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Old Europe is a term used in the Communist Manifesto of Karl Marx which starts with the words:
When Marx used the term in 1848, the year of failed liberal revolutions across Europe, he was referring to the restoration of Ancien régime dynasties, following the defeat of Napoleon. Of his three sets of pairs, each pair links figures who might on the surface be considered adversaries, in alliances that he clearly sees as unholy, to set up one of history's most effective conspiracy theories. An "Old Europe" must find a mental contrast with a posited "New Europe."
In January 2003 the term resurfaced (probably mockingly) with U.S. Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, to refer to those European countries who were not in favour of the 2003 invasion of Iraq. Rumsfeld answered to a comment, that more than 70% of the people in Europe were not in favour of the war in Iraq:
It is probably equivalent to the European Union, with the exception of Spain, where the government supported the U.S. in defiance of its people, the United Kingdom, Ireland, Italy, Denmark, Portugal and the newly joined Eastern European states.
The German translation altes Europa was the word of the year 2003 in Germany, because the Germans use it in some ironic way. The word went largely unnoticed in the English-language press.
In contrast to Rumsfeld's usage, for many young Europeans the term 'Old Europe' implies the existence of a 'New Europe', which now seems to include those nations which once were behind the Iron Curtain and in the USSR-controlled Warsaw Pact, but which now are lining up to enter the European Union, rather than flirting with the "old Europe" that is actually embodied in American-controlled NATO. So Old Europe and "New Europe" are flexible terms that reveal the point-of-view of the speaker.
Old Europe is also a term used by archaeologists and ethnographers to characterize autochthonous ("aboriginal") peoples who, according to one theory, were living in Neolithic Europe before the suspected immigration of Indo-European peoples. According to the theory these people arrived from the south-east, across the plains north of the Black Sea. The term was introduced by Marija Gimbutas, in The Goddesses and Gods of Old Europe (1974). Excavations in what was then Yugoslavia, in Macedonia, Greece and Italy made it possible for Gimbutas to focus on an investigation of the Neolithic period (which she termed "Old Europe") in order to understand cultural developments before the Indo-European influences.
Ancient Greek writers called the "Old European" pre-Hellenic dwellers in Greece "Pelasgians".