Book contents
- Frontmatter
- CHAPTER I INTRODUCTORY SUMMARY
- CHAPTER II ECONOMIC CHANGE AND GROWTH
- CHAPTER III THE SCIENTIFIC MOVEMENT AND ITS INFLUENCE ON THOUGHT AND MATERIAL DEVELOPMENT
- CHAPTER IV RELIGION AND THE RELATIONS OF CHURCHES AND STATES
- CHAPTER V EDUCATION AND THE PRESS
- CHAPTER VI ART AND ARCHITECTURE
- CHAPTER VII IMAGINATIVE LITERATURE
- CHAPTER VIII LIBERALISM AND CONSTITUTIONAL DEVELOPMENTS
- CHAPTER IX NATIONALITIES AND NATIONALISM
- CHAPTER X THE SYSTEM OF ALLIANCES AND THE BALANCE OF POWER
- CHAPTER XI ARMED FORCES AND THE ART OF WAR: NAVIES
- CHAPTER XII ARMED FORCES AND THE ART OF WAR: ARMIES
- CHAPTER XIII THE UNITED KINGDOM AND ITS WORLD-WIDE INTERESTS
- CHAPTER XIV RUSSIA IN EUROPE AND ASIA
- CHAPTER XV THE REVOLUTIONS OF 1848
- CHAPTER XVI THE MEDITERRANEAN
- CHAPTER XVII THE SECOND EMPIRE IN FRANCE
- CHAPTER XVIII THE CRIMEAN WAR
- CHAPTER XIX PRUSSIA AND THE GERMAN PROBLEM, 1830–66
- CHAPTER XX THE AUSTRIAN EMPIRE AND ITS PROBLEMS, 1848–67
- CHAPTER XXI ITALY
- CHAPTER XXII THE ORIGINS OF THE FRANCO-PRUSSIAN WAR AND THE REMAKING OF GERMANY
- CHAPTER XXIII NATIONAL AND SECTIONAL FORCES IN THE UNITED STATES
- CHAPTER XXIV THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR
- CHAPTER XXV THE STATES OF LATIN AMERICA
- CHAPTER XXVI THE FAR EAST
- References
CHAPTER I - INTRODUCTORY SUMMARY
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 March 2008
- Frontmatter
- CHAPTER I INTRODUCTORY SUMMARY
- CHAPTER II ECONOMIC CHANGE AND GROWTH
- CHAPTER III THE SCIENTIFIC MOVEMENT AND ITS INFLUENCE ON THOUGHT AND MATERIAL DEVELOPMENT
- CHAPTER IV RELIGION AND THE RELATIONS OF CHURCHES AND STATES
- CHAPTER V EDUCATION AND THE PRESS
- CHAPTER VI ART AND ARCHITECTURE
- CHAPTER VII IMAGINATIVE LITERATURE
- CHAPTER VIII LIBERALISM AND CONSTITUTIONAL DEVELOPMENTS
- CHAPTER IX NATIONALITIES AND NATIONALISM
- CHAPTER X THE SYSTEM OF ALLIANCES AND THE BALANCE OF POWER
- CHAPTER XI ARMED FORCES AND THE ART OF WAR: NAVIES
- CHAPTER XII ARMED FORCES AND THE ART OF WAR: ARMIES
- CHAPTER XIII THE UNITED KINGDOM AND ITS WORLD-WIDE INTERESTS
- CHAPTER XIV RUSSIA IN EUROPE AND ASIA
- CHAPTER XV THE REVOLUTIONS OF 1848
- CHAPTER XVI THE MEDITERRANEAN
- CHAPTER XVII THE SECOND EMPIRE IN FRANCE
- CHAPTER XVIII THE CRIMEAN WAR
- CHAPTER XIX PRUSSIA AND THE GERMAN PROBLEM, 1830–66
- CHAPTER XX THE AUSTRIAN EMPIRE AND ITS PROBLEMS, 1848–67
- CHAPTER XXI ITALY
- CHAPTER XXII THE ORIGINS OF THE FRANCO-PRUSSIAN WAR AND THE REMAKING OF GERMANY
- CHAPTER XXIII NATIONAL AND SECTIONAL FORCES IN THE UNITED STATES
- CHAPTER XXIV THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR
- CHAPTER XXV THE STATES OF LATIN AMERICA
- CHAPTER XXVI THE FAR EAST
- References
Summary
The prodigious forces discovered and exploited through many decades by the inventive genius and tireless energy of the European peoples seemed in the middle of the nineteenth century to carry them upwards to the very zenith of their power. The states of Europe might subsequently rule over dominions still more extensive, command armies still larger, and possess weapons more terrible by far in their destructive range; yet, as time went on, their supremacy would be increasingly open to challenge from the peoples of other continents. In the years 1830–70, however, it was scarcely questioned. This was a period when the European states were free from serious threat of political dominance by any one among them, and when, prone though they as ever were to shifting antagonisms, they were not more permanently divided into hostile and highly armed camps. Their wars were relatively brief and the loss of life relatively small. Conflict had not yet attained the suicidal proportions of 1914–18, and, although men of vision like Tocqueville and Gioberti could foretell the immense future power of the United States or Russia, it was not until after that first ‘world war’ that a European statesman would write of the decadence of Europe and a European thinker dilate upon the decline of the West.
This supremacy the European peoples owed above all to their near monopoly of the new skills and machines born of the Industrial Revolution and to the extraordinary and simultaneous increase in their own numbers. These phenomena had become manifest well back in the eighteenth century and had led intelligent men to ponder deeply upon their significance.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The New Cambridge Modern History , pp. 1 - 21Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1960