The Economic History of a European Security Culture, After the Napoleonic Wars
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Open Access
Type
Book chapterAuthor/s
Sluga, GlendaAbstract
Economic developments have long shaped what we think of as the main themes of global as well as national history, from the story of capitalism and the industrial revolution, to the age of empires-cum-nations. Yet peacemaking at the end of the Napoleonic wars brought onto the ...
See moreEconomic developments have long shaped what we think of as the main themes of global as well as national history, from the story of capitalism and the industrial revolution, to the age of empires-cum-nations. Yet peacemaking at the end of the Napoleonic wars brought onto the international scene financiers, rentiers, and bankers, funding the future of Europe. Their presence was indicative of the emergence of a new capitalist economic order shaped by industrialisation and imperialism. This chapter uses a focus on this rising class as a lens through which to survey the social and ideological influence of shifting economic relations, practices and identities on the politics of peacemaking and on political agendas, from their impact on foreign policies and questions of ‘security’, to the proposals for political consideration brought to the peacemakers by Benjamin Constant, Saint-Simon, and Robert Owen.
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See moreEconomic developments have long shaped what we think of as the main themes of global as well as national history, from the story of capitalism and the industrial revolution, to the age of empires-cum-nations. Yet peacemaking at the end of the Napoleonic wars brought onto the international scene financiers, rentiers, and bankers, funding the future of Europe. Their presence was indicative of the emergence of a new capitalist economic order shaped by industrialisation and imperialism. This chapter uses a focus on this rising class as a lens through which to survey the social and ideological influence of shifting economic relations, practices and identities on the politics of peacemaking and on political agendas, from their impact on foreign policies and questions of ‘security’, to the proposals for political consideration brought to the peacemakers by Benjamin Constant, Saint-Simon, and Robert Owen.
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Date
2019Source title
Securing Europe after Napoleon. 1815 and the New European Security CulturePublisher
Cambridge University PressFunding information
ARC FL130100174Licence
Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0Rights statement
This material has been published in revised form in Securing Europe after Napoleon. 1815 and the New European Security Culture, edited by Beatrice de Graaf, Ido de Haan, Brian Vick [https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108597050]. This version is free to view and download for private research and study only. Not for re-distribution or re-use. © Glenda Sluga.Faculty/School
Faculty of Arts and Social SciencesDepartment, Discipline or Centre
Department of HistoryShare