In the Seven Years' War (1756-1763), two European rivalries-between England and France and between Prussia and Austria-collided to spark a global conflagration. In the United States, it is known as the French and Indian War, a precursor to the Revolutionary War. In India, by contrast, it marked a new stage on the path toward British colonial rule. The war saw Spain's decline and Russia's rise; territories from Quebec to the Philippines changed hands. From Europe to the Americas, Africa, and South Asia, people across continents were swept up in clashes that began in faraway places and spread like wildfire.
The World in Flames is a bottom-up history of the Seven Years' War, exploring this epochal conflict from the perspective of contemporaries around the globe. Drawing on hundreds of eyewitness accounts, Marian Fuessel offers a sweeping portrait of warfare and everyday life during the cataclysm. He vividly narrates battles and sieges from the viewpoints of bakers, generals, and everyone in between, tracing the roles of mercenaries and trading companies as well as regular troops. Fuessel emphasizes how contemporaries perceived and understood the global nature of the conflict. At once a media war and an economic war for commodities such as sugar and fur, a war of emerging nationalism and a last religious war, the Seven Years' War was a laboratory of modernity, combining the old world and the new. A groundbreaking, world-spanning microhistory, this book shows us the first truly global military conflict in a new light.
Rezensionen / Stimmen
Ranging across this great global conflict with a wide perspective, awesome mastery of the sources, and a lively pen, Marian Fuessel delivers a feast of information, insight, and entertainment. -- Tim Blanning, author of <i>Frederick the Great: King of Prussia</i> Fuessel lights up what we thought was a well-researched conflict. He brings to bear newly discovered writings of ordinary people, soldiers, civilians, pastors, tradesmen, aristocratic ladies, and ordinary women as they respond to the devastation around them. The war was seen as not only a military conflict but also a media event. A notably clear account of interlocking conflicts and the virtually simultaneous making of their memorialization. -- Dorinda Outram, author of <i>Four Fools in the Age of Reason: Laughter, Cruelty, and Power in Early Modern Germany</i> An exciting history of the Seven Years' War as a global conflict, combining lucid analysis of the main events and their outcomes with sympathetic treatment of those caught up in the struggle. Particular attention is paid to how contemporaries perceived the complex interactions between the war's many theaters and how the conflict's expansive character changed how they saw the world. -- Peter H. Wilson, author of <i>Iron and Blood: A Military History of the German-Speaking Peoples Since 1500</i>
Reihe
Sprache
Verlagsort
Zielgruppe
Für Beruf und Forschung
Für höhere Schule und Studium
Produkt-Hinweis
Illustrationen
Maße
Höhe: 229 mm
Breite: 152 mm
ISBN-13
978-0-231-20240-4 (9780231202404)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Klassifikation
Marian Fuessel is chair professor of early modern history with special focus on the history of science at the University of Goettingen and a member of the Goettingen Academy of Sciences and Humanities in Lower Saxony.
Brian Hanrahan is a writer, scholar, and broadcaster who has translated ten books from German to English.
Translator's Preface
Preface: A Global Conflict in Close-Up
1. Geopolitics Between Reich and Empire
2. Sparking the Flame
3. A War Without Fronts: The German Theater
4. 1757: The Year of Battles
5. Everyday Life in Wartime
6. 1758: The Fighting Spreads
7. 1759: Annus Mirabilis
8. As Mighty As the Sword: The Media War
9. Urban Life in a State of Exception
10. 1761: New Alliances, Missed Opportunities
11. Mosquitoes and Monsoons: The Grab for Spain's Colonies
12. A Second Miracle
13. 1763: Peace at Last
14. Outcomes of the War
Epilogue
Acknowledgments
Notes
Bibliography
Index