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Charles XI and Swedish Absolutism, 1660–1697

  • A. F. Upton, University of St Andrews, Scotland
  • Hardback
  • ISBN:9780521573900
  • Publication date:June 1998
  • 312pages
  • 2 b/w illus. 1 map
    • Dimensions: 228 x 152 mm
    • Weight: 0.63kg
      87.0097805215739000GB0en_GBGBP£
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    The reading public outside Sweden knows little of that country's history, beyond the dramatic and short-lived era in the seventeenth century when Sweden under Gustavus Adolphus became a major European power by her intervention in the Thirty Years War. In the last decades of the seventeenth century another Swedish king, Charles XI, launched a less dramatic but remarkable bid to stabilize and secure Sweden's position as a major power in northern Europe and as master of the Baltic Sea. This project, which is almost unknown to students of history outside Sweden, involved a comprehensive overhaul of the government and institutions of the kingdom, on the basis of establishing Sweden as a model of absolute monarchy. This 1998 book gives an account of what was achieved under the absolutist direction of a distinctly unglamorous, but pious and conscientious ruler.

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