The goal toward which Spirit was working, in Hegel’s conception, was the state—not any state existing in his time but a constitutional organization guaranteeing freedom to all citizens. The journey of Spirit began in China, which had grasped the idea that one person (the emperor) was free; but freedom for only one person is in fact license for him and despotism for everyone else. Thus, the unfolding idea of freedom leads to the idea that, unless everyone is free, “freedom” will have no meaning. Yet freedom without limits is also self-contradictory (one person’s freedom to swing his arms must be limited by the freedom of others not to be hit in the face). Thus, a structure of laws guarantees freedom rather than abridges it.
Hegel’s philosophy of history was full of original and profound insights into the histories of China, India, Egypt, Greece, Rome, and the “Germanic world” (though it also included some dubious claims, especially about Africa). Although his most famous follower was Karl Marx (see below Marxist historiography), his influence was felt by many others as well. Many 19th-century historians who were not direct disciples of Hegel were nevertheless idealists of some sort; they focused on the cultures created by peoples and believed that the study of history used distinctive methods and was radically different from, but not inferior to, natural science. Jules Michelet
Jules Michelet is the archetypal Romantic historian. He had a conventionally successful academic career at the Collège de France until he was dismissed in 1851 for refusing to take an oath to Louis Napoleon, president of France and soon emperor of the French. “Academic,” however, would be the least appropriate description of Michelet’s histories. Michelet took an almost sensual pleasure in entering “catacombs of manuscripts, this wonderful necropolis of national monuments” whose contents were “not papers, but lives of men, of provinces, of people.” What he did with the documents, however, was quite different. Distinguishing himself from two contemporaries, François Guizot and Augustin Thierry (he could have added the great German historian Leopold von Ranke), Michelet commented: “Guizot analyzes, Thierry narrates, I resurrect!”
Jules Michelet, detail of an oil painting by Thomas Couture; in the Carnavalet Museum, Paris.Giraudon/Art Resource, New York
In his effort to bring the past, in all its variety, back to life, Michelet did not hesitate to consult the people of his time: “I shut the books, and placed myself among the people to the best of my power; the lonely writer plunged again into the crowd, listened to their noise, noted their words.” The people were France, the object of Michelet’s passion. Through all the vicissitudes of its history, they remained its quasi-mystical essence; and Michelet exhorted them to retain their sense of national unity. Historiography in England
Romanticism crossed the English Channel, though naturally with variations, and it also crossed the Atlantic Ocean. Thomas Babington Macaulay (1800–59) proclaimed that the central theme of English history from the time of the granting of the Magna Carta in 1215 to his own day involved the gradual increase of liberty. His History of England from the Accession of James II (1849–61) situated the genius of the English in achieving liberty by largely peaceful means, thus sparing himself the task of accounting for England’s medieval regicides or the English Civil Wars. The English had enough respect for the past to avoid violent change but enough flexibility to avoid rigid conservatism. In the first volume, Macaulay wrote a classic description of English life in 1685. His picture of England was highly pleasing to 19th-century Victorians, who bought hundreds of thousands of copies.
More directly influenced by Romanticism, as by German thought, was Thomas Carlyle. To him, Macaulay’s views, besides being complacent, were insipid. Conflicts between peoples and the actions of great men were the stuff of history. “Universal History,” he declared in On Heroes, Hero-Worship, and the Heroic in History (1841), “… is at bottom the History of the Great Men who have worked here. They were the leaders of men, these great ones,” and history was “the essence of innumerable biographies.”
The works of many Romantic historians were notable for their literary style. More people, however, derived their sense of the past from the historical novels of Sir Walter Scott (1771–1832). Ranke’s career as a modern historian began when he discovered factual errors in Scott’s novels; Scott was also Marx’s favourite novelist. The emphasis the Romantics put on imagination in recreating the past opened the way for the genre of historical novels, of which Scott was the first great practitioner. Historiography in the United States
The most influential American historian of the 19th century was George Bancroft (1800–91), who studied at the universities of Göttingen and Berlin (see below Johann Christoph Gatterer and the Göttingen scholars). During intervals in a busy career as a public official he wrote a 10-volume History of the United States (1834–74), which placed the country within God’s plan for all humanity. The European colonists who settled the country brought with them the “vital principles of Teutonic liberty.” With the signing of the Declaration of Independence, “a new plebeian democracy took its place by the side of the proudest empire,” a democracy that was destined to spread the blessings of liberty to the rest of the world. As to spreading the blessings of liberty to American slaves, Bancroft argued that slavery was imposed on the United States and that it played a role in the providential plan. The resonance within his work not only of Romantic principles (it can be seen as an adaptation of Hegel) but also American political rhetoric of the 19th century explains its wide appeal.
Other American historians, such as Francis Parkman (1823–93), William Prescott (1796–1859), and John Lothrop Motley (1814–77), also addressed epic themes in captivating language. Parkman’s theme was the contest between France, Britain, and the Native Americans for possession of North America. Prescott and Motley recounted the wars of imperial Spain in the Golden Age of the 16th and 17th centuries. Prescott’s theme was the conquest of Mexico and Peru; Motley (also a product of Göttingen and Berlin) recounted the successful rebellion of the Netherlands, which he did not fail to compare frequently to the American Revolution. History becomes academic Johann Christoph Gatterer and the Göttingen scholars
Until the beginning of the 19th century, the history of historiography could be represented in a list of great and near-great individuals. Group efforts like those of the Bollandists or the Benedictines of St. Maur were the exception; almost all historians worked alone. History had no established place in most university curricula, being subsumed under rhetoric (or occasionally grammar) and studied mainly in faculties of law or theology. The universities, too, lacked intellectual vitality; Gibbon called the 14 months he spent at Oxford the most idle and unprofitable of his life. In Germany, where universities had always been more influential (almost all the great figures in German intellectual life had doctoral degrees), the characteristic institutional structure of contemporary historiography was being established.