The causes of war: Volume 5 1800-1850
"This is the fifth volume in a series charting the causes of war from 3000 BCE to the present day,written by a leading international lawyer.While contextualised in the conflicts and patterns of the period, this work, as drawn directly from the treatiesand the negotiations which led up to them,...
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Oxford
Hart
2023
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Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Zusammenfassung: | "This is the fifth volume in a series charting the causes of war from 3000 BCE to the present day,written by a leading international lawyer.While contextualised in the conflicts and patterns of the period, this work, as drawn directly from the treatiesand the negotiations which led up to them, shows what made both war and peace. The period covered inthis volume, 1800 to 1850, brings this series into the start of the modern world.From the Napoleonic Wars through to the international mechanisms that followed, the first efforts at globalcooperation to maintain peace between the major powers were unique. So too, the spread of colonialism, theexpansion of the United States, the weakening of the Ottoman Empire, and the disintegration and reforming of South America. Each of these external actions that were often linked to war, were mirrored by changes within societies, as the values each society fought for often became just as contentious within countries, as they were between them." |
Beschreibung: | xi, 350 Seiten |
ISBN: | 9781509912407 |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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Table of Contents I. Introduction. 1 II. The Napoleonic Wars. 6 1. Concluding the War of the Second Coalition. 7 (a) The Treaty of Lunéville. 8 (b) The End of the British Allies. 9 2. The Treaty of Amiens. 11 (a) Between the Wars. . -. . .12 3. The Renewed Conflict. 13 4. The War of the Third Coalition. 15 (a) Principles and Alliances. 15 (b) Victory at Sea and Losses onLand. .17 (c) The Treaty of Pressburg. 19 (d) After Pressburg. 20 5. The War of the Fourth Coalition. 22 (a) Prussia Goes to
War. 22 (b) The Berlin Decree. 23 (c) Russia Joins the Fight. 24 (d) The 1807 Treaties of Tilsit.25 6. The Difficult End to 1807.27 7. The Challenges of 1808 and 1809. 30 (a) Italy. 30 (b) Spain and Portugal. 31 (c) Russia, Sweden and the Erfurt Convention. 35 8. The War of the Fifth Coalition.37 (a) The. Treaty of Schonbrunn.40 9. A Likely Napoleonic Future. 40 10. Napoleon’s Invasion of Russia.43 11. The First Defeat of Napoleon. 47 (a) The Grand Alliance. 51 (b) The
Treaty of Chaumont.54 (c) The Initial End to the Fighting, Abdication and Restoration. 56 (d) The Definitive Treaty of Peace and Amity. 58 (e) The Congress of Vienna. 60 12. The Second Defeat of Napoleon. 62 (a) The Final Settlements. 66
viii III. IV. V. VI. VII. Table of Contents The Political Differences. 68 1. Napoleonic France. 68 2. The Export of Revolutionary Values. 72 3. Austria. 73 4. Russia. 74 5. Britain. 75 6. The Advancement of ConstitutionalSettings. 79 Holding Back Change.83 1. Post-War Foundations.83 2. Rising Discontent. 84 3. The Congress of Aix-la-Chapelle.88 4. Coming to the Boil. 88 5. Actual Revolution. 91 6. The Congress of Troppau. 92 7. The
Congress of Verona. 94 8. Slavery. 94 9. Spain and Portugal. 95 10. The Decembrist Rebellion and Tsar Nicolas 1.97 The Turmoil of the 1830s. 99 1. The July Revolution of 1830. 99 2. Revolt in the Belgic Territories.102 3. Revolt in the Polish and Italian Territories. 104 4. The Emergence of Belgium.105 5. Suppression in the Polish and ItalianAreas. 107 6. Controlling the German Confederation. 109 7. The Advance of Britain. 110 8. The Counter-Weight Set Around Portugal and Spain. 113 Before the Storm. 115 1. The Optimistic View. 115 2. The Pessimistic
View. 115 3. German Confederation and Denmark. 116 4. Spain and Portugal. 118 5. Switzerland. 119 6. Russia.120 7. Austria. 121 8. The Italian Areas. 122 9. Britain.123 10. Ireland. 124 11. France. 125 1848. 127 1. January and February. 127 2. The French Second Republic.128 3. March.129
Table of Contents ix 4. Britain. 133 5. Russia. 134 6. April. 134 7. Holding the Line. 137 8. Liberal, not Radical, Change.138 9. Ending the First Schleswig War. 141 10. Pacifying the Italian Peninsula. 143 11. Crushing the Hungarian Uprising. 145 VII I. The United States of America. 148 1. Thomas Jefferson. 148 (a) Slavery. 149 (b) N ative Americans. 149 (c) French, Spanish, British and Russian Adjoining Territories. 150 (d) Skirting War with Britain. 152 2. War in North
Africa. 154 3. James Madison. 155 (a) Spanish Florida and Northern Mexico. 156 4. War with Britain. 157 (a) The Flow of the War. 159 (b) The Treaty of Ghent. 162 (c) Settlement within the United States. 163 5. Renewed War in North Africa. 164 6. James Monroe. 165 (a) Slavery. 165 (b) Native Americans. 166 (c) The Pacific Northwest. 167 (d) Florida.169 (e) Latin America. 171 7. John Quincy Adams. 172 8.
AndrewJackson. 174 (a) Slavery. 174 (b) Native Americans. 175 (c) Foreign Affairs. 179 9. Martin Van Buren. 180 (a) Native Americans. 180 (b) Slavery, Texas and Mexico. 180 (c) Near War with Britain. 181 10. John Tyler. 183 (a) Relations with Britain. 183 (b) Native Americans. 184 (c) Slavery. 185 (d) The Indo-Pacific. 186 (e) The Annexation of Texas. 186
X IX. X. Table of Contents 11. James Polk. 187 (a) Oregon. 187 (b) Native Americans. 187 12. War with Mexico. 188 (a) Preparing to Battle. 188 (b) The Conflict. 190 (c) The Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo. 194 13. Zachary Taylor. 196 Latin America. 198 1. 1800. 198 2. Haiti. 199 3. Miranda. 200 4. The Implications of Napoleon’s Actions in Spain. 201 5. The Rebellions Intensify. 204 6.
An Olive Branch from Spain. 207 7. The Rebellions Continue. 207 8. The Return of the Absolutist King of Spain.209 9. Difficult Years. 210 10. The 1820 Rebellion in Spain. 216 11. The Independence of Mexico. 217 12. The Ongoing Struggles and New Formations. 218 13. Shared Defence, Independence and Constitutions. 220 14. Central America. 222 15. The Independence of Brazil. 223 16. Towards Certainty. 225 17. Recognition and Reaction.227 18. New Countries but Limited Unity. 229 19. Mexico in the Late 1820s.231 20. The Troubles of South America. 232 21. Mexico in the
1830s. 239 (a) The Rebellion in Texas. 240 (b) The Pastry War. 243 (c) The Road to War with the United States. 244 22. The End of the Central American Union. 246 23. The Haitian-Dominican Separation. 248 24. South America in the 1840s. 249 (a) War Around the Argentine Confederation. 249 (b) Peru, Bolivia, Ecuador and Chile. 250 The Near and Middle East. 252 1. Persia. 252 2. Sultan Selim III. 253 3. North Africa.255 4. The Napoleonic Wars.255 5. A Reorientation of Friends and Allies. 257
Table of Contents xi The Treaty of Bucharest. 259 The Treaty of Gulistan.259 The Post-Napoleonic World. 260 The Independence of Greece. 263 (a) The Greek Declaration of Independence. 265 (b) Peace with Persia and the Invitation to Mehmet Ali. 266 (c) The Changing Tide. 268 (d) Britain, France and Russia Join the Fight. 270 10. Russia’s Other Battles. 272 11. Peace and the Establishment of Modern Greece.273 12. The French Invasion of Algeria.275 13. The Levant Crisis and the Treaty of Hünkâr Iskelesi. 277 14. The British in Afghanistan. 279 15. The Eastern and Western Corners of North Africa. 282 16. The Sick Man of Europe. 283 17. The Slavery Question. 287 XI. Colonial
Expansion: India, the East Indies, Africa and the Pacific. 288 1. India During the Napoleonic Period. 288 2. The Dutch East Indies. 293 3. Interest in the Pacific. 294 4. The European Footholds in Africa.296 5. The British Expansion in India. 299 6. The Dutch Expansion in the East Indies. 302 7. Singapore, Malacca, Burma and Siam. 304 8. Extreme Violence in the Antipodes. 306 9. Entrenchment in West Africa. 308 10. The Complicated Landscape of South Africa. 310 11. The Dutch Take Bali. 312 12. New Zealand Becomes a British Colony. 314 13. The Pacific Becomes Contested. 315 14. Assuming Full Control Over India. 318 15. A Changing Ethos in West Africa. 321 16. The Wars of South
Africa. 324 XII.China. 331 1. The Jiaqing Emperor . 331 2. The Daoguang Emperor. 332 3. War with Britain.333 4. The Treaty of ^anjing. 339 5. The Opening of China.341 6. 7. 8. 9. Index. 343 |
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spelling | Gillespie, Alexander 1966- Verfasser (DE-588)159329388 aut The causes of war Volume 5 1800-1850 Alexander Gillespie Oxford Hart 2023 xi, 350 Seiten txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier "This is the fifth volume in a series charting the causes of war from 3000 BCE to the present day,written by a leading international lawyer.While contextualised in the conflicts and patterns of the period, this work, as drawn directly from the treatiesand the negotiations which led up to them, shows what made both war and peace. The period covered inthis volume, 1800 to 1850, brings this series into the start of the modern world.From the Napoleonic Wars through to the international mechanisms that followed, the first efforts at globalcooperation to maintain peace between the major powers were unique. So too, the spread of colonialism, theexpansion of the United States, the weakening of the Ottoman Empire, and the disintegration and reforming of South America. Each of these external actions that were often linked to war, were mirrored by changes within societies, as the values each society fought for often became just as contentious within countries, as they were between them." (DE-604)BV041445306 5 Digitalisierung BSB München - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=034946038&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Gillespie, Alexander 1966- The causes of war |
title | The causes of war |
title_auth | The causes of war |
title_exact_search | The causes of war |
title_exact_search_txtP | The causes of war |
title_full | The causes of war Volume 5 1800-1850 Alexander Gillespie |
title_fullStr | The causes of war Volume 5 1800-1850 Alexander Gillespie |
title_full_unstemmed | The causes of war Volume 5 1800-1850 Alexander Gillespie |
title_short | The causes of war |
title_sort | the causes of war 1800 1850 |
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