After the deluge : Poland-Lithuania and the Second Northern War, 1655-1660 / Robert I. Frost.
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Cambridge University Press
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1993.
Available at Main Library (DL725.6F8)
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Location | Classmark | LOAN TYPE | Status | MAP |
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Main Library | DL725.6F8 | 4 WEEK | IN LIBRARY |
More Details
Imprint |
Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 1993.
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Copyright Date |
©1993
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Description |
xxiv, 235 pages : maps, genealogical tables ; 23 cm.
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Content type |
text
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Media type |
unmediated
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Carrier type |
volume
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Series | |
Bibliog. |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
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Contents |
Introduction: Poland-Lithuania in the mid-seventeenth century -- The deluge -- Recovery: July 1655-August 1656 -- The widening conflict: June- December 1656 -- Constructing a coalition: January- December 1657 -- The succession and the failure of the coalition: January-July 1658 -- Political reform -- Towards a French candidature: 1658-1660 -- Conclusion: the succession and the failure of reform.
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Summary |
The Swedish invasion of 1655, known to Poles ever since as the 'Swedish Deluge', provoked the political and military collapse of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, the second-largest state in Europe. Although the Swedes were ultimately driven out, the 'Swedish Deluge' proved to be a crucial turning-point in Polish history. The Commonwealth, dominant in eastern and northern Europe in the sixteenth century, never recovered from the blows inflicted during the Second Northern War (1655-1660). In the eighteenth century it was the plaything of its neighbours, and its political system was the laughing-stock of Europe. By 1795 it had been partitioned out of existence. War has long been seen as crucial to the development of more effective systems of government in Europe during the seventeenth century, but studies usually concentrate on states which responded successfully to the challenges. Much can be learned from those that failed; none failed more dramatically than Poland-Lithuania. Robert Frost examines the reasons for Poland's fall and the conduct of the war by the Polish government, and addresses the crucial question of why, despite widespread recognition of the shortcomings of the political system, subsequent attempts to reform should have failed.
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Subject | |
ISBN |
9780521420082 hardback
0521420083 hardback
9780521544023 paperback
0521544025 paperback
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ISBN/ISSN |
9780521544023
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4 WEEK