Western Civilization - History Of European Society

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

466 Chapter 24


economies in which “man has exploited man” and called
for a new order based upon the principle “from each
according to his capacity, to each according to his
productivity.”
Charles Fourier proposed utopian communities,
which he called phalansteries. Fourier envisioned an
idealistic, but highly structured, society whose mem-
bers shared labor and freedom. Other pioneers called
for a cooperative socialism of workers, a Christian
socialism based upon Jesus’s devotion to the poor, or a


democratic socialism, on the theory that the poor
would have a majority in a true democracy and create a
socialist society. The champion of democratic socialism
was a French journalist, Louis Blanc, who developed the
idea of a strong socialist state that regulated the econ-
omy and provided work for the unemployed in national
workshops.
A final doctrine of social change, feminism, had
not yet acquired that name (a late nineteenth-century
coinage) but already called for reconsideration of the

SPAIN
PORTUGAL

FRANCE

BELGIUM

ENGLAND
IRELAND

SCOTLAND

NETHERLANDS

ITALY

SWITZERLAND

DENMARK

SWEDEN

NORWAY

FINLAND

GERMANY

AUSTRIA-HUNGARY

MONTENEGROSERBIA
BULGARIA

OTTOMAN EMPIR

RUSSIA

ROMANIA

ALBANIA
GREECE

Dneip
erR
.

Danueb
R.

Po R.

Seine R.

Rh
ine
R.

Ebro
R.

Balt

ic

Se

a

Atlantic

Ocean

Mediterranean Sea

North
Sea

Black Sea

SPANISH

PORTUGUESE

BASQUE

BRETON
FRENCH

CATALAN

PROVENCAL

WALLOON

DUTCH

ERSE

GAELIC

WELSH
CORNISH

ENGLISH
FLEMISH GERMAN

ITALIAN

GREEK

ALBANIAN

BULGARIAN

TURKISH

ROMANIAN
CROATIAN
SERBIAN

SLOVENIAN

HUNGARIAN
(MAGYAR)

SLOVAKIAN

CZECH

POLISH

UKRAINIAN

RUTHENIAN

RHAETO-
ROMANCE

WHITE
RUSSIAN

GREAT
RUSSIAN

LITHUANIAN

LATVIAN
(LETTISH)

ESTONIAN

FINNISH

SWEDISH
NORWEGIAN

DANISH

Corsica

Sardinia

Sicily

Crete

Balea

ricI

slan

ds

Cyprus
Slavic
Hellenic
Germanic

Latin
Other

Celtic
Baltic

Root language groups

0 250 500 Miles

0 250 500 750 Kilometers

MAP 24.2
Language Distribution in Nineteenth-Century Europe
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