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The Chancelleries of Europe - Hidden Diplomacy, 1814-1918 (Paperback, Main)
Loot Price: R566
Discovery Miles 5 660
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The Chancelleries of Europe - Hidden Diplomacy, 1814-1918 (Paperback, Main)
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Loot Price R566
Discovery Miles 5 660
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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In the author's own words this is a book about 'chaps and maps'.
More formally. The Chancelleries of Europe is a study of
traditional diplomacy at its peak of influence in the
nineteenth-century and the first years of the twentieth. At the
Congress of Vienna in 1814-15 the five Great Powers - Austria,
Britain, France, Prussia and Russia - established a system of
international intercourse that safeguarded the world from major war
for exactly a hundred years. The successive crises that challenged
this supranational system - the unification of Italy and Germany,
the scramble for colonies in Africa, and for trade concessions in
Asia, the decline of the Ottoman Empire and the emergence of Japan
- are well-known. Less attention has been given to the way the
system functioned and to changes imposed on its character by the
spread of speedier communications. It is these gaps in our
understanding of the international politics of the century that the
author seeks to fill. The book therefore studies the clashes of
personality between crowned heads of the old empires and between
rival statesmen and ambassadors seeking advancement. It compares
the growth of personnel and specialist departments in the various
foreign ministries, assesses the impact of domestic politics on
external affairs, the power of the pressure groups like the
(British) China Association and the (Russian) Far Eastern
Committee, the proto-spin fed to favoured newspapers and, in
contrast, the growing unease of press and public at 'hidden'
negotiations and the concealment of diplomatic expedients and
alliances. But the book also notes changes in the way diplomacy was
conducted in the wake of technological inventions such as the
semaphore towers of the early years and the electric telegraph and
undersea cables of the second half of the century. Moments of high
drama, skullduggery and bathos prove that the reading of diplomatic
history is not the dull, dreary drudge many abhorred in their
schooldays.
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