List of Plates
List of Maps
Introduction
1. States and the Nation in the Late-Eighteenth and
Early-Nineteenth Centuries
2. Independence and Early South German Particularism
3. Models of German Unification, 1815-1848
4. The Years of Prophecy and Change, 1848-1849
5. Counterrevolution, Reaction and Reappraisals, 1850-1859
6. Six Years of Autumn, 1860-1866
7. The Unification of Germany, 1866-1871
8. Remembering and Forgetting Württemberg, 1871-1914
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index
A re-evaluation of the process that led to the unification of Germany in 1871 through the prism one of the smaller German states.
Bodie A. Ashton is the Professional Academic Editor for the European Research Council-funded ReConFort project at the Universität Passau, Germany. He is also a Visiting Research Fellow at the University of Adelaide, South Australia, and has taught extensively at Adelaide and Flinders University of South Australia in modern European history, imperialism, colonialism, protest, and revolution.
Bodie A. Ashton makes an important contribution to the German and
regional history of the 19th century with his book. It is
recommended.
*H-German*
[The book] offers in a concise way a good overview of Württemberg’s
room for manoeuvre and initiatives with regard to the German
Question between 1815 and 1871.
*German History*
This comprehensive book represents nothing less than the current
state of research on the history of nineteenth-century Württemberg,
and it will surely find readers in the other remaining
Mittelstaaten as well.
*European History Quarterly*
A succinct book, whose valuable contribution to the transfer of
knowledge across different historiographies should be
acknowledged.
*German Historical Institute London Bulletin*
This is a clearly presented, well-researched, and very readable
account of the multifaceted role the middle-seized German state of
Württemberg – the home of Friedrich Schiller, Hermann Hesse, and
Albert Einstein – played in the process of German unification.
Intimately familiar with the historiography, Bodie Ashton offers a
fresh and interesting perspective on this rich topic.
*Hermann Beck, Professor of History and International Studies,
University of Miami, USA*
This is a very welcome contribution to nineteenth-century German
history. Bodie Ashton's new study of the small South-west German
state of Württemberg retells the history of the movement for German
unification from an unfamiliar vantage point. In calling into
question some of the assumptions of an older body of literature,
Ashton gives us the benefit of a more plural and more open-ended
history of German unification, at the same time as demonstrating
why some alternative ideals of the nation-state ultimately
failed.
*Andrew Bonnell, Associate Professor in History, University of
Queensland, Australia*
It is hard to give this book sufficient praise; lucid and
thoroughly researched, it brings the past to life, and the sections
on politics, economic growth (or the absence of it in southern
Germany), and warfare are equally effective. If the unification of
Germany came in a way that was unexpected (the author notes in
closing), what came afterward was equally unpredictable. Summing
Up: Highly recommended. Upper-division undergraduates and
above.
*CHOICE*
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