19th century  

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-[[Image:Véritable portrait de Monsieur Ubu, par Alfred Jarry (1896).png|thumb|right|200px|'''''Ubu Roi''''' (King Ubu) is a [[play]] developed by [[Alfred Jarry]] premiered on [[December 10]] [[1896]], and is widely acknowledged as a theatrical [[precursor]] to the [[Theatre of the Absurd|Absurdist]], [[Dada]] and [[Surrealism|Surrealist]] art movements.]]+[[Image:Véritable portrait de Monsieur Ubu, par Alfred Jarry (1896).png|thumb|left|200px|''[[True Portrait of Monsieur Ubu]]'' (1896) by Alfred Jarry]]
-[[Image:L'Absinthe (1876) - Edgar Degas.jpg|thumb|right|200px|''[[L'Absinthe]]'' ([[1876]]) - [[Edgar Degas]]]]+{| class="toccolours" style="float: left; margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 2em; font-size: 85%; background:#c6dbf7; color:black; width:30em; max-width: 40%;" cellspacing="5"
-[[Image:The Great Wave off Kanagawa by Hokusai.jpg|thumb|right|200px|''[[The Great Wave off Kanagawa]]'' ([[1820s]]), [[woodblock printing in Japan|woodblock printing]] by [[Hokusai]]]]+| style="text-align: left;" |
 +"The [[nineteenth century]] not only shows a [[new age]], but probably begins a new section of [[universal history]]. It is probable that in contrast with this epoch of stirring movement, during which the readjustment of all political and social relations, the new discoveries in the instruments of commerce, trade, and industry have given an entirely new aspect to the world, the next thousand years will sum up all the previous centuries as the "[[old world]]." New men require a [[new art]]. One would be inclined to surmise from this that [[the art of the nineteenth century]] presented itself as something essentially personal, with a sharply distinctive style. Instead of this it offers at first view, in contrast with those old ages of uniform production, a condition like that of [[Babylon]]. The nineteenth century has no [[style]]--the phrase that has been so often quoted as to have become a commonplace."--''[[The History of Modern Painting]]'' (1893/94) Richard Muther
 +<hr>
 +"The [[Industrial Revolution]], starting in England, where scientific research and applied science ushered in the Machine Age, spread rapidly. The half-century from 1800 to 1850 saw the first of many inventions: steamboat, locomotive, transatlantic liner, and passenger train as well as the telegraph and the camera — all which, with other factors, eventuated in a great expansion of industry; in the rise of the wealthy manufacturer to challenge the wealthy [[landowner]]; in the drift of population to the cities where the manufacturing plants were located, with consequent [[overcrowding]]; in the emergence of those social and economic conditions which gave rise to [[socialism]] and other attempts to alleviate their [[injustice]]. The application of the scientific viewpoint, with its critical observation of phenomena, produced Darwin’s ''[[The Origin of Species]]'' (1859) and a consequent long line of research; and a weakening of [[religious faith]]." --''[[Gardner's Art Through the Ages]]'' (1926) by Helen Gardner
 +|}
 + 
 +[[Image:Darwin ape.jpg|thumb|right|As "[[Darwinism]]" became widely accepted in the 1870s, good-natured caricatures of him with an [[ape]] or [[monkey]] body symbolised evolution.]]
 +[[Image:L'Absinthe (1876) - Edgar Degas.jpg|thumb|right|200px|''[[L'Absinthe]]'' (1876) by Edgar Degas]]
 +[[Image:The Great Wave off Kanagawa by Hokusai.jpg|thumb|right|200px|''[[The Great Wave off Kanagawa]]'' (1832) by Hokusai]]
[[Image:Edgar Allan Poe.jpg|thumb|right|200px|[[Edgar Allan Poe]] is an icon of [[19th century in literature|19th century literature]]]] [[Image:Edgar Allan Poe.jpg|thumb|right|200px|[[Edgar Allan Poe]] is an icon of [[19th century in literature|19th century literature]]]]
 +[[Image:Mona Lisa Smoking a Pipe.jpg|thumb|right|200px|''[[Mona Lisa Smoking a Pipe]]'' (1887) by Eugène Bataille]]
 +[[Image:The_monomanies_series_by_Géricault.jpg|thumb|right||400px|''[[The monomanies series by Géricault]]'' (1821-24) by Théodore Géricault. From left to right: Portrait of a Woman Suffering from Obsessive Envy, A Kleptomaniac, Military Obsessive, Monomaniac of Gambling and Monomania of Child Kidnapping]]
 +[[Image:The Dog (Goya).jpg|thumb|right|200px|''[[The Dog (Goya)|The Dog]]'' (c. 1819–1823) by Francisco Goya]]
 +[[Image:The Polar Sea.jpg|thumb|right|200px|''[[The Sea of Ice]]'' (1824) by Caspar David Friedrich]]
 +[[Image:View from the Window at Le Gras.jpg|thumb|200px|''[[View from the Window at Le Gras]]'' (1826) by Nicéphore Niépce]]
 +
{{Template}} {{Template}}
-:The [[19th century]] was [[scandal]]ized when [[Naturalist]] [[Darwin]] implied that [[humans]] were descendant from [[primate]]s, much as in the [[20th century]] when [[Freud]] would imply that all of [[human behaviour]] was motivated by [[sex]]ual [[urge]]s.+{|class="toc hlist" id="toc" summary="Contents" style="margin-left:auto; margin-right:auto; text-align:center;"
 +|colspan="3" |
 +|-
 +! style="text-align:right; width:310px;"|<< [[18th century]]
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 +! style="text-align:left; width:310px;"|[[20th century]] >>
 +|}
 +The '''19th''' ('''nineteenth''') '''century''' was the ninth century of the [[2nd millennium]].
-:The history of [[literacy]] goes back several thousand years, but before the [[industrial revolution]] finally made [[pulp|cheap paper and cheap books]] available to all classes in industrialized countries in the mid-[[nineteenth century]], only a small percentage of the population in these countries were [[literate]]. Up until that point, materials associated with literacy were prohibitively expensive for people other than wealthy individuals and institutions.+The century saw large amounts of social change; [[slavery]] was [[abolitionism|abolished]], and the [[Industrial Revolution]] led to massive [[urbanization]] and much higher levels of productivity, profit and prosperity. The [[Gunpowder empires|Islamic gunpowder empires]] were formally dissolved and European [[imperialism]] brought large parts of Asia and almost all of Africa under [[colonial rule]].
-:Toward the [[end of the 19th century]], painters and critics began to rebel against the many rules of the Académie française, including the preference for [[history painting]]. New artistic movements included the [[Realism (visual arts)|Realists]] and [[Impressionism|Impressionists]], which each sought to depict the present moment and daily life as observed by the eye, and unattatched from historical significance; the Realists often choosing genre painting and still-life, while the Impressionists would most often focus on landscapes. The history painting gained less favor through the vogue in Europe for Japanese culture and art, in the form of [[Japonism]]&mdash;in Japan significant importance was placed upon items such as laquerware and porcelain.+The British Empire grew rapidly in the first half of the century and during the post-Napoleonic era, it enforced what became known as the [[Pax Britannica]], which had ushered in unprecedented [[globalization]] and economic integration on a massive scale.
 +It was a century of widespread invention and discovery, and one in which social, cultural, and economic systems were heavily affected by science and technology and the [[business model]]s built on them, such as a shift from independent artisans and craftsmen to wage laborers employed by large factories as the primary means of production.
-The '''19th century''' (1801–1900) was a period in history marked by the collapse of the [[Spanish Empire|Spanish]], [[Portuguese Empire|Portuguese]], [[Late Imperial China|Chinese]], [[Holy Roman Empire|Holy Roman]] and [[Mughal Empire|Mughal]] empires. This paved the way for the growing influence of the [[British Empire]], the [[German Empire]] and the [[United States]], spurring military conflicts but also advances in science and exploration.+It was the heyday of [[capitalism]], but it was also the century in which the major opposing ideologies, [[socialism]] and [[communism]], arose. The successes up to that time in building mechanical devices and in discovering the natural laws of the universe led to a widespread belief by the end of the century that the world ran predictably as by [[clockwork]] and that all of its mysteries would soon be solved by modern science; and, similarly, all of the social problems of human society could be solved too by application of scientific principles. These beliefs were soon dashed by 20th century developments such as relativity and quantum physics, and by the wars and genocides of that century.
-After the defeat of the [[First French Empire|French Empire]] and its allies in the [[Napoleonic Wars]], the British Empire became the world's leading power, controlling one quarter of the world's population and one fifth of the total land area. It enforced a [[Pax Britannica]], encouraged trade, and battled rampant [[piracy]]. The 19th century was an era of [[invention]] and discovery, with significant developments in the fields of mathematics, physics, chemistry, biology, electricity, and metallurgy that lay the groundwork for the technological advances of the 20th century The [[Industrial Revolution]] began in Europe. The [[Victorian era]] was notorious for the employment of young children in factories and mines.+===Visual artists, painters, sculptors===
 +:''[[19th century art]]''
 +The [[Realism (visual arts) |Realism]] and [[Romanticism]] of the early 19th century gave way to [[Impressionism]] in the later half of the century, with [[French art of the 19th century|Paris]] being the dominant art capital of the world.
-[[History_of_medicine#Modern_medicine|Advances in medicine]] and the understanding of human anatomy and disease prevention took place in the 1800s, and were partly responsible for rapidly accelerating [[population growth]] in the [[western world]]. Europe's population doubled during the 19th century, from roughly 200 million to more than 400 million. The introduction of [[Rail transport|railroads]] provided the first major advancement in land transportation for centuries, changing the way people lived and obtained goods, and fueling major [[urbanization]] movements in countries across the globe. Numerous cities worldwide surpassed populations of a million or more during this century. London was transformed into the world's [[List of largest cities throughout history|largest city]] and capital of the British Empire. Its population expanded from 1 million in 1800 to 6.7 million a century later. The last remaining undiscovered landmasses of Earth, including vast expanses of interior Africa and Asia, were [[List of explorers|discovered]] during this century, and with the exception of the extreme zones of the Arctic and Antarctic, accurate and detailed maps of the globe were available by the 1890s. [[Liberalism]] became the preeminent [[reform movement]] in Europe.+After [[Rococo]] there arose in the late 18th century, in [[architecture]], and then in painting severe [[neo-classicism]], best represented by such artists as [[Jacques Louis David|David]] and his heir [[Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres|Ingres]]. Ingres' work already contains much of the sensuality, but none of the spontaneity, that was to characterize [[Romanticism]].
-[[Slavery]] was greatly reduced around the world. Following a successful [[Haitian Revolution|slave revolt in Haiti]], [[United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland|Britain]] forced the [[Barbary pirates]] to halt their practice of kidnapping and enslaving Europeans, [[Slavery Abolition Act|banned slavery throughout its domain]], and charged [[Royal Navy|its navy]] with ending the global [[slave trade]]. Britain abolished slavery in 1834, America's [[Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution|13th Amendment]] following their [[American Civil War|Civil War]] abolished slavery there in 1865, and in [[Lei Áurea|Brazil]] slavery was abolished in 1888 (see [[Abolitionism]]). Similarly, [[serfdom]] was abolished in [[Emancipation reform of 1861 in Russia|Russia]].+This movement turned its attention toward [[landscape]] and [[nature]] as well as the [[human figure]] and the supremacy of natural order above mankind's will. There is a [[pantheist]] philosophy (see [[Spinoza]] and [[Hegel]]) within this conception that opposes [[Age of Enlightenment|Enlightenment]] ideals by seeing mankind's destiny in a more tragic or pessimistic light. The idea that human beings are not above the forces of [[Nature]] is in contradiction to [[Ancient Greek]] and Renaissance ideals where mankind was above all things and owned his fate. This thinking led romantic artists to depict the [[sublime]], [[ruin]]ed churches, [[shipwreck]]s, [[massacre]]s and [[madness]].
-The 19th century was remarkable in the widespread formation of new [[settler|settlement]] foundations which were particularly prevalent across North America and Australasia, with a significant proportion of the two continents' largest cities being founded at some point in the century. In the 19th century approximately 70 million people left Europe.+Romantic painters turned [[landscape painting]] into a major genre, considered until then as a minor genre or as a decorative background for figure compositions.
 +Some of the major painters of this period are [[Eugene Delacroix]], [[Théodore Géricault]], [[J. M. W. Turner]], [[Caspar David Friedrich]] and [[John Constable]]. [[Francisco de Goya]]'s late work demonstrates the Romantic interest in the irrational, while the work of [[Arnold Böcklin]] evokes mystery and the paintings of [[Aesthetic movement]] artist [[James McNeill Whistler]] evoke both sophistication and [[decadent movement|decadence]]. In the [[United States]] the Romantic tradition of landscape painting was known as the [[Hudson River School]]. Important painters of that school include [[Thomas Cole]].
-The 1800s also saw the rapid creation, development and codification of many sports, particularly in Britain and the United States. [[Association football]], [[rugby union]], [[baseball]] and many other sports were developed during the 19th century, while the British Empire facilitated the rapid spread of sports such as [[cricket]] to many different parts of the world.+The leading [[Barbizon School]] painter [[Camille Corot]] painted in both a romantic and a [[Realism (visual arts)|realistic]] vein; his work prefigures [[Impressionism]], as does the paintings of [[Eugène Boudin]] who was one of the first French landscape painters to paint outdoors. Boudin was also an important influence on the young [[Claude Monet]], whom in 1857 he introduced to [[Plein air]] painting. A major force in the turn towards [[Realism (visual arts)|Realism]] at mid-century was [[Gustave Courbet]]. In the latter third of the century Impressionists like [[Édouard Manet]], [[Claude Monet]], [[Pierre-Auguste Renoir]], [[Camille Pissarro]], [[Alfred Sisley]], [[Berthe Morisot]], [[Mary Cassatt]], and [[Edgar Degas]] worked in a more direct approach than had previously been exhibited publicly. They eschewed allegory and narrative in favor of individualized responses to the modern world, sometimes painted with little or no preparatory study, relying on deftness of drawing and a highly chromatic pallette. Manet, Degas, Renoir, Morisot, and Cassatt concentrated primarily on the human subject. Both Manet and Degas reinterpreted classical figurative canons within contemporary situations; in Manet's case the re-imaginings met with hostile public reception. Renoir, Morisot, and Cassatt turned to domestic life for inspiration, with Renoir focusing on the female nude. Monet, Pissarro, and Sisley used the landscape as their primary motif, the transience of light and weather playing a major role in their work. While Sisley most closely adhered to the original principals of the impressionist perception of the landscape, Monet sought challenges in increasingly chromatic and changeable conditions, culminating in series of monumental works, and Pissarro adopted some of the experiments of [[Post-Impressionism]]. Slightly younger Post-Impressionists like [[Vincent Van Gogh]], [[Paul Gauguin]], and [[Georges Seurat]], along with [[Paul Cezanne]] led art to the edge of [[modernism]]; for Gauguin impressionism gave way to a personal [[symbolism]]; Seurat transformed impressionism's broken color into a scientific optical study, structured on frieze-like compositions; Van Gogh's turbulent method of paint application, coupled with a sonorous use of color, predicted [[Expressionism]] and [[Fauvism]], and Cezanne, desiring to unite classical composition with a revolutionary abstraction of natural forms, would come to be seen as a precursor of 20th century art.
-==Eras==+The spell of Impressionism was felt throughout the world, and nowhere more profoundly than in the United States, where it became integral to the painting of the [[American Impressionists]]. It also exerted influence on painters who were not primarily impressionistic in theory, like the portrait and landscape painter [[John Singer Sargent]]. At the same time in America there existed a native and nearly insular realism, as richly embodied in the figurative work of [[Thomas Eakins]] and the landscapes and seascapes of [[Winslow Homer]], both of whose paintings were deeply invested in the solidity of natural forms. The visionary landscape, a motive largely dependent on the ambiguity of the nocturne, found its advocates in [[Albert Pinkham Ryder]] and [[Ralph Blakelock]].
-*[[Industrial revolution]]+
-*[[European Imperialism]]+
-*[[British Regency]], [[Victorian era]] (UK, [[British Empire]])+
-*[[Bourbon Restoration]], [[July Monarchy]], [[French Second Republic]], [[Second French Empire]], [[French Third Republic]] ([[France in the nineteenth century|France]])+
-*[[Belle Époque]] (Europe)+
-*[[Edo period]], [[Meiji period]] (Japan)+
-*[[Qing Dynasty]] (China)+
-*[[Tanzimat]], [[First Constitutional Era (Ottoman Empire)|First Constitutional Era]] ([[Decline of the Ottoman Empire|Ottoman Empire]]) +
-*[[Russian Empire]]+
-*[[Manifest Destiny|American Manifest Destiny]], [[Gilded Age|The Gilded Age]]+
-==Events==+===Neoclassicism, Romanticism, Academism and Realism===
-===1800–1809===+As time passed, many artists were repulsed by the ornate grandeur of these styles and sought to revert to the earlier, simpler art of the Renaissance, creating [[Neoclassicism]]. Neoclassicism was the artistic component of the intellectual movement known as [[the Enlightenment]], which was similarly idealistic. [[Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres|Ingres]], [[Antonio Canova|Canova]], and [[Jacques-Louis David]] are among the best-known neoclassicists.
-* 1800: The Company of Surgeons are awarded their [[Royal Charter]] and became the [[Royal College of Surgeons of England]].+
-* 1800: The inception of the [[Second Great Awakening]] for the United States.+
-* 1801: [[Thomas Jefferson]] elected [[President of the United States]] by the [[United States House of Representatives]], following a tie in the [[Electoral College (United States)]]+
-* 1801: The [[Kingdom of Great Britain]] and the [[Kingdom of Ireland]] merge to form the [[United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland|United Kingdom]].+
-* 1801: [[Maharaja Ranjit Singh (Punjab)|Ranjit Singh]] crowned as King of [[Sikh Empire|Punjab]].+
-* 1801–15: [[Barbary War]] between the United States and the [[Barbary States]] of North Africa+
-* 1803: The United States buys out France's territorial claims in North America via the [[Louisiana Purchase]]. This begins the U.S.'s westward expansion to the Pacific referred to as its [[Manifest Destiny]] which involves [[United States territorial acquisitions|annexing and conquering land]] from Mexico, Britain, and Native Americans.+Just as Mannerism rejected Classicism, so did [[Romanticism]] reject the ideas of the Enlightenment and the aesthetic of the Neoclassicists. Romantic art focused on the use of color and motion in order to portray emotion, but like classicism used Greek and Roman mythology and tradition as an important source of symbolism. Another important aspect of Romanticism was its emphasis on nature and portraying the power and beauty of the natural world. Romanticism was also a large literary movement, especially in [[poetry]]. Among the greatest Romantic artists were [[Eugène Delacroix]], [[Francisco Goya]], [[J.M.W. Turner]], [[John Constable]], [[Caspar David Friedrich]], [[Thomas Cole]], and [[William Blake]].
-* 1803: The [[Wahhabi]]s of the [[First Saudi State]] capture [[Mecca]] and [[Medina]].+
-* 1804: [[Haitian Revolution#Free republic|Haiti]] gains independence from France and becomes the first black republic.+
-* 1804: [[Austrian Empire]] founded by [[Francis II, Holy Roman Emperor|Francis I]].+
-* 1804: [[Napoleon I of France|Napoleon]] crowns himself emperor of France.+
-* 1804–10: [[Fulani War|Fulani Jihad]] in [[Nigeria]].+
-* 1804–15: [[Serbian revolution]] erupts against the [[Ottoman Empire|Ottoman]] rule. [[Suzerainty]] of Serbia recognized in 1817. +
-* 1805: The [[Battle of Trafalgar]] eliminates the French and Spanish naval fleets and allows for British dominance of the seas, a major factor for the success of the [[British Empire]] later in the century.+
-* 1805–48: [[Muhammad Ali of Egypt|Muhammad Ali]] modernizes [[Egypt]].+
-* 1806: [[Holy Roman Empire]] dissolved as a consequence of the [[Treaty of Pressburg]].+
-* 1807: Britain declares the Slave Trade illegal.+
-* 1808–09: Russia conquers Finland from Sweden in the [[Finnish War]].+
-* 1808–14: [[Spanish people|Spanish]] [[guerrilla warfare|guerrilla]]s fight in the [[Peninsular War]].+
-* 1809: [[Napoleon]] strips the [[Teutonic Knights]] of their last holdings in [[Bad Mergentheim]].+
-===1810s===+Most artists attempted to take a centrist approach which adopted different features of Neoclassicist and Romanticist styles, in order to synthesize them. The different attempts took place within the French Academy, and collectively are called [[Academic art]]. [[Adolphe William Bouguereau]] is considered a chief example of this stream of art.
-* 1810: The [[Humboldt University of Berlin|University of Berlin]], the world's first research university, is founded. Among its students and faculty are [[Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel|Hegel]], [[Karl Marx|Marx]], and [[Otto von Bismarck|Bismarck]]. The German university reform proves to be so successful that its model is copied around the world (see [[History of European research universities#European university models in the 19th and 20th centuries|History of European research universities]]).+
-* 1810: The [[Grito de Dolores]] begins the [[Mexican War of Independence]].+
-* 1810s–20s: Most of the Latin American colonies free themselves from the [[Spanish Empire|Spanish]] and [[Portuguese Empire]]s after the [[Latin American wars of independence]].+
-* 1812: The [[French invasion of Russia]] is a turning point in the [[Napoleonic Wars]].+
-* 1812–15: [[War of 1812]] between the United States and the United Kingdom+
-* 1813–1907: The contest between the [[British Empire]] and [[Imperial Russia]] for control of [[Central Asia]] is referred to as [[the Great Game]].+
-* 1815: The [[Congress of Vienna]] redraws the European map. The [[Concert of Europe]] attempts to preserve this settlement, but it fails to stem the tide of liberalism and nationalism that sweeps over the continent.+
-* 1815: [[Napoleon I of France|Napoleon's]] defeat at [[Battle of Waterloo|Waterloo]] brings a conclusion to the [[Napoleonic Wars]] and marks the beginning of a [[Pax Britannica]] which lasts until 1870.+
-* 1816: [[Year Without a Summer]]: Unusually cold conditions wreak havoc throughout the Northern Hemisphere, likely caused by the 1815 explosion of [[Mount Tambora]].+
-* 1816–28: [[Shaka]]'s [[Zulu]] kingdom becomes the largest in [[Southern Africa]].+
-* 1817: [[Principality of Serbia]] becomes [[suzerain]] from the [[Ottoman Empire]]. Officially independent in 1867.+
-* 1819: The modern city of [[Singapore]] is established by the [[British East India Company]].+
-* 1819: [[Théodore Géricault]] paints his masterpiece ''[[The Raft of the Medusa]]'', and exhibits it in the French Salon of 1819 at the [[Louvre]].+
-===1820s===+In the early 19th century the face of Europe, however, became radically altered by [[industrialization]]. Poverty, squalor, and desperation were to be the fate of the new [[working class]] created by the "revolution." In response to these changes going on in society, the movement of [[realism (arts)|Realism]] emerged. Realism sought to accurately portray the conditions and hardships of the poor in the hopes of changing society. In contrast with Romanticism, which was essentially optimistic about mankind, Realism offered a stark vision of poverty and despair. Similarly, while Romanticism glorified nature, Realism portrayed life in the depths of an urban wasteland. Like Romanticism, [[Realism (arts)|Realism]] was a literary as well as an artistic movement. The great [[Realism (visual arts)|Realist]] painters include [[Jean Baptiste Siméon Chardin]], [[Gustave Courbet]], [[Jean-François Millet]], [[Jean-Baptiste Camille Corot|Camille Corot]], [[Honoré Daumier]], [[Edouard Manet]], [[Edgar Degas]] (both considered as [[Impressionism|Impressionist]]s), and [[Thomas Eakins]], among others.
-* 1820: [[Missouri Compromise]]+
-* 1820: [[History of Liberia|Liberia]] founded by the [[American Colonization Society]] for freed American slaves.+
-* 1821: Mexico gains independence from Spain with the [[Treaty of Córdoba]].+
-* 1821: [[Peru]] declares its independence from Spain.+
-* 1822–23: [[First Mexican Empire]], as Mexico's first post-independent government, ruled by Emperor [[Agustín de Iturbide|Agustín I of Mexico]].+
-* 1821–27: Greece becomes the first country to break away from the [[Ottoman Empire]] after the [[Greek War of Independence]].+
-* 1822: Prince Pedro of Portugal proclaimed the [[Brazilian independence]] on September 7. On December 1, he was crowned as Emperor [[Dom (title)|Dom]] [[Pedro I of Brazil]].+
-* 1823–87: The British Empire annexed [[Burma]] (now also called Myanmar) after three [[Anglo-Burmese Wars]].+
-* 1825: [[Erie Canal]] opened connecting the [[Great Lakes]] to the Atlantic Ocean.+
-* 1826–28: After the final [[Russo-Persian War, 1826-1828|Russo-Persian War]], the [[Persian Empire]] took back territory lost to Russia from the previous war.+
-* 1827: Death of [[William Blake]]+
-* 1825–28: The [[Argentina-Brazil War]] results in the independence of [[Uruguay]].+
-===1830s===+The response of architecture to industrialization, in stark contrast to the other arts, was to veer towards [[historicism]]. Although the [[railway stations]] built during this period are often considered the truest reflections of its spirit – they are sometimes called "the cathedrals of the age" – the main movements in architecture during the Industrial Age were revivals of styles from the distant past, such as the [[Gothic Revival architecture|Gothic Revival]]. Related movements were the [[Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood]], who attempted to return art to its state of "purity" prior to [[Raphael]], and the [[Arts and Crafts Movement]], which reacted against the impersonality of mass-produced goods and advocated a return to medieval craftsmanship.
-* 1830: The [[Church of Christ (Latter Day Saints)|Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints]] is established on April 6, 1830.+
-* 1830: [[July Revolution]] in France.+
-* 1830: The [[Belgian Revolution]] in the [[United Kingdom of the Netherlands]] led to the creation of Belgium.+
-* 1830: [[Greater Colombia]] dissolved and the nations of [[Colombia]] (including modern-day Panama), [[Ecuador]], and [[Venezuela]] took its place.+
-* 1830 [[November Uprising]] in Poland against Russia.+
-* 1831: France [[French rule in Algeria|invades and occupies Algeria]].+
-* 1833: [[Slavery Abolition Act]] bans slavery throughout the [[British Empire]].+
-* 1833–76: [[Carlist Wars]] in Spain.+
-* 1834: The [[German Customs Union]] is formed.+
-* 1834: [[Spanish Inquisition]] officially ends.+
-* 1834–59: [[Imam Shamil]]'s rebellion in Russian-occupied [[Caucasus]].+
-* 1835–36: The [[Texas Revolution]] in Mexico resulted in the short-lived [[Republic of Texas]].+
-* 1836: The [[Battle of the Alamo]].+
-* 1837–1838: [[Rebellions of 1837]] in Canada.+
-* 1837–1901: [[Victoria of the United Kingdom|Queen Victoria]]'s reign is considered the apex of the [[British Empire]] and is referred to as the [[Victorian era]].+
-*1838–40: Civil war in the [[Federal Republic of Central America]] led to the foundings of [[Guatemala]], [[El Salvador]], [[Honduras]], [[Nicaragua]], and [[Costa Rica]].+
-*1839–51: [[Uruguayan Civil War]]+
-*1839–60: After two [[Opium Wars]], France, the United Kingdom, the United States and Russia gained many concessions from China resulting in the decline of the [[Qing Dynasty]].+
-===1840s===+
-*1840: New Zealand is founded, as the [[Treaty of Waitangi]] is signed by the [[Māori]] and British.+
-*1844: Persian Prophet the [[Báb]] announces his revelation on May 23, founding [[Bábís]]m. He announced to the world of the coming of "[[He whom God shall make manifest]]". He is considered the forerunner of [[Bahá'u'lláh]], the founder of the [[Bahá'í Faith]].+
-*1844: First publicly funded [[telegraph]] line in the world—between Baltimore and Washington—sends demonstration message on May 24, ushering in the age of the telegraph. This message read "What hath God wrought?" (Bible, Numbers 23:23)+
-*1844: [[Millerites|Millerite]] movement awaits the [[Second Advent]] of [[Jesus Christ]] on October 22. Christ's non-appearance becomes known as the [[Great Disappointment]].+
-*1844: [[Dominican War of Independence]] from [[Haiti]].+
-*1845: Unification of the Kingdom of [[Tonga]] under [[George Tupou I of Tonga|Tāufaʻāhau]] (King George Tupou I)+
-*1845-1846: [[First Anglo-Sikh War]]+
-*1845–72: The [[New Zealand Land Wars]]+
-*1845–49: The [[Irish Potato Famine (1845-1849)|Irish Potato Famine]] led to the [[Irish diaspora]].+
-*1846–48: The [[Mexican-American War]] leads to Mexico's cession of much of the modern-day [[Southwestern United States]].+
-*1846–47: [[History of the Latter Day Saint movement|Mormon]] migration to [[Utah]].+
-*1847–1901: The [[Caste War of Yucatán]].+
-*1848-1849: [[Second Anglo-Sikh War]]+
-*1848: ''[[The Communist Manifesto]]'' published.+
-*1848: [[Revolutions of 1848]] in Europe+
-*1848: [[Seneca Falls Convention]] is the first women's rights convention in the United States and leads to the [[History of Women's Suffrage in the United States|battle for suffrage]] and [[women's rights|women's legal rights]].+
-*1848–58: [[California Gold Rush]]+
-===1850s===+Toward the [[end of the 19th century]], painters and critics began to rebel against the many rules of the Académie française, including the preference for [[history painting]]. New artistic movements included the [[Realism (visual arts)|Realists]] and [[Impressionism|Impressionists]], which each sought to depict the present moment and daily life as observed by the eye, and unattatched from historical significance; the Realists often choosing genre painting and still-life, while the Impressionists would most often focus on landscapes. The history painting gained less favor through the vogue in Europe for Japanese culture and art, in the form of [[Japonism]]&mdash;in Japan significant importance was placed upon items such as laquerware and porcelain.
- +
-*1850: The [[Little Ice Age]] ends around this time.+
-*1851: The [[Great Exhibition]] in London was the world's first international [[Expo (exhibition)|Expo]] or World's Fair.+
-*1851–52: The [[Platine War]] ends and the [[Empire of Brazil]] has the hegemony over South America.+
-*1851–60s: [[Victorian gold rush]] in Australia+
-*1851–64: The [[Taiping Rebellion]] in China is the bloodiest conflict of the century.+
-*1853–56: [[Crimean War]] between France, the United Kingdom, the [[Ottoman Empire]] and Russia+
-*1854: The [[Convention of Kanagawa]] formally ends Japan's policy of [[Sakoku|isolation]].+
-*1855: [[Bessemer process]] enables [[steel]] to be mass produced.+
-*1856: World's first [[oil refinery]] in [[Romania]]+
-*1857–58: [[Indian Rebellion of 1857]]+
-*1859: [[The Origin of Species]] published.+
- +
-===1860s===+
-*1861–65: [[American Civil War]] between the [[Union (American Civil War)|Union]] and seceding [[Confederate States of America|Confederacy]]+
-*1861: Russia [[Emancipation reform of 1861 in Russia|abolishes serfdom]].+
-*1861–67: [[French intervention in Mexico]] and the creation of the [[Second Mexican Empire]], ruled by [[Maximilian I of Mexico]] and his consort [[Carlota of Mexico]].+
-*1862–1877: [[Dungan revolt|Muslim Rebellion]] in northwest China.+
-* 1863: [[Bahá'u'lláh]] declares His station as "[[He whom God shall make manifest]]". This date is celebrated in the [[Bahá'í Faith]] as The Festival of [[Ridván]].+
-*1863: Formation of the [[International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement|International Red Cross]] is followed by the adoption of the [[First Geneva Convention]] in 1864.+
-*1863–1865: [[January Uprising|Polish uprising]] against the [[Russian Empire]].+
-*1864–66: The [[Chincha Islands War]] was an attempt by Spain to regain its South American colonies.+
-*1864–70: The [[War of the Triple Alliance]] ends Paraguayan ambitions for expansion and destroys much of the Paraguayan population.+
-*1865–77: [[Reconstruction era of the United States|Reconstruction]] in the United States; Slavery is banned in the United States by the [[Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution]].+
-*1865-April 9, 1865 [[Robert E. Lee]] surrenders the [[Army of Northern Virginia]] (26,765 troops) to [[Ulysses S. Grant]] at [[Appomattox Courthouse, Virginia]], effectively ending the [[American Civil War]].+
-*1865-April 14, 1865, United States President [[Abraham Lincoln]] is assassinated while attending a performance at [[Ford's Theater]], [[Washington, D.C.]]. He dies approximately nine hours after being shot on April 15, 1865.+
-*1866: Successful [[transatlantic telegraph cable]] follows an earlier attempt in 1858.+
-*1866: [[Austro-Prussian War]] results in the dissolution of the [[German Confederation]] and the creation of the [[North German Confederation]] and the [[Austria-Hungary|Austrian-Hungarian Dual Monarchy]].+
-*1866–1868: [[Finnish famine of 1866–1868|Famine in Finland]].+
-*1866–69: After the [[Meiji Restoration]], Japan embarks on a program of rapid [[modernization]].+
-*1867: The United States [[Alaska Purchase|purchased Alaska]] from Russia.+
-*1867: [[Canadian Confederation]] formed.+
-*1867: The [[Principality of Serbia]] passes a [[Constitution]] which defines its independence from the [[Ottoman Empire]]. International recognition followed in 1878.+
-*1868; The Expatriation Act is approved by Congress, guaranteeing U.S. citizens the right to expatriate. Coupled with the 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution approved only one day later, the Expatriation Act allows U.S. citizens to renounce federal citizenship in order to regain Constitutional rights ceded by U.S. citizens as defined by the 14th Amendment.+
-*1868; The 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution was approved.+
-*1869: [[First Transcontinental Railroad]] completed in United States on May 10.+
-*1869: The [[Suez Canal]] opens linking the [[Mediterranean Sea|Mediterranean]] to the [[Red Sea]].+
- +
-===1870s===+
-*1870–71: The [[Franco-Prussian War]] results in the unifications of [[German Empire|Germany]] and [[Italian unification|Italy]], the collapse of the [[Second French Empire]], the breakdown of Pax Britannica, and the emergence of a [[New Imperialism]].+
-*1871–1872: [[List of famines|Famine]] in [[Iran|Persia]] is believed to have caused the death of 2 million. +
-*1871–1914: [[Second Industrial Revolution]]+
-*1870s-90s: [[Long Depression]] in Western Europe and North America+
-*1872: [[Yellowstone National Park]] is created.+
-*1873: Maxwell's ''[[A Treatise on Electricity and Magnetism]]'' published.+
-*1874: The ''Société Anonyme Coopérative des Artistes Peintres, Sculpteurs, and Graveurs'', better known today as the [[Impressionist]]s organize and present their first public group exhibition at the Paris studio of the photographer [[Nadar (photographer)|Nadar]]. +
-*1874: The [[British East India Company]] is dissolved.+
-*1874–1875: [[First Spanish Republic|First Republic]] in Spain. +
-*1875–1900: 26 million Indians perished in India due to [[Famine in India|famine]].+
-*1876: The [[April Uprising|Bulgarian revolt]] against [[Ottoman Empire|Ottoman]] rule.+
-*1876–1879: 13 million Chinese died of [[famine]] in northern China. +
-*1876–1914: The massive expansion in population, territory, industry and wealth in the United States is referred to as the [[Gilded Age]].+
-*1877: [[Great Railroad Strike]] in the United States may have been the world's first nationwide [[Strike action|labor strike]].+
-*1877–78: Following the [[Russo-Turkish War (1877-1878)|Russo-Turkish War]], the [[Treaty of Berlin, 1878|Treaty of Berlin]] recognizes formal independence of the [[Principality of Serbia]], [[Montenegro]] and [[Romania]]. [[Bulgaria]] becomes autonomous.+
-*1878: First commercial [[telephone exchange]] in [[New Haven, Connecticut]].+
-*1879: [[Anglo-Zulu War]] in South Africa.+
-*1879–83: [[Chile]] battles with [[Peru]] and [[Bolivia]] over Andean territory in the [[War of the Pacific]].+
- +
-===1880s===+
-*1880–1881: the [[First Boer War]].+
-*1881: First electrical [[power plant]] and [[Electricity distribution|grid]] in [[Godalming]], Britain.+
-*1881–1899: The [[Mahdist War]] in [[Sudan]].+
-*1882: The British invasion and the subsequent occupation of [[Egypt]]+
-*1883: [[Krakatoa]] volcano explosion.+
-*1884–85: The [[Berlin Conference]] signals the start of the European "[[scramble for Africa]]". Attending nations also agree to ban trade in [[slaves]].+
-*1884–85: The [[Sino-French War]] led to the formation of [[French Indochina]].+
-*1885 : "The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde" by Robert Louis Stevenson is published.+
-*1886: [[Russian-Circassian War]] ended with the defeat and the exile of many [[Circassians]]. [[Imam Shamil]] defeated.+
-*1888 (August): [[Jack the Ripper]] is believed to have [[Mary Ann Nichols|begun murdering]].+
-*1888 (November): Jack The Ripper is believed to have murdered [[Mary Jane Kelly|his last victim]].+
-*1888: [[Lei Áurea|Slavery banned in Brazil]].+
-*1889: [[Eiffel tower]] was inaugurated in [[Paris]].+
-*1889: [[Mirza Ghulam Ahmad]] establishes the [[Ahmadi]] Muslim Community.+
-*1889: End of the [[Brazilian Empire]] and the beginning of the [[History of Brazil (1889-1930)|Brazilian Republic]]+
- +
-===1890s===+
-*1890: The [[Wounded Knee Massacre]] was the last battle in the American [[Indian Wars]]. This event represents the end of the [[American Old West]].+
-*1891: Basketball was invented.+
-*1894–95: After the [[First Sino-Japanese War]], China cedes [[Taiwan]] to Japan and grants Japan a free hand in Korea.+
-*1895–1896: [[Ethiopia]] defeats Italy in the [[First Italo–Ethiopian War]].+
-*1896: [[Olympic Games#Revival|Olympic Games]] revived in [[Athens]].+
-*1896: [[Klondike Gold Rush]] in Canada.+
-*1897: [[Gojong of Joseon|Gojong]], or Emperor Gwangmu, proclaims the short-lived [[Korean Empire]]: lasts until 1910.+
-*1898: The United States gains control of [[Cuba]], [[Puerto Rico]], and the [[Philippines]] after the [[Spanish-American War]].+
-*1898–1900: The [[Boxer Rebellion]] in China is suppressed by an [[Eight-Nation Alliance]].+
-*1898–1902: The One Thousand Days war in [[Colombia]] breaks out between the "Liberales" and "Conservadores", culminating with the loss of [[Panama]] in 1903.+
-*1899: [[Second Boer War]] begins (-1902); [[Philippine-American War]] begins (-1913).+
- +
-==Significant people==+
-*[[Clara Barton]], nurse, pioneer of the [[American Red Cross]]+
-*[[Sitting Bull]], a leader of the [[Lakota people|Lakota]]+
-*[[John Burroughs]], Naturalist, conservationist, writer+
-*[[Benito Juárez]], Mexican President +
-*[[Davy Crockett]], ''King of the wild frontier'', [[folk hero]], [[Frontier#American frontier|frontiersman]], soldier and politician+
-*[[Jefferson Davis]], Confederate States President+
-*[[W G Grace|William Gilbert Grace]], English cricketer+
-*[[Baron Haussmann]], civic planner+
-*[[Franz Joseph I of Austria]], Emperor of [[Austrian Empire|Austria]] and brother of [[Maximilian I of Mexico|Mexican Emperor]]+
-*[[Chief Joseph]], a leader of the [[Nez Percé]]+
-*[[Ned Kelly]], Australian folk hero, and outlaw+
-*[[Elizabeth Kenny]], Australian Nurse and found an Innovative Treatment of Polio+
-*[[Sándor Körösi Csoma]], explorer of the [[Tibet]]an [[Tibetan culture|culture]]+
-*[[Abraham Lincoln]], United States President+
-*[[Fitz Hugh Ludlow]], writer and explorer+
-*[[John Muir]], Naturalist, writer, [[preservationist]]+
-*[[Florence Nightingale]], nursing pioneer+
-*[[Napoleon I of France|Napoleon I]], First Consul and Emperor of the French+
-*[[Charles Stewart Parnell]], Irish political leader+
-*[[Matthew C. Perry|Commodore Perry]], U.S. Naval commander, opened the door to Japan+
-*[[Jose Rizal|Dr. Jose P. Rizal]], Filipino hero, novelist, liberator+
-*[[Sacagawea]], Important aide to [[Lewis&Clark]]+
-*[[Ignaz Semmelweis]], proponent of [[hygiene|hygienic practices]]+
-*[[John Snow (physician)|Dr. John Snow]], the founder of [[epidemiology]]+
-*[[Fred Spofforth|F R Spofforth]], Australian [[cricket]]er+
-*[[Queen Victoria]], Queen of the United Kingdom+
-*[[William Wilberforce]], Abolitionist, Philanthropist+
-*[[Hong Xiuquan]] inspired China's [[Taiping Rebellion]], perhaps the bloodiest civil war in human history +
-*[[Karl Marx]] wrote The Communist Manifesto, promoted change in the labor system of Europe+
- +
-===Show business and theatre===+
-*[[P. T. Barnum]], showman+
-*[[David Belasco]], actor, playwright, theatrical producer+
-*[[Sarah Bernhardt]], actress+
-*[[Edwin Booth]], actor+
-*[[Dion Boucicault]], playwright+
-*[[Mrs Patrick Campbell]], actress+
-*[[Anton Chekhov]], playwright+
-*[[Buffalo Bill Cody]], [[Wild West]] legend, and showman+
-*[[Jean-Gaspard Deburau|Baptiste Deburau]], [[Bohemian]]–French actor and [[Mime artist|mime]].+
-*[[Eleonora Duse]], actress+
-*[[Henrik Ibsen]], playwright+
-*[[Edmund Kean]], actor+
-*[[Charles Kean]], actor+
-*[[Lillie Langtry]], actress, socialite+
-*[[Frédérick Lemaître]], actor+
-*[[Jenny Lind]], opera singer called the ''Swedish Nightingale''+
-* Céleste Mogador, dancer+
-*[[Lola Montez]], [[exotic dancer]]+
-*[[Adelaide Neilson]], actress+
-*[[Annie Oakley]], [[Wild West]], sharp-shooter+
-*[[Lillian Russell]], singer, actress +
-*[[George Bernard Shaw]], playwright+
-*[[Edward Askew Sothern]], actor+
-*[[Ellen Terry]], actress+
- +
-===Athletics===+
-[[File:John L Sullivan.jpg|thumb|upright|[[John L Sullivan]] in his prime, c.1882.]]+
-*[[Cap Anson]], baseball player+
-*[[James J. Corbett|Gentleman Jim Corbett]], heavyweight boxer+
-*[[Ed Delahanty|Big Ed Delahanty]], baseball player+
-*[[Bob Fitzsimmons]], heavyweight boxer+
-*[[Pud Galvin]], baseball player+
-*[[Olympic Games]], 1894 the [[IOC]] is formed, and the first [[Summer Olympics]] games are held in [[Athens]], Greece in 1896+
-*[[WG Grace|Dr William Gilbert 'WG' Grace]], cricketer+
-*[[Peter Jackson (boxer)|Peter Jackson]], heavyweight boxer+
-*[[James J. Jeffries]], heavyweight boxer+
-*[[Charles Radbourn|Old Hoss Radbourn]], baseball player+
-*[[Tom Sharkey]], heavyweight boxer+
-*[[John L. Sullivan]], heavyweight boxer+
-*[[John Montgomery Ward]], baseball player+
-*[[Evangelis Zappas]], Founder of the International Modern Olympic Games+
- +
-===Business===+
-*[[John Jacob Astor III]], Real Estate+
-*[[Andrew Carnegie]], Industrialist, philanthropist+
-*[[Jay Cooke]], Finance+
-*[[Henry Clay Frick]], Industrialist, art collector+
-*[[Jay Gould]], Railroad developer+
-*[[Meyer Guggenheim]] Family patriarch, mining +
-*[[Daniel Guggenheim]] (copper)+
-*[[E. H. Harriman]], Railroads+
-*[[Henry O. Havemeyer]] (sugar), art collector+
-*[[George Hearst]], Gold+
-*[[James J. Hill]] (railroads) – ''The Empire Builder''+
-*[[Andrew W. Mellon]], Industrialist, philanthropist, art collector+
-*[[J.P. Morgan]], banker, art collector+
-*[[George Mortimer Pullman]] (railroads)+
-*[[Charles Pratt]] Oil, founder of the [[Pratt Institute]]+
-*[[Cecil Rhodes]] diamonds, mining magnate, founder of [[De Beers]].+
-*[[John D. Rockefeller]], Oil, Business tycoon, philanthropist+
-*[[Levi Strauss]], clothing manufacturer+
-*[[Cornelius Vanderbilt]], Shipping, Railroads+
-*[[William Chapman Ralston]], Businessman, Financier, founder of [[Bank of California]].+
- +
-===Famous and infamous personalities===+
-*[[William Bonney]] aka [[Henry McCarty]] aka [[Billy the Kid]], [[Wild West]], outlaw+
-*[[John Wilkes Booth]], [[Assassination|assassin]]+
-*[[James Bowie]], Soldier, Texan who died at the [[Alamo]], invented the [[Bowie knife]]+
-*[[Jim Bridger]], [[Wild West]], [[Mountain man]]+
-*[[John Brown (abolitionist)|John Brown]], a fanatical [[abolitionist]] who led an armed [[insurrection]] at [[Harpers Ferry, Virginia]], in 1859.+
-*[[Kit Carson]], [[Wild West]], [[frontiersman]]+
-*[[Cochise]], [[Chiricahua Apache]] leader+
-*[[George Armstrong Custer]], soldier, whose last stand was in the [[Wild West]]+
-*[[Wyatt Earp]], [[Wild West]], lawman+
-*[[Pat Garrett]], [[Wild West]], lawman+
-*[[Charles J. Guiteau]], assassin+
-*[[Jack The Ripper]], [[serial killer]] whose identity remains unknown.+
-*[[Geronimo]], [[Chiricahua Apache]] leader +
-*[[Wild Bill Hickock]], Legendary [[Wild West]], lawman+
-*[[Doc Holliday]], Legendary Wild West, gambler, gunfighter+
-*[[Crazy Horse]], War leader of the [[Lakota people|Lakota]]+
-*[[Frank James]], [[Wild West]], outlaw, older brother of Jesse+
-*[[Jesse James]], Legendary Wild West, outlaw+
-*[[Calamity Jane]], [[frontiersman|Frontierswoman]]+
-*[[Bat Masterson]], [[Wild West]], lawman, gambler, newspaperman+
-*[[Allan Pinkerton]], spy, founded the [[Pinkerton Agency]], first detective agency in the United States+
-*[[William Poole]] aka ''Bill the Butcher'', member of the New York City gang, the [[Bowery Boys]], a [[Bare-knuckle boxing|bare-knuckle boxer]], and a leader of the [[Know Nothing]] political movement.+
-*[[Belle Starr]] Legendary [[Wild West]], female outlaw+
-*[[Nat Turner]], led a [[slave rebellion]] in [[Southampton County, Virginia]] during August 1831.+
- +
-===Anthropology, archaeology, scholars===+
-*[[Churchill Babington]], Archaeology +
-*[[Adolph Francis Alphonse Bandelier]], Archaeology+
-*[[Franz Boas]], Anthropology+
-*[[Charles Étienne Brasseur de Bourbourg]], Archaeology+
-*[[Louis Agassiz Fuertes]], Ornithology+
-*[[George Bird Grinnell]], Anthropology+
-*[[Joseph LeConte]], Scholar, [[preservationist]]+
-*[[Nicholai Miklukho-Maklai]], Anthropology+
-*[[Clinton Hart Merriam]], Zoology+
-*[[Lewis H. Morgan]], Anthropology+
-*[[Jules Etienne Joseph Quicherat]], Archaeology+
-*[[Robert Ridgway]], Ornithology+
-*[[Edward Burnett Tylor]], Anthropology+
-*[[Karl Verner]], Linguist+
- +
-===Journalists, missionaries, explorers===+
-*[[Roald Amundsen]], explorer+
-*[[Samuel Baker]], explorer+
-*[[Thomas Baines]], artist, explorer+
-*[[Heinrich Barth]], explorer+
-*[[Henry Walter Bates]], naturalist, explorer+
-*[[Jim Bridger]], explorer+
-*[[Richard Francis Burton]], explorer+
-*The [[Lewis&Clark]] expedition, exploration+
-*[[Frederick Samuel Dellenbaugh]], explorer+
-*[[Percy Fawcett]], adventurer, explorer, proto-[[Indiana Jones]]+
-*[[Horace Greeley]], journalist+
-*[[Peter Jones (missionary)]], Canadian Methodist minister, and go-between between Christians and his fellow [[Mississaugas]] and other Indian tribes. +
-*[[Adoniram Judson]], missionary+
-*Sir [[John Kirk (explorer)|John Kirk]], explorer, physician, companion of David Livingston+
-*Sir [[Joseph Dalton Hooker]], botanist, explorer, friend of Charles Darwin +
-*Sir [[William Jackson Hooker]], botanist, explorer, father of Sir Joseph Dalton Hooker+
-*[[Meriwether Lewis]], explorer+
-*[[David Livingstone]], missionary+
-*[[Thomas Nast]], journalist, [[caricaturist]] and [[editorial cartoonist]]+
-*[[Robert Peary]], explorer+
-*[[Marcelo H. del Pilar]], writer, journalist, editor of ''[[La Solidaridad]]''.+
-*[[Nikolai Przhevalsky]], explorer+
-*[[Frederick Selous]], explorer +
-*[[John Hanning Speke]], explorer+
-*[[Henry M. Stanley]], journalist, explorer+
-*[[John McDouall Stuart]], explorer+
-*[[John L. O'Sullivan]], journalist who coined ''[[Manifest Destiny]]''+
-[[File:Thomas Nast - Brady-Handy.jpg|thumb|upright|[[Thomas Nast]], c. 1860–1875, photo by [[Mathew Brady]] or Levin Handy]]+
- +
-===Photography===+
-*[[Ottomar Anschütz]], [[chronophotographer]]+
-*[[Mathew Brady]], documented the [[American Civil War]]+
-*[[Edward S. Curtis]], documented the [[American West]] notably [[Native Americans in the United States|Native Americans]]+
-*[[Louis Daguerre]], inventor of [[daguerreotype]] process of photography, chemist+
-*[[Thomas Eakins]], pioneer motion photographer+
-*[[George Eastman]], inventor of the [[Photographic film|roll of film]] +
-*[[Hércules Florence]], pioneer inventor of photography+
-*[[Auguste and Louis Lumière]], pioneer filmmakers, inventors+
-*[[Étienne-Jules Marey]], pioneer motion photographer, [[chronophotographer]]+
-*[[Eadweard Muybridge]], pioneer motion photographer, [[chronophotographer]]+
-*[[Nadar (photographer)|Nadar]] aka Gaspard-Félix Tournachon, portrait photographer+
-*[[Nicéphore Niépce]], pioneer inventor of photography+
-*[[Louis Le Prince]], motion picture inventor and pioneer filmmaker+
-*[[William Fox Talbot]], inventor of the negative / positive photographic process.+
- +
-===Visual artists, painters, sculptors===+
- +
-The [[realism (visual arts)|Realism]] and [[Romanticism]] of the early 19th century gave way to [[Impressionism]] and [[Post-Impressionism]] in the later half of the century, with Paris being the dominant art capital of the world. In the United States the [[Hudson River School]] was prominent. 19th century painters included:+
-*[[Albert Bierstadt]]+
-*[[William Blake]]+
-*[[Arnold Bocklin]]+
-*[[Mary Cassatt]]+
-*[[Camille Claudel]]+
-*[[Paul Cézanne]]+
-*[[Frederic Edwin Church]]+
-*[[Thomas Cole]]+
-*[[John Constable]]+
-*[[Camille Corot]]+
-*[[James Tissot]]+
-*[[Gustave Courbet]]+
-*[[Honoré Daumier]] +
-*[[Edgar Degas]]+
-*[[Eugène Delacroix]]+
-*[[Thomas Eakins]]+
-*[[Caspar David Friedrich]]+
-*[[Paul Gauguin]]+
-*[[Théodore Géricault]]+
-*[[Vincent van Gogh]]+
-*[[Ando Hiroshige]]+
-*[[Hokusai]]+
-*[[Winslow Homer]]+
-*[[Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres]]+
-*[[Édouard Manet]]+
-*[[Claude Monet]]+
-*[[Gustave Moreau]]+
-*[[Berthe Morisot]]+
-*[[Edvard Munch]]+
-*[[Camille Pissarro]]+
-*[[Pierre-Auguste Renoir]]+
-*[[Auguste Rodin]]+
-*[[Albert Pinkham Ryder]]+
-*[[John Singer Sargent]]+
-*[[Georges Seurat]]+
-*[[Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec]]+
-*[[J. M. W. Turner|Joseph Mallord William Turner]]+
-*[[James Abbott McNeill Whistler]]+
-*[[Tsukioka Yoshitoshi]]+
===Music=== ===Music===
-[[Sonata form]] matured during the Classical era to become the primary form of instrumental compositions throughout the 19th century. Much of the music from the nineteenth century was referred to as being in the [[Romantic music|Romantic]] style. Many great composers lived through this era such as [[Ludwig van Beethoven]], [[Franz Liszt]], [[Frédéric Chopin]], [[Piotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky]] and [[Richard Wagner]]. The list includes:+:''[[19th century music]], [[Romantic music]]''
-*[[Ludwig van Beethoven]]+[[Sonata form]] matured during the Classical era to become the primary form of instrumental compositions throughout the 19th century. Much of the music from the nineteenth century was referred to as being in the [[Romantic music|Romantic]] style. Many great composers lived through this era such as [[Ludwig van Beethoven]], [[Franz Liszt]], [[Frédéric Chopin]], [[Piotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky]] and [[Richard Wagner]].
-*[[Hector Berlioz]]+
-*[[Georges Bizet]]+
-*[[Alexander Borodin]]+
-*[[Johannes Brahms]]+
-*[[Anton Bruckner]]+
-*[[Frédéric Chopin]]+
-*[[Claude Debussy]]+
-*[[Antonín Dvořák]]+
-*[[Edvard Grieg]]+
-*[[Scott Joplin]]+
-*[[Gustav Mahler]]+
-*[[Franz Liszt]]+
-*[[Felix Mendelssohn]]+
-*[[Modest Mussorgsky]]+
-*[[Jacques Offenbach]]+
-*[[Niccolò Paganini]]+
-*[[Camille Saint-Saëns]]+
-*[[Antonio Salieri]]+
-*[[Franz Schubert]]+
-*[[Robert Schumann]]+
-*[[Gilbert and Sullivan]]+
-*[[Piotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky]]+
-*[[Giuseppe Verdi]]+
-*[[Richard Wagner]]+
===Literature=== ===Literature===
 +:''[[19th century in literature]]''
-On the literary front the new century opens with [[romanticism]], a movement that spread throughout Europe in reaction to 18th-century rationalism, and it develops more or less along the lines of the Industrial Revolution, with a design to react against the dramatic changes wrought on nature by the [[steam engine]] and the [[railway]]. [[William Wordsworth]] and [[Samuel Taylor Coleridge]] are considered the initiators of the new school in England, while in the continent the German ''[[Sturm und Drang]]'' spreads its influence as far as Italy and Spain.+The history of [[literacy]] goes back several thousand years, but before the [[industrial revolution]] finally made [[pulp|cheap paper and cheap books]] available to all classes in industrialized countries in the mid-[[nineteenth century]], only a small percentage of the population in these countries were [[literate]]. Up until that point, materials associated with literacy were prohibitively expensive for people other than wealthy individuals and institutions.
-French arts had been hampered by the [[Napoleonic Wars]] but subsequently developed rapidly. [[Modernism]] began. +The new century opens with [[romanticism]], a movement that spread throughout Europe in reaction to 18th-century rationalism, and it develops more or less along the lines of the Industrial Revolution, with a design to react against the dramatic changes wrought on nature by the [[steam engine]] and the [[railway]]. [[William Wordsworth]] and [[Samuel Taylor Coleridge]] are considered the initiators of the new school in England, while in the continent the German ''[[Sturm und Drang]]'' spreads its influence as far as Italy and Spain.
-The Goncourts and [[Emile Zola]] in France and [[Giovanni Verga]] in Italy produce some of the finest naturalist novels. Italian naturalist novels are especially important in that they give a social map of the new unified Italy to a people that until then had been scarcely aware of its ethnic and cultural diversity. On February 21, 1848, [[Karl Marx]] and [[Friedrich Engels]] published the Communist Manifesto.+The Goncourts and [[Émile Zola]] in France and [[Giovanni Verga]] in Italy produce some of the finest [[naturalist novel]]s. Italian naturalist novels are especially important in that they give a social map of the new unified Italy to a people that until then had been scarcely aware of its ethnic and cultural diversity. On February 21, 1848, [[Karl Marx]] and [[Friedrich Engels]] published the Communist Manifesto.
-There was a huge literary output during the 19th century. Some of the most famous writers included the Russians [[Leo Tolstoy]], [[Anton Chekhov]] and [[Fyodor Dostoevsky]]; the English [[Charles Dickens]], [[John Keats]], [[Alfred, Lord Tennyson]] and [[Jane Austen]]; the Scottish [[Sir Walter Scott]]; the Irish [[Oscar Wilde]]; the Americans [[Edgar Allan Poe]], [[Ralph Waldo Emerson]], and [[Mark Twain]]; and the French [[Victor Hugo]], [[Honoré de Balzac]], [[Jules Verne]] and [[Charles Baudelaire]]. Some other important writers of note included:+There was a huge literary output during the 19th century. Some of the most famous writers included the Russians [[Leo Tolstoy]], [[Anton Chekhov]] and [[Fyodor Dostoevsky]]; the English [[Charles Dickens]], [[John Keats]], [[Alfred, Lord Tennyson]] and [[Jane Austen]]; the Scottish [[Sir Walter Scott]]; the Irish [[Oscar Wilde]]; the Americans [[Edgar Allan Poe]], [[Ralph Waldo Emerson]], and [[Mark Twain]]; and the French [[Victor Hugo]], [[Honoré de Balzac]], [[Jules Verne]] and [[Charles Baudelaire]].
-*[[Leopoldo Alas]]+The [[19th century]] was perhaps the most [[literary]] of all centuries, because not only were the forms of [[novel]], [[short story]] and [[serial|magazine serial]] all in existence side-by-side with [[theatre]] and [[opera]], but since film, radio and television did not yet exist, the popularity of the written word and its direct enactment were at their height. Major trends included [[Romanticism]], the [[Decadent movement]], [[Naturalism (literature)|Naturalism]], [[Literary realism|Realism]] and [[Symbolist literature|Symbolist literature]].
-*[[Hans Christian Andersen]]+
-*[[Machado de Assis]]+
-*[[Jane Austen]]+
-*[[Gertrudis Gómez de Avellaneda]]+
-*[[Gustavo Adolfo Bécquer]]+
-*[[Elizabeth Barret Browning]]+
-*[[Anne Brontë]]+
-*[[Charlotte Brontë]]+
-*[[Emily Brontë]]+
-*[[Georg Büchner]]+
-*[[Lord Byron]]+
-*[[Rosalía de Castro]]+
-*[[François-René de Chateaubriand]]+
-*[[Kate Chopin]]+
-*[[Samuel Taylor Coleridge]]+
-*[[James Fenimore Cooper]]+
-*[[Stephen Crane]]+
-*[[Eduard Douwes Dekker]]+
-*[[Emily Dickinson]]+
-*[[Charles Dickens]]+
-*[[Arthur Conan Doyle]]+
-*[[Alexandre Dumas, père]] (1802–1870)+
-*[[George Eliot]]+
-*[[Ralph Waldo Emerson]]+
-*[[Gustave Flaubert]]+
-*[[Margaret Fuller]]+
-*[[Elizabeth Gaskell]]+
-*[[Johann Wolfgang von Goethe]]+
-*[[Nikolai Gogol]]+
-*[[Juana Manuela Gorriti]]+
-*[[Brothers Grimm]]+
-*[[Henry Rider Haggard]]+
-*[[Ida, Countess von Hahn-Hahn|Ida Gräfin Hahn-Hahn]] (1805–1880)+
-*[[Thomas Hardy]]+
-*[[Francis Bret Harte]]+
-*[[Nathaniel Hawthorne]]+
-*[[Friedrich Hölderlin]]+
-*[[Heinrich Heine]]+
-*[[Henrik Ibsen]]+
-*[[Washington Irving]]+
-*[[Henry James]]+
-*[[John Keats]]+
-*[[Caroline Kirkland]]+
-*[[Jules Laforgue]]+
-*[[Giacomo Leopardi]]+
-*[[Stéphane Mallarmé]]+
-*[[Alessandro Manzoni]]+
-*[[José Martí]]+
-*[[Clorinda Matto de Turner]]+
-*[[Herman Melville]]+
-*[[Friedrich Nietzsche]]+
-*[[Manuel González Prada]]+
-*[[Marcel Proust]]+
-*[[Aleksandr Pushkin]]+
-*[[Fritz Reuter]] (1810–1874)+
-*[[Arthur Rimbaud]]+
-*[[John Ruskin]]+
-*[[George Sand]] (Amandine-Aurore-Lucile Dupin)+
-*[[Mary Shelley]]+
-*[[Percy Shelley]]+
-*[[Stendhal]] (Marie-Henri Beyle)+
-*[[Robert Louis Stevenson]]+
-*[[Bram Stoker]]+
-*[[Harriet Beecher Stowe]]+
-*[[Alfred, Lord Tennyson]]+
-*[[Henry David Thoreau]]+
-*[[Leo Tolstoy]]+
-*[[Mark Twain]]+
-*[[Paul Verlaine]]+
-*[[Jules Verne]]+
-*[[Lew Wallace]]+
-*[[HG Wells]]+
-*[[Walt Whitman]]+
-*[[William Wordsworth]]+
-*[[Émile Zola]]+
-*[[José Zorrilla]]+
-===Science===+In Britain, the 19th century is dominated by the [[Victorian era]], characterized by [[Romanticism]], with [[Romantic poetry|Romantic poets]] such as [[William Wordsworth]], [[Lord Byron]] or [[Samuel Taylor Coleridge]] and genres such as the [[gothic novel]] and the [[fashionable novel]].
-The 19th century saw the birth of science as a profession; the term '''scientist''' was coined in 1833 by [[William Whewell]] . Among the most influential ideas of the 19th century were those of [[Charles Darwin]], who in 1859 published the book ''[[The Origin of Species]]'', which introduced the idea of [[evolution]] by [[natural selection]]. [[Louis Pasteur]] made the first [[vaccine]] against [[rabies]], and also made many discoveries in the field of chemistry, including the [[optical isomerism|asymmetry of crystals]]. [[Thomas Alva Edison]] gave the world a practical everyday [[lightbulb]]. [[Karl Weierstrass]] and other mathematicians also carried out the [[arithmetization of analysis]] for functions of [[real variable|real]] and [[complex variable]]s; they also began the use of [[hypercomplex number]]s. But the most important step in science at this time was the ideas formulated by [[Michael Faraday]] and [[James Clerk Maxwell]]. Their work changed the face of physics and made possible for new technology to come about. Other important 19th century scientists included:+
-*[[Amedeo Avogadro]], physicist+
-*[[Johann Jakob Balmer]], mathematician, physicist+
-*[[Henri Becquerel]], physicist+
-*[[Alexander Graham Bell]], inventor+
-*[[Ludwig Boltzmann]], physicist+
-*[[János Bolyai]], mathematician+
-*[[Louis Braille]], inventor of [[braille]]+
-*[[Robert Bunsen]], chemist+
-*[[Marie Curie]], physicist, chemist+
-*[[Pierre Curie]], physicist+
-*[[Gottlieb Daimler]], engineer, industrial designer and industrialist+
-*[[Christian Doppler]], physicist, mathematician+
-*[[Thomas Edison]], inventor+
-*[[Michael Faraday]], scientist+
-*[[Léon Foucault]], physicist+
-*[[Gottlob Frege]], mathematician, logician and philosopher+
-*[[Sigmund Freud]], the father of psychoanalysis+
-*[[Carl Friedrich Gauss]], mathematician, physicist, astronomer+
-*[[Willard Gibbs|Josiah Willard Gibbs]], physicist+
-*[[Ernst Haeckel]], biologist+
-*[[William Rowan Hamilton]], physicist and mathematician+
-*[[Heinrich Hertz]], physicist+
-*[[Alexander von Humboldt]], naturalist, explorer+
-*[[Robert Koch]], physician, bacteriologist+
-*[[Justus von Liebig]], chemist+
-*[[Nikolai Ivanovich Lobachevsky|Nikolai Lobachevsky]], mathematician+
-*[[James Clerk Maxwell]], physicist+
-*[[Wilhelm Maybach]], car-engine and automobile designer and industrialist+
-*[[Gregor Mendel]], biologist+
-*[[Dmitri Mendeleev]], chemist+
-*[[Samuel Morey]], inventor+
-*[[Alfred Nobel]], chemist, engineer, inventor+
-*[[Louis Pasteur]], microbiologist and chemist+
-*[[Santiago Ramón y Cajal]], biologist+
-*[[Bernhard Riemann]], mathematician+
-*[[William Emerson Ritter]], biologist+
-*[[Nikola Tesla]], inventor+
-*[[William Thomson, 1st Baron Kelvin|William Thomson]], Lord Kelvin, physicist+
-===Philosophy and religion===+In the later 19th century, Romanticism is countered by [[Literary realism|Realism]] and [[Naturalism (literature)|Naturalism]]. The late 19th century, known as the ''[[Belle Époque]]'', with its ''[[Fin de siècle]]'' retrospectively appeared as a "golden age" of European culture, cut short by the outbreak of [[World War I]] in 1914.
-The 19th century was host to a variety of religious and philosophical thinkers, including:+===Science===
-*[[Mirza Ghulam Ahmad]] founded the [[Ahmadiyya]] Islamic movement in India.+:''[[Science in the 19th century]]''
-*[[Bahá'u'lláh]] founded the [[Bahá'í Faith]] in Persia+The 19th century saw the birth of science as a profession; the term '''scientist''' was coined in 1833. Among the most influential ideas of the 19th century were those of [[Charles Darwin]], who in 1859 published the book ''[[The Origin of Species]]'', which introduced the idea of [[evolution]] by [[natural selection]]. [[Louis Pasteur]] made the first [[vaccine]] against [[rabies]]. [[Thomas Alva Edison]] gave the world a practical everyday [[lightbulb]].
-*[[Mikhail Bakunin]], anarchist+
-*[[William Booth]], social reformer, founder of the [[Salvation Army]]+
-*[[Auguste Comte]], philosopher+
-*[[Mary Baker Eddy]], religious leader, founder of [[Christian Science]]+
-*[[Friedrich Engels]], political philosopher+
-*[[Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel]], philosopher+
-*[[Allan Kardec]], sistematizer of the [[Spiritism|Spiritist Doctrine]]+
-*[[Søren Kierkegaard]], philosopher+
-*[[Karl Marx]], political philosopher+
-*[[John Stuart Mill]], philosopher+
-*[[William Morris]], social reformer+
-*[[Friedrich Nietzsche]], philosopher+
-*[[Nikolai of Japan|Nikolai (Nicholas) of Japan]], religious leader, introduced [[Eastern Orthodox]]y into Japan+
-*[[Ramakrishna Paramahamsa]], Hindu mystic+
-*[[Claude Henri de Rouvroy, Comte de Saint-Simon]], founder of French [[socialism]]+
-*[[Arthur Schopenhauer]], philosopher+
-*[[Joseph Smith, Jr.]] and [[Brigham Young]], founders of [[Mormonism]]+
-*[[Ayya Vaikundar]], initiator of the belief system of [[Ayyavazhi]]+
-*[[Ellen White]] religious author and co-founder of the [[Seventh-day Adventist Church]]+
-===Politics and the Military===+The [[19th century]] was [[scandal]]ized when [[Naturalist]] [[Darwin]] implied that [[humans]] were descendant from [[primate]]s, much as in the [[20th century]] when [[Freud]] would imply that all of [[human behaviour]] was motivated by [[sex]]ual [[urge]]s.
-*[[John Adams]], American statesman, lawyer, and president+
-*[[John Quincy Adams]], U.S. congressman, lawyer, and president+
-*[[Susan B. Anthony]], U.S. women's rights advocate+
-*[[Otto von Bismarck]], German chancellor+
-*[[Napoleon I of France|Napoleon Bonaparte]], French general, first consul and emperor+
-*[[John C. Calhoun]], U.S. senator+
-*[[Henry Clay]], U.S. statesman, "The Great Compromiser"+
-*[[Jefferson Davis]], President of the [[Confederate States of America]] just before and during the [[American Civil War]].+
-*[[Benjamin Disraeli]], novelist and politician+
-*[[Frederick Douglass]], U.S. abolitionist spokesman+
-*[[Ferdinand VII of Spain]]+
-*[[Joseph Fouché]], French politician+
-*[[John C. Frémont]], Explorer, Governor of California+
-*[[Giuseppe Garibaldi]], unifier of Italy and [[Piedmont]]ese soldier+
-*[[Isabella II of Spain]]+
-*[[Emperor Gwangmu|Gojong of Joseon]], [[Korean people|Korean]] emperor+
-*[[William Lloyd Garrison]], U.S. abolitionist leader+
-*[[William Ewart Gladstone]], British prime minister+
-*[[Ulysses S. Grant]], U.S. general and president+
-*[[George Hearst]], U.S. Senator and father of [[William Randolph Hearst]]+
-*[[Theodor Herzl]], founder of modern political [[Zionism]]+
-*[[Andrew Jackson]], U.S. general and president+
-*[[Thomas Jefferson]], American statesman, philosopher, and president+
-*[[Lajos Kossuth]], Hungarian governor; leader of the war of independence+
-*[[Robert E. Lee]], [[Confederate States of America|Confederate]] general+
-*[[Libertadores]], Latin American liberators+
-*[[Abraham Lincoln]], U.S. president; led the nation during the [[American Civil War]]+
-*[[Sir John A. Macdonald]], Canada, first Prime Minister of Canada+
-*[[Klemens von Metternich]], Austrian Chancellor+
-*[[Meiji Emperor|Mutsuhito]], Japanese emperor+
-*[[Napoleon III]]+
-*[[Pedro II of Brazil]]+
-*[[Cecil Rhodes]]+
-*[[Theodore Roosevelt]], Explorer, Naturalist, future President of The United States+
-*[[William Tecumseh Sherman]], [[United States of America|Union]] general during the [[American Civil War]] +
-*[[Fulwar Skipwith]], the first and only president of the short lived [[Republic of West Florida]]+
-*[[Leland Stanford]], Governor of California, U.S. Senator, entrepreneur+
-*[[István Széchenyi]], aristocrat, leader of the Hungarian reform movement+
-*[[Charles Maurice de Talleyrand]], French politician+
-*[[Harriet Tubman]], [[African-American]] [[abolitionist]], [[humanitarian]], played a part in the [[Underground Railroad]]+
-*[[William M. Tweed]], aka ''Boss Tweed'', influential New York City politician, head of [[Tammany Hall]]+
-*[[Victoria of the United Kingdom|Queen Victoria]], British monarch+
-*[[Hong Xiuquan]], revolutionary, self-proclaimed [[Son of God]]+
-*[[Tokugawa Yoshinobu]], Japanese [[Shogun]] (The Last Shogun)+
- +Towards the end of the century, [[Sigmund Freud]] published ''[[Studies on Hysteria]]'' and ''[[The Interpretation of Dreams]]''.
-=== General culture ===+
-*[[History of subcultures in the 19th century]]+
-===Literature===+
-*[[19th century in literature]]+
-=== Art ===+
-:''[[19th century art]]''+
-After [[Rococo]] there arose in the late 18th century, in [[architecture]], and then in painting severe [[neo-classicism]], best represented by such artists as [[Jacques Louis David|David]] and his heir [[Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres|Ingres]]. Ingres' work already contains much of the sensuality, but none of the spontaneity, that was to characterize [[Romanticism]].+===Philosophy and religion===
 +:''[[19th century philosophy]]''
 +In the [[18th century]] the philosophies of [[The Enlightenment]] began to have a dramatic effect, the landmark works of philosophers such as [[Immanuel Kant]] and [[Jean-Jacques Rousseau]] influencing a new generation of thinkers. In the late 18th century a movement known as [[Romanticism]] sought to combine the formal rationality of the past, with a greater and more immediate emotional and organic sense of the world. Key ideas that sparked this change were [[evolution]], as postulated by [[Johann Wolfgang von Goethe]], [[Erasmus Darwin]], and [[Charles Darwin]] and what might now be called [[emergent]] order, such as the [[free market]] of Adam Smith. Pressures for egalitarianism, and more rapid change culminated in a period of revolution and turbulence that would see philosophy change as well.
 +====Existentialism====
-This movement turned its attention toward [[landscape]] and [[nature]] as well as the [[human figure]] and the supremacy of natural order above mankind's will. There is a [[pantheist]] philosophy (see [[Spinoza]] and [[Hegel]]) within this conception that opposes [[Age of Enlightenment|Enlightenment]] ideals by seeing mankind's destiny in a more tragic or pessimistic light. The idea that human beings are not above the forces of [[Nature]] is in contradiction to [[Ancient Greek]] and Renaissance ideals where mankind was above all things and owned his fate. This thinking led romantic artists to depict the [[sublime]], [[ruin]]ed churches, [[shipwreck]]s, [[massacre]]s and [[madness]]. +[[Existentialism]] as a philosophical movement is properly a [[20th-century philosophy|20th-century]] movement, but its major antecedents, [[Søren Kierkegaard]] and [[Friedrich Nietzsche]] wrote long before the rise of existentialism. In the [[1840]]s, academic philosophy in [[Europe]], following Hegel, was almost completely divorced from the concerns of individual human life, in favour of pursuing abstract metaphysical systems. Kierkegaard sought to reintroduce to philosophy, in the spirit of [[Socrates]]: subjectivity, commitment, faith, and passion, all of which are a part of the human condition.
-Romantic painters turned [[landscape painting]] into a major genre, considered until then as a minor genre or as a decorative background for figure compositions. +Like Kierkegaard, Nietzsche saw the moral values of 19th-century Europe disintegrating into [[nihilism]] (Kierkegaard called it the ''levelling'' process). Nietzsche attempted to undermine traditional moral values by exposing its foundations. To that end, he distinguished between [[master-slave morality|master and slave moralities]], and claimed that man must turn from the meekness and humility of Europe's slave-morality.
-Some of the major painters of this period are [[Eugene Delacroix]], [[Théodore Géricault]], [[J. M. W. Turner]], [[Caspar David Friedrich]] and [[John Constable]]. [[Francisco de Goya]]'s late work demonstrates the Romantic interest in the irrational, while the work of [[Arnold Böcklin]] evokes mystery and the paintings of [[Aesthetic movement]] artist [[James McNeill Whistler]] evoke both sophistication and [[decadent movement|decadence]]. In the [[United States]] the Romantic tradition of landscape painting was known as the [[Hudson River School]]. Important painters of that school include [[Thomas Cole]].+
-The leading [[Barbizon School]] painter [[Camille Corot]] painted in both a romantic and a [[Realism (visual arts)|realistic]] vein; his work prefigures [[Impressionism]], as does the paintings of [[Eugène Boudin]] who was one of the first French landscape painters to paint outdoors. Boudin was also an important influence on the young [[Claude Monet]], whom in 1857 he introduced to [[Plein air]] painting. A major force in the turn towards [[Realism (visual arts)|Realism]] at mid-century was [[Gustave Courbet]]. In the latter third of the century Impressionists like [[Édouard Manet]], [[Claude Monet]], [[Pierre-Auguste Renoir]], [[Camille Pissarro]], [[Alfred Sisley]], [[Berthe Morisot]], [[Mary Cassatt]], and [[Edgar Degas]] worked in a more direct approach than had previously been exhibited publicly. They eschewed allegory and narrative in favor of individualized responses to the modern world, sometimes painted with little or no preparatory study, relying on deftness of drawing and a highly chromatic pallette. Manet, Degas, Renoir, Morisot, and Cassatt concentrated primarily on the human subject. Both Manet and Degas reinterpreted classical figurative canons within contemporary situations; in Manet's case the re-imaginings met with hostile public reception. Renoir, Morisot, and Cassatt turned to domestic life for inspiration, with Renoir focusing on the female nude. Monet, Pissarro, and Sisley used the landscape as their primary motif, the transience of light and weather playing a major role in their work. While Sisley most closely adhered to the original principals of the impressionist perception of the landscape, Monet sought challenges in increasingly chromatic and changeable conditions, culminating in series of monumental works, and Pissarro adopted some of the experiments of [[Post-Impressionism]]. Slightly younger Post-Impressionists like [[Vincent Van Gogh]], [[Paul Gauguin]], and [[Georges Seurat]], along with [[Paul Cezanne]] led art to the edge of [[modernism]]; for Gauguin impressionism gave way to a personal [[symbolism]]; Seurat transformed impressionism's broken color into a scientific optical study, structured on frieze-like compositions; Van Gogh's turbulent method of paint application, coupled with a sonorous use of color, predicted [[Expressionism]] and [[Fauvism]], and Cezanne, desiring to unite classical composition with a revolutionary abstraction of natural forms, would come to be seen as a precursor of 20th century art. +Both philosophers are precursors to existentialism, among other ideas, for their importance on the "great man" against the age. Kierkegaard wrote of 19th-century Europe, "Each age has its own characteristic depravity. Ours is perhaps not pleasure or indulgence or sensuality, but rather a dissolute [[pantheistic]] contempt for the individual man."
- +==Culture timeline==
-The spell of Impressionism was felt throughout the world, and nowhere more profoundly than in the United States, where it became integral to the painting of [[American Impressionists]] such as [[Childe Hassam]], [[John Twachtman]], and [[Theodore Robinson]]. It also exerted influence on painters who were not primarily impressionistic in theory, like the portrait and landscape painter [[John Singer Sargent]]. At the same time in America there existed a native and nearly insular realism, as richly embodied in the figurative work of [[Thomas Eakins]] and the landscapes and seascapes of [[Winslow Homer]], both of whose paintings were deeply invested in the solidity of natural forms. The visionary landscape, a motive largely dependent on the ambiguity of the nocturne, found its advocates in [[Albert Pinkham Ryder]] and [[Ralph Blakelock]].+* 1800 - ''[[Zoloé et ses deux acolythes]]'' by anonymous
- +* 1801 - ''[[Traité médico-philosophique sur l'aliénation mentale]]'' by Philippe Pinel
-==Neoclassicism, Romanticism, Academism and Realism==+* 1802 - ''[[Travels in Upper and Lower Egypt]]'' by Vivant Denon
-As time passed, many artists were repulsed by the ornate grandeur of these styles and sought to revert to the earlier, simpler art of the Renaissance, creating [[Neoclassicism]]. Neoclassicism was the artistic component of the intellectual movement known as [[the Enlightenment]], which was similarly idealistic. [[Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres|Ingres]], [[Antonio Canova|Canova]], and [[Jacques-Louis David]] are among the best-known neoclassicists. +* 1803 - ''[[Le Diable au corps (1786)|Le Diable au corps]]'' by Nerciat published posthumously
- +* 1804 - ''[[Nightwatches]]'' by Bonaventura
-Just as Mannerism rejected Classicism, so did [[Romanticism]] reject the ideas of the Enlightenment and the aesthetic of the Neoclassicists. Romantic art focused on the use of color and motion in order to portray emotion, but like classicism used Greek and Roman mythology and tradition as an important source of symbolism. Another important aspect of Romanticism was its emphasis on nature and portraying the power and beauty of the natural world. Romanticism was also a large literary movement, especially in [[poetry]]. Among the greatest Romantic artists were [[Eugène Delacroix]], [[Francisco Goya]], [[J.M.W. Turner]], [[John Constable]], [[Caspar David Friedrich]], [[Thomas Cole]], and [[William Blake]].+* 1805 - ''[[Rameau's Nephew]]'' by Denis Diderot first published
- +* 1806 - ''[[Dictionnaire des livres condamnés au feu]]'' by Gabriel Peignot
-Most artists attempted to take a centrist approach which adopted different features of Neoclassicist and Romanticist styles, in order to synthesize them. The different attempts took place within the French Academy, and collectively are called [[Academic art]]. [[Adolphe William Bouguereau]] is considered a chief example of this stream of art.+* 1807 - ''[[The Half-Length Bather]]'' by Ingres
- +* 1808 - ''[[Oedipus and the Sphinx (Ingres)|Oedipus and the Sphinx]]'' by Ingres
-In the early 19th century the face of Europe, however, became radically altered by [[industrialization]]. Poverty, squalor, and desperation were to be the fate of the new [[working class]] created by the "revolution." In response to these changes going on in society, the movement of [[realism (arts)|Realism]] emerged. Realism sought to accurately portray the conditions and hardships of the poor in the hopes of changing society. In contrast with Romanticism, which was essentially optimistic about mankind, Realism offered a stark vision of poverty and despair. Similarly, while Romanticism glorified nature, Realism portrayed life in the depths of an urban wasteland. Like Romanticism, [[Realism (arts)|Realism]] was a literary as well as an artistic movement. The great [[Realism (visual arts)|Realist]] painters include [[Jean Baptiste Siméon Chardin]], [[Gustave Courbet]], [[Jean-François Millet]], [[Jean-Baptiste Camille Corot|Camille Corot]], [[Honoré Daumier]], [[Edouard Manet]], [[Edgar Degas]] (both considered as [[Impressionism|Impressionist]]s), and [[Thomas Eakins]], among others.+* 1809 - ''[[The Tour of Dr. Syntax: In Search of the Picturesque]]'' begun by William Combe and Thomas Rowlandson
- +* 1810 - ''[[The Disasters of War]]'', [[Francisco Goya]] begins the series
-The response of architecture to industrialisation, in stark contrast to the other arts, was to veer towards historicism. Although the railway stations built during this period are often considered the truest reflections of its spirit – they are sometimes called "the cathedrals of the age" – the main movements in architecture during the Industrial Age were revivals of styles from the distant past, such as the [[Gothic Revival architecture|Gothic Revival]]. Related movements were the [[Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood]], who attempted to return art to its state of "purity" prior to [[Raphael]], and the [[Arts and Crafts Movement]], which reacted against the impersonality of mass-produced goods and advocated a return to medieval craftsmanship.+* 1811 - "[[The Necessity of Atheism]]" by Percy Bysshe Shelle
- +* 1812 - "[[King Steam]]" published by an anonymous [[Luddite]]
-====Painters====+* 1813 - ''[[De l'Allemagne]]'' by Madame de Staël
-The [[realism (arts)|Realism]] and [[Romanticism]] of the early 19th century gave way to [[Impressionism]] in the later half of the century, with [[French art of the 19th century|Paris]] being the dominant art capital of the world. +* 1814 - ''[[Fantasy Pieces in Callot's Manner]]'' by E. T. A. Hoffmann and ''[[The Dream of the Fisherman's Wife]]'' by Hokusai
- +* 1815 - ''[[Les Curieux en extase|Les Curieux en extase, ou les cordons de souliers]]'', an engraving of Saartjie Baartman
-19th century painters included:+* 1816 - ''[[Kubla Khan]]'' by Samuel Taylor Coleridge
-* [[Eugène Delacroix]]+* 1817 - ''Rome, Naples, and Florence'' published by Stendhal, with description of [[Stendhal syndrome]]
-* [[Edvard Munch]]+* 1818 - ''[[Frankenstein]]'' by Mary Shelley
-* [[Caspar David Friedrich]]+* 1819 - ''[[The Raft of the Medusa]]'' by Théodore Géricault
-* [[Théodore Géricault]]+* 1820 - ''[[Melmoth the Wanderer]]'' by Charles Robert Maturin
-* [[Vincent van Gogh]]+* 1821 - ''[[Confessions of an English Opium-Eater]]''
-* [[Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres]]+* 1822 - ''[[Portrait of a Woman Suffering from Obsessive Envy]]'' by Théodore Géricault
-* [[Édouard Manet]]+* 1823 - ''[[The Dog (Goya)|The Dog]]'' by Francisco Goya
-* [[Claude Monet]]+* 1824 - ''[[The Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Justified Sinner]]''
-* [[Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec]]+* 1825 - ''[[The Physiology of Taste]]'' by Jean Anthelme Brillat-Savarin
-* [[Joseph Mallord William Turner]]+* 1826 - ''[[View from the Window at Le Gras]]'' by Nicéphore Niépce
-* [[William Morris]]+* 1827 - "[[On the Supernatural in Fictitious Composition]]" by Walter Scott
- +* 1828 - ''[[The Lustful Turk]]'' by anonymous
-===Music===+* 1829 - [[What is Classical is healthy; what is Romantic is sick]] says Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
- +* 1830 - ''[[The Red and the Black]]'' by Stendhal
-:''[[19th century music]]''+* 1831 - First version of the ''[[The Pears]]'' by Charles Philipon
-:''[[List of Romantic composers]], [[Romantic music]]''+* 1832 - ''[[The Great Wave off Kanagawa]]'' by Hokusai
- +* 1833 - ''[[Champavert|Champavert, contes immoraux]]'' by Petrus Borel
-*[[Johannes Brahms]]+* 1834 - ''[[Séraphîta]]'' by Honore de Balzac
-*[[Frédéric Chopin]]+* 1835 - ''[[Viy (story)|Viy]]'' by Russian writer Nikolai Gogol
-*[[Claude Debussy]]+* 1836 - ''[[La Morte Amoureuse]]'' by Théophile Gautier
-*[[Jacques Offenbach]]+* 1837 - ''[[La Vénus d'Ille]]'' by Prosper Mérimée
-*[[Niccolò Paganini]]+* 1838 - "[[Un pauvre honteux]]" by Xavier Forneret
-*[[Camille Saint-Saëns]]+* 1839 - "[[The Fall of the House of Usher]]" by Edgar Allan Poe
-*[[Gilbert and Sullivan]]+* 1840 - ''[[What Is Property?]]'' by Pierre-Joseph Proudhon
-*[[Piotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky]]+* 1841 - ''[[Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds]]'' by Charles Mackay
- +* 1842 - ''[[The Mysteries of Paris]]'' by Eugène Sue
-== Births ==+* 1843 - [[Byron and Sade are perhaps the two greatest inspirations of our moderns]], wrote French literary critic [[Sainte-Beuve]]
- +* 1844 - ''[[Un autre monde]]'' by Grandville
-==Deaths ==+* 1845 - "[[The Imp of the Perverse]]" by Edgar Allan Poe
 +* 1846 - [[Club des Hachichins (Théophile Gautier)|"Club des Hachichins"]] by Gautier
 +* 1847 - [[Galeries Royales Saint-Hubert]] inaugurated in Brussels
 +* 1848 - [[John Ruskin marries Effie Gray]]
 +* 1849 - ''[[La Vie de bohème]]'', play by Murger staged at the Théâtre des Variétés
 +* 1850 - ''[[A Burial At Ornans]]'' by Gustave Courbet
 +* 1851 - [[The Crystal Palace]] inaugurated
 +* 1852 - ''[[Uncle Tom's Cabin]]'' by Harriet Beecher Stowe
 +* 1853 - "[[Bartleby, the Scrivener]]" by Melville
 +* 1854 - [[The red splodge representing the reign of Ivan the Terrible in Gustave Doré's 'The History of Holy Russia'|The red splodge representing the reign of Ivan the Terrible]] by Gustave Doré's
 +* 1855 - "[[I Sing the Body Electric (poem)|I Sing the Body Electric]]" by Walt Whitman
 +* 1856 - ''[[Infant Photography Giving the Painter an Additional Brush]]'', photo by Oscar Gustave Rejlander
 +* 1857 - ''[[Les Fleurs du mal]]'' by Baudelaire
 +* 1858 - ''[[Fading Away]]'' a photograph by Henry Peach Robinson
 +* 1859 - ''[[On the Origin of Species]]'' by Charles Darwin
 +* 1860 - ''[[Les Paradis artificiels|Artificial Paradises]]'' by Baudelaire
 +* 1861 - ''[[Phryne before the Areopagus]]'' by Jean-Léon Gérôme
 +* 1862 - ''[[The Turkish Bath]]'' by Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres
 +* 1863 - ''[[Le Déjeuner sur l'herbe]]'' by Édouard Manet
 +* 1864 - ''[[Notes from Underground]]'' by Fyodor Dostoyevsky
 +* 1865 - ''[[Alice's Adventures in Wonderland]]'' by Lewis Carroll
 +* 1866 - ''[[L'Origine du monde]]'' by Gustave Courbet
 +* 1867 - ''[[Das Kapital]]'' by Karl Marx
 +* 1868 - ''[[Les Chants de Maldoror|The Songs of Maldoror]]'' by Comte de Lautréamont, first canto published
 +* 1869 - ''[[The Philosophy of the Unconscious]]'' by Eduard von Hartmann
 +* 1870 - ''[[Venus in Furs]]'' by Leopold von Sacher-Masoch
 +* 1871 - "[[To arrive at the unknown through the disordering of all the senses, that's the point]]" -- Arthur Rimbaud
 +* 1872 - ''[[Carmilla]]'' by Sheridan Le Fanu
 +* 1873 - ''[[Le Ventre de Paris]]'' by Émile Zola
 +* 1874 - ''[[Les Diaboliques (short story collection)|Les Diaboliques]]'' by Barbey d'Aurevilly
 +* 1875 - ''[[Nocturne in Black and Gold, the Falling Rocket]]'' by James Abbott McNeill Whistler
 +* 1876 - ''[[L'Absinthe]]'' by Edgar Degas
 +* 1877 - "[[Is the Bible Indictable?]]" (c. 1877), a pamphlet by Annie Besant
 +* 1878 - Eadweard Muybridge solves [[Stanford and the trot question]]
 +* 1879 - ''[[Pornocrates]]'' by Félicien Rops
 +* 1880 - ''[[Isle of the Dead (painting)|Isle of the Dead]]'' by Böcklin
 +* 1881 - ''[[Paraphrases about the Finding of a Glove]]'' by Max Klinger
 +* 1882 - ''[[Negroes Fighting in a Tunnel at Night ]]'' by Paul Bilhaud
 +* 1883 - ''[[The Misshapen Polyp Floated on the Shores, a Sort of Smiling and Hideous Cyclops]]'' by Odilon Redon
 +* 1884 - ''[[Flatland]]'' by Edwin A. Abbott and ''[[À rebours]]'' by Joris-Karl Huysmans
 +* 1885 - ''[[Self-Portrait at the Age of Twenty]]'' by Félix Vallotton
 +* 1886 - ''[[Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde]]'' by Robert Louis Stevenson
 +* 1887 - ''[[She: A History of Adventure]]'' by H. Rider Haggard
 +* 1888 - ''[[Gymnopédies|Gymnopédie]]'' by Erik Satie
 +* 1889 - ''[[The Starry Night]]'' by Vincent van Gogh, [[Eiffel Tower]] is inaugurated
 +* 1890 - ''[[The Picture of Dorian Gray]]'' by Oscar Wilde
 +* 1891 - ''[[Moulin Rouge: La Goulue]]'' by Lautrec
 +* 1892 - ''[[Degeneration (Nordau)|Degeneration]]'' by Max Nordau
 +* 1893 - ''[[The Scream]]'' by Edvard Munch
 +* 1894 - ''[[The Songs of Bilitis]]'' by Pierre Louÿs
 +* 1895 - ''[[L'Arrivée d'un train en gare de La Ciotat]]''
 +* 1896 - ''[[Ubu Roi]]'' by Alfred Jarry
 +* 1897 - "[[Funeral March for the Obsequies of a Deaf Man]]" by Alphonse Allais first appears in print
 +* 1898 - ''[[The War of the Worlds]]'' by H. G. Wells
 +* 1899 - ''[[The Torture Garden|Torture Garden]]'' by Octave Mirbeau
 +* 1900 - ''[[The Road to Hell]]'' by Alfred Kubin
 +==Eras==
 +*[[Industrial revolution]]
 +*[[European Imperialism]]
 +*[[British Regency]], [[Victorian era]] (UK, [[British Empire]])
 +*[[Bourbon Restoration]], [[July Monarchy]], [[French Second Republic]], [[Second French Empire]], [[French Third Republic]] ([[France in the nineteenth century|France]])
 +*[[Belle Époque]] (Europe)
 +*[[Edo period]], [[Meiji period]] (Japan)
 +*[[Qing Dynasty]] (China)
 +*[[Tanzimat]]
 +*[[Russian Empire]]
 +*[[Manifest Destiny|American Manifest Destiny]], [[Gilded Age|The Gilded Age]]
==See also== ==See also==
 +*[[History of subcultures in the 19th century]]
 +*[[19th century in literature]]
 +*[[19th century architecture]]
 +*[[19th century art]]
 +*[[19th century erotica]]
*[[19th century in film]] *[[19th century in film]]
*[[19th century in games]] *[[19th century in games]]
Line 742: Line 229:
*[[Capitalism in the nineteenth century]] *[[Capitalism in the nineteenth century]]
*[[France in the nineteenth century]] *[[France in the nineteenth century]]
-*[[List of wars 1800–1899]] 
*[[Mid-nineteenth century Spain]] *[[Mid-nineteenth century Spain]]
 +*[[The long nineteenth century]]
*[[Nineteenth century theatre]] *[[Nineteenth century theatre]]
*[[Russian history, 1855–1892]] *[[Russian history, 1855–1892]]
-*[[Timeline of 19th century Islamic history]] 
-*[[Timeline of historic inventions#19th century]] 
*[[Victorian Era]] *[[Victorian Era]]
- +*[[Political events of the 19th century]]
-== List of years ==+*Start of [[Bohemianism]]
-:[[1800s]], [[1810s]], [[1820s]], [[1830s]], [[1840s]], [[1850s]], [[1860s]], [[1870s]], [[1880s]], [[1890s]]+
- +
-:[[1900]] - [[1899]] - [[1898]] - [[1897]] - [[1896]] - [[1895]] - [[1894]] - [[1893]] - [[1892]] - [[1891]]+
-:[[1890]] - [[1889]] - [[1888]] - [[1887]] - [[1886]] - [[1885]] - [[1884]] - [[1883]] - [[1882]] - [[1881]]+
-:[[1880]] - [[1879]] - [[1878]] - [[1877]] - [[1876]] - [[1875]] - [[1874]] - [[1873]] - [[1872]] - [[1871]]+
-:[[1870]] - [[1869]] - [[1868]] - [[1867]] - [[1866]] - [[1865]] - [[1864]] - [[1863]] - [[1862]] - [[1861]]+
-:[[1860]] - [[1859]] - [[1858]] - [[1857]] - [[1856]] - [[1855]] - [[1854]] - [[1853]] - [[1852]] - [[1851]]+
-:[[1850]] - [[1849]] - [[1848]] - [[1847]] - [[1846]] - [[1845]] - [[1844]] - [[1843]] - [[1842]] - [[1841]]+
-:[[1840]] - [[1839]] - [[1838]] - [[1837]] - [[1836]] - [[1835]] - [[1834]] - [[1833]] - [[1832]] - [[1831]]+
-:[[1830]] - [[1829]] - [[1828]] - [[1827]] - [[1826]] - [[1825]] - [[1824]] - [[1823]] - [[1822]] - [[1821]]+
-:[[1820]] - [[1819]] - [[1818]] - [[1817]] - [[1816]] - [[1815]] - [[1814]] - [[1813]] - [[1812]] - [[1811]]+
-:[[1810]] - [[1809]] - [[1808]] - [[1807]] - [[1806]] - [[1805]] - [[1804]] - [[1803]] - [[1802]] - [[1801]]+
{{GFDL}} {{GFDL}}

Current revision

True Portrait of Monsieur Ubu (1896) by Alfred Jarry
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True Portrait of Monsieur Ubu (1896) by Alfred Jarry

"The nineteenth century not only shows a new age, but probably begins a new section of universal history. It is probable that in contrast with this epoch of stirring movement, during which the readjustment of all political and social relations, the new discoveries in the instruments of commerce, trade, and industry have given an entirely new aspect to the world, the next thousand years will sum up all the previous centuries as the "old world." New men require a new art. One would be inclined to surmise from this that the art of the nineteenth century presented itself as something essentially personal, with a sharply distinctive style. Instead of this it offers at first view, in contrast with those old ages of uniform production, a condition like that of Babylon. The nineteenth century has no style--the phrase that has been so often quoted as to have become a commonplace."--The History of Modern Painting (1893/94) Richard Muther


"The Industrial Revolution, starting in England, where scientific research and applied science ushered in the Machine Age, spread rapidly. The half-century from 1800 to 1850 saw the first of many inventions: steamboat, locomotive, transatlantic liner, and passenger train as well as the telegraph and the camera — all which, with other factors, eventuated in a great expansion of industry; in the rise of the wealthy manufacturer to challenge the wealthy landowner; in the drift of population to the cities where the manufacturing plants were located, with consequent overcrowding; in the emergence of those social and economic conditions which gave rise to socialism and other attempts to alleviate their injustice. The application of the scientific viewpoint, with its critical observation of phenomena, produced Darwin’s The Origin of Species (1859) and a consequent long line of research; and a weakening of religious faith." --Gardner's Art Through the Ages (1926) by Helen Gardner

As "Darwinism" became widely accepted in the 1870s, good-natured caricatures of him with an ape or monkey body symbolised evolution.
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As "Darwinism" became widely accepted in the 1870s, good-natured caricatures of him with an ape or monkey body symbolised evolution.
L'Absinthe (1876) by Edgar Degas
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L'Absinthe (1876) by Edgar Degas
The Great Wave off Kanagawa (1832) by Hokusai
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The Great Wave off Kanagawa (1832) by Hokusai
Mona Lisa Smoking a Pipe (1887) by Eugène Bataille
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Mona Lisa Smoking a Pipe (1887) by Eugène Bataille
The monomanies series by Géricault (1821-24) by  Théodore Géricault. From left to right: Portrait of a Woman Suffering from Obsessive Envy, A Kleptomaniac, Military Obsessive, Monomaniac of Gambling and Monomania of Child Kidnapping
Enlarge
The monomanies series by Géricault (1821-24) by Théodore Géricault. From left to right: Portrait of a Woman Suffering from Obsessive Envy, A Kleptomaniac, Military Obsessive, Monomaniac of Gambling and Monomania of Child Kidnapping
The Dog (c. 1819–1823) by Francisco Goya
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The Dog (c. 1819–1823) by Francisco Goya
The Sea of Ice (1824)  by Caspar David Friedrich
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The Sea of Ice (1824) by Caspar David Friedrich
View from the Window at Le Gras (1826) by Nicéphore Niépce
Enlarge
View from the Window at Le Gras (1826) by Nicéphore Niépce

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<< 18th century 20th century >>

The 19th (nineteenth) century was the ninth century of the 2nd millennium.

The century saw large amounts of social change; slavery was abolished, and the Industrial Revolution led to massive urbanization and much higher levels of productivity, profit and prosperity. The Islamic gunpowder empires were formally dissolved and European imperialism brought large parts of Asia and almost all of Africa under colonial rule.

The British Empire grew rapidly in the first half of the century and during the post-Napoleonic era, it enforced what became known as the Pax Britannica, which had ushered in unprecedented globalization and economic integration on a massive scale.

It was a century of widespread invention and discovery, and one in which social, cultural, and economic systems were heavily affected by science and technology and the business models built on them, such as a shift from independent artisans and craftsmen to wage laborers employed by large factories as the primary means of production.

It was the heyday of capitalism, but it was also the century in which the major opposing ideologies, socialism and communism, arose. The successes up to that time in building mechanical devices and in discovering the natural laws of the universe led to a widespread belief by the end of the century that the world ran predictably as by clockwork and that all of its mysteries would soon be solved by modern science; and, similarly, all of the social problems of human society could be solved too by application of scientific principles. These beliefs were soon dashed by 20th century developments such as relativity and quantum physics, and by the wars and genocides of that century.

Contents

Visual artists, painters, sculptors

19th century art

The Realism and Romanticism of the early 19th century gave way to Impressionism in the later half of the century, with Paris being the dominant art capital of the world.

After Rococo there arose in the late 18th century, in architecture, and then in painting severe neo-classicism, best represented by such artists as David and his heir Ingres. Ingres' work already contains much of the sensuality, but none of the spontaneity, that was to characterize Romanticism.

This movement turned its attention toward landscape and nature as well as the human figure and the supremacy of natural order above mankind's will. There is a pantheist philosophy (see Spinoza and Hegel) within this conception that opposes Enlightenment ideals by seeing mankind's destiny in a more tragic or pessimistic light. The idea that human beings are not above the forces of Nature is in contradiction to Ancient Greek and Renaissance ideals where mankind was above all things and owned his fate. This thinking led romantic artists to depict the sublime, ruined churches, shipwrecks, massacres and madness.

Romantic painters turned landscape painting into a major genre, considered until then as a minor genre or as a decorative background for figure compositions. Some of the major painters of this period are Eugene Delacroix, Théodore Géricault, J. M. W. Turner, Caspar David Friedrich and John Constable. Francisco de Goya's late work demonstrates the Romantic interest in the irrational, while the work of Arnold Böcklin evokes mystery and the paintings of Aesthetic movement artist James McNeill Whistler evoke both sophistication and decadence. In the United States the Romantic tradition of landscape painting was known as the Hudson River School. Important painters of that school include Thomas Cole.

The leading Barbizon School painter Camille Corot painted in both a romantic and a realistic vein; his work prefigures Impressionism, as does the paintings of Eugène Boudin who was one of the first French landscape painters to paint outdoors. Boudin was also an important influence on the young Claude Monet, whom in 1857 he introduced to Plein air painting. A major force in the turn towards Realism at mid-century was Gustave Courbet. In the latter third of the century Impressionists like Édouard Manet, Claude Monet, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Camille Pissarro, Alfred Sisley, Berthe Morisot, Mary Cassatt, and Edgar Degas worked in a more direct approach than had previously been exhibited publicly. They eschewed allegory and narrative in favor of individualized responses to the modern world, sometimes painted with little or no preparatory study, relying on deftness of drawing and a highly chromatic pallette. Manet, Degas, Renoir, Morisot, and Cassatt concentrated primarily on the human subject. Both Manet and Degas reinterpreted classical figurative canons within contemporary situations; in Manet's case the re-imaginings met with hostile public reception. Renoir, Morisot, and Cassatt turned to domestic life for inspiration, with Renoir focusing on the female nude. Monet, Pissarro, and Sisley used the landscape as their primary motif, the transience of light and weather playing a major role in their work. While Sisley most closely adhered to the original principals of the impressionist perception of the landscape, Monet sought challenges in increasingly chromatic and changeable conditions, culminating in series of monumental works, and Pissarro adopted some of the experiments of Post-Impressionism. Slightly younger Post-Impressionists like Vincent Van Gogh, Paul Gauguin, and Georges Seurat, along with Paul Cezanne led art to the edge of modernism; for Gauguin impressionism gave way to a personal symbolism; Seurat transformed impressionism's broken color into a scientific optical study, structured on frieze-like compositions; Van Gogh's turbulent method of paint application, coupled with a sonorous use of color, predicted Expressionism and Fauvism, and Cezanne, desiring to unite classical composition with a revolutionary abstraction of natural forms, would come to be seen as a precursor of 20th century art.

The spell of Impressionism was felt throughout the world, and nowhere more profoundly than in the United States, where it became integral to the painting of the American Impressionists. It also exerted influence on painters who were not primarily impressionistic in theory, like the portrait and landscape painter John Singer Sargent. At the same time in America there existed a native and nearly insular realism, as richly embodied in the figurative work of Thomas Eakins and the landscapes and seascapes of Winslow Homer, both of whose paintings were deeply invested in the solidity of natural forms. The visionary landscape, a motive largely dependent on the ambiguity of the nocturne, found its advocates in Albert Pinkham Ryder and Ralph Blakelock.

Neoclassicism, Romanticism, Academism and Realism

As time passed, many artists were repulsed by the ornate grandeur of these styles and sought to revert to the earlier, simpler art of the Renaissance, creating Neoclassicism. Neoclassicism was the artistic component of the intellectual movement known as the Enlightenment, which was similarly idealistic. Ingres, Canova, and Jacques-Louis David are among the best-known neoclassicists.

Just as Mannerism rejected Classicism, so did Romanticism reject the ideas of the Enlightenment and the aesthetic of the Neoclassicists. Romantic art focused on the use of color and motion in order to portray emotion, but like classicism used Greek and Roman mythology and tradition as an important source of symbolism. Another important aspect of Romanticism was its emphasis on nature and portraying the power and beauty of the natural world. Romanticism was also a large literary movement, especially in poetry. Among the greatest Romantic artists were Eugène Delacroix, Francisco Goya, J.M.W. Turner, John Constable, Caspar David Friedrich, Thomas Cole, and William Blake.

Most artists attempted to take a centrist approach which adopted different features of Neoclassicist and Romanticist styles, in order to synthesize them. The different attempts took place within the French Academy, and collectively are called Academic art. Adolphe William Bouguereau is considered a chief example of this stream of art.

In the early 19th century the face of Europe, however, became radically altered by industrialization. Poverty, squalor, and desperation were to be the fate of the new working class created by the "revolution." In response to these changes going on in society, the movement of Realism emerged. Realism sought to accurately portray the conditions and hardships of the poor in the hopes of changing society. In contrast with Romanticism, which was essentially optimistic about mankind, Realism offered a stark vision of poverty and despair. Similarly, while Romanticism glorified nature, Realism portrayed life in the depths of an urban wasteland. Like Romanticism, Realism was a literary as well as an artistic movement. The great Realist painters include Jean Baptiste Siméon Chardin, Gustave Courbet, Jean-François Millet, Camille Corot, Honoré Daumier, Edouard Manet, Edgar Degas (both considered as Impressionists), and Thomas Eakins, among others.

The response of architecture to industrialization, in stark contrast to the other arts, was to veer towards historicism. Although the railway stations built during this period are often considered the truest reflections of its spirit – they are sometimes called "the cathedrals of the age" – the main movements in architecture during the Industrial Age were revivals of styles from the distant past, such as the Gothic Revival. Related movements were the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, who attempted to return art to its state of "purity" prior to Raphael, and the Arts and Crafts Movement, which reacted against the impersonality of mass-produced goods and advocated a return to medieval craftsmanship.

Toward the end of the 19th century, painters and critics began to rebel against the many rules of the Académie française, including the preference for history painting. New artistic movements included the Realists and Impressionists, which each sought to depict the present moment and daily life as observed by the eye, and unattatched from historical significance; the Realists often choosing genre painting and still-life, while the Impressionists would most often focus on landscapes. The history painting gained less favor through the vogue in Europe for Japanese culture and art, in the form of Japonism—in Japan significant importance was placed upon items such as laquerware and porcelain.

Music

19th century music, Romantic music

Sonata form matured during the Classical era to become the primary form of instrumental compositions throughout the 19th century. Much of the music from the nineteenth century was referred to as being in the Romantic style. Many great composers lived through this era such as Ludwig van Beethoven, Franz Liszt, Frédéric Chopin, Piotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky and Richard Wagner.

Literature

19th century in literature

The history of literacy goes back several thousand years, but before the industrial revolution finally made cheap paper and cheap books available to all classes in industrialized countries in the mid-nineteenth century, only a small percentage of the population in these countries were literate. Up until that point, materials associated with literacy were prohibitively expensive for people other than wealthy individuals and institutions.

The new century opens with romanticism, a movement that spread throughout Europe in reaction to 18th-century rationalism, and it develops more or less along the lines of the Industrial Revolution, with a design to react against the dramatic changes wrought on nature by the steam engine and the railway. William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge are considered the initiators of the new school in England, while in the continent the German Sturm und Drang spreads its influence as far as Italy and Spain.

The Goncourts and Émile Zola in France and Giovanni Verga in Italy produce some of the finest naturalist novels. Italian naturalist novels are especially important in that they give a social map of the new unified Italy to a people that until then had been scarcely aware of its ethnic and cultural diversity. On February 21, 1848, Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels published the Communist Manifesto.

There was a huge literary output during the 19th century. Some of the most famous writers included the Russians Leo Tolstoy, Anton Chekhov and Fyodor Dostoevsky; the English Charles Dickens, John Keats, Alfred, Lord Tennyson and Jane Austen; the Scottish Sir Walter Scott; the Irish Oscar Wilde; the Americans Edgar Allan Poe, Ralph Waldo Emerson, and Mark Twain; and the French Victor Hugo, Honoré de Balzac, Jules Verne and Charles Baudelaire.

The 19th century was perhaps the most literary of all centuries, because not only were the forms of novel, short story and magazine serial all in existence side-by-side with theatre and opera, but since film, radio and television did not yet exist, the popularity of the written word and its direct enactment were at their height. Major trends included Romanticism, the Decadent movement, Naturalism, Realism and Symbolist literature.

In Britain, the 19th century is dominated by the Victorian era, characterized by Romanticism, with Romantic poets such as William Wordsworth, Lord Byron or Samuel Taylor Coleridge and genres such as the gothic novel and the fashionable novel.

In the later 19th century, Romanticism is countered by Realism and Naturalism. The late 19th century, known as the Belle Époque, with its Fin de siècle retrospectively appeared as a "golden age" of European culture, cut short by the outbreak of World War I in 1914.

Science

Science in the 19th century

The 19th century saw the birth of science as a profession; the term scientist was coined in 1833. Among the most influential ideas of the 19th century were those of Charles Darwin, who in 1859 published the book The Origin of Species, which introduced the idea of evolution by natural selection. Louis Pasteur made the first vaccine against rabies. Thomas Alva Edison gave the world a practical everyday lightbulb.

The 19th century was scandalized when Naturalist Darwin implied that humans were descendant from primates, much as in the 20th century when Freud would imply that all of human behaviour was motivated by sexual urges.

Towards the end of the century, Sigmund Freud published Studies on Hysteria and The Interpretation of Dreams.

Philosophy and religion

19th century philosophy

In the 18th century the philosophies of The Enlightenment began to have a dramatic effect, the landmark works of philosophers such as Immanuel Kant and Jean-Jacques Rousseau influencing a new generation of thinkers. In the late 18th century a movement known as Romanticism sought to combine the formal rationality of the past, with a greater and more immediate emotional and organic sense of the world. Key ideas that sparked this change were evolution, as postulated by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Erasmus Darwin, and Charles Darwin and what might now be called emergent order, such as the free market of Adam Smith. Pressures for egalitarianism, and more rapid change culminated in a period of revolution and turbulence that would see philosophy change as well.

Existentialism

Existentialism as a philosophical movement is properly a 20th-century movement, but its major antecedents, Søren Kierkegaard and Friedrich Nietzsche wrote long before the rise of existentialism. In the 1840s, academic philosophy in Europe, following Hegel, was almost completely divorced from the concerns of individual human life, in favour of pursuing abstract metaphysical systems. Kierkegaard sought to reintroduce to philosophy, in the spirit of Socrates: subjectivity, commitment, faith, and passion, all of which are a part of the human condition.

Like Kierkegaard, Nietzsche saw the moral values of 19th-century Europe disintegrating into nihilism (Kierkegaard called it the levelling process). Nietzsche attempted to undermine traditional moral values by exposing its foundations. To that end, he distinguished between master and slave moralities, and claimed that man must turn from the meekness and humility of Europe's slave-morality.

Both philosophers are precursors to existentialism, among other ideas, for their importance on the "great man" against the age. Kierkegaard wrote of 19th-century Europe, "Each age has its own characteristic depravity. Ours is perhaps not pleasure or indulgence or sensuality, but rather a dissolute pantheistic contempt for the individual man."

Culture timeline

Eras

See also




Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "19th century" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

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