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Metternich wolfram siemann
Metternich wolfram siemann










metternich wolfram siemann

The Metternichs were rewarded for their services to the Holy Roman Empire with profitable estates in the Rhineland and Bohemia.“A superb biographical portrait and work of historical analysis…Let us hope that it will serve if not as a manual then at least as an inspiration-good statesmanship is needed more than ever.”-Brendan Simms, Wall Street Journal Siemann elegantly describes the family’s gradual ascent up the rungs of the imperial nobility. Metternich came from a family possessing an ancient noble pedigree. To this, he appends four fascinating thematic essays, on Metternich and women, Metternich as a manager of his estate, Metternich and war, and Metternich’s views on the governance of the Habsburg Empire. Siemann divides Metternich’s long life and career into seven stages, starting with his childhood under the ancien régime and ending with the years after the revolutions of 1848. Will English-speaking readers feel their time well spent learning about this leading minister of a bygone era? Metternich himself entertained no doubt that he was worthy of such attention: ‘People look on me as a kind of lantern,’ he wrote to his collaborator Friedrich Gentz in 1825, ‘to which they draw near in order to see their way through the almost complete darkness.’ Siemann has spent years doing original archival research in Vienna and Prague, and historians of central Europe have been falling over themselves in praise of the German edition. Now this statesman, who dominated the European political scene for the first half of the 19th century – the so-called Sattelzeit (‘saddle period’) between the end of the ancien régime and the birth of the modern world – is the subject of a magisterial biography by Wolfram Siemann, professor emeritus of history at the University of Munich. Half a century later, he lamented that he had spent much of his life ‘propping up decaying edifices’.

metternich wolfram siemann metternich wolfram siemann

W hen the twenty-year-old Clemens Wenzel Lothar von Metternich journeyed to Frankfurt to participate in the splendid coronation of the Holy Roman Emperor in 1792, little did he realise that he was witnessing the dying embers of a vanishing world.












Metternich wolfram siemann