Originally posted by Dr Strangelove I think that the idea of nationality rose with the supremacy of the monarchs in most western european nations, Germany and Italy being exceptions. Consider the fact that during the English Civil War there was very little pressure for the dissolution of the United Kingdom. Likewise the resistence to the French Revolution fought to regain the country, not to seperate from it. Early nationalism was intermixed with fealty to the king and the church. Liberal nationalism was born during the struggles between the English parliament and the English king in the late 17th and early 18th centuries, then spread to British North America, France and then on to the rest of the european continent. The revolutionaries of the 18th and 19th centuries had to believe that they already were nationalities before overthrowing their monarchs in order to found liberal democratic states, or otherwise they simply would have seceeded. During their national revolutions power was transferred from already existing national royal dictatorships to national dempcratic institutions. Exceptions to this rule include Belgium, Norway, Greece and other ehtnic groups which found themselves under foreign rule against which they rebelled.
But AFAIK in most continental monarchies the national element was rather secondary in pre-revolutionary Europe. Take Prussia, which ruled over large parts of Poland and saw these as integral parts of the Prussian realm. Similar for Russia (which had lots of other ethnic groups as well) or the Habsburger realms. Also colonial empires weren't limited to a purely national view either. All these rulers hardly defined themselves as rulers of a nation state in our sense, but rulers of territories with loyal subjects of the crown (from whatever nationality).
The legitimacy for their rule came either in the form of the divine right, natural law or later (and additionally) from the view that the monarch is there to work for the common good of the realm and his subjects. This is best illustrated by Fredericks II. "I'm the first servant of my state" statement, but you find similar ideas also elsewhere, for example in Catherine the Great's "Instruction". That's one of the core elements of what we call enlightened monarchies. In reality they often weren't that selfless of course, but in several cases these so-called enlightened rulers did indeed serious steps to modernize their countries.
The French monarchy seemed to be rather against these new ideas, but still they became increasingly important in France during the enlightenment (also since many of the influential thinkers were French). So when old patterns of legitimization (like divine right) became less important with the enlightenment, and people got the impression that the monarch indeed doesn't serve the new ideals like common good anymore the entire monarchy, not only the current rulers, get in trouble. That's exactly what happened during the crisis that lead for example to the French revolution. It wasn't just a economical or financial crisis in France, it was a crisis of the whole aristocratic system while the bourgeoisie became more important economically and so was demanding more political participation as well. So on the one hand you have the old regime with decreasing legitimacy, unable to handle a crisis and unable or unwilling to do major reforms, on the other an economical and increasingly political force which insists on such reforms.
That was the beginning of the struggle (which started quite some time before the revolution actually broke out in 1789), it wasn't much about nation at the start, it was about political participation. I agree with you that early on there was often still loyalty towards the king. The French didn't want to abolish monarchy completely in the beginning either, that was just the last step.
The nation state became the tool in which the broader political participation would be realized, and nationalism became a force to mobilize the people to fight for that, first against their own aristocratic elites if they resisted the change, but also against enemies from outside if needed, since in the case of France these outside enemies were seen as exactly the forces of the old, reform-unable aristocratic system (during the coalition wars).
Later revolutions had certain differences - I agree that then there often was already a certain nationalist movement or at least some sort of national consciousness present. But we have to be aware that these later 19th century revolutionaries in Europe were often already strongly influenced by the French revolutionary ideas, later by the wars against Napoleon and of course by the following restauration which disappointed hopes for reforms throughout continental Europe.
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