Europe in the Eighteenth Century: Aristocracy and the Bourgeois Challenge

Portada
Harvard University Press, 1985 - 290 páginas
Europe in the Eighteenth Century is a social history of Europe in all its aspects: economic, political, diplomatic military, colonial-expansionist. Crisply and succinctly written, it describes Europe not through a history of individual countries, but in a common context during the three quarters of a century between the death of Louis XIV and the industrial revolution in England and the social and political revolution in France. It presents the development of government, institutions, cities, economies, wars, and the circulation of ideas in terms of social pressures and needs, and stresses growth, interrelationships, and conflict of social classes as agents of historical change, paying particular attention to the role of popular, as well as upper- and middle-class, protest as a factor in that change.
 

Índice

Maps
1
Europe
10
Land and Peasants
20
Industry and Trade
38
Cities
54
Society and Aristocracy
69
Government
85
France and its provinces in 1789 III
111
Wars and the Expansion of Europe
222
Italy on the eve of the French Revolution
224
The Balkans in the eighteenth century
226
The partitions of Poland
230
The Western expansion of Russia under Peter I and Catherine II
235
Europe in 1789
236
Europe overseas 1714
238
Europe overseas 1763
239

Church State and Society
121
The Arts
139
Enlightenment
153
The Struggle for Control of the State
175
The Popular Challenge
192
Diplomacy and Warfare
207
The expanding knowledge of the world 17001800
241
Why was there a Revolution in France?
243
Notes
257
Bibliography
271
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