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The Pursuit of Glory: Europe 1648-1815

The Pursuit of Glory: Europe 1648-1815
By Tim Blanning

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"The Pursuit of Glory" brings to life one of the most extraordinary periods in European history - from the battered, introvert continent after the Thirty Years War to the dynamic one that experienced the French Revolution and the wars of Napoleon. Tim Blanning depicts the lives of ordinary people and the dominant personalities of the age (Louis XIV, Frederick the Great and Napoleon), and explores an era of almost unprecedented change, growth and cultural, political and technological ferment that shaped the societies and economies of entire countries.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #4270 in Books
  • Published on: 2008-02-28
  • Original language: English
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 736 pages

Editorial Reviews

Review
A sprawling, lively history of the era in which the Late Renaissance morphed into the Enlightenment - at least for some lucky Europeans.Blanning (History/Cambridge Univ.) locates the beginning of that time in the Peace of Westphalia, which ended the Thirty Years' War. The treaty settled two major issues, he writes: the independence of the Netherlands from Spain, and the general distribution of power in the German-speaking world, which would be fairly untumultuous as compared to its neighbors. Spain and France kept fighting after the treaty, and other parts of Europe still had their problems; Sweden found itself, for instance, in "a confusing series of wars," while a great plague felled 100,000 Britons in a single year, lending credence to the Book of Common Prayer of 1662: "When mourners gathered around an English graveside to hear the clergyman intoning the words 'in the midst of life we are in death,' - they knew that he was telling the truth." But not long thereafter, as Blanning chronicles, much of Europe began to emerge from pestilence, famine and war, and a "culture of reason" began to assert itself - helped along by noble and churchly folk as much as the bourgeoisie, to say nothing of the state. (For instance, in Hungary and elsewhere in the early 18th century, "the persecution of witches did not end because belief in witchcraft or magic ceased, but because the government intervened.") The rise of the Enlightenment saw not always connected developments such as the decline of papal powers in the secular realm, the slow abandonment of serfdom and the ascent of science. All these matters are treated at length and with some leisure, though the narrative starts to gallop at the end, with the Napoleonic Wars accounted for in only a couple of dozen pages. To do otherwise would of course have added bulk to an already big book. Blanning is a most lucid interpreter of the past, and readers may find themselves wanting more. (Kirkus Reviews)

Sunday Times 7 April 2007
Europe's early-modern history viewed from an Olympian height - a
grand, gripping and all-encompassing read.

John Adamson, Sunday Times, 29 April 2007
This work's most winning quality is the sense one has throughout
of being in the company of not only the most expert but also the most
congenial of historical guides, a man who is himself a perfect product of
the European Enlightenment: humane, rational, sceptical and with an
encyclopedic learning enlivened by a mordant Voltairian wit. Let the
nations rejoice: this history of Europe is a truly glorious book.