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KINGDOM . 'Iogpl' .,. n Ga ''---•- Tole ~~ '~ .~+,q1 Y Cordo s 4 II See also:Seville ~, 9 ti tit • d Boundary of the See also:Roman See also:Empire at the See also:death of See also:Theodoric b?B .: : ~..r~ Boundary of the Roman Empire at the death of Justinian 565 :.... Prankish Kingdom circa 500 .. . : Frankish Kingdom after 548 f Conquered from the See also:West Goths 507-511 West See also:Gothic Kingdom after 550 : IIIIIIIIIIII See also:East Gothic Kingdom at the death of Theodoric ~IIIlillllll Roar Kingdom after SBB ~ Lombard Kingdom after 5B8._.. ••--•-- -- o too • See also:Scale, t:38,000,00e . Soo See also:Miles - nmrtylf/ between emperors of the East and West. It was the beginning not only of the break-up of the empire, but of that increasing divergence between the eastern and western types of See also:European See also:religion and culture which has continued to this See also:day. The pressure of the See also:Teutonic invasions became increasingly strong during the reigns of the See also:emperor See also:Valens and his successors. These invasions were of two types, (I) migrations of whole peoples with their old See also:German patriarchal organization See also:complete, (2) bands, larger or smaller, of emigrants in See also:search of See also:land to See also:settle on, without tribal cohesion, but organized under the leadership of military chiefs. The earlier invaders, Goths and See also:Vandals, and later the Burgundians and See also:Lombards were of the first type; to the second belonged the See also:Franks, " See also:free " men from the Saxon See also:plain, and the Saxon invaders of See also:Britain. The distinction was a vital one; for the Goths, Vandals, Burgundians and Lombards never took See also:root in the See also:soil, and succumbed in turn, while the Frankish and Saxon immigrants, each See also:man See also:lord in his own See also:estate, not only maintained themselves, but set up at the cost of the Roman organization and of the See also:power of their own See also:kings a wholly new polity, based on the See also:independence of the territorial unit, which later on was to develop into See also:feudalism. It was owing to the pressure of Turanian invaders from the East that the Teutonic peoples were first forced to take See also:refuge within the empire. In 378 the Goths defeated and slew the emperor Valens in a See also:battle near See also:Adrianople; in 410 See also:Alaric, See also: Though in Asia the emperor See also:Heraclius, in a See also:series of victorious See also:campaigns, See also:broke the See also:Persian power and succeeded even in extending the Roman dominion, Italy, See also:save for a while Ravenna itself and a few scattered See also:sea-See also:coast towns, was thence-forth lost to the empire of which in theory it still formed a See also:part,
This See also:catastrophe produced one result the importance of which it is impossible to exaggerate; the development of the See also:political power of the papacy. At the beginning of the 6th See also:century Rome, under Theodoric the Goth, was still the See also:city of the Caesars, the tradition of its See also:ancient See also:life was yet unbroken; at the end of the century Rome, under See also:Pope See also:Gregory the Great (590-604), had become the city of the popes. And with the city the popes entered into some of the See also:inheritance of the Caesars; in the See also:world-wide activity of Gregory we already have a foreshadowing of universal claims, often effectively asserted, which made the great See also:medieval popes, in a truer sense than the medieval emperors, the representatives of the See also:idea of Roman imperial unity (see Rona, sec. ii. See also:Middle Ages; PAPACY).
The Teutonic invasions.
The next event that profoundly affected the history_of See also:Europe was the rise of Mahommedanism. .%A.d biz t;'s s'tktki>t Yeart{
r- -7
The He after Gregory's dead s oeeurred the # ht` %;r'of glra, A. a See also:Mahomet from A1ecca to See also:Medusa, which fixed the
W. Rise memorable era of 'the ` Hegira. The.full floret of the
°fmaoi n- militant-religion founded-by the Arab See also:prophet was not
See also:felt till after his death 03+4. The emperor Heraclius,
the vigour of his manhood passed,ivas"unable to meet this new
peril; the See also:Arabs, strong in their h dy simplicity and new-See also:born {
religious fanaticism, and aided bythe-.See also:treason and cowardice of
the decadent Roman governing classes, overran Asia See also:Minor,
eon4tfered See also:Egypt and the Ss Tole of See also:northern Africa, overwhaii d
the Gothis,.kingdgm'in Spain, and even penetrated beyond the
Pyre>}iees to the See also:conquest of the See also:province of Narboskise. Oe of the See also:Chief effects of these Arab conquests was that
~hr~atiar
i:ivilfzation "became gradually See also:con ded to Europe,, the twas
that, they See also:trade routes 4o the East, were cled tat t,We 'West nations, The conquest of See also:Narbonne marked the ff tf" o€.;the advance of See also:Islam in western to p'lile, fei 1 73 the rahre'Were Overthrown by See also: The. battle of Tours emphasized and increased• the power and reputation of Charles Martel; As a See also:mayor of the palce to the rli® See also:Caen-_decadent Merovingian successors &faClaxis, he was Iingians. virtually ruler of the Franks, and, after his death, the last of the rois faineants of the See also:house of Merovech was deposed, and See also:Pippin, Charles's son, was elected king of the Franks. The See also:prestige of the Carolingian house,(to give it the name it was later known by). was increased when, at the urgent entreaty of Pope See also:Stephen 'III., Pippin marched into Italy and saved Rome from the Lombards, who were endeavouring to extend their power southwards. Pippin's son Charles (See also:Charlemagne) finally conquered the Lombards in 774 and thus added part of northern Italy to his dominions. In 707 an even of the highest importance to the European world took place. The emperor See also:Constantine VI. was deposed The coro6- by his See also:mother See also:Irene, who seized the See also:throne. Thereupon anon of Pope See also:Leo and the Roman See also:people definitely threw Charles the off the authority of the emperors of See also:Constantinople, Great as on the ground that a woman could not hold the position emperor, son.' of See also:Caesar. In 8mo Leo' crowned Charlemagne emperor at Rome, and henceforth 6111 453, when Constantinople was conquered by the See also:Turks, there was an Eastern and a Western Charlemagne's Empire at its greatest extent. empire.. r Till his death in 814 Charlemagne was king of the ritnks+as a5 erttperor. His kingdom embraced not only all Germany •and nadern See also:France, but -included -a large part of Italy and Spain. as f•ar-as;the• See also:Ebro. Under his rule western, Europe was See also:united in a powerful empire, in the organization of which the principles of Roman and Teutonic See also:administration were blended`; and after his death, he See also:left.. to his successors,, the Frankish and German kings, the tradition of a centralized See also:government which survived the See also:chaos of the See also:period that followed,` and the prescriptive right to the See also:title and prestige of Roman emperors—a.;tradition and a :claim that were to exercise a ndt*ble effect.., on the development of European See also:history for centuries try come. (See FRANCE: .H2rtory and CHARLEMAGNE)? The period from the death of Charlemagne (814) to the 12thCentury is cha acterized in western Europe by the general we.kenitrgiof tiles idea of central government and by eprope the ri~~se~sOf feudalism:. During the `same period the after the F.as't Kor r r Byzantine empire escaped disruption death of
atd, presdlC ins the traditions of Roman See also:civil `and Charlemagne. militB,''r administration, formed an effective barrier
fef Europe and Christendom against the advancing See also:tide of Islam.r At the See also:saint time, however, the growing divergence between See also:ute; a'See also:fern atid Western Churches, which had been accentuated`' ;l$y ,the iconoclastic controversy (see See also:ICONOCLASTS), and was! destined in 1053 to culminate in a definite See also:schism, was gradually, wideging the See also:breach between the two .types .of European civilization, which came into violent conflict at the beginning of. the' 1',3 th:century, when crusaders from western Europe captured Constantinople and set up a Latin empire in the East (see ROMAN ... EMPIRE,.-:LATER, Cnuacn HISTORY;. See also:CRUSADES). In western Europe, meanwhile, the unity of the empire did not See also:long survive Charlemagne. Its definite break-up See also:dates from the treaty of See also:Verdun (843), by which Charles the Bald received See also:Neustria, See also:Aquitaine and western See also:Burgundy, See also: :EUROPE
struggles had led to the growth of independent or semi»indepiend
ent See also:powers within the states themselves. The See also:Frank landownefs
had successfully asserted their independence of the See also:jurisdiction
of the king (or emperor) and his officials; the imperial See also:official's
themselves, See also:dukes or See also:counts, had received grants of lands with
similar immunities (beneficia), and these had become hereditary.
Thus sprang up a class of great territorial nobles to whom, amid
the growing anarchy, men looked for See also:protection rather than ,to
the weak and remote central power; and so, out of the chaos
that followed the break-up of the empire of Charlemagne, teas
born the feudal system of the middle ages (see FEUDALISM).
This organization was admirable for See also:defence; and with its aid,
before the See also:close of the first See also:decade of the loth century% the
frontiers of France and Germany had been made safe against
the northern barbarians, who had either been driven off and
barriers erected against their teturn—e.g. the marks established
by See also: Its association with the undefined claims involved in the title of Roman emperor; traditionally attached to it, and notably those to authority in Italy, necessitated con-cession after concession to the feudal nobles, in See also:order to See also:purchase their support for their assertion. The kingship, moreover, became elective; the imperial title was obtainable only at Rome at the hands of the pope; and the Gelman kings thus became entangled in contests, not only with their own vassals, but with the tremendous spiritual force of the medieval papacy by which, for its own ends, the spirit of feudal insubordination Was from time to time fomented. Thus in Germany the feudal nobles gradually acquired a See also:sovereign status which; in some cases, has survived the territorial rearrangements of the r9th cerftury and left its See also:mark on the federal 'constitution of See also:modern Germany; while the kingship and the imperial title grew more arid more shadowy till in 1806 it vanished altogether. (See ENGLISH HISTORY; FRANCE: History; GERMANY: History.) In France the process by which a strong hereditary monarchy was established was a slow one. During the' greater 'part of the loth century the See also:Carolingians, stripped' of the vast These of domains which had been the basis of the power of the house et See also:caper. Pippin, owed their continued existence to the for- bearance of See also:Hugh the Great, cbunt of See also:Paris. In 987, however, the last Carolingian king died, and thighCapet, son of Hugh the Great,1'he most ,powerful of the territorial magnates, was choseniki'ng ;af, France„', With his See also:election sages, thq, eaa beginning of the, French monarchy, and under him and his successors Paris became,;the-capital of >France. Ifugh's ,ele'c'See also:tic~n, however, was the ' See also:work,of the great feudatories, and ii ce remained divided among a number of great fiefs, of which the chief were See also:Brittany, See also:Anjou, See also:Flanders, See also:Vermandois, See also:Champagne, Burgundy, Aquitaine, ,Poitous See also:Gascony, See also:Toulouse and Normany. While the central power in France advanced slowly but steadily', the development of the royal authority in. Germany was in:. the loth, and : 1 rth centuries more rapid. In or' 'the . German magnates had elected See also:Conrad the, The royal Franconian to reign over them, and in 910 Henry Cfermsay. permany t` the Fowler" of Saxony, '' whose reign forms one of the great turning-points in' the history of the German nation." He defeated the' Hungarians, the Slays and the Danes, and by encouraging the growth and development of towns he, contributed greatly to the formation of the German kingdom. His immediate successors; -See also:Otto the `'Great and Otto II., continued his work; which was only. interrupted for, a See also:short time during the reign of the idealist 'Otto III., ' whose " See also:cosmopolitan imperialism " brought: him into' collision with the German See also: The emperor Alexius Coninenus found himself on his accession in : The 1081 threatened by the Seljuks (the victors in the de- eastern ' cisivebattle of Manzikertin 1071) and by the Sicilian Empire Normans who in io8i besieged Durazzo. In 1083 he crasades. defeated the Normans in the battle of Durazzo, and with the' death of See also:Robert Guiscard in Io85 all danger from a fresh See also:Norman invasion passed away. But the first ,crusade broutlit new an'fieties to Alexius, for he feared that the crusaders might attack Constantinople. That fear removed, he took'advaritage of the increased connexion between eastern and western Europe by bestowing commercial privileges upon the See also:Italian trading republics; who "thus gained See also:access to the ports of the Empire on easy terms. With the era of the Crusaded, which Iasted till the middle of the 13th 'century, Europe entered upon a period of See also:change; the importance' of which is realised by contrasting the See also:condition of western Christendom' in the r nth with its `condition in the f3th century. Betweentbe opening and close of the crusading movement Europe underwent a complete revolution. Wb^le the Crusades tended to enhance the prestige and authority of the papacy and the power of European monarchs, they also led to ' increased knowledge of the East, to the rapid de-The veldppment of See also:commerce, to the introduction of new sades and the Hilde- See also:industries, to the rapid decline of the influence of the See also:brand,ne feudal See also:nobility, and to the rapid development of See also:town retorma- life (see See also:COMMUNE). At the same time the Hilde- t,on. brandine See also:reformation was having an immense influence upon the intellectual condition of Europe. The 12th century saw the See also:establishment of many new monastic orders (see See also:MoNASTICIsM), and at the same time a remarkable speculative and See also:literary revival (see See also:SCHOLASTICISM). This movement owed not a little of its success to the influence of the Crusades, which stirred up intellectual as well as commercial activity. This intellectual activity, as well as the fruits of commercial expansion, were—since learning was still a See also:monopoly of the clerical order—weapons in the hands of the papacy, which in the 12th century attained the height of its power, if not of its pretensions. It is, indeed, impossible to exaggerate the influence of the Roman Church upon the development of Europe at this period. The popes, in fact, represented Europe in a sense that could not be predicated of the emperors; the terror of their spiritual power, their vast See also:wealth derived from the See also:tribute of all the West, their unique experience of See also:international affairs, and—in 'the case of the great popes of this See also:epoch—the superiority of their minds and characters, made them not only the spiritual rulers of Europe, but the effective centres of whatever political unity it possessed. As a Byzantine observer was to observe of See also:Innocent III., they had become the successors of the Caesars rather than of See also:Peter (see PAPACY). Nowhere were the beneficial effects of the Crusades seen more clearly than in France. The smaller fiefs were steadily absorbed Growth of by the greater lordships, which in their turn See also:fell the royal victims to the royal power. It might almost be said power in that " modern France is a creation of the Crusades." France. The effects of the crusading movement were felt in France as early as the reign of Louis VI. (1108–1137). Aided by his able See also:minister See also:Suger, Louis managed before his death to add to the possessions of his house the Ile de France and a prospective claim to See also:Poitou and Aquitaine. Under his successor Louis VII. (1137–118o) the consolidation movement was checked owing to the See also:marriage of Eleanor of Aquitaine (after her See also:divorce from Louis VII.) to Henry II. of England. By the addition of his wife's lands (Gascony and See also:Guienne) to those which he had already inherited from his See also:father and mother (Normandy, Anjou, See also:Touraine and See also:Maine) Henry was enabled to form the powerful though short-lived Angevin empire. But the lost ground was rapidly recovered by Philip Augustus (1180-1223), who took See also:advantage of the weakness and folly of See also: The Crusades thus not only postponed the conquest of Constantinople by the Turks for some two See also:hundred years, but led, as had already been said, to a vast expansion of commerce, as seen in the rapid growth and development of the Italian cities, and to a striking development of town life. The Crusades had enormously strengthened the power and prestige of the papacy, and indirectly contributed to its victory over the Empire in the person of Frederick II. From the reign of the emperor Henry IV. to the death of t„gg.1e Frederick II. in 1250 the struggle between the Empire between and the papacy continued, and is coincident in point the empire of time with the Crusades. The reign of Frederick andthe See also:Barbarossa (1152–1190) saw that struggle at its height, papacy and during that reign it became apparent that the emperor's efforts to unite Italy and Germany under one crown were doomed to failure. The rise and success of the See also:alliance of Italian republics known as the Lombard See also:League no doubt contributed to the success of the papacy, but in their contest with the popes the emperors never had any See also:chance of gaining a permanent victory. Frederick II. continued with great See also:energy to See also:attempt the See also:hope-less task of dominating the papacy, but his possession of Sicily only made the popes more determined than ever to establish their predominance in Italy. Frederick's death in 1250 marked not only the See also:triumph of the papacy in Italy, but also that of feudalism in Germany. He has been called the " most dazzling of the long line of imperial failures," and with him ends the Empire as it was originally conceived. Henceforward the Holy Roman Empire, which implied the unity of Italy and Germany, and the close alliance of pope and emperor, no longer exists save in name, and its place is taken by a glorified German kingship presiding over a See also:confederation of turbulent German nobles. Thus with the later years of the 13th century Europe had arrived at the definite close of one epoch and the beginning of another. The period of the Crusades was over, the Europe,. theory of the Holy Roman Empire had broken down. the 14th The period from the beginning of the 14th to the close and 15th of the 15th century might well be styled the latter centuries. days of medieval Europe. During the 14th and 15th centuries the idea of regarding Europe as one state in which emperor and pope presided over a number of subordinate kings gave way before the spirit of nationalism and particularism. England, France and Spain were rapidly becoming strong centralized monarchies which stood in striking contrast to the weakened Empire. Partly no doubt owing to the failure of the Empire and papacy to work together, a great impetus had been given to the formation of national monarchies. While Frederick II. had failed, Louis IX. and Philip IV. of France, Ferdinand III. of See also:Castile (1217–1252), See also: The forces of decentralization Empire, strengthened themselves, and the emperors found that 1254" the formation of a strong and united German kingdom 1519' was an impossibility. Rudolph of Habsburg (1273-1291), realizing what were the limits of his power in Germany and the futility of attempting to establish his hold upon Italy, began that policy of See also:family aggrandizement which was continued so notably by successive members of his house. His reign witnessed the firm establishment of the house of Anjou in See also:Naples, and, after the Sicilian See also:Vespers in 1282, the supremacy of the house of Aragon in Sicily. Refusing to follow the example of Frederick II. and to take part in distant expeditions, Rudolph conquered See also:Austria, See also:Styria, See also:Carinthia and See also:Carniola, See also:Vienna became the capital of the Habsburg dominions in Germany, and his son See also:Albert of Austria, who was king from 1298 to 1308, was careful to continue the policy of his father. Though no Habsburg was again elected to the imperial throne till 1438, when the long succession of emperors began which continued unbroken till 1742, the establishment of the Habsburgs in Austria by Rudolph proved an event of European importance. From that time the, leading members of the Habsburg family never lost an opportunity of aggrandizement. In 1335 they received Carinthia, in 1363 the See also:Tirol. While, however, the Habsburgs, the Wittelsbachs and later the house of See also:Brandenburg were strengthening themselves, the Empire was steadily declining in power and influence. The 14th century saw See also:Switzerland shake itself free from the See also:Austrian house and establish its independence, which was, however, not formally acknowledged till the treaty of See also:Westphalia in 1648. During the 14th century the weakness of the Empire became more and more accentuated under the weak rule of Louis IV. On his death in 1346 his successor Charles of See also:Luxemburg, known as the emperor Charles IV., made a celebrated attempt to form a strong centralized German monarchy. With that See also:object he issued in 1356 the See also:Golden See also:Bull, by which it was hoped that all matters connected with the imperial election would be settled. The number of imperial See also:electors was settled, and henceforth they were to consist of the archbishops of See also:Cologne, See also:Mainz and See also:Trier, and of the king of Bohemia, the See also:duke of Saxony, the See also:margrave of Brandenburg and the See also:count See also:palatine of the See also:Rhine. Charles hoped to concentrate gradually in his house all the chief German provinces, and having by the Golden Bull endeavoured to check the growth of the towns, he expected to establish firmly the imperial influence in Germany. But the towns were too strong to be coerced, and during his reign the Swabian cities formed a See also:union; and though the marriage of his son See also:Sigismund to the heiress of the king of See also:Hungary and See also:Poland, and the possession of Brandenburg, which fell to him in 1373, seemed steps towards the realization of his hopes, his death in 1378 left his work unfinished. Moreover, his son and successor See also:Wenceslaus (1378-1400) proved, like See also:Richard II. of England and Charles VI. of France, unequal to the task of checking the growingindependence of the nobles and the cities. The Hanseatic League (q.v.) was at the height of its power, and in 1381 the Rhenish towns formed a confederation. Wenceslaus, like Richard II., had fallen upon evil times. The advance westwards by the Turks occupied the See also:attention of his See also:brother Sigismund, now king of Hungary; he was himself unpopular in Bohemia, and at the same time was exposed to the intrigues of his See also:cousin See also:Jobst of See also:Moravia, who had secured Brandenburg. In 1400 Wenceslaus was formally deposed by the electors, and spent the rest of his life in Bohemia, where he died in 1419. His successor See also:Rupert of the See also:palatinate reigned from 1400 to 1410, and during his reign the council of See also:Pisa endeavoured to bring to an end the great schism which had followed upon the return of Pope Urban VI. from Avignon to Rome in 1377. Two popes had been elected, one living at Rome, the other at Avignon, and Christian Europe was scandalized at the sight of two See also:rival pontiffs. On Rupert's death the electors See also:chose Sigismund the brother of Wenceslaus, and he ruled as emperor from 1411 to 1437. Thus at the beginning of the 15th century the papacy was seen to have fallen from the high position which it occupied at the time of the death of Frederick II. The Avignon captivity followed by the great schism weakened its Decline temporal as well as its spiritual power and prestige, :fetch" papacy. while national developments and dynastic ambitions, such as led to the Hundred Years' See also:War, diverted men's minds from religious to purely temporal concerns. The work of Wycliffe and Hus illustrated not only the decline of papal prestige but also the general See also:opinion that reform in the papacy was necessary. Sigismund's reign as emperor was rendered 51915 noteworthy by the part which he took in the council of n,una See also:Constance (q.v.), and by his successful efforts to sup- emperor, See also:press the Hussite movement in Bohemia (see See also:HussITEs). 1411" That country on the death of Wenceslaus in 1419 143 fell to Sigismund, but it was not till 1431, after a long and sanguinary war, that the opposition to the union of Bohemia with the Empire was suppressed. Led by YLiika and other able chiefs, the Bohemians who were Slays utilized the Hussite movement in a vigorous attempt to secure their independence. In 1436 Sigismund was formally acknowledged king of Bohemia. In 1431, the See also:year of the final overthrow of the Bohemians and the Hussites, he opened the council of See also:Basel (q.v.), being resolved to establish a religious See also:peace in Europe and to prevent the Hussite doctrines from spreading into Germany. In 1438 Sigismund died, leaving Germany involved in a See also:quarrel with the papacy, but having successfully withstood the efforts of the Bohemians to acquire independence. Sigismund's death marks an epoch in the history of the Empire, for his successor Albert of Austria proved to be the first of a long line of Habsburg emperors. Albert himself reigned only from 1438 to 1440, but on his death the imperial dignity was conferred upon another member of the Habsburg house, Frederick, duke of Styria and Carinthia, known as the emperor Frederick III. With his accession the imperial throne became practically hereditary in the Habsburg family. Frederick's long reign, which lasted from 1440 to 1493, was of little benefit to Germany; for he showed no administrative skill and proved a weak and incapable ruler. Undoubtedly his See also:lot fell upon evil days, for not only were the Turks at the height of their power, but both Bohemia and Hungary gave him much anxiety. The imminent fall The taking of Constantinople, the last barrier of Christendom See also:aeon- against Islam in the East, was a See also:threat not only to stanunthe Empire, but to all Christian Europe. But western ofhpeieTurk 4y s. Europe was too much occupied with internecinefeuds to unite effectively against the common enemy. In vain the emperor John VI. had gone in person to solicit aid at the various courts of the West; in vain he had humbled himself to pay the price asked, by subscribing to the abnegation of the distinctive tenets of the Orthodox Church, which secured the ephemeral See also:reunion of Christendom at the council of See also:Florence (1438). The crusading spirit was dead; the European powers stirred no See also:finger to save the imperial city; and in 1453 See also:Sultan Mahommed II. rode through the breach over the See also:body of the last of the Eastern Caesars, and planted the See also:crescent on the See also:dome of the See also:metropolitan ;See also:lurch. of Eastern Christendom (see . TuRiEY; and ROMAN EMPIRE, LATER). The fall of Constantinople marked the definite establishment on European soil of a power See also:alien and hostile to all that was characteristic of European civilization. It was a power, more-over, which could live only by expanding; and for over two hundred years to come the dread of See also:Ottoman aggression was a dominant factor in the politics of eastern Europe. The tide of See also:Turkish advance could have been arrested by union of Europe; but the appeals of Pope See also:Nicholas V. fell unheeded upon a sceptical See also:age, See also:intent only on its dynastic and particularist ambitions, To the emperor the ousting of the' Ottomans from the See also:Balkan peninsula seemed of less importance than the consolidation of the Habsburg power in Germany, and its See also:extension over the neighbouring kingdoms of Hungary and Bohemia. France was exhausted by the long agony of the Hundred Years' War, which came to an end the very year of the fall of Constantinople, and the French kings—especially Louis XI. (2461-1483)—were busy for the rest of the century crushing out the remnants of feudalism and consolidating the power of the, monarchy. As for Italy, with its See also:petty tyrants and' its condottieri, there was no hope of uniting it for any purpose whatever, least of all a religious purpose, and Spain was busy with her own crusades against, the Moors. The exploits of John See also:Hunyadi, king of Hungary, against the, Turks, therefore, remained isolated and unsupported. In 1456 he checked their advance northwards by a brilliant victory which led to the See also:relief of See also:Belgrade; but he died the same year, and his death was followed by a struggle for the succession between Hungarians and Bohemians. The racial and religious quarrels of the Balkan peoples had made it possible for the Turks to obtain a foothold in Europe; the jealousies and internecine struggles of the Christian states made possible the vast expansion of the Ottoman power, which in the 17th century was to advance the frontiers of Islam to those of Germany and to reduce the emperors, in their relations with the See also:Porte, to. the status of tributary princes. The victory of See also:Ladislaus, son of Casimir, king of Poland, who succeeded in uniting in his own person the crowns of Bohemia, Hungary and . Poland, threatened to result in the permanent independence of those countries of the house of Habsburg, But in 1490 Ladislaus was compelled by See also:Maximilian, son of Frederick III., to sign the treaty of See also:Pressburg, providing for the eventual succession of the Habsburgs to Hungary and Bohemia. In other ways the reign of Frederick III. laid the foundations of the greatness of his family. In 1477 Maximilian married See also:Mary, Ceesellda• duchess of Burgundy and heiress of Charles the Bold, tion of the' and through her the Habsburgs obtained Franche Habsburg' See also:Comte and the See also:Netherlands. The line, Bella gerant power. alii, tofelix Austria nube, well described--,themethod by which the hpuse of Habsburg increased its possessions and established its fortunes. A.E.I.O.U. (Austrian est imperare orbi universe) was the See also:device invented for his house at that time by Frederick III. and it proved no idle boast. Maximilian I., the son of Frederick III., reigned from 1493 to 1519, and during his reign Europe passed from medieval to modern times. Some reforms in the Empire were carried out, but the events of his reign made it apparent that it was impossible to set up a central-. ized monarchy in Germany (see MAXIMILIAN I.; GERMANY and AuspuA,: History).
Far different developments were taking place during the 14th and 15th centuries in France, Spain, the Scandinavian France in See also:north and in England. During the greater part of the the,See also:rath 14th century France was engaged in See also:foreign See also:wars and and loth in See also:internal complications, and it seemed doubtful if a centnNes, strong centralized monarchy would be firmly established. The failure of Philip VI. (1328-1350) and John (1350—1364) in their contest with England weakened the central power in France, and, though Charles V. (1364—1389), owing to his own sagacity. end the weakness of the English government, managed to regain for France many of her lost provinces, the French power both at See also:home and abroad again declined under the'rule ofthe. ineapable,Charles VII. (1380-1422). In fact the year 1422 may be said to mark the lowest See also:stage in the history of the French monarchy, From. that year an improvement gradually set in. A national sentiment, as exemplified in the career of See also:Joan of Arc (q.v.), was See also:developed; an alliance, essential for the successful See also:expulsion of the English from France, was made in 1435 between the king of France and the duke of Burgundy; and in 1439 the famous: See also:ordinance empowering the king to maintain a See also:standing See also:army and to raise See also:money for its See also:maintenance was passed ai See also: (1483-1498), Brittany was annexed, and France, secure fromall danger of a feudal reaction, entered with the invasion of Italy in 1494 by Charles VIII. upon modern times. A similar process is observable in England and Spain, In England the Wars of the See also:Roses were followed by the establishment of a strong monarchy under Henry, VII., while in Spain Ferdinand and Isabella established in place of anarchy the royal authority, and during their reign suppressed all attempts at provincial independence. In 1491 the consolidation' of Spain was completed by the conquest of Granada. In 13977 by the union of Calmar, the three kingdoms of See also:Norway, See also:Sweden and See also:Denmark were united under See also:Eric XIII. This union was, however, short-lived, and in the early years of the 16th century came definitely to an end (see NORWAY; SWEDEN; DENMARK). The dose of the middle ages and the beginning of modern times was marked by several noteworthy events. The invention of• See also:printing, the See also:discovery of See also:America and the invasion The dose of Italy by Charles VIII. all occurred before the end of the of the 18th century, while in the early years of the 16th middle century the ideal, of civil and ecclesiastical unity was ages' finally shattered by the Reformation and by the development of the modern states system, accompanied by the prominence henceforward attached to the question of the See also:balance of power: During the whole of'the 15th century Europe had been affected by what is known as the Renaissance movement, which marked the transition from the medieval to the modern order. The This movement, caused by the growth of learning, naissance. had its first home in Italy, which had witnessed a marvellous revival of See also:interest in classical antiquity, in See also:painting and in See also:sculpture, accompanied by a keen intellectual activity in religious and political, no less than in literary matters. See also:Criticism of existing beliefs was developed, knowledge became widely diffused, and, while the way was prepared for the substitution of See also:individualism for the old ecclesiastical system, the development of commerce coincident with the discovery of America and the establishment of monarchical systems destroyed feudalism (see RENAISSANCE). The later years of the 15th, and the early years of the 16th, centuries may be described as the transition from medievalism to modern times, from feudalism to individualism, from the idea of a world church and a world empire to one in which national consolidation was the chief feature and monarchical government a See also:necessity. From the. beginning of the 16th century Europe entered upon modern times. Many events marked the close of the middle ages. The discovery of America, the decay of See also:Venice, swmmal'y the, development of the European states system, the rise ofBuro-
of See also:diplomacy as a permanent international system (see peen DIPLOMACY), the wars of religion—all these are the history general characteristics of the new period upon which from tsao. Europe now enters., With the growth of monarchies arises the belief in the divine right of kings, the development of territorial See also:sovereignty, and wars of ambition like those waged by Louis XIV.
With the 18th century democratic ideas first begin to appear See also:side by side with the rule of the enlightened despots such as Frederick the Great, See also:Catherine II. and See also:Joseph II. The outbreak of the French Revolution brings to an end the old European system, upsets the ideas on which it was founded, and leads to important territorial changes.
HISTORY(
The See also:advent of the Reformation, as has already been pointed out, finally shattered that ideal of civil and religious unity
which had been the See also:main characteristic of the middle The ages. Thus from the beginning of the 16th century
balance of
power and Europe See also:sees the development of the modern states the begla- system and becomes the See also:scene of national wars in agog of which the idea of the balance of power was the leading
modern
times. principle (see BALANCE OF POWER). That principle did
not allow of the recognition of the rights of nationalities, and till the wars of the French Revolution the interests of the various European states were usually subordinated to the dynastic aims of their rulers. During the ensuing centuries the balance of power in Europe was seriously threatened; during the first See also:half of the 16th century by Charles V., during the latter half of the same century by Philip II., in the first half of the 17th century by the house of Habsburg, and in the latter half by Louis XIV.
The close of the Seven Years' War seemed to prelude a period of See also:British ascendancy on the See also:continent, but that danger passed away with the outbreak of the war between Great Britain and her See also:American colonies. For a time the balance of power in Europe was completely shattered by See also:Napoleon's brilliant conquests, but his fall, while to a great extent restoring the political See also:equilibrium, gave an opportunity to See also: With the accession of See also:Francis I. to the French and Charles V. to the imperial throne began the long rivalry between France The Refer- and the house of Habsburg, which continued with few mation and Interruptions till 1756. In the struggle between the rivalry Charles V. and Francis I., which began in 1521, the of Charles former had the advantage, and the battle of See also:Pavia v. an (1525) seemed likely to See also:lead to the permanent pre- Francis I. See also:eminence of the imperial cause. But unexpected See also:allies were found by Francis in the German reformers and in the Turks. The nailing by See also:Luther of his ninety-five theses to the door of the See also:Wittenberg church, followed by the decisions of the See also:diet of See also:Worms in 1521, led to a rapid development of Lutheran opinions among the princes of the north of Germany. Charles V.'s victory over France in 1525 and his reconciliation with the papacy in 1529 seemed, however, to prelude the suppression of the See also:Protestant opinions. But Francis I. again took up arms, while the invasions of See also:Suleiman the Magnificent, diiring whose reign the Turkish influence was not only felt in Hungary and Germany but extended to the west See also:basin of the Mediterranean, forced Charles to temporize. When in 1544 the conclusion of the peace of Crepy with Francis I. enabled Charles to turn his attention to the rapid growth of Protestantism, it was too See also:late to adopt with any chance of success a policy of suppression. In 1552 he found himself compelled to agree to the treaty of See also:Passau which implied the See also:adoption of a policy of See also:compromise, and which in 1555 was followed by a definite arrangement at See also:Augsburg, which admitted the principle of cujus regio, ejus religio. Till the outbreak of the See also:Thirty Years' War in 1618, the See also:settlement of Augsburg tended to keep peace between the Catholics and the Protestants. Equally unsuccessful were Charles's later efforts against France; in 1553 he lost See also:Metz, See also:Toul and Verdun, and in 1556 he retired to Spain, leaving the Empire to his brother Ferdinand, and Spain, the Netherlands and his Italian possessions to his son Philip. The latter, after winning the battle of St Quentin in 1557, made peace with Herry II. of France by the treaty of Cateau-Cambresis in 1559. By this peace a See also:term was put to the struggle between France on the one hand and the Empire and Spain on the other, and the The kings of France and Spain were enabled to turn their See also:Counter- attention to the issues raised by the immense growth Reeorm"- of Protestantism since 1521. While Charles V. had e-oo. been engaged in his struggles with the Turks and the French, Protestantism had rapidly developed. In Sweden, in Denmark, in England, in various parts of Germany, and in 929 France Protestant principles had, been largely adopted (see REFORMATION). Though the forces of Roman Catholicism had for a time been vanquished they had still to be counted with. From the middle of the 16th century the growth of Protestantism began to be checked, and a period of reaction against the Reformation set iinr For a time it seemed that the efforts of Roman Catholicism would be successful and that the cause of Protestantism would be permanently weakened. The papacy since the beginning of the 16th century had reformed itself, the council of See also:Trent (q.v:), which closed its sittings in 1564, had given Roman Catholicism a " clearly and sharply defined body of See also:doctrine," and the See also:Catholic Church had become " more united, less wordly; and more dependent on herself." In this work of reorganizatidh the See also:Jesuits had played a great part, and the success of the Counter-Reformation was largely °due to their efforts (see JESUITS). See also:Paul III., See also:Pius IV. and V., Gregory XIII. and See also:Sixtus V. are all See also:good examples of the reforming popes of the 16th century. Under them the Jesuits worked; they restored Catholicism in Poland, Bohemia and south Germany; and supported by them the See also:Inquisition crushed Protestantism ou of Spain and Italy. The interest of the Counter-Reformation movement from 1559 to 1618 centres See also:round Philip II. of Spain. While Pitts V. (1566–1572) is the best example of the Counter- The ai Reformation popes, Philip II. took the lead among g ofPhilip'1l. European Catholic monarchs in working for the ex- tinction of Protestantism. His recovery of the southern Nether-lands for the Catholic cause, his attempt to conquer England, his intention of subjugating France, were all parts of a See also:scheme to advance simultaneously his own power and that of the Counter-Reformation.
Circumstances combined to aid Philip, and while he was endeavouring to carry out his political aims, the Jesuits were busily occupied in winning back large portions of Europe to See also:allegiance to the papacy. But failure attended most of Philip's projects. Though he succeeded in recovering the southern or Walloon provinces of the Netherlands, he was unable to conquer the northern provinces, which under William of See also:Orange formed themselves into the Dutch See also:republic (see See also: Till 1618, however, an open conflict between Protestantism and Catholicism in Germany was averted; in that year the See also:acceptance, by the Calvinist Frederick, the elector palatine, 930 of the crown of Bohemia, proved the starting-point of the Thirty Years' War. Till the death of Gustavus See also:Adolphus in 1632 that war preserved a religious or semi-religious See also:character. The emperor Ferdinand II., Philip III. of Spain and Maximilian of Bavaria The Thirty undoubtedly hoped to suppress Protestantism in Ger- Years' War. many, while See also:Wallenstein, the great imperial general, was prepared to conquer Denmark, Sweden and Norway, and to convert the Baltic into an Austrian See also:lake. Though the resistance of Christian IV. of Denmark was vain, the See also:jealousy felt by the Catholic princes of Wallenstein and the skill of Gustavus Adolphus caused the See also:total failure of these ambitious schemes. All hope of seeing the imperial See also:flag waving over the Baltic was dispelled by the victory of See also:Breitenfeld, and that of Liitzen in 1632, and though Gustavus Adolphus fell in the last-named battle, he had saved north.Germany from falling into the hands of the Jesuits. With his death the Thirty Years' War became in the main a political struggle between France and the Habsburgs—a con- tinuation of the wars of Francis I. and Henry II. Entry of against Charles V., and of the war between Henry IV. France he ar, and Philip II. Ferdinand II. had attempted to carry back the religious history of the Empire more than seventy years, and had failed. He had endeavoured to make the Empire a reality and to revive and carry out the designs of Charles V. His failure was now complete. The See also:edict of Restitution issued in 1629 remained a dead See also:letter, and from 1632 to 1648 he and his successor Ferdinand III. had to employ all their energies in defending their possessions from the attacks of the French and Swedes. The death of Gustavus Adolphus followed in 1634 by the assassination of Wallenstein proved an admirable opportunity for the entry of France into the Thirty Years' War. And till 1648, in spite of occasional reverses, the French and their allies gradually wore down their adversaries. After the death of Henry IV. in 1610 France had temporarily retired from a foremost place in the politics of Europe, and for some thirty years her ministers were busy in coercing the Huguenots and establishing the supremacy of the crown which was threatened by the nobles. Once united at home France was ready and eager to seize the opportunity for inflicting a severe See also:blow upon the Habsburgs in Spain and Austria. The time for such See also:action was well chosen. Austria was weakened by the war which had been waged since 1618, while Spain, exhausted by her efforts in the preceding century, had entered upon a long period of decay, and was about to see Portugal regain its independence. The Protestant princes in the north of Germany were ready to ally with France and Sweden against the emperor, even the Catholic Bavarian duke was to prove a doubtful ally of the Habsburg house. In 1642 See also:Richelieu and in 1643 Louis XIII. died, but though Louis XIV. was an See also:infant, and the French nobles by their cabals hindered the work of the regency, See also:Mazarin successfully carried out the anti-Habsburg policy of his predecessors and brought the war against Austria to a successful conclusion. (See further THIRTY YEARS' WAR.) The peace of Westphalia in 1648 marked the virtual close of religious conflicts in Europe. It also marked the end of the The peace attempts of the Habsburgs to establish a monarchical of west- system throughout all Germany. By that peace the phalia, See also:practical independence of the German princes was 1648. assured. Henceforward each See also:prince could decide what form of religion was to be observed in his dominions. Thus Lutheranism, Calvinism and Catholicism were alike tolerated, and this recognition of the principle of compromise prepared the way for a wider See also:toleration. Moreover, the petty principalities of the Empire, which numbered over 300, were allowed the right of concluding alliances with any foreign power, of making their own See also:laws, and of carrying on war. Thus, in consequence of this most important concession of the emperor, the Empire lost all cohesion and became little more than a confederation. The states had firmly established their " liberties," the princes were now emancipated from imperial See also:control, and it was evident that, [HISTORY unless by some means the house of Austria could re-establish its ascendancy, the eventual See also:dissolution of the Empire must sooner or later follow. The peace of Westphalia thus marks for Europe, and in a See also:special sense for Germany, the end of an important epoch. For Germany the changes introduced into its political life amounted to nothing less than a revolution, for there the mainspring of the national life was broken." For Europe the Thirty Years' War brought to a close " the mighty impulses which the great movements of the Renaissance and Reformation had imparted to the aspirations " of men in all parts of the western world. It was not, however, till the treaties of the See also:Pyrenees (1659) and See also:Oliva (1660) were signed that the echoes of the Thirty Years'. War died away, and Europeentered upon a period in The treaties which the political ambitions of Louis XIV. threatened oathe Pyre-the interests of Europe and absorbed the attention of pees and all European statesmen. During the intervening Oliva. years from 1648 to 1659 Spain and France continued the struggle, while Charles X. of Sweden in 1654 entered upon a career of aggression and conquest in the north of Europe, which was only ended with his death on the 23rd of See also:February 1660. Upon the balance of power in the north of Europe the wars of Charles X. had little permanent effect, and the peace of Oliva to a great extent merely marked the restoration of the status quo. But the peace of the Pyrenees was far more important. During its struggle with France, Spain found itself also involved in hostilities with England, and the real rottenness of the Spanish monarchy became rapidly apparent. Any assistance which might have been hoped for from the emperor was prevented by the formation of leagues of German princes—See also:lay and ecclesiastical—in 165.7 and 1658, which had the full support of France. The effect of the formation of the second league was at once apparent: all hope of assistance to Spain from the emperor was seen to have disappeared, and tho conclusion of a pacific settlement between France and Spain was at once arrived at. The peace of the Pyrenees was a. triumph for the Rheinbund, no less than for France. With the beginning of the See also:personal rule of Louis XIV. in 1661, and the return of Charles II. to England in 1660, a new period in the history of personal monarchy in Europe began. The age of At the time of the peace of Westphalia the monarchy Loaisx. . in Europe was under a See also:cloud. In England the cause of Charles I. was lost In France the See also:Fronde was holding its own against Mazarin; in Germany the princes had triumphed over the emperor; even in Russia the nobles were aiming at the curtailment of the power of the crown. But from 166o it became evident that these attempts to secure the curtailment of the monarchical power were, with few exceptions, not destined to be successful. Though all chance of the establishment of a strong central authority in Germany had disappeared, the various states composing the Empire now entered upon a new period in their history and speedily formed See also:miniature despotisms. Of these Brandenburg, Saxony and Bavaria were the most important. In Denmark Frederick III. made his crown hereditary, and his establishment of an absolutism was imitated by Charles XI. of Sweden a few years later. Thus when Louis XIV. took into his own hands the government of France, the absolutist principle was triumphant all over Europe. The period of his personal rule lasted from 1661 to his death 1715, and is known as " the age of Louis XIV." During that period France was the leading monarchy in Europe, and the most conspicuous not only in arms but also in all the arts of civilization. While See also:Turenne, Luxemburg, See also:Villars and many others exemplified, till the rise of See also:Marlborough, the pre-eminence of French generals, See also:Pascal, See also:Racine, See also:Corneille, See also:Moliere and See also:Fenelon testified to the commanding position taken by France in the world of literature. The See also:building of See also:Versailles and the establishment of the French See also:court there was an event of importance not only in the history of France, but also in the history of Europe. The history of Europe may without exaggeration be said during the reign of Louis XIV. to centre round Versailles. During his reign France took the lead in European politics, and established her supremacy all the more easily, owing partly The politi- to the weakness of most of the European countries, cal condl- partly to the aggressions of the Turks, whose invasions See also:Lion of of eastern Europe occupied from 1683 to 1699 the B'Pe' attention of the Poles and of the Austrians. The 1661-16e8. weakness or See also:neutrality of the various European states was due to various causes. England was prevented till 1689 from taking a part in opposing the ambitious schemes of Louis XIV. owing to the personal aims of Charles II. and James II. Philip IV. and Charles II. of Spain could do nothing to resist the growing ascendancy of France, owing to the increasing weakness and rapid decadence of Spain, whose disappearance from the See also:rank of great powers was one of the most striking features in the history of Europe during the second half of the i7th century. The weakness of Germany from the peace of Westphalia to the end of the century, due partly to the establishment of the independence of the princes of the Empire, partly to the unrest in Hungary, partly to the aggressions of the Turks, was obviously an immense gain to Louis XIV. Realizing the strength of his own position and the weakness of that of most of the European states, he entered in 1667 into the See also:Devolution war and secured several fortresses in Louts' ag- the Spanish Netherlands. From 1672 to 1678 he was gressloas. again at war with Holland, and from 1673 with the emperor, Spain and Brandenburg as well. At the same time the Turks invaded Poland, but were successfully resisted by John Sobieski. In 1676, however, they made the favourable treaty of Zurawna, securing Kamenets and portions of See also:Podolia and the See also:Ukraine. Thus, while the Turks were threatening the inde- pendence of eastern Europe, Louis XIV. was attacking the independence of western Europe. In 1678 he made the treaty of See also:Nijmwegen, securing great advantages for France. Till the end of the century Europe was faced with two serious problems: Could she successfully See also:cope with the Turks on her eastern frontier ? And could she resist the continued aggressions of France on her western frontier ? Consequently the years from 1678 to the end of the century were of vital importance to the European world. For during that period the French and Turks made unceasing efforts to extend their frontiers at the expense of Germany. Encouraged by the weakness of the chief European states, Louis set up the See also:Chambers of Reunion, seized See also:Strassburg in time of peace and attempted to annex Luxemburg. At the same time it seemed that an independent Gallican Church would be set up, and that Louis, like Henry VIII., would sever all connexion with Rome. The persecution of the Jansenists and the revocation of the edict of See also:Nantes in 1685 established some- thing akin to religious uniformity in France. Buoyed up by his successes abroad and at home, and conscious that he had nothing to fear from England or from Spain, Louis prepared to carry out his schemes, with regard to the extension of his territory east- wards, at the expense of Germany. Simultaneously with Louis' aggressions in western Europe, the Turks had made an attempt to See also:capture Vienna in 1683. Fortunately the efforts of the
emperor See also:Leopold, aided by John Sobieski, king of Poland, were
successful, and the Turkish tide of conquest was gradually but
successfully checked. It was not, however, till the accession of
William III. to the English throne that the tide of French
conquest in western Europe was in like manner successfully
resisted, and it was not till the treaty of See also:Ryswick in 1697 that
Louis realized that Europe had set a limit to his conquests.
That treaty inflicted a blow on the prestige of France, just as the
treaty of See also:Karlowitz, concluded in 1699, was an important step
in the decline of the Ottoman power. By that treaty, which
marks a definite beginning in the history of the Austro-Hun-
garian monarchy, the hands of the emperor were freed, and he
was able to devote his attention to the Spanish succession
question, which already engrossed the attention of all Europe.
The decadence of Spain had been obvious to all Europe since
the middle of the century, and in anticipation of the death of the
Spanish king Charles II., Louis XIV. and William III. had made
a partition treaty in See also:October 1698, which was superseded in
See also: To Spain the war in-directly brought unexpected benefits. Freed from her expensive possessions in Belgium and Italy, and now ruled by a new See also:dynasty, Spain, so far from See also:meeting with the See also:fate which later attended Poland, entered upon a new period in her career, and throughout the 18th century showed considerable power of resistance to the colonial policy of Great Britain. With all its defects the treaty of Utrecht proved in many ways an excellent settlement. Till 1940, although a few short wars took place, Europe as a whole enjoyed peace. The 18th But with the settlement of Utrecht Europe seemed century. to have lost all See also:touch with the high ideals which occasionally, as in the career of Gustavus Adolphus, or in the English great See also:rebellion, or in the defence of Vienna by John Sobieski, were met with. The 18th century was marked by the dominance of a perverted system of the balance of power, which regarded such acts as the Prussian seizure of See also:Silesia and the partition of Poland as justifiable on the ground that might is right. Before many years had passed after the treaty of Utrecht it became evident that two new nations were forcing themselves into the front rank of European powers. These were European Russia and See also:Prussia. The treaty of Nystad in 1721 politics—was to the north of Europe what the treaty of Utrecht 1715-was to the western and southern nations. It marked /740. the decline of Sweden and the rise of Russia, which henceforth played an important part in European politics. Nevertheless till 1740 with the exception of the short See also:Polish Succession War 1733–35 and the equally short war of 1737–39, in which Russia and Austria fought against See also:Turkey, no general European struggle took place. That this was so was due in great measure to the alliance of 1717 between Great Britain and France, to the subsequent peace policy upheld by See also:Walpole, See also:Fleury, Patin() and See also:Horn (the English, French, Spanish and See also:Swedish ministers), to the hostility between the courts of Vienna and See also:Madrid—only momentarily healed by the treaty of Vienna in 1725—and to the uncertain character of See also:Russian politics. During those years from 1713 to 1740 the great powers were slowly forming themselves into See also:groups, See also:bound together by motives of interest. Thus Spain and France after 1729 began to realize that both countries were interested in checking Great Britain's colonial developments, while Spain was also ready to seize every opportunity of increasing her possessions in Italy at the expense of Austria. With the year 1740 Europe entered upon a new epoch. The rivalry of Austria and Prussia for the leadership of Germany definitely began, and the struggle between Great Britain and France for supremacy in See also:India, Canada 1po a. new epoch and the West Indies entered upon an acute phase. The War of the Austrian Succession (1740–48) holds therefore an important place in the history of Europe, and proved with the Seven Years' War, which was practically a continuation of it, of very real interest to Europe. In See also:April 1748 Great Britain, France and Holland signed preliminaries of peace, which on the 18th of October became the definitive treaty of See also:Aix-fa-Chapelle. The other powers concerned agreed to the treaty with reluctance, Spain on the 20th ' October, Austria on the 8th of November, and See also:Sardinia on the loth of November. By the terms of the peace France and Great Britain restored the conquests in America, India and Europe The Treaty which each had made from the other. As regards the of Aix-la other powers, the peace left serious See also:heart-burnings. Chapelle, Sardinia, though gaining territory in the Milanese, 1798. was compelled to relinquish her hold on See also:Piacenza and its territory, and to restore See also:Finale to See also:Genoa; Austria had to yield See also:Parma and Piacenza to See also:Don Philip, and to recognize the loss of Silesia to Prussia; Spain was compelled to forgo all hope of regaining Gibraltar. The importance of the terms of this treaty lies in the fact that they indicate not only the lines followed by later European settlements, but also the tendency of later European developments. To Great Britain the treaty was only a pause in her expansion in Canada and in her advance to the establishment of her influence over all India. To France the treaty was equally a presage of future disasters in India and Canada. The retention of Silesiaby Prussia was a pronouncement to all Europe that a new power had arisen which was destined in 1866 to oust Austria from her dominant position in Germany. The gains won by Sardinia, too, indicated that the real danger to Austria's position in Italy would come from the house of See also:Savoy. The Seven Years' War (1756—63) opened with a See also:diplomatic revolution as important as that of 1717, when France and Great The Seven Britain made an alliance. In May 1756, as a reply nears, war.to the treaty of See also:Westminster the Second, made in See also:January between Great Britain and Prussia, France. and Austria, united in the treaty of Versailles. This unexpected union, which lasted till the French Revolution, between two powers which had been hostile to each other from the beginning of the 16th century, amazed all Europe. However, it had not the results expected, for although Russia, which was allied with Austria, sent large armies headed by capable generals to the war, Frederick the Great remained unconquered. This result was partly due to the English alliance, partly to the incapable French generals, and partly to the state of internal politics in Russia. The treaties of Paris (February 1o, 1763) and Hubertsburg (February 5) marked an important stage in the history of Europe. By the first Great Britain emerged from the war an imperial power with possessions all over the world, by the second Prussia was recognized as the equal of Austria in Europe. The period from the close of the Seven: Years' War to the French Revolution saw all the special characteristics and tendencies of the 18th century in an accentuated form. Close of Benevolent despotism found representatives not only the Seven Years' War in Frederick the Great and Maria See also:Theresa, but also in to the Joseph II., Catherine II., Charles III. of Spain, and French Re- Leopbld of See also:Tuscany. Reforming ministers, too, volution. flourished in the persons of Tanucci, See also:Turgot, Squillaci,. See also:Florida Blanca, D'See also:Aranda and many others. Instances, too, of the See also:low state of political morality are to be found. The indefensible seizure of Silesia by Frederick the Great was followed in 1772 by the equally immoral partition of Poland, and it was clearly apparent that monarchs, though ostensibly actuated by a See also:desire for the welfare of their subjects, were resolved that reforms should come from above and not from below. The. chief European events during these years were (1) the partition of Poland; (2) the war of the Bavarian Succession; (3) the alliance of Russia with Prussia in 1764 and with Austria in 1781; (4) the entry of France and Spain into war between Great Britain and her American colonies; (5) the combined attack of Russia and Austria against Turkey (1787—92); (6) the Triple Alliance of 1788. No sooner was the Seven Years' War ended than France and Spain, having made the third family compact in 1761 (the other two were signed in 1733 and 1743), prepared to take revenge upon Great Britain at the first favourable opportunity. The result of this determination, and of Great Britain's absorption in internal politics, was that Russia, Prussia and Austria were enabled to carry out the first partition of Poland in 1772. The entry of France into the American war of independence rendered it impossible for Joseph II., single-handed, to carry out his project of exchanging the Austrian Netherlands for Bavaria,and he was compelled, after a short war, to give up for the time his project and to agree to the treaty of Tesehen (1779). The continuance of the American War proved of great value to Russia and enhanced her position in Europe. Not only See also:bad she, together with France, brought about the treaty of See also:Teschen, but in 178o she headed the league of armed neutrality, and between 178o and 1784 annexed the See also:Crimea. The conclusion of the war of American Independence enabled Great Britain to regain her influence in Europe, and when Russia and Austria combined to attack Turkey, and when France threatened to re-establish her influence in Holland, See also:Pitt formed with the Prussian king and the See also:stadtholder the famous Triple Alliance of 1788. During the ensuing four years the influence of that alliance made itself felt in an unmistakable way. All hope of the establishment of French influence in Holland was destroyed; Denmark was forced to relinquish an attack on Sweden, then at war with Russia; and after Leopold of Tuscany had succeeded Joseph II. as emperor in 1700, the revolution in the Netherlands was brought to an end. Moreover, through the influence of Leopold the hostility of Prussia to Austria was removed, and the two powers in See also:July 1790 made the treaty of See also:Reichenbach. Great Britain, the chief member of the Triple Alliance, had supported the pacific See also:solution of all these questions so menacing to European peace, and Pitt was aided in his policy by the emperor Leopold, who in 1791 made the treaty of See also:Sistova with the Turks. Danger to the peace of Europe was, however, caused by the attempt of the Spaniards to annex See also:Nootka See also:Sound, and by the continuance of the war between Russia and Turkey. The former difficulty was, however, removed in November 1790 by an agreement between Great Britain and Spain, and in January 1792 Russia made the treaty of See also:Jassy with Turkey. Instead of Europe remaining at peace the year 1792 saw the beginning of a series of wars which did not come to a final conclusion till the battle of See also:Waterloo. While the east French of Europe was. engaged in war, and while the Triple Revo1,-Alliance was busy attempting to restore peace toEurope, tion, the French Revolution had broken out in 1789. The 1789' assistance given by France to the American colonists had brought the country to See also:bankruptcy, and no course was left to Louis XVI. except to summon the states-general in May 1789. In that year a revolution' against the reforms of Joseph II. had taken place in the Netherlands, and a revolution was being prepared in Poland for the overthrow of the aristocratic constitution and for the establishment of an hereditary monarchy. At first the revolution in France was entirely occupied with internal reforms, but after the dissolution of the Constituent See also:Assembly in See also:September 1791 the See also:Girondists, whose influence became See also:paramount, deter-See also:mined by the See also:advice of See also:Brissot to insist upon a policy of menace towards the Empire which would inevitably lead to war. War would, they hoped, result in the downfall of monarchy in France. On the other hand, See also:Lafayette and his party advocated war on the ground that it would strengthen the cause of monarchy. In April 1792 war was accordingly declared upon Austria, then in' alliance with Prussia. After a short period of failure the French in September won the battle of Valmy, and in November the battle of, See also:Jemappes. French armies advanced to the Rhine, Belgium was occupied, the See also:Scheldt was declared open, and Holland was threatened. In consequence of the danger to Holland, Pitt adopted a warlike See also:tone, and in February 1793 France declared war upon Great Britain. In the Openwinarg of that war Spain, Sardinia and Tuscany joined, so that between France was practically fighting all Europe. Neverthe- France less, owing to the want of union among the allies, to and Qreaf Brltaia the Polish questions which distracted Prussia and 1793. Austria, and to the determination and patriotism of all classes in France, the allies were discomfited and the league of powers broken up in 1795, when the treaties of Basel were made. Only Great Britain, Austria and Sardinia remained in arms against France, which was till 1799 ruled by the See also:Directory. The next few years witnessed a series of most startling events. The successes of Napoleon See also:Bonaparte in the Italian campaigns of 1797 and 1798 led to the peace of Cherasco with Sardinia, and the peace of CL.npo Formio with Austria. Only Great Britain remained at war with France. In 1799, taking advantage The of the absence of Napoleon in Egypt, , the Second &rides of See also:Coalition was formed by Russia,. Great Britain and Lunevi ie Austria. Though the French were driven from Italy, a See also:dens. See also:Massena defeated the Russians in Switzerland, and the English were forced to retire from Holland. The return of Napoleon from Egypt was followed by the establishment of the Consulate in November 1799, by the overthrow of the Austrians at See also:Marengo and Hohenlinden, by the treaty of See also:Luneville with the emperor, and by the treaty of See also:Amiens in 1802 with the English government. (See FRENCH REVOLUTIONARY WARS.) Up to this point the Revolution may be said to have benefited Europe and to have shaken to its See also:base the 18th-century ideas of The government. During the years succeeding the peace German of Campo Formio a revolution was effected in Germany. Revolu- The Holy Roman Empire had become an See also:anachronism,. tion. and as soon as France became possessed of the left See also:bank of the Rhine it was obvious that the imperial constitution required revision. The jealousies existing among the German princes and the overthrow of Austria at See also:Austerlitz enabled Napoleon to carry out a revolution in Germany according to his own ideas. At, first, in 1804, new arrangements were made with regard to the character and formation of the diet. The constitution of that assembly was so altered that a Protestant See also:majority free from Austrian influence was now assured. The middle states, such as Prussia, Baden, Bavaria, See also:Wurttemberg and See also:Hanover, received additions of territory, taken either from the ecclesiastical states or from the lands belonging to the imperial knights. After Austerlitz Napoleon in 1806 established the Confederation,of the Rhine, and the Holy Roman Empire came finally to an end. A great European revolution had now been effected, but much remained to be done before; a feeling of See also:nationality could be aroused among the people of central Europe. Already before the peace of Amiens Pitt had tried to stir up national feeling in Austria and Prussia, the means • which he The suggested for opposing Napoleon being in great causes of measure those which were adopted in 1813 and 1814. Napoleon's But during Pitt's lifetime central Europe.; was not success. moved by any feeling of nationality or of patriotism. During the war of the Second Coalition in 1799 Austria had acted without any regard for her allies, while Prussia, from motives of jealousy of and from want of confidence in Austria, had refused to move. It was not till the small states which hitherto had formed independent See also:units had been destroyed and Austria and Prussia trampled under See also:foot by Napoleon that a strong national spirit in Germany. was evoked. Until the treaty of See also:Tilsit had been signed in 1807 these was no visible growth of a national uprising in any part of Europe. During the intervening years Prussia had been crushed at See also:Jena and her kingdom cut short (i8o6), while Alexander I. of Russia, after a fierce campaign against Napoleon, had agreed in 1807 to the treaty of "Tilsit, which apparently placed Europe at the feet of France and Russia. Napoleon was, as he thought, no.w. in a position to Napoleon bring about the humiliation of Great Britain. Already aims at the in November 18o6, realizing that he could not ruin destruction England by See also:direct invasion, he had issued the first of Great See also:Berlin See also:Decree, which ordered the exclusion of British Britain. goods .from the continent. The Continental System necessitated by the victory of See also:Trafalgar was thus definitely set up. After Tilsit he proposed to become supreme in the Baltic, and, by securing the dependence of Spain and Portugal, to dominate the Mediterranean, and to resume his plans for con-quests in the East, and for the destruction of the British power in India. Thus the effects of the British naval victories of the See also:Nile and Trafalgar would be completely nullified, the Mediterranean would be closed to British See also:ships, Great Britain's See also:Indian possessions would be lost, and Great Britain herself would be forced by See also:starvation into surrender. Fortunately for Europe various circumstances hindered the realization of these ambitious schemes. Alexander, who feared that the French emperor desired Constantinople, never proved a very helpful ally, the measures. taken by Great Britain seriously interfered with Napoleon's. schemes, and, before he had subjugated Spain, first Austria in r8o9 and then Russia in 1812 offered an active resistance to' his projects. The first See also:note of opposition to Napoleon's plans was struck by See also:Canning, when in 18ory he carried off the Danish See also:fleet to. England. Then the British fleet conveyed to See also:Brazil in safety the Portuguese royal family when Portugal was invaded by See also:Junot, while the surrender of 30,000 French troops at Baylen in July 1808, which was followed in See also:August by the See also:convention of See also:Cintra, indicated that Spanish patriotism was, when roused, as effective as in the days of the Spanish Succession War. Austria was the first country to follow the example of Spain, and though she was defeated at See also:Wagram and forced to accept Napoleon's hard terms, the national feeling aroused in. Germany in 1809 rapidly developed. But Napoleon was apparently unconscious of the growth and importance of a national sentiment in any of the subject countries. In 1810 he had married See also:Marie See also:Louise of Austria, on the 20th of March 1811 a son was born to him, and he now seems to have resolved upon the establishment of a strictly hereditary empire with Paris its capital and' Rome its second city. In extent, his empire would be vaster than that of Charlemagne, and the pope was to be completely subordinate to the emperor. This conception of the establishment of a reformed Holy Roman Empire with its centre at.Paris did not appear unrealizable in 1811 when every-thing seemed to favour the new Charlemagne. Napoleon's power was apparently securely established, and during the years i8ro and i8'i he was again returning to his vast See also:oriental designs A sudden ,check, however, was about to be placed upon his ambitious schemes. The establishment of French influence in Italy and Germany had stirred up inboth countries a national feeling, the growth of which was encouraged by the example of Spain. No The greater; See also:mistake was ever made by Napoleon than triumph of when, ignoring the strength of the Spanish resistance, "nation-and the development of a national movement in Germany, he resolved to enter upon the Russian campaign and to march to See also:Moscow. Unconsciously Napoleon " had called into vigorous life the forces of See also:Democracy and Nationality in Germany and Italy." The failure of the Moscow campaign led at once to a national rising in Prussia, and as soon as Austria had,united her forces with those of Prussia and Russia, the over-throw of Napoleon at See also:Leipzig in October 1813 was the result, and "he• imperial yoke was shaken from the See also:neck of the German people." Napoleon's wars had roused feelings of patriotism in Italy, Germany, Russia and Spain. It was at least realized by the nations of continental Europe, what had long been apparent to Englishmen, that a nation to be strong must be united. To " the subversive cosmopolitanism " of the French Revolution was now opposed the modern idea of nationality, against which the See also:Napoleonic legions hurled themselves in vain. (See NAPOLEON I.; NAPOLEONIC CAMPAIGNS;; FRENCH REVOLUTION; ALEXANDER I., emperor of Russia; METTERNICH.) (A. H1..) The downfall of Napoleon involved that of the political system of Europe which he had constructed. The changes wrought by the revolutionary period in the old stales system were, however, too profound to admit of any attempt at a Reconcomplete restoration, even had the interests of the of allied , powers been consistent with such a course. The object of the four great powers in whose hands the settlement of Europe now lay, was rather, after taking precautions to confine France within her " legitimate boundaries," to arrange such a " just equilibrium " in Europe that no individual state should for the future be in a position to overset the balance of power. The first object was to be attained by the re-establish, ment of the ancient dynasty in France, as a See also:guarantee to Europe against a renewal of the revolutionary propaganda; the See also:congress second was the work of the congress of Vienna, by ofVienna, which, between September 1814 and See also:June 1815, the 1814-reconstruction of Europe was taken ' in hand. The See also:ibis. opening of the congress, in which for the first time all Europe seemed; to be united for the friendly settlement of conunon interests, was hailed as the See also:dawn of a new era. In a sense it was so; but hardly in the manner nor to the degree that some had hoped. In its See also:councils the arts of the old diplomacy, still inspired by the traditional principles or lack of principles, were directed to the old ends; and the world, as though the popular upheaval of the Revolution had never been, was treated as real estate to be parcelled out by the executors of Napoleon's empire among sovereigns by divine right, regardless of the wishes of the populations, which figured in the protocols merely as See also:numbers to be balanced and bartered one against the other. This process of " dividing the spoils," as See also:Gentz called it, was naturally pregnant with possibilities of quarrels. Of these the most dangerous was that provoked by the See also:resolution of the emperor Alexander I. at all See also:costs to keep the former See also:grand-duchy of See also:Warsaw for himself, while compensating Prussia for the loss of some of her Polish territories by the See also:annexation to her of all Saxony. The deadlock caused by the stubborn insistence on this plan, which the other great powers were equally determined to frustrate, all but led to war, and by a See also:secret treaty signed on the 3rd of January 1815, Great Britain, France, and Austria agreed to make common cause in that event against Russia and Prussia. It needed Napoleon's return from See also:Elba (March 1815) to remind the powers that their particular interests must still be subordinated to those of Europe. The common peril restored the broken See also:harmony; and while the armies of the Alliance were closing in for the final struggle with the French emperor, the congress hurried on its deliberations, and on the 9th of June 1815, a few days before the battle of Waterloo, by which Napoleon's power was finally shattered, the Final See also:Act, embodying the treaties of Vienna, was signed. The territorial arrangements thus effected were for half a century the basis of the states system of Europe, and the Territorial treaties in which they were defined the See also:charter of adjust- international relations. It was in central Europe, ments of where Napoleon's policy had most profoundly affected the "eh" the pre-revolutionary system, that the greatest changes treaties. were made. No attempt, indeed, was made to restore the Holy Roman Empire, in spite of the protest of the pope against the failure to re-establish " the centre of political unity "; but the Confederation of the Rhine having come to an end, Germany was reconstituted as a confederation of sovereign states, in which all the former members of the Empire which had survived the revolutionary epoch found a place (see GERMANY). Austria, in virtue of the imperial tradition of the house of Habsburg, received the. See also:presidency of the federal diet; but the bulk of her territories lay outside the frontiers of the Con-federation, and the non-German character of the Habsburg monarchy was accentuated by the other arrangements at the congress. In Italy See also:Lombardo-See also:Venetia was erected into a kingdom under the Austrian crown; while the dynastic settlements in the other Italian states tended to make Austrian influence supreme in the peninsula (see ITALY). In return for this, Austria surrendered her claim to her former possessions in the Low Countries, which were annexed to the crown of Holland, so as to form, under the title of the United Netherlands, an efficient barrier to French aggression northwards. The See also:function of defender of Germany on the Rhine frontier which Austria thus abandoned was assigned to Prussia, an arrangement pregnant with momentous issues. In See also:compensation for her disappointment in the matter of Saxony, half of which was ultimately restored to the dynasty of See also:Wettin, she received a large accession of territory in the Rhine provinces, carved partly out of the suppressed kingdom of Westphalia, partly out of the former ecclesiastical states, and comprising the imperial city of Aix-la-Chapelle and the former electorate of Cologne. To Prussia also was conceded the right to See also:garrison the federal fortress of Luxemburg. Of the other German states, Bavaria, which alone was sufficiently powerful to be of any great importance in the general affairs of Europe, reaped the See also:reward of her timely defection from the cause of her See also:protector Napoleon. She had, indeed, to restore to Austria the territories annexed to her at the expenseof the Habsburg monarchy by the French emperor: Tirol, the Quarters of the See also:Inn and of the Hausruck, and part of See also:Salzburg. But she received ample compensation elsewhere, notably the former Bavarian Palatinate with a See also:strip of territory to connect it with Bavaria proper. The right to garrison the federal fortress of Mainz was also ultimately conceded to her. Bavaria was thus placed in a position to continue her traditional policy of aiming at the position of a European great power and holding the balance between Austria and Prussia (see BAVARIA: History). The two other German states whose See also:elevation to kingdoms had symbolized a similar ambition, Saxony and Wurttemberg, were henceforth relegated to a position of third-See also:rate importance; Saxony depended for her very existence on the rivalry of her more powerful neighbours: Wurttemberg protested in vain against the dictatorship of the great powers to which she was forced to submit. Finally, the electorate of Hanover, partly out of compliment to the king of Great Britain, partly because with the abolition of the Holy Empire the title elector had fallen obsolete, was elevated to a kingdom. The See also:request of the elector of See also:Hesse for a similar concession in his case was refused by the powers assembled at Aix-la-Chapelle in 1818. Of great importance were the changes effected in the north and east of Europe. The affairs of the Ottoman empire, which the treaty of See also:Bucharest (1812) between Russia and Turkey had left in a very unsatisfactory condition, were not dealt with by the congress, in spite of the efforts of Great Britain to bring them into discussion. But the concessions made to the emperor Alexander elsewhere represented a notable advance in the European position of Russia. The possession of See also:Finland, conquered from the Swedes in 18o8, was confirmed to her; and, above all, the erection of the former grand-duchy of Warsaw into a constitutional kingdom of Poland under the Russian crown not only thrust the See also:Muscovite power like a See also:wedge into the heart of Germany, but seemed to threaten the Polish possessions of Austria and Prussia by setting up a quasi-independent Poland as a centre of attraction to the scattered elements of the Polish nation; though in the sequel the establishment of the city of See also:Cracow and its territory as an independent republic, to avoid the difficult question of its See also:assignment elsewhere, proved a more fruitful source of nationalist unrest. In the north the settlement confirmed by the congress marked the definite withdrawal of the Scandinavian Powers from any active influence on the affairs of the continent. Alone of the parvenu monarchs of the Napoleonic age Bernadotte retained the crown of Sweden, to which, by the treaty of See also:Kiel, that of Norway had been added. On the other hand, by the cession of Swedish See also:Pomerania to Prussia, Sweden finally withdrew from the southern shores of the Baltic. The Scandinavian states ceased henceforth to See also:play any determining part in European politics. In the south, on the other hand, the restoration of Savoy and See also:Piedmont to See also:Victor See also:Emmanuel I., king of Sardinia, and the See also:incorporation in his dominions of the territories of the former republic of Genoa, were factors pregnant with mighty issues. The object of this increase of the power of the house of Savoy was but to erect a barrier against any possible renewal of French aggression in Italy; in effect it established the See also:nucleus of the power which was to struggle successfully with Austria for the See also:hegemony of Italy. The gains of Great Britain in Europe were comparatively small, though by no means unimportant. By the retention of See also:Malta she secured her power in the Mediterranean, and this was further increased by the treaty of Paris (November 5, 1815), by which the powers recognized her See also:protectorate over the Ionian Islands. (See VIENNA, CONGRESS or.) But for the See also:episode of the Hundred Days, France would have emerged from the congress with recovered prestige and See also:mistress of at least some of the territorial gains of the revolution- The ary wars; though Napoleon had thrown away, during powers the negotiations at See also:Chatillon, the chance of preserving Fare ee. for her her " natural frontiers " of the Rhine, the See also:Alps and the Pyrenees. After Napoleon's second downfall she was in serious danger of dismemberment, for which the German powers clamoured as essential to their safety. That Louis XVIII. continued to rule over the territories " handed down to him by his ancestors " was due to the magnanimity, or policy, of the emperor Alexander I. (q.v.), and the commonsense of Castlereagh and See also:Wellington, who saw well that the " just equilibrium," which it was their object to establish, could not be secured if France were unduly weakened, and that peace could never be preserved if the French people were left to See also:smart under a sense of permanent injury. By the second peace of Paris, signed on the zoth of November 1815, France retained her traditional boundaries. The unsatisfied ambition to secure her " national frontiers " was to See also:bear troublesome See also:fruit later. That the treaties embodied in the Final Act of Vienna represented a settlement of all outstanding questions was believed by nobody. They had been negotiated for weary months in an atmosphere of diplomatic and feminine intrigue; they had been concluded in a See also:hurry, under the influence of the panic caused by Napoleon's return from Elba. To See also:Friedrich von Gentz they were at best but " partial arrangements," useful as forming an authoritative basis for the establishment of a more complete and satisfactory system. The history of the international politics of Europe for the years immediately succeeding the congress of Vienna is that of the attempt to establish such a system. After a See also:quarter of a century of almost ceaseless wars, what Europe needed above all things was peace and time to recuperate. Treaty of This conviction was common to all the powers who had Nov. 20, inherited Napoleon's dictatorship in Europe; but on 1815, and the question of the method by which peace should be the See also:Concert secured, and the principles which should See also:guide their of Europe. action, a fateful divergence of view soon became apparent within their councils. All were agreed that France still represented the See also:storm centre of Europe; and a second treaty, signed on the zoth of November 1815, renewed the provisions of the treaty of Chaumont, in view of any fresh outburst of the French revolutionary spirit. But the new treaty went further. By its 6th See also:article it was declared that " in order to consolidate the intimate tie that unites the four sovereigns for the happiness of the world, the High Contracting Powers have agreed to renew at fixed intervals . . . meetings consecrated to great common See also:objects and to the examination of such measures as at each of these epochs shall be judged most salutary for the peace and prosperity of the nations and for the maintenance of the peace of Europe." This was the formal charter of the concert of the great powers by which for the next seven years Europe was governed, a concert to which the name "Holy Alliance" has been commonly but erroneously applied. The Holy Alliance, See also:drawn up The Holy by the emperor Alexander I,, and signed by him, the Alliance. emperor Francis, and King Frederick William III. of Prussia on the 26th of September 1815, represented a different and conflicting ideal. Actually it was not a treaty at all, but at best a See also:declaration of principles to which any Christian could subscribe, at worst—to quote Castlereagh—" a piece of See also:sublime See also:mysticism and nonsense " from the political point of view (see HOLY ALLIANCE). Additional information and CommentsThere are no comments yet for this article.
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