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Metternich : strategist and visionary / Wolfram Siemann ; translated by Daniel Steuer.

By: Siemann, Wolfram [author.].Contributor(s): Steuer, Daniel [translator.].Publisher: London : The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2019Description: xv, 900 pages : illustrations.Content type: text | still image Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 9780674743922.Uniform titles: Metternich. English Subject(s): Metternich, Clemens Wenzel Lothar, Fürst von, 1773-1859 | Statesmen -- Austria -- Biography | Diplomats -- Austria -- Biography | Austria -- History -- 1789-1900 | Europe -- Politics and government -- 1789-1900DDC classification: 920
Contents:
A life in seven stages -- Metternich's biographers across the generations -- The risks and limitations of Srbik's biography of Metternich -- Origins: family ties and the rise of the Metternichs -- Metternich's generation : Ancien Regime and Enlightenment, 1773-1792 -- A double crisis : empire and revolution, 1789-1801 -- Between peace and war : life as an ambassador, 1801-1806 -- World war : outset and intensification, 1806-1812 -- World war : climax and crisis, 1813 -- World war : catastrophe and resolution, 1814 -- The end of an era and a new beginning for Europe : the Congress of Vienna, 1814-1815 -- The connoisseur of women and head of the entail -- The construction of a new beginning : reform and reconstruction, 1815-1818 -- Defensive security policies : averting threats under the Vienna system, 1815-1829 -- The economist : Metternich as a capitalist with a social conscience -- The spring of nations amid poverty, 1830-1847 -- The organization of rule : power centers, networks, interests, intrigues -- Revolution, escape, exile, 1848-1851 -- At the observatory : twilight years in Vienna, 1851-1859 -- Epilogue : Metternich as a postmodern character in early Modernity.
Summary: This is a major biography of Clemens von Metternich (1773-1859), perhaps the most important European politician of the first half of the nineteenth century. Metternich held the highest civilian posts in the Austrian Empire without interruption from 1809 to 1848, helped determine the shape of post-Napoleonic Europe, and established the system of international congresses (the Metternich system) that dominated international relations up to 1918 and set a precedent for the League of Nations and the United Nations. His influence on international affairs in the first half of the century was so profound that the period is sometimes called the Age of Metternich. He is usually considered a stubborn conservative and an enemy of liberalism and nationalism, which then went hand in hand. For many, he represents everything that the revolutionaries of 1848 opposed. In this biography, Wolfram Siemann argues that the conventional view of Metternich is wrong. He writes that Metternich idealized Britain's liberal constitution and aimed to make as much room as possible for liberalism and nationalism as was consistent with his overarching aim: the preservation of peace in Europe, a commitment arising from his horror at the death and destruction of the Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars. Drawing on previously unopened archives belonging to the Metternich family, Siemann also presents in full his subject's active personal and social life. Metternich had many mistresses, one of them Napoleon's sister, and counted almost everybody with power in Europe as a friend or enemy.-- Provided by publisher.
Holdings
Item type Current library Class number Status Date due Barcode
Book House of Lords Library - Palace Dewey 920 MET (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 018768

"Originally published in German as Metternich: Stratege und Visionar, eine Biografie, by Wolfram Siemann, revised edition, 2017, (c) Verlag C.H.Beck oHG, Munchen 2016."--Title page verso.

Includes bibliographical references and index.

A life in seven stages -- Metternich's biographers across the generations -- The risks and limitations of Srbik's biography of Metternich -- Origins: family ties and the rise of the Metternichs -- Metternich's generation : Ancien Regime and Enlightenment, 1773-1792 -- A double crisis : empire and revolution, 1789-1801 -- Between peace and war : life as an ambassador, 1801-1806 -- World war : outset and intensification, 1806-1812 -- World war : climax and crisis, 1813 -- World war : catastrophe and resolution, 1814 -- The end of an era and a new beginning for Europe : the Congress of Vienna, 1814-1815 -- The connoisseur of women and head of the entail -- The construction of a new beginning : reform and reconstruction, 1815-1818 -- Defensive security policies : averting threats under the Vienna system, 1815-1829 -- The economist : Metternich as a capitalist with a social conscience -- The spring of nations amid poverty, 1830-1847 -- The organization of rule : power centers, networks, interests, intrigues -- Revolution, escape, exile, 1848-1851 -- At the observatory : twilight years in Vienna, 1851-1859 -- Epilogue : Metternich as a postmodern character in early Modernity.

This is a major biography of Clemens von Metternich (1773-1859), perhaps the most important European politician of the first half of the nineteenth century. Metternich held the highest civilian posts in the Austrian Empire without interruption from 1809 to 1848, helped determine the shape of post-Napoleonic Europe, and established the system of international congresses (the Metternich system) that dominated international relations up to 1918 and set a precedent for the League of Nations and the United Nations. His influence on international affairs in the first half of the century was so profound that the period is sometimes called the Age of Metternich. He is usually considered a stubborn conservative and an enemy of liberalism and nationalism, which then went hand in hand. For many, he represents everything that the revolutionaries of 1848 opposed. In this biography, Wolfram Siemann argues that the conventional view of Metternich is wrong. He writes that Metternich idealized Britain's liberal constitution and aimed to make as much room as possible for liberalism and nationalism as was consistent with his overarching aim: the preservation of peace in Europe, a commitment arising from his horror at the death and destruction of the Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars. Drawing on previously unopened archives belonging to the Metternich family, Siemann also presents in full his subject's active personal and social life. Metternich had many mistresses, one of them Napoleon's sister, and counted almost everybody with power in Europe as a friend or enemy.-- Provided by publisher.

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