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The Thirty Years War - A Documentary History (Hardcover)
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The Thirty Years War - A Documentary History (Hardcover)
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The Thirty Years War: A Documentary History fills a gap in recent
studies of the great pan-European conflict, providing fresh
translations of thirty-eight primary documents for the student and
general reader. The selections are drawn from the standard
political documents, from the Apology of the Bohemian Estates for
the Defenestration of Prague to the text of the Treaty of
Westphalia, as well as from imperial edicts, trial records,
letters, diary entries, and satirical broadsheets, all directly
translated from the Early New High German, French, Swedish, and
Latin. The volume contains some ten illustrations and one map . . .
and on the whole is well organized and well presented with a
judicious amount of footnotes and a slim For Further Reading
section. A succinct introduction introduces the four sections, each
with its own substantial introduction: (1) Outbreak of the Thirty
Years War (1618-1623), (2) The Intervention of Denmark and Sweden
(1623-1635), and (3) The Long War (1635-1648). The concluding
section (4) Two Wartime Lives (1618-1648), interestingly juxtaposes
the journals of a wandering mercenary and a settled townsman. The
first is the diary of Peter Hagendorf, kept between the years 1624
and 1649 and only rediscovered in 1993. Hagendorf experienced the
war as a common mercenary from the Baltic to Italy, from France to
Pomerania. His counterpart is Hans Heberle, a shoemaker from a
small town in the territory of the free imperial city of Ulm whose
Zeytregister chronicled happenings both in the neighborhood and
further afield. The engrossing accounts of their shifting fortunes
over the three decades of the war really help to give this
collection of texts, and the troublesome period itself, a human
face. They are the stuff from which Grimmelshausen would craft his
great novel of the war, The Adventuresome Simplicissimus (1668).
Tryntje Helfferich is to be applauded for this consistently
interesting and eminently useful volume. --Martin W. Walsh,
University of Michigan, in Sixteenth Century Journal
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