The Middle Kingdoms The Middle Kingdoms

The Middle Kingdoms

A New History of Central Europe

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    • $19.99

Publisher Description

'Fascinating, masterful ... gems scattered throughout the book' Peter Frankopan, Spectator

'Quirkily original but also scholarly and authoritative, to be read for pleasure and serious reflection' Telegraph

*The dramatic history of Europe's shape-shifting centre, from the author of The Habsburgs*


Central Europe is not just a space on a map but also a region of shared experience - of mutual borrowings, impositions and misapprehensions. From the Roman Empire onwards, it has been the target of invasion from the east. In the Middle Ages, Central Europeans cast their eastern foes as 'the dogmen'. They would later become the Turks, Swedes, Russians and Soviets, all of whom pulled the region apart and remade it according to their own vision.

Competition among Europe's Middle Kingdoms yielded repeated cultural effervescences. This was the first home of the High Renaissance outside Italy, the cradle of the Reformation, the starting point of the Enlightenment, Romanticism, the symphony and modern nationalism. It was a permanent battleground too for religious and political ideas.

Most recent histories of Central Europe confine themselves to the lands in between Germany and Russia, homing in on Poland, Hungary, and what is now the Czech Republic. This new history embraces the whole of Central Europe, including the German lands as well as Ukraine and Switzerland. The story of Europe's Middle Kingdoms is a reminder of Central Europe's precariousness, of its creativity and turbulence, and of the common cultural trends that make these lands so distinctive.

GENRE
History
RELEASED
2023
4 May
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
640
Pages
PUBLISHER
Penguin Books Ltd
SELLER
Penguin Books Limited
SIZE
8.1
MB

Customer Reviews

rhitc ,

HRE rules

Author
British. Retired Professor of Central European History at the School of Slavonic and East European Studies, University College London. His last published work, The Habsburgs: The Rise and Fall of a World Power (2020), is one of, if not the, definitive publication.
Summary
Here, the author draws upon and expands his knowledge of that inbred mob of krauts, the Habsburgs, to cover the whole of Central Europe (the titular Middle Kingdoms are not, as the name might suggest at first blush, Chinese) from the Romans onwards: the Holy Roman Empire, Poland (at the times when it was a thing), Lithuania, Bohemia, Slovakia, Austria, Hungary, Romania, and fair slab of the Balkans. You name it, it’s here. I could have done with a little less detail about the original Romans and the world wars of the 20th century (there’s more than enough written about those already) and a little more about the break up of the HRE (Holy Roman Empire for the initiated), but that’s a minor a quibble.
Writing
Easily readable style makes it easy to digest, which is good because, trust me, there’s a lot to digest. The extensive underlying research involved is mirrored by the reference list.

The Habsburgs The Habsburgs
2020
The Habsburg Empire The Habsburg Empire
2017
Království střední Evropy Království střední Evropy
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Medzipriestor Medzipriestor
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Közép-Európa új története Közép-Európa új története
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Vom Rhein bis zu den Karpaten Vom Rhein bis zu den Karpaten
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