Acknowledgements.
Preface.
List of Maps.
List of Illustrations.
1. The Context of 1600.
2. Central and Southern Europe: 1600-1635.
3. Central and Southern Europe: 1635-1648.
4. Western Europe: 1600-1660: Spain and France.
5. Western Europe: 1603-1660: Britain and the United Provinces.
6. Northern Europe: 1618-1660: Scandinavia, Russia and Poland.
Interlude.
7. Central and Southern Europe with the Ottoman Empire: 1660-1720.
8. Western Europe: 1660-1720: France and Spain.
9. Western Europe: 1660-1720: Britain the United Provinces and War.
10. Northern Europe: 1660-1721: Scandinavia, Russia and Poland.
Concluding Discussion.
List of Significant Dates.
Bibliography.
David J. Sturdy is Professor of Early Modern History at the University of Ulster in Coleraine. His previous publications include The d'Aligres de la Rivière: Servants of the Bourbon State in the Seventeenth Century (1986), Science and Social Status in Early Modern France: The Members of the Académie des Sciences, 1666–1750 (1995) and Louis XIV (1998).
"A first-rate narrative account of a fascinating period in European
history. The inclusion of the British Isles is especially welcome
as is the due weight devoted to eastern Europe. Sturdy is alive to
the varieties and ambiguities of European history in this period,
and is not seduced by easy talk of the development of the modern
state or simplistic assessments of absolutism." Jeremy Black,
University of Exeter
"Dr Sturdy has written an excellent introduction to
seventeenth-century Europe for the student approaching the subject
for the first time. He supplies in a lucid description the factual
evidence essential to the formulation of thematic or analytical
arguments about the period." Lionel K. J. Glassey, University of
Glasgow
"Sturdy's book is organized around geographical regions (including
the British Isles) with a break at 1660 to consider some themes...
a comprehansive and factually accurate a narrative [which] is a
considerable achievement. Sturdy is to be commended for producing a
sound textbook, which must have been the product of much labour."
Graham Derby, King Edward VI School, Southampton
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