ABSTRACT

Originally published in 1967, this book discusses economic and constitutional developments and religious history in relation to their political consequences. Political theory is treated in two sections: one is devoted to the ideas current from 1789 to the ‘revolutionary year’ of 1848, and another to those of the Bismarckian era. The author used archival material to verify her analysis of such complicated questions as the operation of the Holy Roman Empire and Bismarckian foreign policy. Investigating the disappearance of the old Germany, in which medieval institutions still survived the book shows that the unification of Germany was not the final climax of German history, it appeared, at the time, to be.

chapter I|21 pages

Germany in 1789

chapter II|42 pages

Germany and France 1789–1806

chapter III|39 pages

Germany and Napoleon 1806–1813

chapter IV|31 pages

German Political Thought 1789–1848

chapter V|38 pages

Germany and Metternich

chapter VI|40 pages

The Revolutionary Year

chapter VII|40 pages

Germany in the Fifties

chapter IX|38 pages

Three Wars, Germany 1860–71

chapter X|27 pages

Bismarck’s Germany: the Liberal Era

chapter XII|43 pages

Emperor and Chancellors: Germany 1888—1909

chapter XIII|45 pages

War and Revolution: Germany 1909–1919

chapter |11 pages

Epilogue