We're sunsetting PodQuest on 2025-07-28. Thank you for your support!
Export Podcast Subscriptions
cover of episode The Congress of Vienna and the Roots of World War I

The Congress of Vienna and the Roots of World War I

2024/1/4
logo of podcast World War I Podcast

World War I Podcast

Shownotes Transcript

Between September 1814 and June 1815, against the backdrop of Napoleon’s exile to Elba and his brief return, the Congress of Vienna worked out a new way to balance the power of the Great Powers and avoid future conflict. This system was called the Concert of Europe. It was supposed to keep the peace, and indeed, on the eve of World War I, many people in Europe were celebrating a century of relative peace on the continent – a golden age of European power and civilization. There had been regional conflicts in Europe and colonial wars, but nothing on the scale of the Napoleonic Wars. And yet, what started as a small regional conflict in 1914 spiraled quickly into world war. WWI was a war with a long fuse. Was the Congress of Vienna and the system it set up a long-term root cause of the war? Was a system designed to keep the peace the instrument that disrupted the peace? To discuss these questions, the World War I Podcast sat down with Professor Greg Jackson, creator, host, and head writer of the US history podcast, History That Doesn't Suck) and star of the live tour THE UNLIKELY UNION.Tour Dates — History That Doesn't Suck (htdspodcast.com))

Have a comment about this episode? Send us a text message! (Note: we can read texts, but we cannot respond.))

Follow us:

  • **Twitter: @MacArthur1880) **
  • Amanda Williams on Twitter: ** ****@AEWilliamsClark**)
  • **Facebook/Instagram: ****@MacArthurMemorial**)

www.macarthurmemorial.org )