Manuel historique de politique étrangère, tome Ier [de 4] : les origines

"How to speak with the dead" by Sciens is a historical manual written in the late 19th century. It presents a civic-minded survey of European foreign policy, tracing the making of modern Europe through the Reformation, colonial expansion, the Eastern Question, and the statecraft of figures like Richelieu. The work aims to educate citizens to judge international affairs with historical perspective rather than prejudice. The opening of this work declares that France’s fate rests in its own hands and argues that national strength requires informed scrutiny of Europe and the wider world; it positions the book as a tool of civic education, not a diplomat’s handbook. A notice for a later edition explains the author’s archival method and notes that recent diplomatic events in France encouraged a pragmatic, interest-based foreign policy. The introduction then sketches the birth of modern Europe: the shattering of religious unity by the Reformation, the rise of nation-states and individual conscience, the paradox of strong centralized states, and Europe’s simultaneous expansion overseas and eastward via Russia, all feeding the enduring Eastern Question. Turning to the 17th century, it frames a grand drama from the Thirty Years’ War to the rise of England and Russia. The first chapter on Richelieu sets the scene of Habsburg-Spanish pressure, recounts the Valtellina and Palatinate crises, and shows Richelieu’s balancing act: forging coalitions abroad while suppressing internal rebellions (La Rochelle, court intrigues), intervening in Italy (Susa, Casale, Mantua) and securing the treaties of Cherasco and Fontainebleau, before noting how Gustavus Adolphus’s expansive designs complicated the carefully built equilibrium. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

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About this eBook

Author Bourgeois, Émile, 1857-1934
Title Manuel historique de politique étrangère, tome Ier [de 4] : les origines
Edition Troisième édition
Original Publication Paris: Eugène Belin, 1901.
Credits Laurent Vogel and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at www.pgdp.net (This book was produced from scanned images of public domain material from the Google Books project.)
Language French
LoC Class D: History: General and Eastern Hemisphere
Subject Europe -- Politics and government
Subject France -- Foreign relations
Category Text
EBook-No. 77291
Release Date
Copyright Status Public domain in the USA.
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