494 Chapter 25
among the great powers since the defeat of Napoleon.
The Crimean War, was fought around the Black Sea
(chiefly on the Russian peninsula of the Crimea). It
demonstrated two important changes in the post-
Metternichian world. First, the public discussion of inter-
national politics had changed. Ideology no longer defined
relations—the politics of self-interest did. The Metter-
nichian system had (in theory) united the great powers to
defend the status quo; during the Crimean War, the great
powers were candidly motivated by national interests,
and they were willing to fight for them. As the nationalist
foreign secretary of Britain, Lord Palmerston, told Parlia-
ment, “We have no eternal allies and we have no perpet-
ual enemies. Our interests are eternal and perpetual, and
these interests it is our duty to follow.”
The second change in post-Metternichian power
politics had more frightening implications: The
Crimean War gave the world its first glimpse of war in
the industrial age, teaching lessons that were amplified
during the 1860s by the American Civil War and the
wars of German unification. Metallurgical advances, the
factory system using interchangeable parts, and steam-
powered transportation industrialized war.
The Crimean War originated in the eastern ques-
tion, the complex issue of the survival of the Ottoman
Empire. In the late seventeenth century, the Ottoman
Empire had encompassed all of southeastern Europe, al-
most to the gates of Vienna (see map 25.2). By the end
of the Napoleonic Wars, the Ottomans had lost vast
territories to the Habsburg Empire (including both
Hungary and Transylvania) and to the Russian Empire
(which annexed the Crimea in 1783 and Bessarabia in
1812). In the 1850s Sultan Abdul Mejid ruled the east-
ern Mediterranean, the Balkans, the Middle East, andCaesareaPalmyraDura-EuropusTyrus SeleuciaRomeArretiumPuteoliOstiaCarnuntum
ApulumBrundislumAquileiaSalonaeColonia Agrippina
Augusta TreverorumArelateAlexandriaAnconaCarthageCyrenteCorinth
SyracuseRhegiumPergamum
EphesusNicomediaSinopeByzantium TrapesusAntiochiaTarsusJerusalem
GazaLUX. NurembergITALYSWITZ.BernLocarno
FiumeRomeROMANIAHUNGARY(AUSTRIA)SLOVAKIAGERMANYBelgradeSofiaBucharestPragueIstanbul(CZECH.)Sava
R.THESSALYAthensSLOVENIA
CROATIAPERSIAIRAQTRANS-
JORDANPALESTINELEBANONSYRIACYRENAICAPo R.Black SeaRed
SeaCaspian
SeaMe
dite
rran
ean
SeaDanubeR..iN
le
R.RhoneR.Dniep
erR.Tigr
isR
.Euphr
ates
R.AlpsMts.SardiniaCorsicaSicilyCreteRhodes
CyprusBalearics
AthensViennaKievSevastopolJerusalemCairoBaghdadConstantinopleAlgiersVeniceBudapestBOSNIABULGARIASERBIA
(1817)HUNGARY
(1699)TRANSYLVANIA
(1699)BUKOVINA
(1775)BANAT
(1718)DALMATIA
(1699)
MONTENEGROALBANIA
MACEDONIAMOLDAVIA
(1828)WALLACHIA
(1829)BESSARABIA
(1812)EMPIREOTTOMANEGYPT
(1811)CRIMEAN
(1774)JEDISAN
(1792)TRIPOLITUNISALGERIA
(1830)GREECE
(1830)0 200 400 Miles0 200 400 600 KilometersOttoman Empire
Regions winning
Independence
Regions winning
Autonomous GovernmentRegions lost to Russia
Regions lost to Austria
Regions lost to FranceMAP 25.2
The Decline of the Ottoman Empire to 1853