Eighteenth- and Nineteenth-Century German Patriotism: Virtue, Cosmopolitanism, and Reform
Abstract
The early history of German patriotism is complex and illuminates many of
patriotism’s potential virtues as well as its dangers. Throughout the late eighteenth
and early nineteenth centuries, patriotism’s overarching connotation was
devotion to the greater good, but whether that greater was local, national, or
global varied dramatically. Early uses of patriotism were devoid of national or
military connotations and instead denoted local engagement in public projects
and willingness to aid to those in need. The patriot moreover worked for
enlightened political reform, convinced that good government could convert
subjects into citizens. Patriotism also had distinct cosmopolitan connotations,
indicating someone who had humanity’s good generally as a goal. In the early
aftermath of the French Revolution, acting in the interest of humanity’s development
meant supporting the revolutionaries as the best hope for furthering political
progress. As the Revolution dissolved into the Terror, German intellectuals hoped
that Germany could assume the mantle of progress: being a patriot meant
supporting German culture as a means of furthering humanity’s enlightenment.
The Napoleonic Wars, however, shifted Germans’ attitude significantly: years of
French occupation culminated in patriotism being defined as favoring German
culture and unity in the interest of defeating the French. Patriotism’s nationalist
connotations from that point intensify significantly. But its early history argues
for remembering and revitalizing its potential to unite the local with the global
and to promote enlightened civic engagement in the pursuit of political progress.