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Q: What were the affects on new nations such as Italy and Germany-Explain Nationalism?
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Where was nationalism particularly dangerous around the beginning of World War l?

Nationalism was especially dangerous in the Axis nations: Germany, Italy and Japan.


What became a unified country in the 1800s?

which nations unified during the late 1800's due to nationalism/


What does nationalism mean for World War I?

Nationalism is an extreme pride or devotion that people feel for their country or culture. In World War 1, the spirit of nationalism led to the formation of new nations, such as Germany and Italy during the 1870s. It also led to the competition for more power.


Did nationalism affect Italy?

it improved it


How did nationalism in Europe serve as both a unifying and a disruptive force?

It unified the nations of Italy and Germany, but split apart the multi-national empires, such as the Ottoman Empire, and the Austro-Hungarian empire.


Who brought the ideas of nationalism to Germany and Italy?

napoleon


Is the unification of Italy and Germany an example of nationalism?

yes


Is Italy part of The United Nations?

yes Italy is part of the united nations.


What European countries were affected by nationalism in the 19Th century?

There were a few countries who were involved in Nationalism in 1914. These included Germany, Italy, Russia, and the country of France.


What happen because if nationalism?

The unification of Italy - apexs ! :D


Who brought the first ideas of nationalism to Italy and Germany?

napoleon


How did Young Italy encourage Italian nationalism?

Actually, the leader of the Young Italy movement, Giuseppe Mazzini, was against nationalism. As the author says inA Cosmopolitanism of Nations: Giuseppe Mazzini's Writings on Democracy, Nation Building, and International Relations, "Mazzini rejected nationalism as both politically dangerous and morally wrong. Nationalism-that is, an ideology of national self-assertion untempered by the awareness of universal moral duties-interrupts what Mazzini took to be a natural process of communication and even contest between supposedly different degrees of human perfection."-P. 16