The Concert of EuropeWalker, 1968 - 384 pages "When the representatives of great powers assembled at the Congress of Vienna in 1815, writes the editor in his introduction, "the quarter of a century of turmoil to which Europe had been subjected created a strong and authentic desire for peace and order. At Vienna the clock was ostensibly set back and the Europe of 1815 may have seemed to the restorers little different from that of pre-1789. Yet it was also felt more than ever desirable that the competition of interests should proceed in orderly fashion: order could best be maintained by the clear assertion of the right and the responsibility of those possessed of power, The Great Powers." This collection documents their efforts to achieve and maintain international stability through the century. The choice of illustration is mainly drawn from treaties, protocols of conferences and officials correspondence. Among the sources are Marten's Recueil des Traites, the British State Papers and Hertslet's The Map of Europe bt Treaty. The Bristish Parliamentary Papers are so frequently referred to. The editor's purpose "has been to enable the reader to obtain an adequate understanding of precisely what the Concert of Europe was, what it achieved and failed to achieve, and how it functioned. Rene Albrecht-Carrie is a professor of history at Barnard College who has also taught at Columbia University's School of International Affairs. He is the author of The Diplomatic History of Europe Since the congress of vienna; France, Europe and the Two World Wars, and Europe Since 1815. The past is often its own best spokesman despite the good intentions of historians. Too commonly, when we come to history second-hand we lose sight of the humanity within past eras, movements and ideas. This series has been conceived as a means of restoring the immediacy the events of history held for their participants. These volumes edited by leading authorities provide the basic primary sources for an understanding of the history as well as some of the traditional chronological blocs. Each volume has substantial editorial commentary, including a fresh, scholarly introduction. Each document is set in its historical context, with elucidations and identifications when necessary. Each document is set in its historical context, with elucidations and identifications when necessary. Each is complete whenever possible, or is given in a substantial excerpt in the most comphehensive university Librarues, and a great deal has never been translated into English before". - Publisher. |
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Page 61
... remained the country where the density of liberal sentiment was highest , and Paris the lodestar to which continental liberals everywhere tended to look for guidance , especially until the events of 1848. Louis XVIII understood the con ...
... remained the country where the density of liberal sentiment was highest , and Paris the lodestar to which continental liberals everywhere tended to look for guidance , especially until the events of 1848. Louis XVIII understood the con ...
Page 174
... remained united in their general and ultimate purpose , the preservation of the integrity of the Ottoman Empire , as they proceeded to declare in the following document . 38. Protocol signed at Vienna on the 9th of April , 1854 , by the ...
... remained united in their general and ultimate purpose , the preservation of the integrity of the Ottoman Empire , as they proceeded to declare in the following document . 38. Protocol signed at Vienna on the 9th of April , 1854 , by the ...
Page 280
... remained confined to Russia and Turkey , and Russia had won a military victory . If the gains of San Stefano had been drastically revised at Berlin , she yet retained appreciable advan- tages . She was back on the Danube , 23 and ...
... remained confined to Russia and Turkey , and Russia had won a military victory . If the gains of San Stefano had been drastically revised at Berlin , she yet retained appreciable advan- tages . She was back on the Danube , 23 and ...
Table des matières
Introduction | 1 |
THE INITIAL STAGES OF THE CONCERT | 25 |
THE INDEPENDENCE OF BELGIUM | 60 |
Droits d'auteur | |
10 autres sections non affichées
Autres éditions - Tout afficher
Expressions et termes fréquents
agreed agreement Alliance Allied Ambassador annexed April arrangements ARTICLE Austria-Hungary Balkan Belgian Belgium Bismarck British Bulgaria Cabinet Christian communication Concert of Europe Conference Congress consequence Constantinople Convention Count Buol declared desire Document Duchy Eastern Egypt Emperor of Austria England established European Firman five Powers force Foreign Office four Powers France French frontier German Greece Greek guarantee Herstlet High Contracting Parties Holland independence interest Italy July Kingdom London Majesty the Emperor Majesty the King Majesty's Government measures mediation Mehemet Mehemet Ali ment Minister Morocco Napoleon nations navigation negotiations Netherlands neutrality object Ottoman Empire PALMERSTON Parliamentary Papers peace Plenipotentiaries present Treaty Prince principle proposal Protocol provinces question reforms regard Representatives respective result Russia Sardinia Servia signed Sir Edward Grey Sovereigns stipulations Sublime Porte territory three Courts tion Treaty of Berlin Treaty of Paris troops Tsar Turkey Turkish Undersigned Vienna
Références à ce livre
Global Governance and Japan: The Institutional Architecture Glenn D. Hook,Hugo Dobson Aucun aperçu disponible - 2007 |
A Diplomatic History of Europe Since the Congress of Vienna René Albrecht-Carrié Affichage d'extraits - 1973 |