How did nationalism first develop?

Link to this answer

CloseClose

Link to this answer

Share this credible answer with others. Simply paste this code into your blog or Web page:

<a href="http://qanda.encyclopedia.com/question/did-nationalism-first-develop-130103.html" >How did nationalism first develop?</a>
E-mail this answer Link to this answer

Although nationalism is unique to the modern world, some of its elements can be traced throughout history. The first roots of nationalism are probably to be found in the ancient Hebrews, who conceived of themselves as both a chosen people, that is, a people as a whole superior to all other peoples, and a people with a common cultural history. The ancient Greeks also felt superior to all other peoples and moreover felt a sense of great loyalty to the political community. These feelings of cultural superiority (ethnocentrism), which are similar to nationalism, gave way to much more universal identifications under the Roman Empire and with the Christian Church through its teaching of the oneness of humanity. As strong centralized monarchies were built from petty feudal states, as regional languages and art forms were evolved, and as local economies widened, popular identification with these developments became increasingly strong. In areas such as Italy, which were not yet single nations, recurring invasions led such thinkers as Niccolò Machiavelli to advocate national political federation. The religious wars of the Reformation set nation against nation, though the strongest loyalty continued to adhere to the sovereign. In the 16th and 17th cent. the nationalistic economic doctrine of mercantilism appeared. The growth of the middle classes, their desire for political power, and the consequent development of democratic political theory were closely connected with the emergence of modern nationalism. The theorists of the French Revolution held that people should establish governments of equality and liberty for everyone. To them the nation was inseparable from the people, and for the first time in history a people could create a government in accordance with the nation's general will. Although their aims were universal, they glorified the nation that would establish their aims, and nationalism found its first political expression.

Answer verified with
Get more facts and information about nationalism . Or, view the full encyclopedia entry from The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition.

Similar questions: When did nationalism first develop? What is the early history of nationalism? [ Hide these questions ]

Related research articles

Canadian nationalism and the struggle for popular sovereignty. Magazine article from: Canadian Dimension ...resurgence of Canadian nationalism reminiscent of...1970s Canadian nationalism figured prominently...currents of economic nationalism, in sections of...remain united. The first such unifying concept...However, nationalism did not develop everywhere on the...
Scottish nationalism before 1789: an ideology, a sentiment, or a creation? Magazine article from: International Social Science Review ...strength of Scottish nationalism in the late twentieth...Parliament for the first time since the union...remains strong in the first years of the twenty-first century. Books such...was not new. Nor did a Scottish identity develop overnight. Rather...
How should one study ethnicity and nationalism? Magazine article from: Contributions to Nepalese Studies ...Muslims? ... Why did the Maithils get...for authors to develop the ethnographic...Nationalism? Rule One: Nationalism is not natural. The first rule for the scholarly...that ethnicity and nationalism are not `natural...for particular nationalisms; but there have...on this role. ...
Nationalism and Latin American music: selected case studies and theoretical... Magazine article from: Latin American Music Review ...about nations and nationalism were not yet common...colonial musical nationalism, especially the...further discussion. First, populist nationalist...musical nationalism did not receive the...to change in the first half of the twentieth...practices were to develop a symbiotic ...
Nationalism and Asia - Behind much tension in Asia lie issues of nationalism... Magazine article from: The Economist (US) ...OF ETHNICITY AND NATIONALISM. Edited by Edward...field, looks at nationalism in general. Their...unpack the ideas of nationalism and ethnicity...biggest Asian country first, suggest Messrs...and politicians, did develop an ever stronger...
See all results at HighBeam

HighBeam gives you access to newspaper, magazine, and trade journal articles plus press releases, facts, information, and biographies from thousands of sources.