Antiquity to Crusades The emergence of city-states (
poleis) in
ancient Greece marks the beginning of
classical antiquity. The two most important Greek cities, the
Ionian-democratic
Athens and the
Dorian-aristocratic
Sparta, led
the successful defense of Greece against the invading
Persians from the east, but then clashed against each other for supremacy in the
Peloponnesian War. The
Kingdom of Macedon took advantage of the following instability and
established a single rule over Greece. Desire to form a
universal monarchy brought
Alexander the Great to annex the entire
Persian Empire and begin a
Hellenization of the Macedonian possessions. At his death in 323 BC, his reign was divided between his
successors and several
Hellenistic kingdoms were formed.
Rome expanded into the whole of
Italy around the same period and then
rose to prominence in the western and
Eastern Mediterranean through the
Punic Wars and
Macedonian Wars, but was then shaken by a
century-long political crisis. Meanwhile, the popularity and wealth of Roman generals increased: notably
Julius Caesar acquired fame for projecting military power north of the
Alps into
Gaul, east of the
Rhine into
Germania and across the
Channel into
Britain. A group of senators afraid of Caesar's title of
dictator for life assassinated him on the
Ides of March of 44 BC. The adoptive son of Caesar,
Octavian Augustus, defeated the killers of his father and became the first
Roman Emperor (
Princeps) in 27 BC. The
Roman Empire peaked during the
Pax Romana, stagnated during the
crisis of the third century AD and ultimately
split between the
Latin West and the
Greek East. Both parts of the Empire abandoned pagan
polytheism in order to
tolerate monotheistic
Christianity and finally
make it the state religion. The West
collapsed around 476, following centuries of
attacks by Germanic and Slavic peoples and several
successor states were established on its former territory. The East continued to be ruled by the
Eastern Roman Empire for an additional thousand years. Among the successor states in the West, that of the
Franks was the largest, and under
Charlemagne managed to unite most of present-day France, Germany, Switzerland, Austria, the Low Countries and Italy under one rule: he was subsequently crowned
Holy Roman Emperor the day of Christmas in 800 by
Pope Leo III. This led to a conflict with the
Byzantine Empire, the so-called
problem of two emperors saw both empires being unable wage war with each other making other disputes and common threats the dominating factor of their relations. Meanwhile, the
Iberian Peninsula fell under
Muslim control. The beginning of the
Reconquista of Christian forces is traditionally dated to the
Battle of Covadonga (718 or 722), in which an
Asturian army achieved the first Christian victory over the forces of the
Umayyad Caliphate since the beginning of the military invasion. Its culmination came in 1492 with the
fall of the Nasrid kingdom of Granada to the united Spanish Crown of
Ferdinand II of Aragon and
Isabella I of Castile. The Germanic Emperor (Holy Roman Emperor) and the
Roman Pontiff (Pope in Rome) came to be known as the
universal powers of Europe, but then entered in conflict during the
investiture controversy and the
clash between their factions. Their rivalry made possible the birth of autonomous
city-states in northern Italy and the rise of an independent
feudal monarchy in France under the
House of Capet. Around the same period, the
Norman Conquest of England happened in 1066 and
Sicily fell in 1130. With the
Holy Land lost to Islam and the
Romans seeking help from
Turks, the Pope initiated the First
Crusade against the Muslims in an attempt to restore Christian authority in former Roman lands following the
Eastern Schism of the
Orthodox from the Catholics. Most of the crusades did not achieve their objective, but some of them had a massive impact on the political and economic landscape of Europe: the
First Crusade (1099) re-opened the trade routes in the Mediterranean and ushered in the
commercial revolution; the
Fourth Crusade (1204) resulted in the formation of the
Venetian maritime empire; and the Sixth Crusade (1228) temporarily made
Frederick II, heir of both the
Kingdom of Sicily the
Holy Roman Empire, and
King of Jerusalem. At the same time, the
Reconquista was taking place in the Iberian Peninsula and the kingdoms of
Portugal,
Castile and
Aragon were formed. A vast part of the French nobility took part in the crusades under the leadership of their king: this made possible the formation of a strong centralized French monarchy. The rise of medieval France began with the
Battle of Bouvines (1214), the German
Interregnum (1250) and the
Avignon Papacy (1309) but ended with the outbreak of the
Hundred Years' War (1337) with England and the
return of the papacy to Rome (1378). After Europe recovered from the
Black Death, the
goldsmith Johannes Gutenberg invented the movable-type printing press, which started the
Printing Revolution. A
Renaissance in art and science began in Italy and spread to the rest of the continent.
Crusades to Westphalia Portugal formed the first European colonial empire in 1415 with the
conquest of Ceuta. In 1453, the French expelled the
English from their land, and the
Ottoman Turks conquered Constantinople, initiating the
dominance of the
Ottoman Empire in Europe. At the end of the 15th century, following the marriage of
Isabella I of Castile and
Ferdinand II of Aragon Spain was
dynastically unified and the
Reconquista concluded successfully. Portugal and Spain, followed by France and England, ushered in the
Age of Discovery. During the early 16th century, France and the
House of Habsburg clashed during the
Italian Wars. In 1519,
Charles V of Habsburg, already Duke of Burgundy, King of Spain, and Archduke of Austria, became Holy Roman Emperor. After the defeat in the
Battle of Pavia,
Francis I of France allied with the
Muslim Ottoman
sultan Suleiman the Magnificent. After the
annexation of the Aztec Empire and
conquest of the Incas, Emperor Charles used the gold and silver coming from the Americas to finance the defence of his German territories in Austria from the Ottoman Empire (
Siege of Vienna) and of his Italian territories in the
Duchy of Milan from France (
Battle of Pavia). In response, European rival states sanctioned
privateers to raid Spanish or Portuguese ships full of gold and silver, most especially in the
Caribbean. Ultimately, Charles V conceded the
Peace of Augsburg and abandoned his multi-national project with a series of abdications in 1556 that divided his hereditary and imperial domains between the Spanish Habsburgs, headed by his son
Philip II of Spain, and the
Austrian Habsburgs, headed by his brother
Ferdinand. Ferdinand had been Archduke of Austria in Charles's name since 1521 and the designated successor as emperor
since 1531. The papacy launched the
Catholic revival in an attempt to halt the growth of Protestantism and
Ottoman expansion. Despite some successes, such as the
Battle of Lepanto (1571) and the
Siege of Paris (1590), the
Anglo-Spanish War and the
Long Turkish War questioned the Catholic ambitions. Ultimately, the papacy lost its status and influence with the
Thirty Years' War (1618–1648) where the Catholic French empire allied with the Protestant nations to defeat the Habsburg alliance. The Thirty Years War was one of the longest and most destructive conflicts in European history. Fought primarily in
Central Europe, an estimated 4.5 to 8 million soldiers and civilians died as a result of battle, famine, and disease, while some areas of what is now modern Germany experienced population declines of over 50%. Related conflicts include the
Eighty Years' War, the
War of the Mantuan Succession, the
Franco-Spanish War, the
Dutch-Portuguese War and the
Portuguese Restoration War. Many Protestant states also experienced a golden age: the newly independent Netherlands formed the
Dutch East India Company in
Indonesia; Sweden formed
an empire in northern Europe; and England began the
colonization of North America. By the
Treaty of Westphalia at the end of the Thirty Years' War, the Holy Roman Empire became a more decentralized entity in which constituent states, such as Prussia (which also had lands outside the Empire), were allowed to pursue their own foreign policy independent of that of the Austrian Habsburg Emperor. The Austrian Habsburgs also controlled some states outside of the Holy Roman Empire. It was France under
Louis XIV who took the status of main continental power from the Habsburgs thanks to the
Treaty of Westphalia and the
Treaty of the Pyrenees.
Stately quadrille Within the
Holy Roman Empire, specifically smaller states were interested in keeping the balance. After the
Peace of Westphalia, Sweden and France became "
Guarantors of the imperial constitution" who could be called by the Estates or Emperor to keep the status quo. Russia (at least in their view) joined in 1779 with the
Treaty of Teschen which ended the
War of the Bavarian Succession. Following the war, Austria offered the
Duke of Bavaria a to become
King of Burgundy in 1785, the
Fürstenbund was formed seeing this proposal as a disturbing the balance. In the 16th and 17th centuries,
English and
Dutch foreign policy strove to prevent a creation of a single
universal monarchy in Europe, which many believed France or Spain might attempt to create. To maintain the balance of power, the English and Dutch made alliances with other
states—including
Portugal and the Holy Roman Empire—to counter the perceived threat. These
Grand Alliances reached their height in the wars against
Louis XIV and
Louis XV of France. They often involved the English (later the
British) and Dutch paying large subsidies to European allies to finance large armies. In the 18th century, this led to the
stately quadrille, with the major European powers of that century—
Austria,
Prussia,
Great Britain, and
France—
changing alliances multiple times to prevent the hegemony of one nation or alliance. A number of wars stemmed, at least in part, from the desire to maintain the balance of power, including the
War of the Spanish Succession,
War of the Austrian Succession, the
Seven Years' War, the
War of the Bavarian Succession and the
Napoleonic Wars. Following
Britain's success in the Seven Years' War during which it was allied with Prussia, many of the other powers began to see Great Britain as a greater threat than France. Several states, most particularly France, entered the
American War of Independence in the hope of overturning Britain's growing strength by securing the independence
of the Thirteen colonies of
British America. To keep the balance, Prussia demanded after the
Russo-Turkish War of 1768–1774 and the
Austro-
Russo-Turkish War compensation, leading to the
Partitions of Poland.
19th century After the end of the Napoleonic Wars, during which France directly or indirectly controlled much of Europe except for Russia, and the Holy Roman Empire was dissolved, the
Concert of Europe tried to maintain the balance of power. The territorial boundaries agreed to by the victorious Great Powers (Prussia, Austria, Russia and Great Britain) at the Congress of Vienna in 1815 were maintained, and even more important there was an acceptance of the theme of balance with no major aggression. Otherwise the Congress system says historian Roy Bridge, "failed" by 1823. In 1818, the British decided not to become involved in continental issues that did not directly affect them. They rejected the plan of Tsar Alexander I to suppress future revolutions. The Concert system fell apart as the common goals of the Great Powers were replaced by growing political and economic rivalries. Artz says the Congress of Verona in 1822 "marked the end." There was no Congress called to restore the old system during the great
revolutionary upheavals of 1848 with their demands for revision of the Congress of Vienna's frontiers along national lines. Britain, with its naval, maritime, commercial and financial dominance, was committed to the European balance of power after 1815. Between the 1830s and 1850, Britain and France were the strongest powers in Europe, but by the 1850s they had become deeply concerned by the growing power of Russia, which had expanded westward towards Central Europe, and Prussia, which was increasingly assuming greater control and influence over the German lands, aside from Austria. The
Crimean War of 1854–55 and the
Italian War of 1859 shattered the relations among the Great Powers in Europe. The creation in 1871 and rise of the Prussian-led
German Empire (excluding Austria) as a dominant nation (Prussia had quickly defeated both Austria and France in wars) restructured the European balance of power. For the next twenty years,
Otto von Bismarck managed to maintain the balance of power, by proposing treaties and creating many complex alliances between the European nations such as the
Triple Alliance.
World Wars After 1890, the German Emperor
Kaiser Wilhelm II set out on his imperialist course of
Weltpolitik ("world politics") to increase the empire's influence in and control over the world. Newly created alliances were proven to be fragile, something that triggered the
First World War in 1914 with Germany and Austria-Hungary on one-side against Great Britain, France, Italy and Russia (until 1917) on the other. One of the objectives of the
Treaty of Versailles, the main post-World War I treaty, was to abolish the dominance of the 'Balance of Power' concept and replace it with the (global)
League of Nations and to form countries based mostly on ethnicity (although the diminished Austria containing only its German-speaking lands and the majority-German areas of the Czech lands were not permitted to join Germany). This idea floundered as Europe split into three principal factions in the 1920s and 1930s:
liberal democratic states led by the UK and France,
communist states led by the
Soviet Union, and
authoritarian nationalists led by
Germany and
Italy. The failure of the democratic states to prevent the advance of Nazi Germany ultimately led to the
Second World War, which led to a temporary alliance between the UK and the Soviets. The UK did not condemn the
Soviet invasion of Poland in 1939, but declared war on Germany. Later, they sided with the Soviet Union against Germany after the
Axis invasion of the Soviet Union.
Post-World War II: Cold War period During the post-Second World War era, the Allies split into two blocs, a balance of power emerged among the
Eastern Bloc (affiliated with the
Soviet Union and the
Socialist nations of
Central and Eastern Europe,
Central Asia, and the
Caucasus), the
Western Bloc (affiliated with the
Western democracies, particularly
France, the
United States, and the
United Kingdom), and neutral or non-aligned countries (including
Ireland,
Sweden,
Switzerland,
Austria, and
Yugoslavia), with German lands divided up between them respectively as
East Germany and
West Germany until
1989. Most Western Bloc countries came together under the military alliance of
NATO, while the Eastern Bloc countries formed the
Warsaw Pact. The first
NATO Secretary General, the British
Lord Ismay, famously stated the organization's initial goal was "to keep the
Russians out, the Americans in, and the Germans down."
Post-Cold War era leaders discussing with
Petro Poroshenko the
Russo-Ukrainian War The three most powerful members of the
European Union — France, Italy and Germany — as well as the
United Kingdom are referred to as the
Big Four of
Western Europe. They are
major European powers and the only EU countries individually represented as full members of the
G7, the
G8, and the
G20. The
NATO Quint is made up by the
United States and the Big Four. The term
G4 is especially (although not only) used to describe meeting of the four nations at the leaders' level. In addition, the term
EU three (or G-3) was used to describe the grouping of foreign ministers from France, the United Kingdom, (at the time is still a European Union member state) and Germany (now re-unified) during the
Iran nuclear talks. On the other hand, the grouping of interior ministers that includes Spain and Poland is known as the
G6. Germany (which has the largest economy in Europe) is often regarded as the EU's economic leader, such as with the
European sovereign debt crisis, whilst France and the United Kingdom (both permanent members of the
UNSC) often lead in defence and foreign policy matters, such as the
intervention in Libya in 2011. This, to an extent, represents a balancing of leadership power for the Western sphere of the continent. How this balance will change after
Brexit in 2020 is still an open matter. However, there continues to be a wider, strategic balance of Western and (now) Russian power, albeit with the boundary between the two pushed further east since the
collapse of the Soviet Union, with many former Communist countries in
Central Europe having since joined the EU and NATO. ==See also==