1867

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Featured events in 1867
1867·Europe·Politics

Marx Publishes Capital

The first volume of Karl Marx's gigantic economic work appeared in Hamburg after twenty years of reading in the British Museum. It was dense, German, and nearly unreadable. It sold slowly. But it gave the workers' movement a theory to fight with, and transformed socialism from a sentimental dream into something that sounded like science.

1867Industrial Age
1867·North America·Politics

Canadian Confederation

The British North America Act joined Ontario, Quebec, Nova Scotia, and New Brunswick into a self-governing dominion under the Crown. Canada was a state mostly for self-defense against an American army fresh from civil war. Sir John A. Macdonald became prime minister. Within a decade the dominion would stretch, on paper, to the Pacific.

July 1, 1867Industrial Age
1867·Europe·Politics

Austro-Hungarian Compromise

To hold his empire together after Königgrätz, Franz Joseph made a deal with the Hungarian nobility: separate parliaments, common army and foreign policy, one crown worn twice. He was crowned king of Hungary in Buda. The Dual Monarchy would stagger on for another fifty years and die in 1918, but this was its birth certificate.

June 8, 1867Industrial Age
1867·North America·Politics

Alaska Purchased

Secretary of State William Seward bought Alaska from Russia for $7.2 million - about two cents an acre. Newspapers called it "Seward's Folly" and "Seward's Icebox." Thirty years later, prospectors would find gold at Klondike Creek, and the deal would look, in retrospect, inspired. Russia had been very glad to be rid of it.

March 30, 1867Industrial Age
1867·North America·Politics

Maximilian Executed

The Habsburg prince whom Napoleon III had installed as emperor of Mexico was captured by Benito Juarez's republicans, tried, and shot by a firing squad on a hill outside Queretaro. Manet would paint it. Napoleon's Mexican adventure - and the last European attempt to plant a monarchy in the New World - ended in a ditch.

June 19, 1867Industrial Age
1867·Europe·Culture

Paris Exposition

Napoleon III's second world's fair drew eleven million visitors to an oval pavilion on the Champ de Mars, showing off machinery, railways, and empires. The Khedive of Egypt had a palace; Japan had its first official European exhibit; Krupp showed a fourteen-inch siege gun. The Second Empire was at the height of its confidence and three years from Sedan.

April 1, 1867Industrial Age
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