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External challenges, strategic threats, and war have shaped the
course of modern British history. This volume examines how Britain
mobilized to meet these challenges and how developments in the
constitution, state, public sphere, and economy were a response to
foreign policy issues from the Restoration to the rise of New
Labour.
This book examines Prussia's response to Napoleon and Napoleonic
expansionism in the years before the crushing defeats of Auerstadt
and Jena, a period of German history as untypical as it was
dramatic. Between the years 1797 and 1806 the main fear of Prussian
statesmen was French power, rather than revolution from below. This
threat spawned a foreign-policy debate characterised by
geopolitical thinking: the belief that Prussian policy was
conditioned by her unique geographic situation at the heart of
Europe. The book breaks new ground both methodologically and
empirically. By combining high-political and geopolitical analysis,
it is able to present a more comprehensive and nuanced picture than
earlier interpretations. The book also draws on a very wide range
of sources, official and unofficial, many previously unused.
This original volume seeks to get behind the surface of political
events and to identify the forces which shaped politics and culture
from 1680 to 1840 in Germany, France and Great Britain. The
contributors, all leading specialists in the field, explore
critically how 'culture', defined in the widest sense, was
exploited during the 'long eighteenth century' to buttress
authority in all its forms and how politics infused culture.
Individual essays explore topics ranging from the military culture
of Central Europe through the political culture of Germany, France
and Great Britain, music, court intrigue and diplomatic practice,
religious conflict and political ideas, the role of the
Enlightenment, to the very new dispensations which prevailed during
and after the French Revolution and the Napoleonic watershed. The
book will be essential reading for all scholars of
eighteenth-century European history.
For more than 120 years (1714-1837) Great Britain was linked to the
German Electorate, later Kingdom, of Hanover through Personal
Union. This made Britain a continental European state in many
respects, and diluted her sense of insular apartness. The
geopolitical focus of Britain was now as much on Germany, on the
Elbe and the Weser as it was on the Channel or overseas. At the
same time, the Hanoverian connection was a major and highly
controversial factor in British high politics and popular political
debate. This volume was the first systematically to explore the
subject by a team of experts drawn from the UK, US and Germany.
They integrate the burgeoning specialist literature on aspects of
the Personal Union into the broader history of eighteenth- and
early nineteenth-century Britain. Never before had the impact of
the Hanoverian connection on British politics, monarchy and the
public sphere, been so thoroughly investigated.
The Battle of Midway was, on paper, an improbable victory for the
smaller, less experienced American navy and air force, so much so
that it was quickly described as "a miracle." Yet fortune favored
the Americans at Midway, and the conventional wisdom has it that
the Americans' lucky streak continued as the war in the Pacific
turned against the Japanese. This new history demonstrates that
luck, let alone miracles, had little to do with it. In The Silver
Waterfall, Brendan Simms and Steven McGregor show how the efforts
of America's peacetime navy combined with creative innovations made
by designers and industrialists were largely responsible for the
victory. The Douglas Dauntless Dive Bomber, a uniquely conceived
fighting weapon, delivered a brutally accurate attack the Japanese
quickly came to dread. Told through a vivid narrative, Simms and
McGregor show how the course of the war in the Pacific was
dramatically altered, emphasizing the crucial combination of a
culture of innovation, a brilliant contribution from immigrants,
and a vital intelligence coup that allowed the navy to orchestrate
the devastating attack on the Japanese and dominate the Pacific for
good.
External challenges, strategic threats, and war have shaped the
course of modern British history. This volume examines how Britain
mobilized to meet these challenges and how developments in the
constitution, state, public sphere, and economy were a response to
foreign policy issues from the Restoration to the rise of New
Labour.
In this volume eminent historians compare German and British
statesmen in war, from the Seven Years' War to World War II. The
subjects of the biographical essays range from Frederick the Great
and William Pitt the Elder, William Pitt the Younger and Joseph II,
William Gladstone and Bismarck, David George and Wilhelm II, as
well as Churchill and Hitler. Differences and similarities in the
conduct of warfare and references to the present-day political
situation are impressively presented. This collection thus provides
important results to stimulate further research.
'History at its scintillating best ... hard-hitting, revelatory and
superbly researched' Andrew Roberts, author of Churchill: Walking
with Destiny 'A rare achievement ... sure to become an instant
classic' John Lewis Gaddis, Yale University This gripping book
dramatizes the extraordinarily compressed and terrifying period
between the surprise Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor and Hitler's
declaration of war on the United States. These five days
transformed much of the world and have shaped our own experience
ever since. Simms and Laderman's aim in the book is to show how
this agonizing period had no inevitability about it and that
innumerable outcomes were possible. Key leaders around the world
were taking decisions with often poor and confused information,
under overwhelming pressure and knowing that they could be facing
personal and national disaster. And yet, there were also
long-standing assumptions that shaped these decisions, both
consciously and unconsciously. Hitler's American Gamble is a superb
work of history, both as an explanation for the course taken by the
Second World War and as a study in statecraft and political
choices.
The dilemma of how best to protect human rights is one of the most
persistent problems facing the international community today. This
unique and wide-ranging history of humanitarian intervention
examines responses to oppression, persecution and mass atrocities
from the emergence of the international state system and
international law in the late sixteenth century, to the end of the
twentieth century. Leading scholars show how opposition to tyranny
and to religious persecution evolved from notions of the common
interests of 'Christendom' to ultimately incorporate all people
under the concept of 'human rights'. As well as examining specific
episodes of intervention, the authors consider how these have been
perceived and justified over time, and offer important new insights
into ideas of national sovereignty, international relations and
law, as well as political thought and the development of current
theories of 'international community'.
The dilemma of how best to protect human rights is one of the most
persistent problems facing the international community today. This
unique and wide-ranging history of humanitarian intervention
examines responses to oppression, persecution and mass atrocities
from the emergence of the international state system and
international law in the late sixteenth century, to the end of the
twentieth century. Leading scholars show how opposition to tyranny
and to religious persecution evolved from notions of the common
interests of 'Christendom' to ultimately incorporate all people
under the concept of 'human rights'. As well as examining specific
episodes of intervention, the authors consider how these have been
perceived and justified over time, and offer important new insights
into ideas of national sovereignty, international relations and
law, as well as political thought and the development of current
theories of 'international community'.
For more than 120 years (1714-1837) Great Britain was linked to the
German Electorate, later Kingdom, of Hanover through Personal
Union. This made Britain a continental European state in many
respects, and diluted her sense of insular apartness. The
geopolitical focus of Britain was now as much on Germany, on the
Elbe and the Weser as it was on the Channel or overseas. At the
same time, the Hanoverian connection was a major and highly
controversial factor in British high politics and popular political
debate. This volume was the first systematically to explore the
subject by a team of experts drawn from the UK, US and Germany.
They integrate the burgeoning specialist literature on aspects of
the Personal Union into the broader history of eighteenth- and
early nineteenth-century Britain. Never before had the impact of
the Hanoverian connection on British politics, monarchy and the
public sphere, been so thoroughly investigated.
This volume seeks to get behind the surface of political events and
to identify the forces which shaped politics and culture from 1680
to 1840 in Germany, France and Great Britain. The contributors, all
leading specialists in the field, explore critically how 'culture',
defined in the widest sense, was exploited during the 'long
eighteenth century' to buttress authority in all its forms and how
politics infused culture. Individual essays explore topics ranging
from the military culture of Central Europe through the political
culture of Germany, France and Great Britain, music, court intrigue
and diplomatic practice, religious conflict and political ideas,
the role of the Enlightenment, to the very new dispensations which
prevailed during and after the French Revolution and the Napoleonic
watershed. The book will be essential reading for all scholars of
eighteenth-century European history.
This book examines Prussia's response to Napoleon and Napoleonic expansionism in the years before the crushing defeats of Auerstadt and Jena, a period of German history as untypical as it was dramatic. Events are analyzed at the level of high politics, foreign policy and the reform of the executive. The book also addresses matters of general theoretical concern such as high politics, geopolitics and the "primacy of foreign policy". In doing so it goes beyond anything that has been attempted before, and presents a comprehensive and nuanced picture of Prussia before 1806.
From a prize-winning historian, the definitive biography of Adolph
Hitler Hitler offers a deeply learned and radically revisionist
biography, arguing that the dictator's main strategic enemy, from
the start of his political career in the 1920s, was not communism
or the Soviet Union, but capitalism and the United States. Whereas
most historians have argued that Hitler underestimated the American
threat, Simms shows that Hitler embarked on a preemptive war with
the United States precisely because he considered it such a potent
adversary. The war against the Jews was driven both by his anxiety
about combatting the supposed forces of international plutocracy
and by a broader desire to maintain the domestic cohesion he
thought necessary for survival on the international scene. A
powerfully argued and utterly definitive account of a murderous
tyrant we thought we understood, Hitler is essential reading for
anyone seeking to understand the origins and outcomes of the Second
World War.
SHORTLISTED FOR THE MARK LYNTON HISTORY PRIZE 2020 A DAILY
TELEGRAPH BOOK OF THE YEAR 2019 A revelatory new biography of Adolf
Hitler from the acclaimed historian Brendan Simms Adolf Hitler is
one of the most studied men in history, and yet the most important
things we think we know about him are wrong. As Brendan Simms's
major new biography shows, Hitler's main preoccupation was not, as
widely believed, the threat of Bolshevism, but that of
international capitalism and Anglo-America. These two fears drove
both his anti-semitism and his determination to secure the 'living
space' necessary to survive in a world dominated by the British
Empire and the United States. Drawing on new sources, Brendan Simms
traces the way in which Hitler's ideology emerged after the First
World War. The United States and the British Empire were, in his
view, models for Germany's own empire, similarly founded on
appropriation of land, racism and violence. Hitler's aim was to
create a similarly global future for Germany - a country seemingly
doomed otherwise not just to irrelevance, but, through emigration
and foreign influence, to extinction. His principal concern during
the resulting cataclysm was not just what he saw as the clash
between German and Jews, or German and Slav, but above all that
between Germans and what he called the 'Anglo-Saxons'. In the end
only dominance of the world would have been enough to achieve
Hitler's objectives, and it ultimately required a coalition of
virtually the entire world to defeat him. Brendan Simms's new book
is the first to explain Hitler's beliefs fully, demonstrating how,
as ever, it is ideas that are the ultimate source of the most
murderous behaviour.
'Dazzling ... a trenchant, provocative account of the intimate
relations of Britain and Europe and how each shaped the other'
Prospect Magazine 'Elegant, refreshing and wide-ranging ... this is
essentially a brief history of the UK but a deliciously different
one' Literary Review Britain has always had a tangled, complex,
paradoxical role in Europe's history. It has invaded and been
invaded, changed sides, stood aloof, acted with both brazen
cynicism and the cloudiest idealism. Every century troops from the
British isles have marched across the mainland in pursuit of a
great complex of different goals, foremost among them the
intertwined defence of parliamentary liberty in Britain and the
'Liberties of Europe'. Dynastically Britain has been closely linked
to countries as varied as Spain, the Netherlands, Germany and
France. In this bracing and highly enjoyable book, Brendan Simms
describes the highlights and low-points in the Euro-British
encounter, from the Dark Ages to the present. The critical
importance of understanding this history is shown in the final
chapter, which dramatizes the issues around British relations with
the European Union. Britain's Europe is a vital intervention for
our times.
Brendan Simms's formidable, game-changing history of Europe In this
marvelously ambitious and exciting book, Brendan Simms tells the
story of Europe's constantly shifting geopolitics and the peculiar
circumstances that have made it both so impossible to dominate, but
also so dynamic and ferocious. It is the story of a group of highly
competitive and mutually suspicious dynasties, but also of a
continent uniquely prone to interference from 'semi-detached'
elements, such as Russia, the Ottoman Empire, Britain and (just as
centrally to Simms's argument) the United States.
In 1815, the deposed emperor Napoleon returned to France and
threatened the already devastated and exhausted continent with yet
another war. Near the small Belgian municipality of Waterloo, two
large, hastily mobilized armies faced each other to decide the
future of Europe--Napoleon's forces on one side, and the Duke of
Wellington on the other. With so much at stake, neither commander
could have predicted that the battle would be decided by the Second
Light Battalion, King's German Legion, which was given the
deceptively simple task of defending the Haye Sainte farmhouse, a
crucial crossroads on the way to Brussels. In The Longest
Afternoon, Brendan Simms recounts how these 400-odd riflemen beat
back wave after wave of French infantry until finally forced to
withdraw, but only after holding up Napoleon for so long that he
lost the overall contest. Their actions alone decided the most
influential battle in European history. Drawing on previously
untapped eye-witness reports for accurate and vivid details of the
course of the battle, Simms captures the grand choreography and
pervasive chaos of Waterloo: the advances and retreats, the death
and the maiming, the heroism and the cowardice. He describes the
gallant fighting spirit of the French infantrymen, who clambered
over the bodies of their fallen comrades as they assaulted the
heavily fortified farmhouse--and whose bravery was only surpassed
by that of their opponents in the Second Light Battalion. Motivated
by opposition to Napoleonic tyranny, dynastic loyalty to the King
of England, German patriotism, regimental camaraderie, personal
bonds of friendship, and professional ethos, the battalion suffered
terrible casualties and fought tirelessly for many long hours, but
refused to capitulate or retreat until the evening, by which time
the Prussians had arrived on the battlefield in large numbers. In
reorienting Waterloo around the Haye Sainte farmhouse, Simms gives
us a riveting new account of the famous battle--an account that
reveals, among other things, that Napoleon came much closer than is
commonly thought to winning it. A heroic tale of 400 soldiers who
changed the course of history, The Longest Afternoon will become an
instant classic of military history.
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Europe (Paperback)
Brendan Simms
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R1,101
Discovery Miles 11 010
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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If there is a fundamental truth of geopolitics, it is this: whoever
controls the core of Europe controls the entire continent, and
whoever controls all of Europe can dominate the world. Over the
past five centuries, a rotating cast of kings and conquerors,
presidents and dictators have set their sights on the European
heartland, desperate to seize this pivotal area or at least prevent
it from falling into the wrong hands. From Charles V and Napoleon
to Bismarck and Cromwell, from Hitler and Stalin to Roosevelt and
Gorbachev, nearly all the key power players of modern history have
staked their titanic visions on this vital swath of land.
In "Europe," prizewinning historian Brendan Simms presents an
authoritative account of the past half-millennium of European
history, demonstrating how the battle for mastery there has shaped
the modern world. Beginning in 1453, when the collapse of the
Byzantine Empire laid Europe open to Ottoman incursion and prompted
the dramatic expansion of the Holy Roman Empire, Simms leads
readers through the epic struggle for the heart of Europe.
Stretching from the Low Countries through Germany and into the
North Italian plain, this relatively compact zone has historically
been the richest and most productive on earth. For hundreds of
years, its crucial strategic importance stoked a seemingly unending
series of conflicts, from the English Civil War to the French
Revolution to the appalling world wars of the 20th century. But
when Europe is in harmony, Simms shows, the entire world
benefits--a lesson that current leaders would do well to remember.
A bold and compelling work by a renowned scholar, "Europe"
integrates religion, politics, military strategy, and international
relations to show how history--and Western civilization itself--was
forged in the crucible of Europe.
In the eighteenth century, Britain became a world superpower
through a series of sensational military strikes. Traditionally,
the Royal Navy has been seen as Britain's key weapon, but in "Three
Victories and a Defeat" Brendan Simms argues that Britain's true
strength lay with the German aristocrats who ruled it at the time.
The House of Hanover superbly managed a complex series of European
alliances that enabled Britain to keep the continental balance of
power in check while dramatically expanding her own empire. These
alliances sustained the nation through the War of the Spanish
Succession, the War of the Austrian Succession, and the Seven
Years' War. But in 1776, Britain lost the American continent by
alienating her European allies.
An extraordinary reinterpretation of British and American
history, "Three Victories and a Defeat" is a masterwork by a rising
star of the historical profession.
'A superb little book that is micro-history at its best' Washington
Post 'The brevity of this remarkable book belies the amount of work
that went into it. One can only marvel at how well Professor Simms
has gone through the original sources - the surviving journals,
reminiscences and letters of the individual combatants - to produce
a coherent and gripping narrative' Nick Lezard, Guardian The true
story, told minute by minute, of the soldiers who defeated Napoleon
- from Brendan Simms, acclaimed author of Europe: The Struggle for
Supremacy Europe had been at war for over twenty years. After a
short respite in exile, Napoleon had returned to France and
threatened another generation of fighting across the devastated and
exhausted continent. At the small Belgian village of Waterloo two
large, hastily mobilized armies faced each other to decide the
future of Europe. Unknown either to Napoleon or Wellington the
battle would be decided by a small, ordinary group of British and
German troops given the task of defending the farmhouse of La Haye
Sainte. This book tells their extraordinary story, brilliantly
recapturing the fear, chaos and chanciness of battle and using
previously untapped eye-witness reports. Through determination,
cunning and fighting spirit, some four hundred soldiers held off
many thousands of French and changed the course of history.
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