science 👇
https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PL3T6dsqle3vm6exYORzs89cUuFpQxlSFL
➡️ Playlist of Greek Philosophers👇
https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PL3T6dsqle3vna2cwa7Ygm-S5o649Y07Sa
➡️ Playlist of Concepts of Philosophy👇
https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PL3T6dsqle3vkwnzAtHQgN1b5ZlixOaMFN
➡️ Playlist of Philosophical Methods 👇
https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PL3T6dsqle3vnz9VAkKXgk-3zp42c9ktw1
➡️ Sociology Lectures 👇
https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PL3T6dsqle3vmGxYHNCoR6gGb2HouUWBAK
➡️ English Vocabulary 👇
https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PL3T6dsqle3vlpdGPUyofrZRMpKtMB9WZm
Regards: Lectures by Waqas Aziz
#waqasazizlectures
#lecturesbywaqasaziz
#waqasaziz
#europeanhistory
#europeanhistorycss
#europeanhistoryupsc
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#concepts
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#upscpreparation
#july
#revolution
#julyrevolution1830
https://wn.com/July_Revolution_1830_|_European_History_|_Lectures_By_Waqas_Aziz
July Revolution 1830 | European History | Lectures by Waqas Aziz
July Revolution 1830 is known as the second French Revolution. After the death of Louis XVIII, Charles X became the emperor of France. He was conservative. He wanted to restore absolute monarchy and the privileges of clergy and nobles. His appointment of Prince Polignac as Minister raised some serious concerns among French people. Besides, his infamous and unconstitutional ordinances provoked revolutionary sentiments among masses. Resultantly, a three day revolution forced Charles X to abdicate his throne in favour of Louis Philippe.
This lecture explains July Revolution of 1830 in France in detail.
Other Playlists on my channel
➡️ Playlist of Political Science 👇
https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PL3T6dsqle3vm6exYORzs89cUuFpQxlSFL
➡️ Playlist of Greek Philosophers👇
https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PL3T6dsqle3vna2cwa7Ygm-S5o649Y07Sa
➡️ Playlist of Concepts of Philosophy👇
https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PL3T6dsqle3vkwnzAtHQgN1b5ZlixOaMFN
➡️ Playlist of Philosophical Methods 👇
https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PL3T6dsqle3vnz9VAkKXgk-3zp42c9ktw1
➡️ Sociology Lectures 👇
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Regards: Lectures by Waqas Aziz
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- published: 06 Oct 2023
- views: 7900
31:54
Europe Ablaze: The 1848 Revolutions
This is the story of the 1848 European revolutions, one of the most dramatic and significant moments in the history of the continent. Hungry workers and peasant...
This is the story of the 1848 European revolutions, one of the most dramatic and significant moments in the history of the continent. Hungry workers and peasants joined forces with liberals and nationalists, and in a series of tumultuous events, toppled the French monarchy, and forced reforms across Italy, Germany, and the Austrian Empire. But the revolutionaries were divided between middle class liberals seeking limited reforms, and radicals and workers who wanted sweeping change. As they argued over political and economic reform, counter-revolutionary forces recovered their confidence, and gathered their strength for a brutal onslaught against Europe's revolutionaries.
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Radetzky March performed by the United States Marine Band.
#EpicHistoryTV #1848 #Revolutions
https://wn.com/Europe_Ablaze_The_1848_Revolutions
This is the story of the 1848 European revolutions, one of the most dramatic and significant moments in the history of the continent. Hungry workers and peasants joined forces with liberals and nationalists, and in a series of tumultuous events, toppled the French monarchy, and forced reforms across Italy, Germany, and the Austrian Empire. But the revolutionaries were divided between middle class liberals seeking limited reforms, and radicals and workers who wanted sweeping change. As they argued over political and economic reform, counter-revolutionary forces recovered their confidence, and gathered their strength for a brutal onslaught against Europe's revolutionaries.
Support Epic History TV on Patreon from $1 per video, and get perks including ad-free early access & votes on future topics https://www.patreon.com/EpicHistoryTV
👕 Buy posters, t-shirts, hoodies, mugs & stickers at our merch store: https://crowdmade.com/collections/epichistorytv
Visit our online bookshop to find great books on this and other topics:
UK site - https://uk.bookshop.org/shop/epichistorytv
US site - https://bookshop.org/shop/epichistorytv
As a bookshop.org affiliate we earn from qualifying purchases while donating 10% of sales to support independent bookshops!
🎶Music from Filmstro: https://filmstro.com/?ref=7765
Get 20% off an annual license with this exclusive code: EPICHISTORYTV_ANN
Radetzky March performed by the United States Marine Band.
#EpicHistoryTV #1848 #Revolutions
- published: 05 Aug 2022
- views: 1159730
3:22
Why didn't Britain have a Revolution in 1848? (Short Animated Documentary)
Loads of European countries had revolutions or wars in 1848 but the United Kingdom didn't. So why not?
A special thanks to my Patreon supporters below:
Jens K...
Loads of European countries had revolutions or wars in 1848 but the United Kingdom didn't. So why not?
A special thanks to my Patreon supporters below:
Jens Koch-Nommensen
Øystein Alsaker
Carl Österbrand
Sergio M. Vela
Heath Robertson
Matthew Hogan
Dave Brondsema
Michael Kram
Hasmuffin
Franco La Bruna
Ethan
Bradley chaulk
Azlow the Lion
Spencer W
Don Bonnigan
Southside Mitch
Ian Whitcomb
John
Justin Kubusch
Adam Barrett
JakeBak0905
Ryan Schindeler
Person
Ray Charles Barkley
Sean D.
Alex Teplyakov
Philip Yip
BeninPrince51
Jane Sumpter
Joooooshhhhhh
Shauna K
Martha Grondin
Ariel David Moya Sequeira
sharpie660
imperialgerman
Andrea Dekrout
Farquhar Ramshackle
Nathan Mendelsohn
Shion
Paul Munro
Piotr Wojnowski
Vance Christiaanse
Mario Peshev
Joshua Rackstraw
Aaron Conaway
Phoenix Fats
Tom Ebert
DocOzz13 .
S. Marisol Asselta
Christopher Godfrey
Travis Mount
Andreas Mosand
Barry
Konstantin Bredyuk
Joshua Schneider
Colonel Oneill
Tailsdoll
Steven Gibson
Jack Nelson
Tony Belmonte
zockotron
Erik Hare
Dr. Schtnizel
ConspiracyPizza
Adrian Marine
MGS2600
Roman Kynčl
Angel Aguiñaga
Nicholas Menghini
Windischgraetz
Contdoko12
Shakira Graham
Jack Wicks
Ivaer
Baste
Porkmeister
Andrew F
Zhao Liu
Andy McGehee
William Swiacki
Ron Johnson
Jamie van Brewen
Jake Faust
Phillip Gathright
D. Mahlik
Shawn Morse
Nick Macarius
Bret Allan
Matthew Toles
Nolan Peale
Tactical_Jackal
Katie Flinn
HelloAgain
Thomas McGraw
Keith A. Layton
Jacob Zachs
Joe DeVito
Bradley Backoff
GrokThis
Sahni
Ciege Engine
John Garcia
Dana Spurgeon
Snowdon
Vilena5
Chris Winther
Andrew Patane
Allen Rines
Michael Galloway
Tiffany Twisted
mgnesium.poetry
Carl Blanton
Chase Labiste
Sethars
Bernice
Leena Al-Souki
Matt Reed
Zach Rust
Liam Gilleece
Harley Raptopoulos
Serius_Loyola
blaZzinG_FurY
Zachary Pascalar
Michael Myers
Chris Weisel
Mickey Landen
Imperial Pony
Tim Stone
Dullis
george tyler
Fabrizio Zagonel
Clayton Schuman
William Adderholdt
KNSTRKTVST
Ben Drums 24
Brian George
ThePalestRose
Greyceful
Joel Cromwell
B Dryad
Perry Gagne
bas mensink
TH
David van Reyk
Matthew O'Connor
Wilhelm Screamer
Logical Insanity
ARandomPaperClip
Aaron Larrow
Bodo Nuber
Justin Short
JAY ALAN EDELMAN
No way
Anthony McCann
Jason Gould
Łukasz Burchard
Ryan Marinelli
Bartosz Zasada
Ahmed Roshdi
Curt Helmerich
Abhijeeth
Dexter_McAaron
Joseph Hutchins
Tim Stumbaugh
Chach
Tim Sweeney
Ian Smith
Tyler Jenkins
Alex Slepak
Toshnika
Blue Cardinal
Liquid Chief
luvrhino
Matthew Ward
Nathan Ngumi
Oliver Jenner
Stefan Møller
Ned Burke
kevinh
Colm Byrne
Bernardo Cavalcanti
William Wilkerson
Romney Manassa
Hexapuma
Geoffrey Sparrow
Ryan Lowe
Andrew Niedbala
Joel Wasserman
Warren Rudkin
Random Insanity
Adam Rabung
Steven Mastronardo
Magdalena Reinberg-Leibel
Ali Sadighian
Benjamin Bowring
Robin!
Vegard Tønnessen
BattleGoat Studios
anon
Brian Giordano
Christian Vasquez Leon
Emily Glover-Wilson
Joseph Reinsch
Juan Castillo
John Orr
Clay Carroll
Sterling Archer
Ethan Harlow
Bren Ehnebuske
Thomas McGill
Ryan Haber
Alen
William Clark
James
Rob Rollins
Yared Cristiano
Emily D
Burt Clothier
Richard Wolfe
Jonny Minogue
Gordon Wilson
Daniel D.
Melissa Prober
Dustin Koellhoffer
SirAlpaka
Zach Weakland
nullptr
Joker 54
Matt Busch
Donald Weaver
Yosef Waysman
Thomas Wang
Mars Project
Peter Marino
Juan Benet
Azul Bravestrong
Manny F
Hiro P
Ball State
SketerK
pdswanfleet
Kirk Hoffman
Pat Stahl
Eric Askins
JT96
Tino
Ian M
Yuichiro Kakutani
Laurent Othacehe
Andrey Listochkin
DHILON RAY
Jeffrey Schneider
Paoli Ferlicca
Michael Dierker
I'm Not In The Description
Kevin Phoenix
hefcluba
David Spellmeyer
Tristan Kreller
Scott Oppel
Mik Scheper
0_DannyBoy
אורי פרקש
Joseph Kerckhoff
Augustus Caesar
Sean Long
Steve Bonds
Mark Ploegstra
LambOfLeg
Allen
Mirza Ahmed
Anthony Uk
Sara Birnbaum
mohd
James R DeVries
Sophie Winter
Dan Reiher
Jesse Plung
Austin Martin
Joshua A Bishop
Phil and Lisa Toland
Dutchball Animations
Lech Duraj
Roko Lisica
Tranier Bocaj
Alex G.
Hunter Bayliss
Michael Wagner
Now Seibert
John Gross-Whitaker
Gregory Priebe
Wolf
Miky Hidalgo Morriss
Doug MacLean
Mr. Awesome
Colm Boyle
Charles Doolittle
Robert Brockway
Zachary Oertel
Victor Gomez
Franklin Sousa
Danny Anstess
Seth Reeves
Rita Cragwall
Heytun
Isabel Harrison
Chasen Le Hara
Will Sullivan
Peter Konieczny
Dr. Sarno
AltHistoryConjectures
Nathan Snyder
Igor Stavchanskiy
Riley davidson
George Caponera
Dr. Howard Dr. Fine Dr. Howard
Kinfe85
Theodosius the Elder
LAMAR DANIEL-KELLY
Andrew Sever
Lindorien
Paul McGee
Abdallah Al-Ammari
[email protected]
João Santos
Daniel O'Reilly
Deadlock
Typhoon2401
Michael Corson
Markus Lindström
Gezza The Random Reviewer
blei95
M Scho
Robin_Col
Olaf
Kasi
Schwarzer Hai
Jan Bart Verbist
biohazardgamer
Tarsirrus
Laura Jeal
Rhys Little
James
Ben L
Jackarice26
joshua smyth
Justin McDaid
Harrison Tatem-Wyatt
Gina Service
Twinny Hill
zemnmez
KingKyumber
Roberticus1992
Rhys Jackson
Baby Routemaster
Tom Pollard
DarkLycan
Matthew Shelby
Phil Johnston
https://wn.com/Why_Didn't_Britain_Have_A_Revolution_In_1848_(Short_Animated_Documentary)
Loads of European countries had revolutions or wars in 1848 but the United Kingdom didn't. So why not?
A special thanks to my Patreon supporters below:
Jens Koch-Nommensen
Øystein Alsaker
Carl Österbrand
Sergio M. Vela
Heath Robertson
Matthew Hogan
Dave Brondsema
Michael Kram
Hasmuffin
Franco La Bruna
Ethan
Bradley chaulk
Azlow the Lion
Spencer W
Don Bonnigan
Southside Mitch
Ian Whitcomb
John
Justin Kubusch
Adam Barrett
JakeBak0905
Ryan Schindeler
Person
Ray Charles Barkley
Sean D.
Alex Teplyakov
Philip Yip
BeninPrince51
Jane Sumpter
Joooooshhhhhh
Shauna K
Martha Grondin
Ariel David Moya Sequeira
sharpie660
imperialgerman
Andrea Dekrout
Farquhar Ramshackle
Nathan Mendelsohn
Shion
Paul Munro
Piotr Wojnowski
Vance Christiaanse
Mario Peshev
Joshua Rackstraw
Aaron Conaway
Phoenix Fats
Tom Ebert
DocOzz13 .
S. Marisol Asselta
Christopher Godfrey
Travis Mount
Andreas Mosand
Barry
Konstantin Bredyuk
Joshua Schneider
Colonel Oneill
Tailsdoll
Steven Gibson
Jack Nelson
Tony Belmonte
zockotron
Erik Hare
Dr. Schtnizel
ConspiracyPizza
Adrian Marine
MGS2600
Roman Kynčl
Angel Aguiñaga
Nicholas Menghini
Windischgraetz
Contdoko12
Shakira Graham
Jack Wicks
Ivaer
Baste
Porkmeister
Andrew F
Zhao Liu
Andy McGehee
William Swiacki
Ron Johnson
Jamie van Brewen
Jake Faust
Phillip Gathright
D. Mahlik
Shawn Morse
Nick Macarius
Bret Allan
Matthew Toles
Nolan Peale
Tactical_Jackal
Katie Flinn
HelloAgain
Thomas McGraw
Keith A. Layton
Jacob Zachs
Joe DeVito
Bradley Backoff
GrokThis
Sahni
Ciege Engine
John Garcia
Dana Spurgeon
Snowdon
Vilena5
Chris Winther
Andrew Patane
Allen Rines
Michael Galloway
Tiffany Twisted
mgnesium.poetry
Carl Blanton
Chase Labiste
Sethars
Bernice
Leena Al-Souki
Matt Reed
Zach Rust
Liam Gilleece
Harley Raptopoulos
Serius_Loyola
blaZzinG_FurY
Zachary Pascalar
Michael Myers
Chris Weisel
Mickey Landen
Imperial Pony
Tim Stone
Dullis
george tyler
Fabrizio Zagonel
Clayton Schuman
William Adderholdt
KNSTRKTVST
Ben Drums 24
Brian George
ThePalestRose
Greyceful
Joel Cromwell
B Dryad
Perry Gagne
bas mensink
TH
David van Reyk
Matthew O'Connor
Wilhelm Screamer
Logical Insanity
ARandomPaperClip
Aaron Larrow
Bodo Nuber
Justin Short
JAY ALAN EDELMAN
No way
Anthony McCann
Jason Gould
Łukasz Burchard
Ryan Marinelli
Bartosz Zasada
Ahmed Roshdi
Curt Helmerich
Abhijeeth
Dexter_McAaron
Joseph Hutchins
Tim Stumbaugh
Chach
Tim Sweeney
Ian Smith
Tyler Jenkins
Alex Slepak
Toshnika
Blue Cardinal
Liquid Chief
luvrhino
Matthew Ward
Nathan Ngumi
Oliver Jenner
Stefan Møller
Ned Burke
kevinh
Colm Byrne
Bernardo Cavalcanti
William Wilkerson
Romney Manassa
Hexapuma
Geoffrey Sparrow
Ryan Lowe
Andrew Niedbala
Joel Wasserman
Warren Rudkin
Random Insanity
Adam Rabung
Steven Mastronardo
Magdalena Reinberg-Leibel
Ali Sadighian
Benjamin Bowring
Robin!
Vegard Tønnessen
BattleGoat Studios
anon
Brian Giordano
Christian Vasquez Leon
Emily Glover-Wilson
Joseph Reinsch
Juan Castillo
John Orr
Clay Carroll
Sterling Archer
Ethan Harlow
Bren Ehnebuske
Thomas McGill
Ryan Haber
Alen
William Clark
James
Rob Rollins
Yared Cristiano
Emily D
Burt Clothier
Richard Wolfe
Jonny Minogue
Gordon Wilson
Daniel D.
Melissa Prober
Dustin Koellhoffer
SirAlpaka
Zach Weakland
nullptr
Joker 54
Matt Busch
Donald Weaver
Yosef Waysman
Thomas Wang
Mars Project
Peter Marino
Juan Benet
Azul Bravestrong
Manny F
Hiro P
Ball State
SketerK
pdswanfleet
Kirk Hoffman
Pat Stahl
Eric Askins
JT96
Tino
Ian M
Yuichiro Kakutani
Laurent Othacehe
Andrey Listochkin
DHILON RAY
Jeffrey Schneider
Paoli Ferlicca
Michael Dierker
I'm Not In The Description
Kevin Phoenix
hefcluba
David Spellmeyer
Tristan Kreller
Scott Oppel
Mik Scheper
0_DannyBoy
אורי פרקש
Joseph Kerckhoff
Augustus Caesar
Sean Long
Steve Bonds
Mark Ploegstra
LambOfLeg
Allen
Mirza Ahmed
Anthony Uk
Sara Birnbaum
mohd
James R DeVries
Sophie Winter
Dan Reiher
Jesse Plung
Austin Martin
Joshua A Bishop
Phil and Lisa Toland
Dutchball Animations
Lech Duraj
Roko Lisica
Tranier Bocaj
Alex G.
Hunter Bayliss
Michael Wagner
Now Seibert
John Gross-Whitaker
Gregory Priebe
Wolf
Miky Hidalgo Morriss
Doug MacLean
Mr. Awesome
Colm Boyle
Charles Doolittle
Robert Brockway
Zachary Oertel
Victor Gomez
Franklin Sousa
Danny Anstess
Seth Reeves
Rita Cragwall
Heytun
Isabel Harrison
Chasen Le Hara
Will Sullivan
Peter Konieczny
Dr. Sarno
AltHistoryConjectures
Nathan Snyder
Igor Stavchanskiy
Riley davidson
George Caponera
Dr. Howard Dr. Fine Dr. Howard
Kinfe85
Theodosius the Elder
LAMAR DANIEL-KELLY
Andrew Sever
Lindorien
Paul McGee
Abdallah Al-Ammari
[email protected]
João Santos
Daniel O'Reilly
Deadlock
Typhoon2401
Michael Corson
Markus Lindström
Gezza The Random Reviewer
blei95
M Scho
Robin_Col
Olaf
Kasi
Schwarzer Hai
Jan Bart Verbist
biohazardgamer
Tarsirrus
Laura Jeal
Rhys Little
James
Ben L
Jackarice26
joshua smyth
Justin McDaid
Harrison Tatem-Wyatt
Gina Service
Twinny Hill
zemnmez
KingKyumber
Roberticus1992
Rhys Jackson
Baby Routemaster
Tom Pollard
DarkLycan
Matthew Shelby
Phil Johnston
- published: 28 Jul 2022
- views: 1212742
9:42
What Were the Revolutions of 1830 and 1848? AP Euro Bit by Bit #30
The ideologies of liberalism, nationalism, and conservatism came into conflict in Europe in 1830 and 1848. Across the continent, revolutions broke out. Most of ...
The ideologies of liberalism, nationalism, and conservatism came into conflict in Europe in 1830 and 1848. Across the continent, revolutions broke out. Most of them failed. Here's a brief overview of some of those revolutions.
https://wn.com/What_Were_The_Revolutions_Of_1830_And_1848_Ap_Euro_Bit_By_Bit_30
The ideologies of liberalism, nationalism, and conservatism came into conflict in Europe in 1830 and 1848. Across the continent, revolutions broke out. Most of them failed. Here's a brief overview of some of those revolutions.
- published: 27 Jan 2016
- views: 115533
6:11
The REVOLUTIONS of 1848, Explained [AP Euro—Unit 6 Topic 6]
AP HEIMLER REVIEW GUIDE (formerly known as the Ultimate Review Packet):
+AP Euro Heimler Review Guide: https://bit.ly/3PCPyiw
+AP Essay CRAM Course (DBQ, LEQ,...
AP HEIMLER REVIEW GUIDE (formerly known as the Ultimate Review Packet):
+AP Euro Heimler Review Guide: https://bit.ly/3PCPyiw
+AP Essay CRAM Course (DBQ, LEQ, SAQ Help): https://bit.ly/3XuwaWN
+Bundle Heimler Review Guide and Essay CRAM Course: https://bit.ly/3XvJGt4
GET FOLLOW-ALONG NOTEGUIDES for this video: https://bit.ly/432NiE9
HEIMLER’S HISTORY MERCH! https://bit.ly/3d3iejm
Tiktok: @steveheimler
Instagram: @heimlers_history
Heimler's History DISCORD Server: https://discord.gg/heimlershistory
In this video Heimler explains what you need to know about Unit 6 Topic 6 (6.6) of the AP European History curriculum which is all about how various European states reacted against the conservatism applied to them in the Concert of Europe, the most potent expressions of which came in the Revolutions of 1848.
https://wn.com/The_Revolutions_Of_1848,_Explained_Ap_Euro—Unit_6_Topic_6
AP HEIMLER REVIEW GUIDE (formerly known as the Ultimate Review Packet):
+AP Euro Heimler Review Guide: https://bit.ly/3PCPyiw
+AP Essay CRAM Course (DBQ, LEQ, SAQ Help): https://bit.ly/3XuwaWN
+Bundle Heimler Review Guide and Essay CRAM Course: https://bit.ly/3XvJGt4
GET FOLLOW-ALONG NOTEGUIDES for this video: https://bit.ly/432NiE9
HEIMLER’S HISTORY MERCH! https://bit.ly/3d3iejm
Tiktok: @steveheimler
Instagram: @heimlers_history
Heimler's History DISCORD Server: https://discord.gg/heimlershistory
In this video Heimler explains what you need to know about Unit 6 Topic 6 (6.6) of the AP European History curriculum which is all about how various European states reacted against the conservatism applied to them in the Concert of Europe, the most potent expressions of which came in the Revolutions of 1848.
- published: 19 Jan 2023
- views: 65889