The 'Congress of Vienna' was a conference between ambassadors from the major powers in
Europe that was chaired by the Austrian statesman
Klemens Wenzel von Metternich and held in
Vienna, Austria, from late September, 1814, to
June 9,
1815.
Its purpose was to settle issues and redraw the continent's political map after the defeat of
Napoleonic France the previous spring, which would also reflect the change in status by the dissolution of the
Holy Roman Empire eight years before. The discussions continued despite the ex-Emperor
Napoleon I's return from exile and resumption of power in France in March 1815, and the Congress's Final Act was signed nine days before his final defeat at
Waterloo on
June 18,
1815.
Technically, one might note that the "Congress of Vienna" never actually occurred, as the Congress never met in
plenary session, with most of the discussions occurring in informal sessions among the
Great Powers meeting without the greater number of delegates from the lesser states.
The Congress was concerned with determining the entire shape of Europe after the Napoleonic wars, with the exception of the terms of peace with France between the belligerents, which had already been decided by the
Treaty of Paris, signed a few months earlier, on
May 30,
1814 returning the Bourbon monarchy and re-setting the borders to their
1792 locations. That outcome was widely unpopular with the populace of France, and led indirectly to the resumption of power by Napoleon during the
Hundred Days.
Participants
At the Congress,
Britain was represented first by its Foreign Secretary,
Viscount Castlereagh; after Castlereagh's return to England in February 1815, by the
Duke of Wellington; and in the last weeks, after Wellington left to face Napoleon in the
Hundred Days, by the
Earl of Clancarty.
Austria was represented by
Prince Klemens von Metternich, the Foreign Minister, and by his deputy, Baron Wessenberg.
Prussia was represented by Prince
Karl August von Hardenberg, the Chancellor, and the diplomat and scholar
Wilhelm von Humboldt.
Louis XVIII's France was represented by its foreign minister,
Charles Maurice de Talleyrand-Périgord.
Although
Russia's official delegation was led by the foreign minister,
Count Nesselrode, Tsar
Alexander I for the most part acted on his own behalf.
Initially, the representatives of the four victorious powers hoped to exclude the French from serious participation in the negotiations, but Talleyrand managed to skilfully insert himself into "her inner councils" in the first weeks of negotiations.
The major Allies' indecision on how to conduct their affairs without provoking a united protest from the lesser powers led to the calling of a preliminary conference on protocol, to which both Talleyrand and the
Marquis of Labrador,
Spain's representative, were invited on
September 30,
1814.
Congress Secretary
Friedrich von Gentz (1764-1832) would report that "The intervention of Talleyrand and Labrador has hopelessly upset all our plans. Talleyrand protested against the procedure we have adopted and soundly [be]rated us for two hours. It was a scene I shall never forget."
[1]
The embarrassed representatives of the Allies replied that the document concerning the protocol they had arranged actually meant nothing. "If it means so little, why did you sign it?" snapped Labrador.
Talleyrand’s policy, directed as much by national as personal ambitions, demanded the close but by no means amicable relationship he had with Labrador. Talleyrand regarded Labrador with "Olympian disdain"
[2]; of Talleyrand, the testy Spaniard would remark: "that cripple, unfortunately, is going to Vienna."
[3]
Talleyrand skirted additional articles suggested by Labrador: he had no intention of handing over the 12,000 ''afrancesados'' ("frenchified" Spanish fugitives who had sworn fealty to
Joseph Bonaparte), with whom he had shady business connections, nor the bulk of the documents, paintings, pieces of fine art, and works of hydrography and natural history that had been looted from the archives, palaces, churches and cathedrals of Spain.
[4]
Most of the work at the Congress was performed by the five main powers (United Kingdom, Russia, Prussia, Austria, France).
On some issues, these powers cooperated with:
★ Spain (represented by the Marquis of Labrador)
★ Portugal (represented by
Pedro de Sousa Holstein, Count of Palmela;
António Saldanha da Gama;
Joaquim Lobo da Silveira).
★ Sweden (represented by
Carl Löwenhielm)
★ On German issues, with the states of
Hanover (A personal union with the British crown of the day),
Bavaria, and
Württemberg. It is of no little interest that as a constant belligerent, King
George III had refused to recognize the abolishment of the
Holy Roman Empire in
1806 and maintained a separate diplomatic staff to conduct the affairs of the family estate (Duchy of Brunswick-Lüneburg) as ''
Elector of Hannover'' until the results of the congress were concluded establishing the
Kingdom of Hannover.
The Iroquois Confederacy participated in the congress as it had been an ally of the British during the War of 1812 which was viewed by the British as part of the Napoleonic Wars.
Elements of the Treaty
★ Russia was given most of the
Duchy of Warsaw (Poland) and was allowed to keep
Finland (which it had annexed from Sweden in 1809 and held until 1917).
★ Prussia was given two fifths of
Saxony, parts of the
Duchy of Warsaw (the
Grand Duchy of Posen),
Danzig, and the
Rhineland/
Westphalia.
★ A
German Confederation of 38 states was created from the previous 300, under the presidency of the Austrian Emperor. Only portions of the territory of Austria and Prussia were included in the Confederation.
★ The
House of Orange was given the
Dutch Republic and the
Southern Netherlands (approx. modern-day
Belgium) to rule as the
United Kingdom of the Netherlands and the
Grand Duchy of Luxembourg (with the Netherlands outside and Luxembourg inside the
German Confederation).
★ The
Dano-Norwegian union was dissolved and
Norway transferred to
Sweden (in
personal union).
★
Sweden ceded
Swedish Pomerania to Prussia.
★ The neutrality of
Switzerland was guaranteed.
★
Hanover gave up the
Duchy of Lauenburg to Denmark, but was enlarged by the addition of former territories of the Bishop of Münster and by the formerly Prussian
East Frisia, and made a kingdom.
★ Most of the territorial gains of
Bavaria,
Württemberg,
Baden,
Hesse-Darmstadt, and
Nassau under the
mediatizations of 1801-1806 were recognized. Bavaria also gained control of the
Rhenish Palatinate and parts of the Napoleonic
Duchy of Würzburg and
Grand Duchy of Frankfurt. Hesse-Darmstadt, in exchange for giving up the Duchy of Westphalia to Prussia, was granted the city of
Mainz.
★ Austria regained control of the
Tirol and
Salzburg; of the former
Illyrian Provinces, and received
Lombardy-Venetia in Italy and
Ragusa in
Dalmatia. Former Austrian territory in Southwest Germany remained under the control of Württemberg and Baden, and the Austrian Netherlands were also not recovered.
★ Habsburg princes were returned to control of the
Grand Duchy of Tuscany and the
Duchy of Modena.
★ The
Papal States were under the rule of the pope and restored to their former extent, with the exception of
Avignon and the
Comtat Venaissin, which remained part of France.
★ The United Kingdom was confirmed in control of
Cape Colony,
South Africa;
Tobago;
Ceylon; and various other colonies in
Africa and
Asia. Other colonies, most notably the
Dutch East Indies and
Martinique, were restored to their previous owners.
★ The King of
Sardinia was restored in
Piedmont,
Nice, and
Savoy, and was given control of
Genoa (putting an end to the brief proclamation of a restored
Republic).
★ The
Duchies of Parma, Piacenza and Guastalla were given to
Marie Louise, Napoleon's wife.
★ The Duchy of Lucca was created for the House of Bourbon-Parma, which would have reversionary rights to Parma after the death of Marie Louise.
★ The Bourbon
Ferdinand IV, King of Sicily was restored to control of the
Kingdom of Naples, but only after
Joachim Murat, the king installed by Bonaparte, rose up and supported Napoleon in the
Hundred Days.
★ The
slave trade was condemned.
★ Freedom of navigation was guaranteed for many rivers,
including the Rhine.
Polish-Saxon crisis
The most contentious subject at the Congress was the so-called Polish-Saxon Crisis. The Russians and Prussians proposed a deal in which much of the Prussian and Austrian shares of the partitions of
Poland would go to Russia, which would create an independent Polish Kingdom in personal union with Russia with Alexander as king. In exchange, the Prussians would receive as compensation all of
Saxony, whose King was considered to have forfeited his throne because he had not abandoned Napoleon soon enough. The Austrians, French, and British did not approve of this plan, and, at the inspiration of Talleyrand, signed a secret treaty on
January 3,
1815, agreeing to go to war, if necessary, to prevent the Russo-Prussian plan from coming to fruition.

Alexander I (1812).
Although none of the three powers was particularly ready for war, the Russians did not call the bluff, and an amicable settlement was soon worked out, by which Russia received most of the Napoleonic
Duchy of Warsaw as a "Kingdom of Poland" (called
Congress Poland), but did not receive the district of
Poznań (
Grand Duchy of Poznań), which was given to Prussia, nor
Kraków, which became a
free city. Prussia received 40% of Saxony (later known as the province of Saxony), with the remainder returned to King
Frederick Augustus I (kingdoms of Saxony).
Other changes
The Congress's principal results, apart from its confirmation of France's loss of the territories annexed in 1795 - 1810, which had already been settled by the
Treaty of Paris, were the enlargement of
Russia, (which gained most of the
Duchy of Warsaw) and
Prussia, which acquired
Westphalia and the northern Rhineland. The consolidation of
Germany from the nearly 300 states of the
Holy Roman Empire (dissolved in 1806) into a much more manageable thirty-nine states was confirmed. These states were formed into a loose
German Confederation under the leadership of Prussia and Austria.
Representatives at the Congress agreed to numerous other territorial changes.
Norway was transferred from
Denmark to
Sweden, this sparked the nationalist movement which led to the establishment of the short-lived
Kingdom of Norway on
May 17 1814. Austria gained
Lombardy-Venetia in Northern Italy, while much of the rest of North-Central Italy went to Habsburg dynasties (The
Grand Duchy of Tuscany, the
Duchy of Modena, and the
Duchy of Parma). The Pope was restored to the
Papal States. The Kingdom of Piedmont-Sardinia was restored to its mainland possessions, and also gained control of the Republic of
Genoa. In Southern Italy, Napoleon's brother-in-law,
Joachim Murat, was originally allowed to retain his Kingdom of
Naples, but following his support of Napoleon in the
Hundred Days, he was deposed, and the Bourbon
Ferdinand IV was restored to the throne.
A large
United Kingdom of the Netherlands was created for the Prince of Orange, including both the old
United Provinces and the formerly Austrian-ruled territories in the Southern Netherlands. There were other, less important territorial adjustments, including significant territorial gains for the German Kingdoms of
Hanover (which gained
East Frisia from Prussia and various other territories in Northwest Germany) and
Bavaria (which gained the Rhenish Palatinate and territories in
Franconia). The
Duchy of Lauenburg was transferred from Hanover to Denmark, and
Swedish Pomerania was annexed by Prussia.
Switzerland was enlarged, and Swiss neutrality was guaranteed.
The treaty did not recognize Portuguese rights over
Olivenza, but instead in the treaty there was only a formal declaration stating that both Spain and Portugal should negotiate over the town's sovereignty in order to preserve "total and permanent harmony" between both countries. However Spain has never desired to start these negotiations. The
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland received parts of the West Indies at the expense of the Netherlands and Spain and kept the former Dutch colonies of
Ceylon and the
Cape Colony, and also kept
Malta and
Heligoland. Under the
Treaty of Paris, Britain obtained the protectorate over the
United States of the Ionian Islands and the
Seychelles.
Later criticism
The Congress of Vienna was frequently criticized by nineteenth-century and more recent historians for ignoring national and liberal impulses, and for imposing a stifling
reaction on the continent. The Congress of Vienna was an integral part in what became known as the
Conservative Order, in which peace and stability were traded for the liberties and civil rights associated with the
American and
French Revolutions.
In the
20th century, however, many historians have come to admire the statesmen at the Congress, whose work had prevented another European general war for nearly a hundred years (1815-1914). Among these is
Henry Kissinger, whose doctoral dissertation was on the Congress of Vienna. Prior to the opening of the Paris peace conference of 1918, the British Foreign Office commissioned a history of the Congress of Vienna to serve as an example to its own delegates of how to achieve an equally successful peace. Besides, the decisions of the Congress were made by the Five Great Powers (Austria, France, Prussia, Russia and the United Kingdom), and not all the countries of Europe could extend their rights at the Congress. For example, Italy became a mere "geographical expression" as divided into eight parts (Parma, Modena, Tuscany, Lombardy, Venetia, Piedmont-Sardinina, the Papal States, Naples-Sicily) under the control of different powers, while Poland was under the influence of Russia after the Congress. The arrangements that made the Five Great Powers finally led to future disputes. The Congress of Vienna preserved the balance of power in Europe, but it could not check the spread of revolutionary movements on the continent.
See also
★
Age of Metternich
★
Concert of Europe
★
List of treaties
Notes
1. Susan Mary Alsop, ''The Congress Dances'' (New York: Harper & Row, Publishers, 1984), 120.
2. Wenceslao Ramírez de Villa-Urrutia, Marqués de Villa-Urrutia, ''España en el Congreso de Viena según la correspondencia de D. Pedro Gómez Labrador, Marqués de Labrador''. Segunda Edición Corregida y Aumentada (Madrid: Francisco Beltrán, 1928), 13.
3. Antonio Rodríguez-Moñino (ed.), ''Cartas Políticas'' (Badajoz: Imprenta Provincial, 1959), 14 (Letter IV, July 10, 1814). Labrador’s letters are full of such pungent remarks, and include his crotchety opinions on bad diplomats, the state of the postal system and the weather, and his non-existent salary and coach and accompanying livery for the Congress.
4. Villa-Urrutia, ''España en el Congreso de Viena'', 61-2.
The French had stripped an enormous amount of art from the country. Joseph had left Madrid with an enormous baggage train containing innumerable pieces of art, tapestries, and mirrors. The most rapacious of the French was Marshal Nicolas Soult, who left Spain with entire collections, which have disappeared to unknown, separate locations around the world. At least, sighs Juan Antonio Gaya Nuño, "[the paintings] have come to spread the prestige of Spanish art around the whole word."