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Author Rady, Martyn, 1955- author

Title The middle kingdoms : a new history of Central Europe / Martyn Rady
Edition First edition
Published New York, NY : Basic Books, Hachette Book Group, 2023
©2023

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 W'PONDS  943 Rad/Mka  AVAILABLE
Description xi, 617 pages : maps ; 25 cm
Contents Introduction: Central Europe, the Dogmen, and the Oak Woods of Berehove -- The Roman Empire, the Huns, and the Nibelungenlied -- The Franks and Charlemagne: The View from Lake Constance -- Avars and Slavs: Destruction and Conversion -- The Return of the Huns, Slave States, and the Shaping of Central Europe -- The Making of the Holy Roman Empire and Central Europe's Wild East -- The Mongol-Tatars, New Cities, and New Knights -- Dynastic Change, Charles IV of Bohemia, the the Prophets of the Antichrist -- Councils, Diets, and the Confusion of the Laws -- Cities, Villages, and Freedoms: From Frisia to Transylvania -- Old Prussia, the Adventures of Henry Bolingbroke, and the Union of Poland and Lithuania -- Merchants, the Hanseatic League, and the Fuggers -- The Dragon in the China Shop and the Habsurg Imagination -- Central Europe's Renaissance, Roman Law, and the Library of the Raven King -- Luther's Reformation, the Badlands of Thuringia, and the Court Painter of Saxony -- The Ottoman Turks and Central Europe's Long Frontier -- Toleration, the Magus, and the Alchemist as Emperor -- Calendars, the Catholic Recovery, and Central Europe's Thirty Years' Civil War -- The Condition of the Countryside: Peasants, Gypsies, Jews, and Others -- Cameralism, Ottoman Endgame, and the Human Laboratory
Bureaucrats, Sarmatians, and Little Landscapes -- The Prussian Way: Cemetery Marionettes and the Machine State -- Dissecting Europe's Orang-utan: The Partitions of Poland and Lithuania -- Napoleon and the Map of Central Europe -- The Gallant World of Tomcat Murr: Romanticism, the Grimms, and the Hanover Handbook -- 1848 and the Coming of Revolution -- The Revenge of the Generals and the Making of Nations -- Bismarck, Khuen-Héderváry's Croatia, and the Presumption of the Law -- Assimilation, Biology, and the Skull Measurers -- 1914-1918: The War Against Central Europe -- Violence, the City, and 'The Blue Angel' -- The Second World War, Ordinary Central Europeans, and Industrial Murder -- Mátyás Rákosi, Stalinist Central Europe, and Its Discontents -- Communist Central Europe and Its Collapse -- Post-Communism: Slavoj Žižek and the Lesson of Laibach
Summary "Central Europe has long been infamous as a region beset by war, a place where, historically, empires clashed and sieges from the east toppled kingdoms and enslaved peoples. Many view the region-comprising present-day Germany, Poland, Hungary, Austria, Slovenia, and Romania, among other countries-as united only by the shared experience of invasions launched by foreign powers, from the Huns of the fourth century, to the Swedes of the seventeenth, to the Russians of the twentieth and twenty-first. Sandwiched between hostile neighbors, Central Europeans have indeed contended with conquest for centuries. But the full story of region encompasses far more than its battles. In The Middle Kingdoms, Martin Rady offers the definitive history of Central Europe, highlighting how the region's preoccupation with invasion has led not only violent conflicts but also tremendous accomplishments in politics, society, and culture. In the Middle Ages, Central Europe was distinguished by its assemblies of noblemen, self-governing cities, and strong village communities. The region's peoples viewed their land as the home of knightly chivalry and great Gothic cities, vigilantly protecting Europe from alien incursion. In the early modern period, dynasties of ambitious rulers such as the Austrian Habsburgs crushed these communities in their quest to assemble sprawling empires. Eager to conquer external foes, they turned duchies, lordships, and kingdoms into family possessions, and for much of the modern era Central Europe served as the seat of European empire. Fierce rivalries over land and power made the region's experience of nation-building intense and often violent, from the devastation of the Napoleonic Wars to the atrocities of the Third Reich. But even as Central Europe engaged in hostilities with its neighbors, it reshaped trends from surrounding nations and exported its own. Central Europeans launched the Reformation, developed the philosophy of the Renaissance and the Enlightenment, originated the Romantic movement, and advanced some of the twentieth century's most important trends in art and cinema, from Expressionism to absurdist drama. More than simply the faultline between Western and Eastern Europe, the region has long possessed a cohesive identity of its own, even as its nations have remained diverse and enduringly distinct from each other. Sweeping in scope, The Middle Kingdoms draws on a lifetime of research and scholarship to tell as never before the panoramic and captivating story of Central Europe's rich, complex past and its enduring influence on world affairs"-- Provided by publisher
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 519-588) and index
SUBJECT Europe, Central -- History
Europe, Central -- Civilization
Europe, Central -- Politics and government
Europe, Central -- History, Military
Europe, Central -- Foreign relations
Genre/Form History.
Military history.
LC no. 2022032147
ISBN 9781541619784 (hardcover)
1541619781 (hardcover)
(electronic book)