Logo image
From Savannah to Vienna: William Henry Stiles, the Revolutions of 1848, and Southern Conceptions of Order
Journal article   Peer reviewed

From Savannah to Vienna: William Henry Stiles, the Revolutions of 1848, and Southern Conceptions of Order

Miles Smith
American nineteenth century history, Vol.14(1), pp.27-51
01/03/2013

Abstract

aristocracy 1848 Austrian Empire slaveholders William Stiles
This article represents an exploration of class identity among southerners during the decade preceding the Civil War. Myriad works on class identity in the antebellum era are extant, but few have used sources by Americans living abroad. William Stiles's History of Austria shows consistent amount of sympathy for European nobles and aristocrats during the 1848 Revolution in the Austrian Empire. The book, centered on a historical event that stemmed from class inequality and nationalist thought, provides an interesting lens to address the issue of class culture and identity in the United States. Using Stiles's work, newspapers, and appropriate primary and secondary monographs, the article argues that aristocratic identity in the South remained more influential than recent historians allowed well into the nineteenth century.

Metrics

Details

Logo image