The Pursuit of Glory
List of Illustrations
Maps
1. Europe in the era of Louis XIV
2. Europe in the eighteenth century
3. Europe in 1809
4. Europe in 1815
5. The Holy Roman Empire and the Habsburg Monarchy in the
eighteenth century
Preface
Introduction
Part One: Life and Death
1. Communications
2. People
3. Trade and Manufacturing
4. Agriculture and the Rural World
Part Two: Power
5. Rulers and Their Elites
6. Reform and Revolution
Part Three: Religion and Culture
7. Religion and the Churches
8. Court and Country
9. Palaces and Gardens
10. The Culture of Feeling and the Culture of Reason
Part Four: War and Peace
11. From the Peace of Westphalia to the Peace of Nystad
12. From the Peace of Nystad to the French Revolutionary Wars
13. The Wars of the French Revolution and Napoleon
Conclusion
Suggested Reading
Index
Tim Blanning is professor of modern history at the University of Cambridge, a Fellow of the British Academy, and the author and editor of numerour books on European history. He appears regularly on BBC Radio in England.
?History writing at its glorious best.?
?"The New York Times"
? Magnificent. Exhilarating. [Blanning has] the acuity of vision to
focus on the particular without ever needing to sacrifice the
broader perspective.?
?"The Sunday Times" (London)
? A triumphant success. [Blanning] brings knowledge, experience,
sound judgment, and a colorful narrative style.?
?"The Economist"
History writing at its glorious best.
"The New York Times"
Magnificent. Exhilarating. [Blanning has] the acuity of vision to
focus on the particular without ever needing to sacrifice the
broader perspective.
"The Sunday Times" (London)
A triumphant success. [Blanning] brings knowledge, experience,
sound judgment, and a colorful narrative style.
"The Economist"
aHistory writing at its glorious best.a
a"The New York Times"
a Magnificent. Exhilarating. [Blanning has] the acuity of vision to
focus on the particular without ever needing to sacrifice the
broader perspective.a
a"The Sunday Times" (London)
a A triumphant success. [Blanning] brings knowledge, experience,
sound judgment, and a colorful narrative style.a
a"The Economist"
In 1648 the Peace of Westphalia brought the Thirty Years War to an
end. Although the Europeans didnt know it, of course, this
devastating conflict would prove to be the last of the Wars of
Religion that had been tearing the continent apart since the start
of the Reformation in 1517. Europe was entering a new age.
Despite the Renaissance, it was still a largely medieval world in
its outlook, infrastructure and government in 1648. Europe was less
wealthy and, in many ways, less economically advanced than other
parts of the world, like Mughal India and China. By 1815, the year
of the Battle of Waterloo, Europe was recognizably modern. It was
also far in advance of the rest of the world economically,
scientifically, technologically, politically and militarily.
So the period between these two dates is the very hinge of European
history. It is no small accomplishment to cover so vast a subject
adequately in a single volume. But Tim Blanning, a professor of
modern history at Cambridge and a fellow of the British Academy,
not only does so, he also triumphs at it. The Pursuit of Glory, at
708 pages, is not a short read, but it is so well written that for
those who love history, it is a page turner.
Mr. Blanning accomplishes his task not by taking a strictly
chronological approach but by dealing with various aspects of a
rapidly changing Europe one by one. Consider communications. In
1648 the main roads in Europe were mostly the ones that the Romans
had built 1,500 years earlier and that had been neglected ever
since.
The pace of travel, therefore, was seldom more than the speed a man
could make on his own two feet, which, indeed, is how most people
traveled. What coachesthere were were wretched and slow. In 1708 an
envoy from Louis XIV to Madrid reported from Bayonne, in
southwestern France, that he had been nine days on the road and
expected that he would need another two weeks to reach the Spanish
capital.
But by the end of the period, roads had much improved in Western
Europe and with it the speed of travel. In France travel times were
cut in half and the comfort of riding in coaches much improved by
the better roads. In Britain matters were even better. The trip
from Bath to London took 50 hours in 1700. By 1800 it took 16.
These greatly improved roads allowed other improvements, like much
more efficient and much less costly postal service.
This sort of history can be deadly dull, an endless recitation of
facts and statistics. In Mr. Blannings hands it is not, because he
has a keen eye for the exactly apposite contemporary quotation. The
people who lived through this transportation revolution regarded it
with the same wonder that we regard, say, the global positioning
systems that now keep us from getting lost. In 1754 a newspaper
advertisement proclaimed, However incredible it may appear, this
coach will actually arrive in London four days after leaving
Manchester.
Mr. Blanning is also the master of the unexpected connection. The
greatly improved roads, and thus greatly increased traffic, had an
entirely unanticipated consequence: highwaymen. The reason that the
18th century saw these gentlemen of the road turn into figures of
romance and legend is simply that the improved roads provided them
with so many more people of whom they could demand that they stand
and deliver.
Mr. Blanning uses this technique over and over, alwayswith good
effect. Why did France develop economically so much more slowly
than Britain in the 18th century, with huge political consequences?
One important reason was that Britain had an internal common
market, but France was still riddled with internal tariffs and
local taxes, causing no end of economic discontinuities.
An English traveler reported in 1786 that a nobleman of Berry told
me that on one side of a rivulet which flows by his chateau, salt
is sold at 40 sols a bushel, and on the other ... at 40 times as
much. In consequence of this, no less than two thousand troops of
horse and foot were stationed on its banks to check smugglers.
While everyone likely to read this book has heard of the scientific
revolution, brought about by people like Isaac Newton, and the
industrial revolution that began toward the end of the period (both
well covered here), the agricultural revolution occurring at the
same time was equally important. In 1648 European agriculture had
not changed much since medieval times. But enclosure, manuring,
crop rotation, new crops like turnips and clover, and improved
breeding brought forth a large increase in food production.
One result was a golden age for the landed gentry, whose rent rolls
increased sharply, and their conspicuous consumption along with
them. (Robert Walpole employed 50 people just to weed his gardens.)
Another result was the freeing of manpower to work in the factories
that were beginning to spring up in the English countryside. The
industrial revolution came about because of turnips as well as
steam engines.
Mr. Blanning thoroughly covers the politics and endless wars of the
era. These power shifts were not unconnected withthe two great
political trends in Europe in this period: the development of
representative government in Britain and the Dutch Republic and the
growth of royal absolutism in much of the rest of Europe. Change
thus came about in manageable increments in Britain, allowing it
both to modernize efficiently and to accommodate a potent new
political force public opinion, made possible by coffee houses and
newspapers while change was bottled up until it exploded in
France.
Even here, Mr. Blanning presents the historical nuggets that bring
this book to such vibrant life. When Louis XVI learned that he was
to die on the guillotine the next morning, he sent a servant to
fetch a copy of David Humes History of England to learn how Charles
I had faced his own execution.
"The Pursuit of Glory" is history writing at its glorious best.
John Steele Gordon (author of "An Empire of Wealth: The Epic
History of American Economic Power"), "The New York Times"
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