History Derailed: Central and Eastern Europe in the Long Nineteenth CenturyUniv of California Press, 2003 - 404 страници "I do not think it possible to understand the troubles and instabilities of Central and Eastern Europe today without reading Ivan T.Berend, the finest comparative historian of this region. In History Derailed, he has produced a characteristically lucid and masterly synthesis of its economic, social, political and cultural history in the 'long nineteenth century' which every reader of his much admired study of inter-war Central and Eastern Europe, Decades of Crisis, will need to read, and anyone interested in the continuing problems of the region will want to read."—Eric J. Hobsbawm, Emeritus Professor of Economic and Social History at the University of London and author of many histories including The Age of Extremes: A History of the World, 1914-1991 "This multi-faceted and lavishly illustrated analytical history of Central-East Europe before World War I, written by the world’s foremost scholar of the region, explains how and why the paths of modernization and development diverged so markedly between East and West Europe. Ivan T. Berend’s tour de force of historical interpretation must be essential reading for anyone seeking a true perspective on modern Europe."—Derek H. Aldcroft, University Fellow in the Department of Economic & Social Science, University of Leicester |
Съдържание
The Challenge of the Rising West and the Lack of Response | 5 |
J N Lewicki The Second Polish Uprising in 1831 | 46 |
Costache Petrescu Demonstration for the 1848 Constitution | 46 |
Romanticism and Nationalism in Central and Eastern Europe | 82 |
The Struggle for Independence | 89 |
following p 112 | 112 |
Zygmunt Ajdukiewicz Going to Town | 112 |
following p 158 | 158 |
Economic Modernization in the Half Century before World War I I34 | 178 |
Democratization | 235 |
World War I | 285 |
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agricultural army Austria Austria-Hungary Balkan Balkan countries Bank became Bohemia Britain Bucharest Budapest Bulgarian capital Central and Eastern cities Courtesy Magyar created Croat Croatia cultural Czech lands decades early Eastern Europe Eastern European economic eighteenth century emerged established estates exports families feudal FIGURE foreign French Galicia garian gentry German Habsburg empire half hectares Hungary ideas important increased independent industrial inhabitants intellectuals Jewish Jews labor language liberal Magyar major military million modern monarchy movement Muzeum nation-building nationalist nobility noble elite organized Ottoman Ottoman empire output parliament party peasant peasantry percent Poland Polish political population Prague provinces radical railroad reforms region remained revolution revolutionary role Romanian romantic romantic national romanticism roughly Russian Serb Serbia serfs seventeenth Slav Slavic Slovak social society struggle Széchenyi szlachta textile theater tion tional trade traditional transformation uprising urban Vienna village Vuk Karadžić Warsaw West Western workers