(, literally: “founders’ period”), also referred to as
promoterism, was the economic phase in 19th century
Germany and
Austria before the great
stock market crash of 1873. At this time in Central Europe the age of
industrialisation was taking place, whose beginnings were found in the 1840s. No precise time for this period can be given, but in Austria the
March Revolution of 1848 is generally accepted as the beginning for economic changes, in contrast to political reforms. In Germany, as a consequence of the large influx of capital resulting from French
war reparations from the
Franco-Prussian War of 1870–1871, and the subsequent
German Unification, there followed an economic boom, giving rise to the description of these years as the “founders’ years.”