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War, Peace, and Power: Diplomatic History of Europe, 1500-2000

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War, Peace, and Power: Diplomatic History of Europe, 1500-2000

By: Vejas Gabriel Liulevicius, The Great Courses
Narrated by: Vejas Gabriel Liulevicius
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Summary

For much of the past five centuries, the history of the European continent has been a history of chaos, its civilization thrown into turmoil by ferocious wars or bitter religious conflicts - sometimes in combination - that have made and remade borders, created and eliminated entire nations, and left a legacy that is still influencing our world.

This 36-lecture series from an award-winning teacher and honored scholar pursues an explanation for this chaos that goes beyond the obvious ones of political ambition, religious intolerance, the pursuit of state power, or the fear of another state's aspirations. In pursuing that explanation, Professor Liulevicius offers everyone interested in the "why" of history a remarkable look into the evolution of the European continent and the modern state system. His provocative lectures allow us to peer through the revealing lens of statecraft to show us its impact on war, peace, and power and how that impact may well be felt in the future.

As you learn to examine key points on history's diplomatic timeline in the context of attempting to establish - successfully and not - a lasting idea of order in the European world, you'll begin to grasp the key Professor Liulevicius offers to understanding the dynamics of international politics. And you'll see how such key concepts as the balance of power, power itself, sovereignty, and "reason of state" - the raison d'état first enunciated by France's powerful Cardinal Richelieu - fit into those dynamics.

PLEASE NOTE: When you purchase this title, the accompanying reference material will be available in your My Library section along with the audio.

©2007 The Teaching Company, LLC (P)2007 The Great Courses
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Definitely worth a listen to if you have interest in European or diplomatic history. Slightly irritating American accent, but it grows on you.

Very interesting read

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I found this to be another excellent course from the Great Courses. Clearly covering 400 years means that it inevitably skims the subject matter somewhat but that is its brief so fair enough. What I found pleasing was the interesting angle that taking the diplomatic view of the period gave. Professor Liulevicius clearly explains the motivations of the states involved, especially the Great Powers and also why they came to those motives.

An excellent overview of European Diplomacy

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Absolutely superb crash course in European history and the individuals who shaped it. If you’ve always been a bit rusty on various periods this is the course for you. Deserves a second listen

Riveting

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This is another excellent history installment from the GreatCourses. I thoroughly enjoyed the fast-paced tour of European political history. The professor is a good lecturer, and I found he organized each installment so it stood on its own.

If you aren't familiar with European history I would start with something that covers that in general before moving on to this more advanced course.

Excellent overview of European diplomacy

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This lecture series covers diplomatic history from 1500 - 2000. With such a wide scale of time you know going in you won't get many of the nitty gritty details, but the prof gives a very good overview of diplomatic paradigms, and a couple of up close inspections of characters and treaties. The most interesting for me was the formation of Italy and Germany, and the decline of the Hapsburg Austrian dynasty.

Practical aspects of diplomacy are covered (such as when diplomats started living in the places they were ambassadors to) as well as diplomatic theories that help explain lots of events in terms of sweeping "balance of power" machinations. Very worth listening to, unless you already know a lot of European history, in which case it may be better to listen to something on a particular topic instead.

I wholeheartedly recommend it!

Sweeping overview, but fascinating nevertheless

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