The developing nations: poverty and progress
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About This Book
"Disraeli claimed that no country suffered more from the foundation of the German Reich than England. Bismarck's empire of 1871 did not, however, strike like a bolt from the blue. The question of German unity had been brewing for decades. Britain and the German Question reconstructs the way Victorians pictured the prehistory of the Reich from the July Revolution of 1830 until the eve of the 'Wars of German Unification'. It scrutinizes how Britain's foreign political establishment - the diplomats, journalists and politicians who informed, determined and executed British foreign policy - analyses and responded to the Germans' search for a reformed, united and powerful nation-state. It lays bare British interests, preconceptions and preoccupations and explains what kind of united Germany Britain would have welcomed." "The book thus illuminates three themes crucial to our understanding of nineteenth-century Europe: the international repercussions of German nationalism; Britain's attitude to continental politics: and the interlocking of liberalism, nationalism, revolution and reform."--BOOK JACKET.
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