The New Cambridge Modern History
Volume VI draws attention to two of the paramount developments which, with the growth of the Hapsburg monarchy, affected all of Europe and many parts of the Americas during the period under survey. War, politics, and society in Western Europe are studied from the English Revolution to the death of Louis XIV, and elsewhere from the accession of Charles XII to the death of Peter the Great (and for the Ottoman Empire to 1730). There is a survey of European maritime commerce extending to all important traffic within the overseas world, and a chapter on population and prices in Europe. Although much space is necessarily occupied by war and diplomacy, and by new methods of conducting them, the cultural and religious history of the period was of fundamental importance to the Enlightenment that was to follow. In this and other respects, the present volume complements volumes V and VII.
Reviews & endorsements
'… this is one of the best volumes of the NCMH yet to appear; it is well planned, [the] editorial direction is firm and enlightened, and the standard of the individual contributions is high …' History
'As might be expected from the distinguished team of contributors, the content of the individual chapters is authoritative, learned and intelligent, and great care has been taken to eliminate contradictions and overlaps …' The Times Literary Supplement
Product details
January 1979Paperback
9780521293969
972 pages
228 × 152 mm
1.41kg
Unavailable - out of print September 1989