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The only modern study of European politics to cover the entire timespan from the end of the Seven Years' War in 1763 to the revolutionary year of 1848 Paul Schroeder's comprehensive and authoritative volume charts the course of international history over this turbulent period, in which the map of Europe was redrawn time and again. It examines the wars, political crises, and diplomatic opportunities of the age, many of which - the Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars, the Congress of Vienna and its aftermath - had far-reaching consequences for modern Europe. Professor Schroeder provides a new account of the course of international politics over these years and a major reinterpretation of the structure and operation of the international system. He shows how the practice of international politics was transformed in revolutionary ways, with far-reaching and beneficial effects. The Vienna Settlement established peace by abandoning the competitive balance-of-power politics of the eighteenth century, and devising a new political equilibrium. It created a European consensus on a new political balance with new rules to maintain it, ushering in a uniquely peaceful, progessive period in European international politics.
What Metiernich wanted at the peak of his career, why he wanted it,
and the methods by which he achieved his goals are questions
brilliantly answered in this survey and analysis of the Austrian
chancellor's diplomacy during the period when he was the
pre-eminent figure in European politics. Metternich's single-minded
objective during 1820-1823 was to preserve the Austrian hegemony he
had gained in Central Europe after long wars, enormous effort, and
great sacrifice. If the internal security and international-power
position secured by Austria at the Congress of Vienna were to be
defended against the impact of widespread revolution in Europe, it
was imperative that peace in Europe and the status quo be
maintained. This required an unyielding opposition to all political
movements that might disturb the equilibrium, especially French
chauvinism and the spread of French constitutional ideas. A one-man
distillate of the doctrine of absolute monarchy, Metternich was the
relentless foe of any cause, just or unjust, that threatened
European repose. Hence, when the revolution in Naples seriously
menaced Austrian hegemony in Italy, Metternich determined that the
constitutional regime in Naples must be overthrown by an Austrian
armed force, an absolute monarchy restored, and an Austrian army of
occupation kept there. Nor did he scruple to use duplicity, secret
negotiation, trickery, or deceit against ally and adversary alike
in his effort to enlist them in the common cause of all thrones. At
the Congress of Troppau, Metternich succeeded not only in defeating
Russian ideas for peaceful intervention and a moderate constitution
at Naples, but also in converting Tsar Alexander to thoroughly
conservative views, thereby making Russia a powerful supporter of
Austrian policies and knowingly alienating England, formerly
Austria's closest ally. Paul W. Schroeder brings to this book
exceptional scholarship and an objectivity hard to attain when
dealing with a personality. Although Metternich, as Schroeder sees
him, doubtless helped to maintain European peace and order, his
real greatness consisted not in his European principles, but in his
ability to defend Austrian interests under the guise of European
principles. The evidence, gathered from documentary material in the
Haus Hof- und Staatsarchiv in Vienna, has forced the author to the
conclusion that Metternich was no real statesman. The very
qualities that distinguished him as a brilliant diplomat-keen
vision, cogent analysis, fertility of expedients, farsightedness,
flexibility, and firmness of purpose-were converted into those of
blindness to reality, superficial analysis, sterility of
expedients, dogmatism, and failure of will when confronted with
fundamental problems of state and society.
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