Barbara Stollberg-Rilinger. The Holy Roman Empire (2018)

Barbara Stollberg-Rilinger. The Holy Roman Empire (2018)
Title:The Holy Roman Empire: a short history
Author:Barbara Stollberg-Rilinger
Translator:Translated and with a Preface: Yair Mintzker
Editor:
Language:English
Series:
Place:Princeton and Oxford
Publisher:Princeton University Press
Year:2018
Pages:XVI, 164
ISBN:0691179115, 9780691179117
File:PDF, 4.6 MB
Download:Click here

Barbara Stollberg-Rilinger. The Holy Roman Empire: a short history. Translated and with a Preface: Yair Mintzker. Princeton and Oxford: Princeton University Press, 2018, XVI+164 p. ISBN 0691179115, ISBN 9780691179117

CONTENTS

Translator’s Preface to the English Edition … VII
A Note on the Translation … XIII
Introduction … 1
What Was the Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation? … 10
A Body Made of Head and Limbs … 17
Institutional Consolidation, 1495–1521 … 43
The Challenge of the Reformation, 1521–1555 … 60
From the Consolidation to the Crisis of the Imperial Institutions, 1555–1618 … 76
The Thirty Years’ War and the Peace of Westphalia … 88
The Westphalian Order and the Renewed Rise of the Emperor … 106
Political Polarization, 1740–1790 … 120
The Dissolution of the Empire, 1790–1806 … 132
Once Again: What Was the Holy Roman Empire? … 140
The Roman- German Emperors of the Early Modern Period … 147
Select Bibliography … 149
Index … 157

A new interpretation of the Holy Roman Empire that reveals why it was not a failed state as many historians believeThe Holy Roman Empire emerged in the Middle Ages as a loosely integrated union of German states and city-states under the supreme rule of an emperor. Around 1500, it took on a more formal structure with the establishment of powerful institutions—such as the Reichstag and Imperial Chamber Court—that would endure more or less intact until the empire’s dissolution by Napoleon in 1806. Barbara Stollberg-Rilinger provides a concise history of the Holy Roman Empire, presenting an entirely new interpretation of the empire’s political culture and remarkably durable institutions.Rather than comparing the empire to modern states or associations like the European Union, Stollberg-Rilinger shows how it was a political body unlike any other—it had no standing army, no clear boundaries, no general taxation or bureaucracy. She describes a heterogeneous association based on tradition and shared purpose, bound together by personal loyalty and reciprocity, and constantly reenacted by solemn rituals. In a narrative spanning three turbulent centuries, she takes readers from the reform era at the dawn of the sixteenth century to the crisis of the Reformation, from the consolidation of the Peace of Augsburg to the destructive fury of the Thirty Years’ War, from the conflict between Austria and Prussia to the empire’s downfall in the age of the French Revolution.Authoritative and accessible, The Holy Roman Empire is an incomparable introduction to this momentous period in the history of Europe.